Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2
Book reviews for "St._John,_Robert" sorted by average review score:

Going Down
Published in Paperback by Writers Club Press (2001)
Authors: John St. Robert and John St Robert
Amazon base price: $14.95
Average review score:

Should be made into a movie
Very good! Really holds your interest. Great plot, cleverly written. Exciting drama throughout. Should be made into a movie

A very clever crime novel
I found this book very entertaining. It keeps you reading and you don't want to put it down. A very clever opening, interesting from start to finish. If you love a mystery, this is it. Plus, it has a very surprise ending. Really enjoyed it and know other readers will, too.

Suzy Schaak

Excellent plot, very descriptive
Great crime novel. Holds your attention from start to finish. Places and characters very vividly portrayed. Unusual approach in capturing criminals by cop and his reporter uncle. Fast-paced and delightful "who dunnit" story with romance.Highly recommended. Looking for sequel to story.


Tongue of the Prophets
Published in Paperback by Wilshire Book Co (1979)
Authors: Robert St.John and Robert St John
Amazon base price: $8.00
List price: $10.00 (that's 20% off!)
Average review score:

The Man Who Re-discovered Hebrew
For any interessted in Jewish history, or of the language of Hebrew itself. An excelent recount of the man who 're-discovered' the language of Hebrew. This book is full of adventure and real life drama. It follows all the ups and downs of his rediscovery of the Hebrew language and the fierce opposition against him. Does not read like a regular biography, very easy to read, could not put down ! I would recommend this book to anyone!

Book Review: Tongue of the Prophets
This is the biography of a Jewish man named Eliezer Ben-Yehuda who made it his life's work to revive the Hebrew language and help return his people to their homeland of Israel. He persevered through a terminal illness, the death of his first wife and several of his children and constant financial trouble. He was misunderstood and criticized by many of his own people, yet he began a movement which brought many Jews home to Israel and helped unite them with a common language. I think one of the most amazing things about this true story is that, in reviving the Hebrew language, Eliezer actually had to create many words himself. Because the language had been "dead" for so long, there were no words for things such as airplanes, automobiles or concerts. He had to hunt through the existing language to find words that he could combine or slightly modify to make new words. He also spent weeks and months hunting through old literature to find lost Hebrew words. This is the most interesting biography I've ever read. Eliezer's passion and perseverance were inspiring.


All the Days Were Summer (Dylan St. John Novels , No 2)
Published in Paperback by Bethany House (1997)
Author: Robert Funderburk
Amazon base price: $8.99
Average review score:

This book showed the real tasks of life!
It was about how two people struggle while in Louisiana City. They move to a bay and thier life is hard at firs. It showed how two people can find their place in life!


The Dark Night of the Soul and the Living Flame of Love: St. John of the Cross (Fount Classics Series)
Published in Paperback by HarperCollins (paper) (1995)
Author: Robert Van De Weyer
Amazon base price: $7.00
Average review score:

A much needed spiritual divine.
A book itself in need of very few word to describe its greatness. A wonderful interpretation of the migrating soul!

When in print I had purchased 3 to pass along to friends.


Fathers of the Church : Saint Augustine : Christian Instruction, Admonition and Grace, the Christian Combat, Faith, Hope and Charity
Published in Hardcover by Catholic Univ of Amer Pr (1998)
Authors: St. Augustine, John J. Gavigan, John Courtney Murray, Robert P. Russell, and Bernard M. Peebles
Amazon base price: $36.95
Average review score:

Three Good Works and One Great One
This book is a collection of four different works of Saint Augustine. The table of contents is as follows:

"Christian Instruction", introduced and translated by John J. Gavigan

"Admonition and Grace", introduced and translated by John Courtney Murray

"The Christian Combat", introduced and translated by Robert P. Russell

"Faith, Hope, and Charity", introduced and translated by Bernard M. Peebles

Index

The supplemental materials in this book consist of fairly short introductions to each work written by the translator of that work, footnotes that explain translation issues, references to other works, including scripture references, and finally, a shared index.

Each of the four works which comprise this book will be discussed in turn.

---

The title of the first work, "Christian Instruction", leaves the reader to wonder whether the work is intended to instruct him in Christianity or to be an instructor of others in Christianity. The answer is: yes. To quote Augustine himself, in his discussion of it in his "Retractions":

"I...completed the work in four books. The first three of these help to an understanding of the Scriptures, while the fourth instructs us how to present the facts which we have just comprehended."

Of the "books" alluded to by Augustine, the first prescribes the proper attitude for the study of scriptures, specifically from the perspective of "faith, hope, and charity". The second prescribes a program of education, central to which is knowledge of language: both the general knowledge of language as a system of signs, and specific knowledge of Hebrew and Greek. The third prescribes a system of hermeneutics or interpretive principals and rules. Finally, the fourth is essentially a discussion of rhetorical methods of persuasion and their application to teaching Christianity to others.

---

The second work, "Admonition and Grace", was written because a number of monks had been disturbed by an a letter of Augustine which they thought so exalted the importance of divine grace as to leave no place for human free will (and responsibility). The specific question they asked was:

"Why are we preached to, and given commands, in order to have us avoid evil and do good, if it is not we ourselves who do these things, but God who effects in us the will and the deed?"

To the immediate question, Augustine in reply developed the doctrine that while man of his own free will could do no good without grace, he could recognize his own evil, and in that power lay his responsibility:

"Whenever you fail to follow the known commands of God and are unwilling to be admonished, you are for this very reason to be admonished, that you are unwilling to be admonished...You are unwilling to have yourself shown to yourself, that you may see your own deformity, and seek one to reform you, and beg Him not to leave you in your ugliness of soul."

Not content with having answered the question at hand, Augustine went further, and discussed the ultimate origin of sin, and the state of man and the fallen angels before their respective falls and the nature of those falls. Going further yet, he discusses grace with regard to Mary and the elect, and still further, ultimately ending in a theodicy.

---

The third work, "The Christian Combat" is a short, muscular work "written in a plain style for brethren not proficient in the Latin language". Its end is to lay out how a Christian should live, and to identify heresies that Christians should avoid falling into. As befitting its audience and purpose, it is simple and direct. The basics of Christian belief and scriptural justifications for them are quickly described, then then warnings are given a series of heresies that must be rejected.

The points of Christian belief covered are the nature of evil (Manichaean dualism being explicitly rejected), the governance of Providence, salvation through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, and God as the Trinity.

The list of heresies to be rejected is actually the bulk of the work. Each begins with a "Let us not heed..." introduction, followed by a description of the particular heresy, and then a justification (generally scriptural, sometimes logical) for why it should be rejected.

---

"Faith, Hope, and Charity", the fourth and final work in the book, is also known as the "Enchiridion", or handbook. It was written in response to a letter containing a list of questions pertaining to Christian doctrine.

"Faith, Hope, and Charity" begins by discussing is a wide-ranging work, as its origin might suggest. Most of the work is loosely organized around the apostles' creed as a framework for explaning the faith. As such, it discusses belief in God, the goodness of creation, the nature of sin, the origin of sin, God's grace and Christ as the means of man's salvation, the church, the resurrection of the dead, the relation between providence and free will, hope and the Lord's prayer, and finally charity as the crowning principal of the commandments and the true good at which man should aim.

---

For my part, the work that really stood out was "Grace and Admonition". The subtlety and power of Augustine's solutions to the problems of grace and free will make truly impressive reading. Several times, I went back to the beginning and started reading again - not because I didn't understand it, but because I was so floored by it, that I simply had to read it again right away.


Emergency Medicine Questions Pearls of Wisdom
Published in Paperback by Boston Medical Pub Inc (15 June, 2001)
Authors: Kevin Mackway-Jones, Elizabeth Molyneux, Barbara Phillips, Susan Wieteska, Bmj Books, Dawson, Fay, Galley, Advanced Life Support Group, and Hatcher
Amazon base price: $45.00
Average review score:

A quick review
This text provides a quick, concise review of the pimary topics covered on emergency medicine exams. I found it to be a good way to prepare for inservice exams and the written boards.


The Spring of Our Exile (Dylan St. John Novels, 4)
Published in Paperback by Bethany House (1999)
Author: Robert Funderburk
Amazon base price: $8.99
Average review score:

Characters "Spring" to Life
The characters in Robert Funderburk's "The Spring of Our Exile" spring to life as real people in this South Louisiana mystery. Dylan, a sheriff's deputy and a complicated man prone to human mistakes, is forced to face the sweaty darkness waiting both in the cajun swamp and in the recesses of his consciousness. He sometimes struggles to maintain his integrity, but, clutching to his faith, he is successful.

His wife and child, the center of his earthly world, often are his strength as he battles those whose corruption includes lies, cheating, illegal drugs, violence, even murder. And then there is "the other woman" who is bent on using Dylan for her own sinister purposes.

The story-line, told amid descriptive passages that bring the reader the smells and sounds of the bayou and paint a picture of a sultry, lush Louisiana, tells of a beautiful, former grade school girlfriend of Dylan's, who returns from Hollywood seeking Dylan's help, charming her way into his life. Dylan, unknowingly, must contend with her rather nefarious agenda, while investigating a series of seemingly unrelated lawless acts that drag Dylan into the shadowy, sordid world of the criminal.

And, there, standing among the shadows is a beautiful and very familiar face.

In the end, will good triumph over evil, right over wrong? ...... have faith.


Matters for Judgement: An Autobiography
Published in Hardcover by Palgrave Macmillan (1979)
Authors: J. R. Kerr and Lord Of St Marylebo Hailsham
Amazon base price: $30.00
Average review score:

Kerr could bore for Australia
John Kerr was a Judge and later Governor General of Australia. He is famous as he was Governor General during Australias Constitutinal crisis of 1975. On that occasion there was a deadlock between the conservative controlled senate and the labour controlled house of representatives. The Labour party lead by Gough Whitlam had just been forced to an election the previous year by the conservatives and were not keen to go again especially as the economy was not in good shape.

Kerr dismissed the Whitlam Government installed the conservative leader Fraser and called an election. The decision was controversial at the time as it was thought by some that the conservatives would give in and in dismissing Whitlam when he did Kerr handed the conservaties a massive electoral advantage.

More recently Kelly in his book 1975 has critized Kerr on other grounds. That is in his view the failure to comunicate with Whitlam was a serious error.

After teh events Whitlam put out a book attacking Kerr not only for his decision but attacking him as a person suggesting that he was a drunk and a social crawler. This is Kerr's response.

Unfortunately Kerr did not have the gift of the light quip or even the light anything. The book is written in leaden prose and in a tone that is hard to like. It probably now would only be of interest to historians or people who have a high boredom tolerance.

Following the writing of this book, Kerr who had a slight problem with alcohol and who gave a speech at the Melbourne Cup obviously very drunk went into exile moving to Europe.

The social damage done by this episode in Australia's history was repared by the success of the Hawke Labour government and by the parties electoral success in Queensland.

Not a review
This is not a review, I would simply point out that this book should be linked with the former Australian PM, Gough Whitlam, as the author of Matters for Judgement is the one who dismissed Whitlam.


African-American Scientists: Robert Jones, Reatha Clark King, Walter Massey, Franklyn G. Prendergast, Larry Shannon (Capstone Short Biographies)
Published in School & Library Binding by Capstone Press (1996)
Authors: Jetty St. John and Jetty St John
Amazon base price: $22.60
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Three Go Searching
Published in Paperback by Moody Press (1977)
Authors: Patricia St. John, Patricia Mary St John, and Robert G. Doares
Amazon base price: $5.99

Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2

Reviews are from readers at Amazon.com. To add a review, follow the Amazon buy link above.