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Book reviews for "Wierzynski,_Gregory_Hieronim" sorted by average review score:

The Cormorant
Published in Paperback by White Wolf Publishing Inc. (1996)
Authors: Stephen Gregory and John Van Fleet
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A chilling ghost story.
Gregory portrays the cormorant as a perfect blend of malevolence and mystery. Short but memorable, with an ending that is both haunting and surprising.

Atmospheric tale whose emotional impact will sneak up on you
Initially, I intended to criticize "The Cormorant" by Stephan Gregory for failing to be as compelling as I had expected a book touted as "Award-winning" to be. However, as I began writing this review, my opinion began to take another shape. Gregory does a masterful job of creating the landscape and atmosphere of the Wales countryside and the cozy cottage where the narrator and his wife take residence after the death of his uncle Ian. It is quite easy for the reader to become enveloped in the world the author has created: to cozy up to the fire and watch the pre-Christmas snow falling outside the slowly-fogging windows, all the while sensing the sulking, angry presence of the ugly joke, the cormorant, trapped in a cage in the back yard. Based on atmosphere alone, "The Cormorant" is a book whose images and emotions will linger in your mind. The ending of the story, the portion of the book with which I was going to find fault, is still unraveling itself in my mind. At first, I felt that the ending didn't create the kind of emotional impact that I felt the author had intended. I now believe that my feelings had more to do with the fact that I stayed up late reading and got little sleep, rather than any failings on the author's part. I feel a bit like a shock victim coming out of it: the emotions are rising up in me as I think back on the story, and plotlines that I felt were left unresolved are weaving themselves together. The sheer fact that a novel can leave this kind of lingering impression should be enough to recommend it. White Wolf publishing, under their Borealis line, has published a number of great books in recent years by authors who are not well know in the United States. After reading several of the titles published in this line, I now browse through bookstores in search of the Borealis imprint. Some other titles in the line include "The Immaculate" by Mark Morris, "Resume with Monsters" by William Browning Spencer, and "Virgins and Martyrs" by Simon Maginn. Check them out!!!


The Cornflake House
Published in Paperback by Picador (2000)
Author: Deborah Gregory
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You cannot escape the madness of The Cornflake House!
It is an absolutely wonderfully written novel ~~ from the very first word ~~ you are captured by Gregory's voice in this novel. She admits in the fly jacket that she was inspired by a house her father had built and boy, is this story colorful and vividly charsmatic. You cannot put this book down! I can guarantee that!

Written in a first-person narrative, Eve is the oldest of 7 children and the daughter of a exceptional woman, Victory, Eve tells the story of The Cornflake House children. Fathered by different men and raised by a single mother, Eve describes a non conventional family whose various talents are always at odd with the rest of society. Eve narrates this story from her berth in prison ~~ where she was accused of arson and of murdering her mother. How she got there and what happens after the court case are what makes this novel so unique. I can't tell you too much ~~ only pick up this book and read for yourself!

I cannot remember the last time I enjoyed a first-person narration ~~ but this one beats all. Gregory writes very vividly and with imagery ~~ and she never lets you forget the plotline of the story. She keeps switching back and forth from Eve's childhood to adulthood, but the switch is done so gently as if she is a master storyteller. She is a master storyteller ~~ one of the best I've encountered in a long time. Since this is her debut novel ~~ I am anxious to read what else she has written.

If you are looking for a story about family ties ~~ I highly recommend this book. Eve will share with you her story and she won't disappoint.

5-8-02

Well-written story that embraces people's differences

As Eve sits in a jail cell, she wonders how her magic failed to warn her. Instead her visitor, Matthew Prithcard, simply stole her ability to speak. Once Matthew left, Eve decides to write to her extraordinary visitor, whom she has fallen for in a blink of an eye, explaining herself and her family.

Eve is the oldest of seven children sired by different fathers. Her mother Victory used her abilities to see the future to attain first prize in a cereal contest. To the chagrin of their new neighbors, Victory and her seven children move into a brand new house in a classy part of town. Instead of trying to fit in, the family enjoyed shocking their staid neighbors. However, this only made things turn ugly as their biased neighbors think the worse of Victory and her horde. Eve has her own child, a teenage boy who has been in trouble with the law and now lives somewhere on the streets. With her trial about to begin, Eve hopes Matthew will be more tolerant than most of the Londoners she has met.

THE CORNFLAKE HOUSE is a delightfully, offbeat tale about a family that emphasizes its differences from the norm even as that causes problems of distrust and hatred. The characters are mostly eccentric, but in a convincing way. The story line is entertaining as readers relish the various oddities of Victory and her children. Dr. Covey embraces that tolerance is okay but not enough. Acceptance and taking pleasure from our differences leads to fulfillment. In her debut novel, Deborah Gregory provides that message in an enjoyable tale.

Harriet Klausner


Dangerous Markets: Managing in Financial Crises
Published in Digital by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ()
Authors: Dominic Barton, Roberto Newell, and Gregory Wilson
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A unique and intriguing book
If you are interested in financial crises in emerging markets, or have to manage a company during one, you will learn from this book.

Two features make the book unique in the financial-crisis literature. First is real-world experience. While the authors are up on their economic theory, the book's real contribution is the fruit of years of practice. From poring over the innards of banks' loan books to working out a national re-structuring plan, these guys have actually done it, and done it in multiple nations. Until now, the theoretical works of academia and the IMF/World Bank have had the field pretty much to themselves. This book is a refreshing break, and a vital complement.

Second is that the book speaks not just to policymakers, but to the private sector. There's plenty of advice out there for central bankers and finance ministers for crisis-management; there hasn't been anything for corporate executives and bankers. This book fills that void. If I were a CEO managing during a crisis, I'd want this book on my nighttable.

A must-read for managers and investors.
Very timely. In today's world, managers should be worrying about how to anticipate and avoid financial crises. An important read for both proactive managers and investors.


The Day Paper: The Story of One of America's Last Independent Newspapers
Published in Hardcover by The Day Publishing Co. (2000)
Author: Gregory N. Stone
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The Day Comes Alive
This well researched volume is a history of The Day Paper, its inception and growth under the revered Theodore Bodenwein (1864-1939), and its evolution over the years into the independent, well staffed paper of record for New London and Southeastern Connecticut. The well researched book (and in many places opinionated which makes it all the more interesting) chronicles the history, the economy, politics and personalities of New London since the Civil War to the present through the eyes of the paper and its editors.

But it is much more than history. It is a story of people and how several strong minded people, especially Mr. Bodenwein, shaped the paper into a community institution and made a difference. It is a story of the survival of The Day as an independent institution as it weaved its way through the Depression, two world wars, the death of Mr. Bodenwein, disinherited heirs, the paper's subsequent bureaucracy, the machine politics of this very ethnic town, the Internal Revenue Service and its reinvention as a modern institution.

Greg Stone, a native son, made New London come alive through his many anecdotes and opinions. And importantly, The Day (its writers, its management and directors) deserves accolades for enabling Greg Strong to write this book. No wonder it is the paper of record for New London and the surrounding county. As a former Day paperboy and New London native who reads theday.com from his desk in Los Angeles, thank you.

A "Day" to Remember
THE DAY PAPER: The Story of One of America's Last Independent Newspapers, by Gregory N. Stone, The Day Publishing Company, New London, 2000

Sometimes you approach a book with great anticipation, and at other times, with an equally great apprehension. I approached THE DAY PAPER, by Gregory N. Stone, with both of those two mind sets in full operational mode. I was eager to read it, because the history of any daily paper that has been around for almost 120 years has the potential to be interesting. In addition, as a regular reader of The Day, and someone with a particular interest in the history of the area it covers, I had a built-in bias towards the subject. But there were good reasons to be skeptical, too. A history that's published by the same paper it chronicles? It didn't sound promising. What kind of objectivity could I expect? I braced myself for what might well turn out to be an eyeball-glazing puff piece. Well, I need not have worried. THE DAY PAPER is not only a good book, it is a sensationally good book. Gregory N. Stone has somehow managed to distill in its pages the whole multifaceted story of The Day and the community it serves in a way that literally pulls the reader along. There are surprises on every page. Gossip. Jokes. Wry insights. Even the occasional tug at the heartstrings, for the sentimentally inclined. Most significantly, there is no pandering, no glossing over of the more embarrassing details, nothing to slow down the pace or cause the reader to wonder what "really happened." The credit for this wonderful book (and I mean that--it really is wonderful) must go to its author, who has somehow found a way to piece together an extraordinarily diverse saga covering thousands of lives, hundreds upon hundreds of incidents, occurring over a century and more, and to give it a shape and a dynamic that impels the reader to want to know what happens next... and next... and next. The author has certain advantages going for him, and he has made good use of them all. First, he has been blessed with publishers who had the wisdom and taste to keep out of his way. As Stone describes it in his introduction, he was instructed to tell the story of the paper "warts and all," and he has done just that. Second, he has a subject that is compact enough to be seen whole, rather than piecemeal. He is able to treat the New London area and its newspaper intimately, so that the reader can follow a remarkably coherent story of the city and The Day as together they pursue their combined destiny from the post-Civil War era to the present. The third advantage Stone has going for him is that he has a hero, an extraordinary, almost legendary hero, the remarkable Theodore Bodenwein, whose rags-to-riches biography and lifelong commitment to New London gives the story its thrust, its moral center, and finally, its remarkable resonance. Bodenwein, who ran the paper for almost fifty years, from 1891 until 1939, was a newspaperman of remarkable ambition and brains, who grasped to a degree few others matched, the symbiotic relationship between a newspaper and its community. Like the more famous immigrant publisher, Joseph Pulitzer, he had a strong sense of public responsibility, and felt obliged to serve those to whom he sold newspapers. Bodenwein died in 1939, having fought innumerable battles to improve the city and to outsmart competitors (in 1900 there were three dailies in New London), but he was determined that his newspaper would not die with him. By the terms of his will, he made The Day as close to immortal as human ingenuity and the laws of inheritance could devise. Essentially, he disinherited his heirs, and locked the newspaper's ownership in a trust, so that it might always be able to protect itself from being gobbled up by some predatory chain. As Gregory Stone makes clear, Bodenwein's legacy is still very much alive, and a remains a cornerstone of the newspaper's culture. But as he also makes clear, his hero was a human being, not a plaster saint. Bodenwein led a full life, and Stone lets us in on a lot of interesting details, including his roving eye, his various real estate schemes, certain personal pecadillos, and the alacrity with which he was able to switch political affiliations when it suited his purposes. What does the book cover? Just about everything. It begins, in the style of Citizen Kane, with the death of the press baron Theodore Bodenwein, then flashes back to his arrival, as a five year old immigrant from Dusseldorf, to the little city of New London. Stone paints a beguiling picture of what it must have been like in the 1870s, when local boosters were already promoting New London's healthy climate, deep water harbor, railroad connections and strategic location as the perfect combination of factors for the metropolis of the future. (Sound familiar?) I was particularly taken by the description of Bertie LaFranc, the star attraction at Lawrence Hall, who billed herself as a "pedestrienne," and entertained local audiences by walking fifty miles in less than twelve hours along a course within the hall that had been marked out by a surveyor. (Apparently, it didn't take a whole lot to attract a crowd in New London in those days.) Stone's story continues at a rollicking clip, chronicling the ups and downs of New London and The Day, identifying seemingly unconnected events, and tracing the way things grow and change. We see how an apparently insignificant U.S. Navy coaling station, established after the Civil War, gradually grew into the most important submarine base in the world; we witness the launching, in 1904, of the world's largest ship, the Minnesota, at the Groton shipyard, which eventually metamorphosed into Electric Boat; we see how the advent of electrical power led to the development of trolleys, which in turn enabled The Day to expand circulation; how the founding of Connecticut College and the Coast Guard Academy improved the city's academic profile (while simultaneously playing hob with the tax base)....


Dead Luck
Published in Paperback by American Literary Press (01 May, 1999)
Author: Gregory Yawman
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Good luck with "Dead Luck"
Greg Yawman is a talented writer who has "done it again". "Dead Luck", his second novel, was even more ejoyable to read than his first piece of work, "The Ultimate Plan". Once I started reading this book, it was difficult to put down.

The book takes place in the Baltimore area, and anyone who reads it and lives in Baltimore, will find themselves visualizing locations in the book. If you don't live here in Baltimore, it is still a GREAT read. I admire the way that Greg Yawman has been able to capture the essence of the Baltimore culture on paper.

Greg Yawman offers the reader an interesting, fast paced storyline that is "peppered" with vivid descriptions offering the reader a "spicy" treat that is savored like a good steak coooked on a grill and a glass of cold beer on a warm summer evening.

If you have not read this book, you are missing a truly enjoyable experience.

Dead Luck is a "Dead Ringer"
Greg Yawman has proven he is the "Master of the Metaphor", the "Sultan of Similes". Dead Luck takes you on a vivid journey through the dark, perilous streets of Baltimore and into the serenity of rural Maryland. Yawman paints a picture in your mind, so realistic, so clearly perceptible, it would make Bob Ross jealous.

Yawman has captured the imaginations of us all, by leading us through his story with a stripper from Baltimore's Block, as the heroine we all would like to "feel"....... for. Greg gives you the opinion he has personally lived through many experiences from "The Block", leaving us to wonder if the dancer is really a fictional character or a memory from his misinterpreted past.

Greg may lose some readers with his use of some odd words, such as, sycophant and subterfuge, but as long as you have a dictionary handy, you can raise your beefy arm and give it a big thumbs up!


Democratic Religion: Freedom, Authority, and Church Discipline in the Baptist South, 1785-1900 (Religion in America Series)
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (1996)
Author: Gregory A. Wills
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Essential reading for Southern Baptists
I grew up in a Southern Baptist Church hearing that Southern Baptists oppose all use of creeds, don't pratice church discipline, and don't believe in a Calvinistic view of God's sovereignty. A lot of people try to argue that as well as being like this today, Southern Baptists were always like that. Gregory Wills totally undermines these understandings of Southern Baptist history. Unlike modern SBC historians who take an understanding of Baptist life that has existed only since 1900 and assume things have always been that way, Wills does exhaustive research into the way local churches in Georgia actually believed and behaved in the 19th century. Wills proves that most SBC churches in Georgia held to Calvinistic beliefs, regularly practiced church disciplined, and favored the disciplinary use of creeds. This book is essential reading for any Southern Baptists interested in the reformation of our denomination.

A Churches that Disciplines its Members is Healthy!
Democratic Religion is an interesting discussion on the topic of Church discipline and the authority that Church governments exerted over memberships in the 19th century. Gregory A. Wills, the author, wrote the book from a point of interest discovered when writing a short article on the subject of a nineteenth century preacher. Wills' study expanded into a book on the story of nineteenth century church polity focusing on the peculiarities of Georgia churches. Nevertheless, the book is also a commentary by way of implication of the status of the church today. Readers will not be able to help but examine their own churches in the light of some of the positive aspects of 19th century religious life and find their own experience a little lacking. Lacking primarily in the advantages of a strong religious authority over church members and a measure of real accountability added to that authority. The first three chapters deal generally with a form of uniquely American church government. The author was influenced by the book The Democratization of Christianity, by Nathan Hatch. Hatch evidently suggested that American preachers developed a cultural contextual style of preaching and church government, casting the gospel in a "new, populist, individualist form." However, Wills is not trapped by the motif of Hatch and clearly communicates that southern Baptists were not entirely democratic in the administration of church polity. Meaning that Baptists tended to also hold to the traditions of the reformation by asserting tremendous authority over church memberships by the adherence to and practice of strict disciplinary procedures. These disciplinary procedures where in the form of "trials" or "dealings" and each church had its own way of dealing with what Wills calls "the texture of discipline" (23). Nevertheless, "trials" were informal events which strove to hear and answer charges, render verdicts, and (hopefully) restore the accused to fellowship. The authority of these proceeding rested in their jurisdiction, over the membership only, and in their ability to either forgive or excommunicate members. The ultimate outcome of these proceedings tended to be restoration and renewal of the church in terms of real revival. In the forth and fifth chapter the authors tuns his attention to, first, the role of women in church polity, and then the role of black slaves. Women seem to have had some degree of freedom to participate in the democratic process of discipline but less ability to participate in matters of church government-the same double standard was applied to slaves as well. Southern whites considered slaves to have enhanced spirituality in matters of basic morals yet unable to rule because of their low intelligence. The sixth chapter briefly describes the struggle of their system of ecclesiastical authority to "ensure pure belief as well as pure deportment" (84). The seventh chapter describes the southern Baptist practice of adhering strictly to creeds, associational authority over local churches, and the issues of Calvinism. Ironically, and in contrast to anti-creed sentiments of the post-modern era, 19th century Baptists seemed to use creeds very prolifically. Finally, chapter eight tells the story of declining church discipline practices which would cease, for all practical purposes, by 1920.


Deshawn Days
Published in School & Library Binding by Lee & Low Books (30 May, 2001)
Authors: Tony Medina, R. Gregory Christie, and Gregory Christie
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Any child would enjoy and learn from this book!
Mr. Medina's "DeShawn Days" captures what life looks like from the view of a child growing up in an urban and distinctly ethnic area. DeShawn is an African-American child, but this is only by coincidence. He describes his world from a universal perspective-- he sees and experiences both love, friendship, play, and family bond like any other kid would, except these experiences are juxtaposed against what can sometimes be a harsh and unforgiving landscape. Mr. Medina somehow presents just the right balance between both the difficult realities as well as the, yes, believe it or not, joys, both of which actually do exist in what some folks like to call "the ghetto." It's reading that I think kids like DeShawn will relate to, and other kids will learn, understand, and yes, enjoy.

DeShawn Days
Tony Medina shares his inner city neighborhood with lively verse, a sense of humor and a tender heart. Reaching out to his young audience, Medina's story inspires joy and compassion without being the least bit didactic.

R. Gregory Christie's energetic paintings celebrate De Shawn's world with sensitivity and passion. Bravo, this book is a gem.


Designer Food
Published in Hardcover by Rowman & Littlefield (15 January, 2002)
Author: Gregory E. Pence
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The controversies over genetically altered foods continue
The controversies over genetically altered foods continue and this addresses many questions regarding the ethics of such food; from a history of altered food's rise around the world to related issues of world hunger, food sabotage, and political and health debates. A well-rounded survey of a host of issues relating to food safety.

Just what I needed
Up here in farm country, food is a big issue,so the ethics of GM Food hits home here.This book made my college term paper for me and got me an A. Has 4 different worldviews, but you know where Pence stands.


Dirty Tricks: British Airways' Secret War Against Virgin Atlantic
Published in Paperback by Virgin Publishing (2000)
Author: Martyn Gregory
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No ethics, little regard for legality, kill the competition
A horrendous expose of blatent efforts to quash the competition on the part of both British Airways and American Airlines, headed by several of Britain's establishment figures, several of who "retired" shortly after book publication. But, as one would think only happening in fiction, one of the main players rose to the top again, and is currently the major player. The most alarming aftermath is that this book was suddenly "out of print" very shortly after publication, not only in the US, but in the UK and Europe. I was loaned a copy by an aviation colleague (who received it as a gift from a Londoner), read it and immediately tried to purchase it three years ago. Am still trying. Could it only be a coincidence that during all the political machinations by both BA and AA to join forces, there were no copies of this book available to the public? One of the many horrifying aspects of this book is the way one company can get into the computer system of another in order to cause havoc.

Excellent review of unethical business practices
Thoroughly researched account of paranoia and dirty business practices used by BA against Richard Branson and Virgin Airlines from smear and innuendo through poaching passengers in the airports to impersonating Virgin staff. Extremely unsettling expose of the British Establishment uniting with vested interests to do down the underdog led this writer to vow never to travel with BA again: one of the main plotters is now running the company. Reads like a thriller, and additional material for the paperback version detailing a campaign of vilification and vandalism against a member of the public and an unholy alliance between BA and Heathrow police force almost beggars belief - and should cast a long shadow over the close relationship between American Airlines and BA. Essential reading for everyone in business and every airline passanger. First-rate investigative journalism


Dr. Ellis's Ultimate Diet Secrets Lite
Published in Paperback by Targeted Body Systems Publishing (24 January, 2003)
Author: Dr. Gregory S. Ellis
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Finally, the weight loss answer!
Over the years I have read hundreds of weight loss books. The result has been total confusion, as I muddled through conflicting information. Count your points, eat low fat, boost your metabolism with supplements, eat all you want but eat low carb, etc. Hundreds of different books all with a different opinion on how to lose weight.

When a friend told me about Dr. Ellis's book, "Dr. Ellis's Ultimate Diet Secrets Lite", I figured it was just another diet scheme dreamed up by the author to make himself rich and would probably make me fatter. I had dieted myself up the scale, trying out different plans. Gained 20 pounds eating all the fats and protein on one actresse's well known diet plan. Lost but quickly regained weight watching points on another plan. You name it, I tried it and ended up regaining weight and getting fatter.

But the desire to lose weight was strong so I decided to read Dr. Ellis's book. I purchased the LITE version. The depth of Dr. Ellis's knowledge is so impressive, I later anted up for the BIG version of his book. But this review will focus on his LITE version.

The book really begins with the cover. Dr. Ellis is pictured on the cover and his physique is spectacular. It's obvious he practise what he preaches. Over the years Ellis has experimented with his own body and in labs and explains clearly in this book exactly what adjustments you must make to lose weight and keep it off permanently. He has a PhD in Physiology and is an expert in bodyweight regulation.

Ellis exposes the myths surrounding weight loss, that have caused failure and frustrations for hundreds of thousands of people. And he spells out exactly what one must do to get rid of unwanted pounds forever.

No dieting Ellis believes in simple changes that will give you permanent results. The first key is that calories DO count. The sellers of the low carb books would like you to believe that there is a metabolic advantage to their program. Ellis dispells this myth and explains exactly how and why calories are the bottomline.

Ellis does not stress dieting. His program involves making wise choices to lose weight. Eat a little less and burn more activity calories and you will achieve your desired goal.

Ellis describes exactly how to do that in the book. And for all those looking for the magic fix explains why it isnt out there!

Though this is the LITE version of the Big book it is jam packed with information. Chapters include physical activity, behavoir modification, the plan to lose weight, why low fat diets don't work, ketosis, the scoop on low carbohydrate diets and much more!

Despite the science in the book, Ellis manages to explain everything clearly. And your interest and excitement in the book will grow page after page as you realize how you have been duped in the past and have finally found the answer to your weight loss woes.

Once you have read the book you will know exactly what to do to lose weight and keep it off permanently!

All the facts, smaller price
Since there is no NO on this diet you don't become fixated on what you can't have. Instead of following a "to do" list, you learn what happens biochemically to any food that's eaten. This changes how you feel about food before the 3 rules are laid on you. The rules are plain old common sense. ALL diets that fail violate either one or all of these rules. You finally see once and for all WHY everything you did in the past COULD NOT work. You can actually take UDS and combine it to any diet and turn that diet into a winner or just follow it all itself. Dieting is math, not myth. UDS contains the sad truth- none of our pet beliefs are true. If you want something, you have to do something for it. That's why some people are fat- they are the same people that want something for nothing. That's why we admire people with incredible bodies- we know they don't come easy. All the other diet books claim to be EASY. If it's so easy then why would ANYONE be fat. It's because it's not easy. It's not hard but it's also not easy. Without this information you are guaranteed to fail. The "Lite" version has all the facts you need. I recommend the larger more expensive version because Ellis's story is amazing and he tells you what he thinks about EVERYTHING and doesn't hold back. Just be sure to GET THIS BOOK!


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