Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2
Book reviews for "Wilson,_Alfred_Jeyaratnam" sorted by average review score:

Probability Concepts in Engineering Planning and Design
Published in Paperback by John Wiley and Sons Ltd (22 February, 1978)
Authors: Alfred H.S. Ang and Wilson Tang
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:

Still the best book
I have used this book and Vol 2 in my graduate and undergraduate courses. Having used a variety of texts for teaching and learning about probability and statistics in an engineering context, I would say the two volumes by Ang and Tang have no rivals. Lots and lots of good engineering type problems.

Excellent text for beginning engineering probability study.
We used this text as the first half of a graduate course in engineering reliability. It presented the concepts clearly and in terms of engineering problems rather than card picking and coin flipping like many other probability and statistics texts. It also provided a thorough treatment of the mathematical basis of the sciences of probability and statistics.

The second volume is also an excellent text, though I have had trouble locating it recently. It treats the issues of reliability and decision analysis in more detail.


The Emerging Principalship (School Leadership Library)
Published in Paperback by Eye on Education (2001)
Authors: Linda Skrla, David A. Erlandson, Eileen M. Reed, and Alfred P. Wilson
Amazon base price: $29.95
Used price: $15.95
Buy one from zShops for: $24.00
Average review score:

Enhanced with an extensive eight page bibliography
The latest addition to the Eye On Education "School Leadership Library", The Emerging Principalship presents an integrated view of contemporary public school principalship. Educational experts Linda Skrla, David A. Erlandson, Eileen M. Reed, and Alfred P. Wilson effectively collaborate to address a wide spectrum of issues, studies, and recommendations for developing better, more effective principals including their recruitment, training, and purpose. Highly recommended for academic library and education departmental reference libraries, The Emerging Principalship is enhanced with an extensive eight page bibliography for further study.


The Tragedy of King Richard the Second (The Pelican Shakespeare)
Published in Paperback by Viking Press (1957)
Authors: William Shakespeare, Matthew Wilson Black, and Alfred Harbage
Amazon base price: $5.95
Used price: $0.21
Collectible price: $3.47
Buy one from zShops for: $3.20
Average review score:

So close to a masterpiece!
My only complaint about this play is that Shakespeare should have had some dialogues where the characters discussed crucial history before the play opens. Gloucester (murdered or dead before the play but mentioned several times) had tried to usurp Richard's crown too many times. History itself is not sure if Gloucester died or was murdered. Bolingbroke for a while conspired with Gloucester and now sees another oppurtunity to usurp the crown.The virtuous John of Gaunt served Richard with honor and integrity and eventually moved parliament into arresting Gloucester for treason. This would of made John of Gaunt's rages all the more valid. Otherwise this play is outstanding! Richard shows himself to be capable of ruling at times, but gains our contempt when he seizes his the honorable John of Gaunt's wealth. John of Gaunt's final rage in 2.1 is a passage of immense rageful beauty. Also, Shakespeare moves us into strongly suspecting that Richard had Gloucester murdered. However, despite Richard's crime, Shakespeare masterfully reverses our feelings and moves us into having deep pity for Richard when he is deposed. The Bishop of Carlisle (Richard's true friend) provides some powerful passages of his own. I can not overestimate the grace in which Shakespeare increases our new won pity for Richard when Bolingbroke (Gaunt's rightful heir) regains his wealth and the death of Gloucester is left ambiguous. 5.1, when Richard sadly leaves his queen and can see that Henry IV and his followers will eventually divide is a scene of sorrowful beauty. 5.4 is chilling when Exton plots Richard's murder. 5.5 is chilling and captivating when Richard dies but manages to take two of the thugs down with him. The icing on the cake is that Bolingbroke (Henry IV) can only regret his actions and realize that he has gotten himself into a troublesome situation. But that will be covered in "1 Henry IV" and "2 Henry IV." We can easily argue that it is in "Richard II" where we see Shakespeare's mastery of the language at its finest.

Richard II
Richard II was incompetent, wastefully extravagant, overtaxed his nobles and peasants, ignored his senior advisors, and lavished dukedoms on his favorites. His rival, Henry of Bolingbroke (later Henry IV), was popular with the common man and undeservingly suffered banishment and loss of all his property. And yet two centuries later Elizabethans viewed the overthrow of Richard II as fundamentally wrong and ultimately responsible for 100 years of crisis and civil war. Queen Elizabeth's government even censored Shakespeare's play.

Shakespeare masterfully manipulates our feelings and attitude toward Richard II and Bolingbroke. We initially watch Richard II try to reconcile differences between two apparently loyal subjects each challenging the other's loyalty to the king. He seemingly reluctantly approves a trial by combat. But a month later, only minutes before combat begins, he banishes both form England. We begin to question Richard's motivation.

Richard's subsequent behavior, especially his illegal seizure of Bolingbroke's land and title, persuades us that his overthrow is justified. But as King Richard's position declines, a more kingly, more contemplative ruler emerges. He faces overthrow and eventual death with dignity and courage. Meanwhile we see Bolingbroke, now Henry IV, beset with unease, uncertainty, and eventually guilt for his action.

Shakespeare also leaves us in in a state of uncertainty. What is the role of a subject? What are the limits of passive obedience? How do we reconcile the overthrow of an incompetent ruler with the divine right of kings? Will Henry IV, his children, or England itself suffer retribution?

Richard II has elements of a tragedy, but is fundamentally a historical play. I was late coming to Shakespeare's English histories and despite my familiarity with many of his works I found myself somewhat disoriented. I did not appreciate the complex relationships between the aristocratic families, nor what had happened before. Fortunately I was rescued by Peter Saccio, the author of "Shakespeare's English Kings". Saccio's delightful book explores how Shakespeare's imagination and actual history are intertwined.

I hope you enjoy Richard II as much as I have. It is the gateway to Henry IV (Parts 1 and 2) and Henry V, all exceptional plays.

An unknown gem among Shakespeare's histories
The thing with Shakespeare histories is that almost no one reads them, as opposed to his tragedies and comedies. I don't know why that is. The histories that are read are either Henry V (largely due to Branagh's movie), Richard III (because the hunchback king is so over-the-top evil), or the gargantuan trilogy of Henry VI, with the nearly saintly king (at least by Part III) who much prefers contemplating religion and ethics to ruling and dealing with the cabals among his nobles.

So why read a relatively obscure history about a relatively obscure king? Aside from the obvious (it's Shakespeare, stupid), it is a wonderful piece of writing - intense, lyrical, and subtle. Richard II is morally ambiguous, initially an arrogant, callous figure who heeds no warnings against his behavior. Of course, his behavior, which includes seizing the property of nobles without regard for their heirs, leads to his downfall. Nothing in his character or behavior inspires his subjects so he has no passionate defenders when one of the wronged heirs leads a rebellion to depose Richard II. But Richard now becomes a much more sympathetic figure -especially in the scene where he confronts the usurper, Richard acknowledges his mistakes, but eloquently wonders what happens when the wronged subjects can depose the leader when they are wronged. What then of the monarchy, what then of England?

On top of the profound political musings, you get some extraordinarily lyrical Shakespeare (and that is truly extraordinary). Most well known may be the description of England that was used in the airline commercial a few years back... "This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle, ..."

If you like Shakespeare and haven't read this play, you've missed a gem.


Banneker : A Case Study of Educational Change
Published in Unknown Binding by Etc Publications (1973)
Author: John Alfred Wilson
Amazon base price: $19.95
Used price: $12.95
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Demography and Natural History of the Common Fruit Bat, Artibeus Jamaicensis, on Barro Colorado Island, Panama (Smithsonian Institution Press)
Published in Paperback by Smithsonian Institution Press (2000)
Authors: Charles O. Handley, Don E. Wilson, and Alfred L. Gardner
Amazon base price: $17.95
Buy one from zShops for: $14.95
Average review score:
No reviews found.

The Forgotten Naturalist: in Search of Alfred Russel Wallace: in Search of Alfred Russel Wallace
Published in Paperback by Arcadia/Australian Scholarly Publishing Pty Ltd (01 December, 2000)
Author: John Wilson
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.

The Forgotten Naturalist: In Search of Alfred Russell Wallace
Published in Paperback by Robert Hymans (01 December, 2000)
Author: John Grenfell Wilson
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Hazards to Drinking Water Supplies
Published in Hardcover by Springer Verlag (1992)
Authors: Alfred Z. Keller and Henry C. Wilson
Amazon base price: $130.00
Used price: $82.59
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Ideology and Experience: Antisemitism in France at the Time of the Dreyfus Affair
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (1988)
Author: Stephen Wilson
Amazon base price: $39.50
Used price: $25.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.

The Life and Times of Sir Alfred Chester Beatty
Published in Hardcover by Metal Bulletin (1985)
Author: A. J. Wilson
Amazon base price: $36.00
Used price: $124.88
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2

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