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As usual, Dover has provided us with a book of the highest quality: they sew their books instead of gluing them so as for them to stay bound and be flexible, and they print legibly. Unfortunately, legible print is becoming disappointingly rare in modern scores, but Dover is the exception.
For a great score of a great opera at a great price, you can't go wrong with Rossini's Barber of Seville.
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the "Magic Pill"
the "Formula for Future Success"
the "Process Improvement Champion"
the "Return-on-Investment Campion"
HIGHEST IMPROVEMENT POTENTIAL in "PRODUCTIVITY GAIN" IN MANUFACTURING OR BUSINESS BY INFORMATION EXCHANGE IN THE BETTERMENT OF SAVING TIME & MONEY IN OUR PURSUIT FOR PROFITS.
>>> leaving us just to measuring those PROFITS!
"HUMAN-CENTRIC INFORMATION" and not "computer-centric"
A must read! to ALL Business
>>> to the Manufacturing audience - reminding us of C.I.M.
by: TED Morawiec, a Process Improvement Consultant
Both thumbs are enthusiastically UP!
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For a contemporary reader Krämer's book might be a difficult lecture though. Krämer puts together facts and legends. Parts of the text are written in Samoan and I could not find out any specific rule for the switching between the German and Samoan languages. The translator of the book, Dr. Verhaaren, remarks in his foreword that Krämer was somewhat inconsistent in his spelling of Samoan words. In my opinion Krämer created a great documentary, but he was not a good writer. The great amount of details, which Krämer often calls by himself just a hearsay, have probably a great value for scholars or lovers of Polynesian mystique, but they might only confuse casual reader. Nevertheless he seems to be very careful about differentiation between facts and rumors.
One of the interesting aspects of this book are the details about the travels, marriages and wars between Samoans, Tongans and even the Melanesian Fijians. Many contemporary families on Samoa know through these reports that their heritage reaches hundreds of miles apart from Samoa. There was a good reason that Samoa became the name "Navigator Islands" after being discovered by the Europeans. Unfortunately, the contemporary Islanders lost solely their ability to navigate on the open Ocean over such distances.
The book contains a large number of beautiful photographs of Samoan people and of the entire Samoa from the colonial period of time as the Great Britain, USA and Germany were all friendly nations "negotiating" their spheres of influence in the Pacific. As you might know, Samoa is still a divided country and the American sponsored government in Pago Pago tries to deepen the differences between the Samoans on the neighboring Islands to prevent a reunification. It is fascinating to see the Samoa as one entity through Krämer's witness document of the past time.
This book is a fascinating "must have" collectible for passionate off road traveler and everyone else looking for the island nostalgia. The publisher, Hawaii Press, made a great effort to provide a splendid quality of typesetting and of print. The price is right. Get this book!
It is a privilege that it is now available in English so that the information can be more widely read.
It's so long since I read my own Gallimard version which I lost long ago in a move. I had hoped to find it in Amazon's list and am pleased to know that there is at least an English version.
I forget now whther Proust's intriguing "Pastiches et Mélanges" is included in "Contre Sainte-Beuve", obviously it doesn't make sense to read that in English - his pastiches of influential late 19th century writers formed an important part of his preparation for the novel.
There are so many great joys in the essays - I remember best the little piece on Classicism and Romanticism which lyrically encapsulates much critical ground covered later by many of the most important modernists.
His essays on Nerval are absorbing too as I recall ("Sylvie") but most of all the general theme of the book is so cogent, a relentless rebuttal of Sainte-Beuve's impoverished positivist critical ideology.
"Contre Sainte-Beuve" is astonishingly contemporary avant la lettre, a salutary tonic for contemporary followers of Comte and Gradgrind.
Many years later, I chose to read the novel and was amazed by it. The portrait of a parochial, socially and sexually repressed Mexican town "on the edge of the storm" of the Revolution is searing. Images from the novel have stayed with me long after plot details have been forgotten, and I remain impressed with Yanez' prose.
The novel very deliberately incorporates the stream of consciousness techniques introduced by Joyce, and may be offputting to people who have little pacience with this narrative structure. On the other hand, the structure works well in providing snapshots of the tensions, needs, resentments, and pain of various villagers in isolated rural Jalisco. This is a work that is generally overlooked by people who have the Latin American literature bug. It shouldn't be, as it is one of the best novels from the region that I have read.
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Expatriate life in Qatar is rewarding and enjoyable. This book has been created with the aim of helping you make the most of your time here.
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I enjoyed both books but would recommend Rable's book for the reader who has a general interest in the battle and doesn't care for detailed accounts of military strategy.
O'Reilly's book will be the standard military account for years to come. This impressive young historian now stands in the ranks of Robert K. Krick, Gordon Rhea and Peter Cozzens in the brilliant way he tells the story of the battle. Maps were helpful to the text (although more maps could always be used!). He did make the mistake of saying Lee's birtday was on Jan. 21 when the general was born on Jan. 19th.
Fredricksburg was the last complete battle where the gray legions were led by the peerless tandem of Lee and Jackson. The battle featured the first urban street fighting on a major scale in the Civil War. Fredricksburg also saw widespread looting by Union troops on a heretofore unprecedented scale.
Anyone planning to tour Fredricksburg should read this book. O'Reilly tells us of the important fighting on Prospect Hill and the slaughter before Marye's Heights (two separate battles).
I would enjoy hearing O'Reilly speak at our Civil War Round Table in Knoxville or on Book TV! I am impressed by this outstand author and Civil War scholar! An excellent work!
Frank has done a superb job of chronicling the events of November and December 1862, casting a critical eye on the conduct of a battle that probably should never have been fought. Utilizing a vast array of sources and with a well-written narrative, Frank O'Reilly has done justice to a campaign that has long required a detailed tactical analysis.
I think that this is one of the finest campaign studies in years, on a par with the superb work of Gordon Rhea.
It's easy to read and the size is standard (9in x 12in). It lies easily on a music stand or desk. It's low price is great for the starving music student. I highly reccommend this for professionals and opera-goers alike.