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Book reviews for "Thomas,_A._M." sorted by average review score:

"M.H." Meets President Harding
Published in Hardcover by Donald I Fine (1987)
Author: Michael Zagst
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A hell of a ride
Zagst, this is a great book. Wonder if you're still writing. It takes history and bends it in interesting ways. Warren Harding, Thomas Edison and other bigwigs go camping... Sounds like a bad joke. Instead it's a good novel.


Mackinac Island: Historic Frontier, Vacation Resort, Timeless Wonderland
Published in Paperback by Chicago Review Press (1997)
Authors: Pamela A. Piljac and Thomas M. Piljac
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Best General Book about Mackinac Island
I think Mackinac Island: Hisotric Frontier, Vacation Resort, Timeless Wonderland is the best all around book about Mackinac Island that is on the market today. It has detailed information about the Islands history and geological evolution that is still very readable. This book covers the many vacation and resorty aspects of the Island also. If you are looking for a readable text book with all the general information about Mackinac Island you could every want, this is the book for you!


Manual of Cardiac Anesthesia
Published in Paperback by Churchill Livingstone (15 January, 1993)
Authors: Stephen J., M.D. Thomas and Jan L., M.D. Kramer
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A Must Have!
The Manual of Cardiac Anesthesia offers the reader a technical and theoretical understanding of the challenges faced in Cardiac Anesthesia today. It incorporates practical information with the essential insights of two experianced physicians.


Mapping the Beat: Popular Music and Contemporary Theory
Published in Paperback by Blackwell Publishers (1997)
Authors: Thomas Swiss, Andrew Herman, and John M. Sloop
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Shhh! Or, the Methodological Earplugs of Cultural Studies
This collection of interesting essays is about things I like. The subtitle is "Popular Music and Contemporary Theory," which promises an all out battle between the "What is Happening?" (knowing) and the "Is it Happening?" (feeling). Or in the language of pop music, between Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On" and REM's "It's the End of the World As We Know It." The fisticuffs between philosophy and rhetoric reverberate here in an articulation specific to cultural studies: The conflict between critic and fan. Is the goal to chart how capitalism and hegemony maintain their grasp on the culture industry or to celebrate the defiances and transgressions that make the Billboard charts a tally in the continual victory of life over death?

Mapping the Beat wants to chart a course between these extremes by tapping the critical powers inherited from Adorno and others without accepting his blanket rejection of popular music. Jacques Attali's Noise, with its Foucault-inspired historicist approach to music and culture, offers a way to conceptualize this methodological pathway. "Mapping the beat," the collection's introduction explains, means following Attali's lead in tracing the shifting boundary between what culture understands to be music and noise. Because the designation of 'music' is given to sound with order and because the perception of order is ideological, the boundary between music and noise is a political one. The boundary always reflects a political reality; the structure of music reveals/conceals/becomes/reflects the order of things.

The understanding that epistemological assumptions have political ramifications is not new, but Attali's work is important because it provides a conceptual starting place for a serious study of popular music. For one, Attali's celebration of jazz and especially free jazz contradicts Adorno's rejection. Adorno preferred the atonal algorithms of 12-tone compositions, in which all 12 tones of the scale have to be sounded before one is repeated so that one key does not become dominant. Adorno wanted the musical symbolic to be thwarted consciously, in an approach that could be justified in the abstract. Attali goes the other way, into the material use-value of sound as its own justification, in which improvisational composition reconfigured social relations immediately. Attali's Noise is a high theoretical expression of DIY attitude.

Attali's discussion is exciting because it tells us that noise is prophetic. We can look at contemporary music from the self-conscious compositions of John Cage, Brian Eno and Negativland on the one hand to the more visceral sound critiques of Bikini Kill and the Pansies on the other, and consider what the shifting boundaries between music and noise hearken. In this way, mapping the beat is about the relationship between "What is happening?" and "Is it happening?" At its best, the mapping of the beat would be a ritual examination of bones in the hopes of putting language to this feeling of impending we-know-not-what.

The conflict between the pop-music critic ("How should we study this thing?") and the fan ("This blows my mind!") that has famously inscribed itself on the formation of cultural studies is really about methodology. What is this methodology, formulaically announced-as-such by the introduction's subheading "Towards a Mapping of the Beat"? The dominant mode of pop-music analysis is to examine a piece of music at the site(s) of production, textualization and/or consumption. It asks how the music industry created a given product, what the product means symbolically as a text, and who is its audience. By contrast, "mapping" hopes to "cut across the division and links between institution, text, and consumption by focusing on how popular music constitutes a terrain of social and cultural identity that can be mapped in terms of its spatiality or, more precisely, as spaces of noise and places of music" (6). A spatialized analysis recognizes (with Lawrence Grossberg) that "economic, bodily, libidinal, emotional, and political effects, some of which are material and some of which are ineffable--cannot be reduced to the meaning of a cultural text and how that meaning is inscribed in production or interpreted in consumption (7). The significant effects of music have to be accounted for in relation to the physical spaces in which it lives.

With Lefebvre's opposition between representations of space (in which the powerful EYE surveys a field) and spaces of representation (where living practice occurs in quotidian, underground, embodied spaces), "mapping" charts a move from visual models of knowing to aural models of feeling. Much like McLuhan's movement from the visual and linear logic of print to the aural and spatial logic of television, the move from traditional Frankfurt-style analysis to "mapping" constitutes a desire to include the grounds of material existence in any consideration of the figures of popular music.

This move--from a practice of representing space from the imaginary subject position of omniscient third-person analyst towards an appreciation of spaces of representation--is illustrated in the introduction through the difference between an "Action Plan" map for the development of a community in Des Moines and a description of one of the author's own experiences living in that neighborhood. One representation seeks to control the community from afar, while another seeks to reveal it from an internal vantage point. In a certain sense, this is simply a move from critic to fan. In another sense, it is a profound relinquishment of the epistemological power that has traditionally been afforded the scholar in the name of a so-called objectivity. Spatialized analysis, it seems, is at least somewhat similar to situated analysis (a la Haraway).

I can only applaud this approach insofar as it underlines that politics are at stake both in knowledge and in music. The use of a run-down American community as an example reminds us that a 'beat' is not just what the quarter note sometimes gets, it is also the territory assigned to a police officer that pounds it. And if the beat is a territory, then a mapping is always a reterritorialization.

As these essays were gathered from a Drake University conference on popular music and therefore not conceived together, I can suggest an interesting game for the reader of this collection: Ask yourself to what extent the essays follow the methodology or aesthetic whose outlines are traced in the introduction.

If "Mapping the Beat" turns out to be a theoretical aesthetic and not a methodology, all the better! Method, after all, is the ideology of academic conservatism.

In "Mapping the Beat," you may have noticed the italicization that creates a pianissimo in the center of mapping. Is this just a precious typographical tidbit? Was the point only to introduce a visual pun on the topic of music, for which any musical symbol would do? Or is this pianissimo in mapping an injunction to map more subtly, to decapitalize the M in Method . . . or to, as Otis Redding might have suggested, "Try a Little More Epistemological Tenderness."


Market Due Diligence for M&A : FAST & FOCUSED : Secrets to How the World's Smartest Consulting Groups Quickly Get the Inside Story on Markets, Competitors, Technologies
Published in Paperback by BRG Publishing (2001)
Author: Thomas E. Austin
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Concise Road-Map for any M&A Professional - Must Read !
Mr. Austin does an excellent job laying out his unique and valuable methodology for conducting "fast, focused" due diligence for any merger or acquisition. For an executive of any company, the most important consideration in any transaction may very well be the "unknowns." Putting Austin's techniques to work in the diligence period of a transaction will allow you to quickly get the market-based facts, and ultimately make a smart business decision by uncovering the blind spots.


Mayo Clinic Internal Medicine Board Review, 2002-2003
Published in Paperback by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Publishers (15 July, 2002)
Authors: Thomas M., Md. Habermann, Sandra Blaine Fitzpatrick, and Darryl S. Chutka
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Mayo review book
If you are taking the ABIM certification or recertification exam, or you are just reviewing internal medicine, this is the definitive review book to get. It is concise, organized and very well written by the Mayo Clinic authors. I have personally gone to the course twice in Rochester, Minnesota. There were other attendees who have made it an annual pilgrimage. There are review questions and answers after the end of every chapter. There are pearls in every page that you can use in daily medicine practice. I give this book 5 stars, the highest rating.


Mayo Internal Medicine Board Review, 2000-2001
Published in Paperback by Raven Press (15 March, 2000)
Authors: Udaya B. S. Prakash, Thomas M. Habermann, and Mayo Clinic Department Of Internal Medic
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A must-have board review
I love the format of this book. It is easy to follow and above all, a quick read for time-restricted board review. High yield presentations with question and answer format that makes you review what you have just read a second time in your head. It works well for me.


Money, Banking and Inflation: Essays in the History of Monetary Thought
Published in Hardcover by Edward Elgar Pub (1993)
Author: Thomas M. Humphrey
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A classic in monetary economics;prohibitively expensive
It is unfortunate that a book of such wide applicability and interest to anyone doing research in the fields of macroeconomics and the history of economic thought is so high-priced. As D.P. O'Brien said in The Economic Journal, "Virtually no essay in the collection is without interest and it should be on the bookshelves of everybody interested in monetary economics." How about a paperback version?


Mother, May You Never See the Sights I Have Seen: The Fifty-Seventh Massachusetts Veteran Volunteers in the Army of the Potomac, 1864-1865
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (1990)
Authors: Warren Wilkinson and Emory M. Thomas
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First-rate regimental history!
This is a comprehensive and authoritative regimental history, and really sets the standard for this genre. What I like most about it, since I research Canadians who served in the Civil War, was the detailed regimental roster that the authors compiled. Unfortunately, this book is out of print and may be difficult and/or costly to track down, but should you get your hands on a copy, you will not be disappointed.


Naked As Water
Published in Paperback by Xenos Books (1996)
Authors: Mario Azzopardi, Grazio Falzon, and Thomas M. Cassidy
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A very valuable book
NAKED AS WATER is a very exotic volume, a translation by Grazio Falzon of the work of Mario Azzopardi, a contemporary Maltese who writes in Maltese, a language which is a rare blend of Arabic and Italian/Sicilian. The poems themselves are a studied primitivism filled with the primal reality of sea, sun and moon but always with a sophisticated awareness of the "isms" of 20th century art and literature. Or is it possible that this meditation on the nature of time is independent of any referencing back to Dali? ----- "Time is flat/ minute hands roll down stunned/ dripping anstractions..." ( "Suite 345" p. 26 ) (HUGH FOX - Small Press Review, Nov. 1996)


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