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Book reviews for "Smith,_Michael_Stephen" sorted by average review score:

Economic Development
Published in Hardcover by Longman Publishing Group (1995)
Authors: Michael P. Todaro and Stephen C. Smith
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Accessible and Comprehensive
The greatest problem facing economists today (I should say "facing the world today") is how to create wealth in the poorest countries of the world. This introduction to the subject is accessible to any reader, even those with very limited previous knowledge of economics. The book begins with a critical summary of current development theories and then takes on a number of policy questions, with case studies. Each chapter ends with discussion questions and the publisher maintains a web site with useful quantitative and graphing exercises (with answers).

Michael Todaro writes from a left-of-center perspective and is more ideological than most textbook writers. However, he presents other points of view and presents them pretty fairly in my opinion. And I have to say that he scores some pretty big points against the neoclassical theorists by showing that their assumptions are frequently at odds with reality.

While some of Todaro's more stridently ideological statements can be annoying, I know of no other book that provides such a comprehensive, well organized, and engagingly written introduction to economic development.

A very readable introduction to developmental economics.
Todaro in this book presents what is quite possibly the easiest to understand introduction to developmental economics that the world has to offer. He does not provide quick answers but a logical and well thought out conception of the complexities of the problems in a format that although not wholly excluding mathmatics, uses it only in appendixes, etc. to explain problems-- which leaves the book open to a wider audience (and also does not allow its readers into the overly simplistic answers that too much mathmatics sometimes hints at....) In my studies of development, this book more often than any other served as a quick reference and fairly handy bibliography. I recommend this book to any undergraduate student or student of public policy the world over. It should be a classic.

The best book on the complexities of economic development.
Todaros's text on the complexities a developing country must face and consider to lead itself out of poverty and backwardness gets better with every edition, now on its sixth. It is the only book I have found that, with unsurpasssed dexterity, combines economics, sociology and political science into a unifying frame that should be required reading for policymakers and government throughout the developing world. His writing style, clarity of exposition and long-term vision are absolutely second to none.


The Witching Hour
Published in CD-ROM by Silver Lake Publishing ()
Authors: Seth Lindberg, Kim Guilbeau, Nnedi Okorafor, Jason Brannon, Ken Goldman, K. Bird Lincoln, Dayle A. Dermatis, Holly H. Newstein, Ralph W. II Bieber, and H. Turnip Smith
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Absolutely bewitching!
I wasn't sure what to expect with this anthology, but I found myself enthralled from beginning to end. Nnedi Okorafor's "Crossroads", Seth Lindberg's "Atropos", and James Dorr's "Madness" were special delights.

Stories for all tastes
A great mix of chilling, horrifying, and otherwise entertaining stories.

Very Satisfying!
This is a great compilation of magic, madness, culture and creativity. All of the stories were pretty satisfying, some of them terrifying! There are some writers here that are going to go places. Watch for the authors of the two longest pieces, Nnedi Okorafor (her story is called Crossroads) and James S. Dorr (he wrote a story called Madness).


Introductory Astronomy and Astrophysics
Published in Hardcover by International Thomson Publishing (1998)
Authors: Michael Zeilik, Stephen A. Gregory, and Elske V. Smith
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Not a worthy investment
Don't bother with this book. I used it for an intro-level astro course, along with Frank Shu's Physical Universe. In the exact words of my professor, the only reason we even had to buy this book was because Shu's was written 20 years ago and is slightly out of date.... we used Shu for important concepts and this for basically nothing other than revising what is in Shu with more up-to-date information. This book is kind of expensive to be simply a tool for updating Shu (which, btw, is a great book)... also, the high number of errors and typos really make this book a "don't bother"

OK General Study Book
This book is a good compromise between the less analytical texts and some of the books geared toward astonomy majors. It is not a great book but I felt it was up to date and comprehensive. One note though, the authors assume you have a good grounding in undergrad math and physics. On several occasions I had to pull out one of my math or physics texts to review a subject so I could understand the material being presented.

A good, general overview for a survey class
This is not a MEATY text. It is a good INTRODUCTORY text that provides a decent overview of general astronomy, including: basic celestial mechanics, the solar system, absorption/emission, stars, H-R diagram, galaxies, interstellar medium, evolution, Hubble's law, active galaxies, cosmology. The level of detail seems appropriate for a survey course. For example, the authors do a good job of describing basic spectral issues (absorption, emission, line broadening, Boltzmann, the Saha equation, optical depth, etc), but they do not provide a detailed discussion of stellar atmospheres. If you have had an introduction to astronomy and want more depth, then look at Bohm-Vitense's books, Elmgreen's Galaxies & Galactic Structure, etc.


Using Isapi
Published in Paperback by Que (1997)
Authors: Stephen Genusa, Bobby, Jr Addison, Allen Clark, Dean Cleaver, Kevin Flick, Thomas Leroux, Martin J. Norman, Tom Parkinson, Paul P., Jr Parrone, and Michael Regelski
Amazon base price: $49.99
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Collectible price: $16.00
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Overpriced Shovelware
Read the Microsoft documentation instead. This book is a thinly disguised rip-off of the Microsoft documentation padded with examples of dubious value. In 590 pages this book manages to add no value or information beyond the original documentation. That's quite an achievement.

If you like pain, ISAPI is for you
If you want to learn ISAPI...think again. This was "hot" 2 years ago...now it is all but dead.

ISAPI's big promise was better performance and memory usage...ironic that it has now fallen in favor to the biggest performance pig of all web applications...ASP. In an age of fast machines and small web apps, rapid development and ease of use wins out over performance.

ISAPI is hard to learn, harder to get right, unstable, bug ridden (if written in MFC) and surprisingly inflexible.

Look, you're a smart person. You want to do the right thing. You don't need to subject yourself to the torture of learning ISAPI. Only hard-core programmers who are tasked with writing a custom web app that is going to get some VERY heavy traffic should even bother with ISAPI.

So why did I give this book 4 stars? There are no good ISAPI books out there. This one has the most information in it and will allow you the best chance to actually develop something that works. Get this book and hit Genusa's (now dusty) ISAPI site. Also spend a lot of time in the Microsoft knowledge base...there are plenty of workarounds and bugs to learn about too.

Keep in mind that with ISAPI you had better be a damn good programmer. If your DLL ever crashes...bye bye web server. This is harder than you think if you are doing "serious" web programming which includes database access.

Smart managers will not allow mission-critical web apps to be developed in ISAPI by a web punk who has never done this before. Do everyone a favor and get a clue. There is a reason why nobody is doing this stuff anymore!

Game over. Go home and don't look back. Go off and learn ASP and Cold Fusion like a good little web programmer. You will have a marketable skill and will actually get things done.

Best of the available ISAPI books, has reasonable examples
ISAPI is Microsoft's approach to adding capabilities to web serving. There are only a few books that describe how to use ISAPI. This book is the best of them, because the author: 1) provides examples in both C and C++, and 2) compares ISAPI with CGI solutions. Unfortunately, ISAPI is a complicated subject, so more and shorter examples would help elucidate the reader.


Dark of the Night: New Tales of Horror and the Supernatural
Published in Hardcover by Pumpkin Books (1997)
Authors: Stephen Jones, Stephen Baxter, Ramsey Campbell, David Case, Jo Fletcher, Christopher Fowler, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Roberta Lannes, Stephen Laws, and Richard C. Matheson
Amazon base price: $26.00
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Dark Voices 4 - The Pan Book of Horror
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Pan MacMillan (1992)
Authors: John Brunner, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Philip J. Cockburn, Peter Crowther, Les Daniels, Bernard Donoghue, Tony J. Forder, Christopher Fowler, Daniel Fox, and Stephen Gallagher
Amazon base price: $8.95
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Local Taxation: The Options and the Arguments (IFS Report Series)
Published in Paperback by Institute for Fiscal Studies (1991)
Authors: Michael Ridge and Stephen Smith
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The Possession at Loudun
Published in Paperback by University of Chicago Press (2000)
Authors: Michel De Certeau, Michael B. Smith, Stephen Greenblatt, and Michel de Certeau
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Recreation and Tourism as a Catalyst for Urban Waterfront Redevelopment : An International Survey
Published in Hardcover by Praeger Publishers (1995)
Authors: Stephen J. Craig-Smith and Michael Fagence
Amazon base price: $62.95
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Redefining the U.S.-Ec Relationship (Chatham House Papers)
Published in Paperback by Council on Foreign Relations Press (1993)
Authors: Michael Smith and Stephen Woolcock
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