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Book reviews for "Wilson,_Abraham" sorted by average review score:

Easy Millions
Published in Paperback by Harvest Capital (01 October, 2002)
Author: Abraham Wilson
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Not what I thought it would be - It was better!
It was hard to get (I waited 12 weeks). I was expecting a fully
technical manual on stock trading and what I got was something
better. An author who knows the importance of a solid foundation.

You can expect to gain a well rounded view of money and financial
issues, perspectives and of course investing tactics.

Good book, needs a better title!
Easy Millions is an inspirational book with hard facts on making money in the stock market. Abraham Wilson talks about his own experience in business, and explains how a company gets started, gets listed on a stock exchange and of course how-to profit from moves in stock prices.

I certainly recommend this book to online investors. The book is actually 152 pages.

I wish I had this book 6 years ago. What a good book!
This book has helped me so much. 6 years ago I started on a downward financial spiral. About 5 months ago I was deep in debt and losing hope.

Ofcourse I am still in debt but I've paid about 20% in the past 3 months. I'm a more active investor now, protecting my profits and avoiding losses. What I like about the book is you can learn from it fast. Techniques are understandable. I wonder where I will be in about 6 years time.

The book is very simply written, and has bits and pieces of wisdom that you will want to write down and post around your house.

The author is no "Mr. Burns". He has dedicated his life to giving, he explains that much of the profits of his investing is given to charity work or helping the poor or people who are down and out.

I really wish I had this book 6 years ago.


Herndon's Informants: Letters, Interviews, and Statements About Abraham Lincoln
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Illinois Pr (Pro Ref) (1997)
Authors: Douglas L. Wilson, Rodney O. Davis, and Terry Wilson
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A Masterpiece in Scholarship
In the preface to his "Life of Lincoln", William Herndon expounded that when writing the history of Lincoln's early life "the whole truth concerning him should be known" and there should be "nothing colored or suppressed." Having set the standard Herndon failed to follow it, for there were something's even Herndon must have felt should not be put into print. Scholars wishing to explore Lincoln's early life beyond the insights offered by Herndon's biography had to turn to examining the letters and notes collected for over a twenty year period by himself and his collaborator Jesse Weik. This often proved to be a daunting task. As the editor's in their introduction noted even though available on Micro roll film specific documents are "very hard to locate" and even if located are "very hard to read." To further complicate matters the index to the Herndon collection prepared by the Library of Congress is "neither accurate nor complete." What Editors Douglas L. Wilson and Rodney O. Davis have done in their "Herndon's Informants" is to transcribe all of the known Herndon, Weik letters and notes into a readable and properly indexed Documentary Edition. What they have also done is create a masterpiece of scholarship that will be used by students of Lincoln for decades to come. "Herndon's Informants" offers the student the complete Herndon collection, unabridged and un-editorialized. To anyone who has a strong interest in learning more about Lincoln's early life this is just about all that is available and it simply must become a part of your personal library.


The New Terror: Facing the Threat of Biological and Chemical Weapons
Published in Hardcover by Hoover Inst Pr (05 December, 1999)
Authors: Sidney D. Drell, Abraham D. Sofaer, George D. Wilson, Revolution, and Peace Hoover Institution on War, and Abraham D. Sofaer
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excellent handbook
This book covers everything from the basics of the threat thru the BCW regimes to what the federal government should do to prepare for a disaster of this sort. The closing chapter is what I found the most interesting because of the discussion of ways to deter the use of BCW. The various authors each explain their positions in a thought provoking way that allowed me to think about the problem and arrive at my own conclusions that can be synconized with the writers. This book is great if you want to know what the experts think about this problem and the solutions that they have arrived at.


Our Father Abraham: Jewish Roots of the Christian Faith
Published in Paperback by Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (1989)
Author: Marvin R. Wilson
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Enjoyable textbook
Written somewhat like a textbook with questions at the end of each chapter. I found the subject matter and format easy to read and understand.

I would especially recommend this book to non-Jews who have not had the opportunity to study their roots.

A Good Book But!
There is much to recommend in Dr. Wilson's book. The fact that he teaches two tracks, one for Jews and another for Gentiles reduces its value in my opinion. As a start in understanding the "Hebrew roots of the faith",this book is useful. For a view that there is one God with one set of rules for life this book should be balanced with Take Hold by Ariel and D'vorah Berkowitz.

Our Father Abraham
When people stop by our website and ask us "where do we start? What book do we read first?" this is the book that we start them off with when they start exploring the Hebrew roots of the Christian Faith. We call this book "THE PRIMER"! A must read for every Christian to understand the first century church.


Honor's Voice: The Transformation Of Abraham Lincoln
Published in Audio Cassette by Books on Tape, Inc. (21 December, 1998)
Author: Douglas L. Wilson
Amazon base price: $88.00
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Painfully detailed but a useful picture of Lincoln emerges.
The bad points first...

Being a Linoln buff myself, but certainly not a scholar on the subject, I found this book to be a worthwhile addition to my library but one that is seriously flawed. The first chapter goes into painstaking detail about Lincoln's wrestling match with Jack Armstrong in New Salem. I think a wrestling historian would find it more useful than someone interested in our 16th president. Endless second and third-hand accounts of the match are analyzed in detail. And for what? No reliable conclusions can be drawn from these contradictory accounts. The first chapter could have been summarized in two words...who knows? And I'm not really sure who cares either. I found this chapter to be a bit bizarre.

My other criticism of the book is that it is very poorly organized, in my opinion. In fact, only the first chapter sticks to the topic of it's title. The rest of the book seems to be organized into chapters only for the purpose of giving the reader a needed break from the tedium. Sure, you will find something about Lincoln's relationship with women in the chapter entitled, "Women," but you will find just as much about this subject in just about any other chapter. And you will learn about his politics in the chapter about women, etc. It almost seems as if Mr. Wilson just pinned a title to the top of a page now and then without regard to what followed. This lack of structure also results in a great deal of repetition. The same quotes are repeated again and again and again which would not have been necessary if each chapter stuck with it's title subject. One hopes that this lack of organization is not a reflection of Mr. Wilson's research skills.

On the plus side, if you can wade through the book, which is tedious to the extreme at times, you may end up with a more textured view of Lincoln the man. The book can help one to fill in the blanks of Lincoln's life but it is almost entirely based on educated guesses and conclusions on Mr. Wilson's part. In a sense, the book is reminiscent of Gore Vidal's Lincoln. But such conjecture can be useful, of course if we are searching for that "ring of truth" to fill in the blanks.

All in all, I consider this to be a useful addition to my fairly extensive Lincoln library but I certainly would not recommend it as a first book about Lincoln by any means and I think Mr. Wilson would agree with that assessment. The author writes that the book is not intended for scholars, but I find it difficult to see why the person with a more casual interest in Lincoln would be interested in these endless details which really never reach a conclusion. The book is, however, instructive as to how incorrect information is passed on and accepted as fact by generations of historians.

This book asks more questions than it answers but, ironically, the overall result is a much better picture of Lincoln. I would recommend this book only to the serious Lincoln student.

Tough Sledding
Wilson opens "Honor's Voice" with an overly long introduction to his methodology, which, in brief, is to sort through all the bits and tales and legends about Abraham Lincoln from age 22 to 33, and weighing the stories for credibility and accuracy, reach the truest picture of the young man. Because there is no shortage of material, Wilson has focused on ten themes, including how he educated himself, how he entered politics, his relations with women, and particularly with Mary Todd, etc.

The problem is that it's not clear for whom Wilson is writing. Wilson himself declares that the book is not for academics, but who else would be interested in a work that is less about Lincoln than about stories about Lincoln? Few of the legion Lincoln fans, save scholars, would have the interest or the patience for a tedious historiography and word-by-word analysis of obscure letters and notes about the life of their subject. For example, the first chapter examines a wrestling match Lincoln had at age 22, and fully describes the match and its significance in three interesting pages. The problem is the chapter goes of for 33 pages, citing dozens of sources, including eyewitnesses as well as later biographers, analyzes differences in their accounts of the match, and weighs them against each other for credibility. This approach may be a useful "how to" for amateur historians, but most readers would likely prefer more history and less methodology.

Fortunately, the first chapter is the toughest sledding. The subsequent ones follow the same pattern, but are far more readable, relying less on Wilson's interior dialogues on reliability and veracity. Lincoln's character slowly and arduously emerges, and Lincoln fans with the patience to wade through will find loads of interesting detail, such as on his surveying and early political careers. Wilson also excerpts snatches of Lincoln's favorite poems (Burns, Byron, etc.) to excellent effect in demonstrating both source and reflection of Lincoln's state of mind. The speculation on his melancholy and on his tragic romance with Ann Rutledge are well worthwhile, if a bit tedious.

The book is a good one, but could be much better. Perhaps Wilson will follow up with a book of half the length giving a detailed and straightforward history of this fascinating period in Lincoln's life based on the conclusions from this work, but omitting the tedium and repetition

A Good Guide to Conflicting Evidence
Teachers in criminal justice classes, I am told, often stage mock crimes in their classrooms. In the middle of a lecture, for example, a bandit will barge in, threaten the students, and make off with the professor's wallet. The students, at first shocked but then relieved when told that it was a staged event, are then asked to describe the event. What did the suspect look like? How tall was he? What color hair did he have? What was he wearing? What did he say? Invariably, there are multiple answers to those questions. People saw different things. No one version of what occurred is totally accurate.

Wilson's book confronts that perennial problem of human perception. Though his 'transformation of Lincoln' plows familiar ground - how one solitary, unschooled backwoods man transformed himself into a national, albeit polarizing figure, through willpower, endurance, ambition, guts, and brains - his careful forensic method, as judge and jury of a multitude of competing facts and interpretations, makes this book a compelling tale, as much about how history is written as it is about how Lincoln evolved.

And this is why I disagree with the reviews that describe this book as long-winded, tough-sledding and over-detailed. In Honor's Voice, Wilson provides a valuable glimpse into the historian's bag of tricks. Wilson takes each of the iconic moments of Lincoln's life - his storied wresting match with Jack Armstrong, his self-education, his disastrous romance with Ann Rutledge - and peels apart the layers, examining the historical record as closely as possible, evaluating the claims of eyewitnesses and second-hand sources, and holding each up to scrutiny before making any assertions; and even then, he is admirably cautious. Wilson presents a lot of quotes, exactly as written, from contemporaries who witnessed, or claimed to have witnessed, crucial events in Lincoln's life, and asks: Is this the truth? Who could have benefit from enhancing the truth? Who was really there? What about the quote lends it authenticity, or falsity? Yes, the narrative covers the same event numerous times, but this is the price one pays of exactness. Like the criminal justice students who have competing recollections of a recent event, not one of Lincoln's contemporaries knows the whole truth. But taken together, one gets a more clear picture of what might have happened.

The risk, of course, is boredom and the frustration of dealing with multiple sources of the same event; but the reward is a new appreciation of Lincoln the man, as well as the historian's challenge of teasing out the facts in an era long since vanished.


Lincoln Before Washington: New Perspectives on the Illinois Years
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Illinois Pr (Pro Ref) (1997)
Author: Douglas L. Wilson
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Lincoln's Mothers
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday (1981)
Author: Dorothy Clarke Wilson
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New pathways in psychology: Maslow and the post-Freudian revolution
Published in Unknown Binding by Gollancz ()
Author: Colin Wilson
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Psychological foundations of learning and teaching
Published in Unknown Binding by McGraw-Hill ()
Author: John Abraham Ross Wilson
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Psychology of Reading: Foundations of Instruction
Published in Textbook Binding by John Wiley & Sons (1974)
Authors: Mildred Dcoenn Robeck and John Abraham Ross Wilson
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