Related Subjects: Author Index
Book reviews for "Turner,_Morris" sorted by average review score:

Building Skin-on-Frame Boats
Published in Paperback by Hartley & Marks (27 November, 2000)
Authors: Robert Morris and Edward R. Turner
Amazon base price: $17.47
List price: $24.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $16.93
Buy one from zShops for: $16.37
Average review score:

Building Skin-on-Frame Boats
Just plainly superb.

Review of Building Skin-on-Frame boats
An exellent book. Detailed where necessary, but still concise. I am in the process of building the Greenland design that Morris recommends as a first qayaq and find the directions easy to follow and complete.
You can order supplies from Morris if you choose to build a boat.

Great book for learning how to build a skin boat
Great pictures and drawings. Occasional unclear directions, but over-all, this is the best book I have ever seen for building a
skin boat.


America's Black Towns and Settlements
Published in Paperback by Missing Pages Productions (1999)
Author: Morris Turner
Amazon base price: $12.95
Used price: $190.10
Average review score:

A fine piece of detective work
A fine piece of detective work reflecting the tenacity of a passionate scholar Dr. James Gray, past chair American Multicultural Studies Department Sonoma State University


The Legacy of Buford Pusser: A Pictorial History of the "Walking Tall" Sheriff
Published in Hardcover by Turner Pub Co (1997)
Authors: Turner Publishing Company and W. R. Morris
Amazon base price: $34.95
Average review score:

the legacy of buford pusser
this is a must have for collector of walking tall, buford pusser pic i have never seen it great if you can get it grap it if you have to use a big stick it worth the money


The Human Zoo: A Zoologist's Classic Study of the Urban Animal (Kodansha Globe)
Published in Paperback by Kodansha International (1996)
Authors: Desmond Morris and Philip Turner
Amazon base price: $10.50
List price: $15.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $3.69
Collectible price: $4.65
Buy one from zShops for: $9.84
Average review score:

How many people go to the zoo everyday?
why we do what we do, why we feel the way we feel are the topics of many good books today but this excellent book takes the questions at hand and approaches them from a unique perspective. Edmund Morris, a zoologist, uses his years of study with animals in an unnatural environment, the zoo and compares their actions to those of their ancestors, humans who are living in an unnatural environment as well. This book is extremely relative to the times, and gives wonderful insights as to why we live in a world with escalating tensions among countries, races etc.. If the reader allows her/his mind to be as creative as the author who wrote this book the possibilities to make improvements in ones life and in the world at large are endless. (The author sites Jane jacobs and her excellent work The death and life of Great American Cities which I would also highly recommend)

"Well, let's bungle in the . . . zoo?"
Like Desmond Morris's _The Naked Ape_, this book is an old friend of mine. The second volume in his well-known trilogy (the third is _Intimate Behavior_), this one makes a compelling case that modern cities are less like "jungles" and more like zoos.

Other animals, Morris says, don't behave in the wild the way humans do in cities. But the sort of erratic violence and heightened self-stimulation in which we find modern humans engaging _does_ have a counterpart in the rest of the animal world: animals do act that way . . . in zoos.

Essentially, Morris's claim is that many millions of years of evolution have equipped us for life in small communities in which everybody knows everybody else and there's enough room for us to move around without klonking into each other all the time. We are not, in short, adapted to the modern metropolis, and that's why "city folk" are so danged weird. And our misattribution of our maladaptive behavior actually gives the jungle an undeserved bad name.

So what's a naked ape to do? I don't know that the intervening years since this book was first published have generated a whole lot of solutions. I guess that's, um, life in the big city.

But as with so many problems, just being aware of the problem is at least half the solution. As with Morris's other books (especially _The Naked Ape_), it's profoundly helpful to step back and see ourselves as one biological species among others (whether or not that's _all_ we are).

Okay, maybe that's not all we are; maybe the fact that we _can_ thus step back from ourselves is the single most important fact about our species. If so, that makes this book more valuable, not less.

So think of this book (and Morris's others) as a way to give your "I" a little distance on your "me," if you know what I mean. And yes, that does mean that I'm recommending a couple of books on evolutionary anthropology as helpful to your spirituality.

A mind-shaking interpretation!
Beautifully written...an elegant work about relationship between nature and human kind. Strongly recommended...


History Of The Pioneer Settlement Of Phelps And Gorham's Purchase, And Morris' Reserve
Published in Library Binding by Reprint Services Corp (1852)
Author: Orsamus Turner
Amazon base price: $99.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Rural Planning and Management (Managing the Environment for Sustainable Development Series)
Published in Hardcover by Edward Elgar Pub (2001)
Authors: Joe Morris, Alison Bailey, R. Kerry Turner, and Ian Bateman
Amazon base price: $250.00
Used price: $67.00
Buy one from zShops for: $184.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Social Psychology
Published in Paperback by Transaction Pub (1990)
Authors: Morris Rosenberg, American Sociological Association, and Ralph H. Turner
Amazon base price: $17.95
Used price: $33.24
Collectible price: $11.91
Average review score:
No reviews found.

The theory of consumer's demand
Published in Unknown Binding by Arno Press ()
Author: Ruby Turner Morris
Amazon base price: $
Used price: $29.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Subjects: Author Index

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