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Book reviews for "Toth,_Charles_William" sorted by average review score:

Free Verse: An Essay on Prosody
Published in Paperback by Northwestern University Press (1996)
Author: Charles O. Hartman
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Outstanding
I read this book in graduate school in its original edition. I don't know that I've ever read a better treatment of the subject. Hartman makes an excellent case for free verse as a rigorous form, and his discussion of prosody should be required reading for all teachers of 20th century poetry and any poet who wants to work in this form.


Fundamentals of Marketing
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill Companies (1986)
Authors: William J. Stanton and Charles Futrell
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Excellent book for the beginners.
It is an excellent book for understanding the basics of marketing. It can be said that it is the door to the marketing world. An ordinary person can go through this book and then can look forward for other advanced books like Marketing Management of Philip Kotler.


Futurework: Putting Knowledge to Work in the Knowledge Economy
Published in Hardcover by Free Press (1994)
Authors: Charles D. Winslow and William L. Bramer
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A must read for anyone involved in performance improvement
I bought FutureWork after I had already read it. Check out our summary & reactions to this great book at http://www.uwm.edu:80/People/kenhahn/brhome.htm


Government Contract Law: Cases and Materials (Carolina Academic Press Law Casebook Series)
Published in Hardcover by Carolina Academic Press (1999)
Authors: Charles Tiefer and William A. Shook
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Excellent Book for the Government Contract Law Attorney
Quality Texts on Government Contract Law are hard to come by. This is one of the few that is well written. There is an excellent selection of cases and excellent concise commentary. You will get the most out of this text if you are familiar with reviewing cases (i.e. an attorney or law student).


Harvest of Barren Regress: The Army Career of Frederick William Benteen, 1834-1898 (Frontier Military Series, 12)
Published in Hardcover by Arthur H Clark (1985)
Author: Charles K. Mills
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Harvest of Barren Regrets
In his poignant biography of the man whom many believe to be George Armstrong Custer's "Brutus", Mills paints a stirring portrait of an enigma of the Indian Wars, Frederick W. Benteen. If you're a follower of Custeriana or a whimsical student of Custer's Last Stand, you'll find this to be a fascinating character portrayal of a man maybe not so different from you and me. Benteen, a renowned cavalryman and survivor of the Battle of the Little Big Horn, rose to the rank of brevet colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War before joining the Seventh Cavalry at Fort Riley, Kansas in 1867. His story is one of life on America's frontier, a tapestry of the hardship and brotherhood common to the campaigning cavalryman on the Great Plains. "Harvest of Barren Regrets" is an epic tale of a forgotten warrior, one of the last of a lost breed of American frontiersmen, and a book well worth the time and investment.


Heroes and Heroines of Chivalry
Published in Paperback by Fredonia Books (NL) (2001)
Authors: William Patten, William Allan Neilson, and Charles W. Eliot
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Children need heroes
Some quotations from Adam Starchild's wonderful afterword to this book are appropriate:

"Children today are starved for the image of real heroes. Celebrities are not the same thing as heroes. Heroes existed way before celebrities ever did, even though celebrities now outshine heroes in children's consciousness." "Worshiping celebrities leaves children with a distinctly empty feeling -- it doesn't teach that they'll have to make sacrifices if they want to achieve anything worthwhile. No- talents become celebrities all the time. The result is that people don't seem to care about achievement or talent -- fame is the only objective."

"... Despite immense differences in cultures, heroes around the world generally share a number of traits that instruct and inspire people. A hero does something worth talking about, but a hero goes beyond mere fame or celebrity. The hero lives a life worthy of imitation. If they serve only their own fame, they may be celebrities but not heroes. Heroes are catalysts for change. They create new possibilities. They have a vision, and the skill and charm to implement their vision."

"Heroes may also be fictional. Children may identify with a character because of the values projected. People tend to grow to be like the people that they admire, but if a child never has any heroes what images will he copy? Adults need heroes too, but the need is even more urgent for children because they don't know how to think abstractly. But they can imagine what their hero would do in the circumstances, and it gives them a useful reference point to build abstract thinking skills."


A History of the Early Church to AD 500
Published in Paperback by Routledge (31 December, 1990)
Authors: John William Charles Wand and J. W. C. Wand
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This is a book to treasure
It is said that church history is the laboratory of doctrine; well this account of the first 500 years of the life of the church really proves this to be true. Wand manages to condense 500 years into an instructional yet highly educational read. Both scholar and young Christian will find this book a worthwhile addition to their collection. But be warned though its not for the faint hearted, he does not always paint a rosy picture of the 1st 500 years but shows it for what it is, a struggle for the truth to be preserved!


How to Catch More Trout
Published in Paperback by Beaver Pond Pub (01 May, 2001)
Authors: Charles R. Meck, Sabrina Heep, and William Frangos
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Good practical book with lots of tips, but repetitive.
Charlie Meck, the king of PA fly fishers, does it again. Most practical book for better fly fishing yet. Very informative and helpful, but at times repetitive. Overall - must read for trout fishers.


The Hoydens and Mr. Dickens: The Strange Affair of the Feminist Phantom
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (1997)
Author: William J. Palmer
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Palmer "captures" Victorian England much the way Dickens did
Palmer's third book in this "series" continues to capture Victorian England; he is able to evoke the landscape and atmosphere of the time, of the place, and of the characters. Most don't. Aside from Anne Perry and Michael Crichton's "Great Train Robbery," I have not read such convincing Victoriana and the accompanying hypocrisy. Palmer is able to sustain the reader's interest throughout, particularly with his use of other "real" characters such as Florence Nightingale. He is able to make Dickens quite the human character!


In Mohawk Country: Early Narratives About a Native People (Iroquois and Their Neighbors)
Published in Hardcover by Syracuse University Press (1996)
Authors: Dean R. Snow, Charles T. Gehring, and William A. Starna
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An important book on Mohawk history.
As a Mohawk historian I am very impressed with this book, which brings together numerous source which may well have taken me years to find otherwise. It offers us insight into what the early colonists thought about as well as descriptions of what they saw and experienced in visiting the Mohawk villages. I would love to see a similar treatment of the other Iroquois nations as well as other aboriginal peoples. While there are a few accounts that may come across as racist to the modern reader, it is nevertheless an opportunity to "time travel" to the old Mohawk homeland. This book should be required reading for anyone who wants to study Mohawk history.


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