Boston
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Book reviews for "Boston" sorted by average review score:

Swan Dive: A Novel of Suspense
Published in Hardcover by ISIS Publishing (March, 1989)
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Average review score: 

The other Boston Private Eye"Swan Dive" by Jeremiah Healy is another very satisfying John Francis Cuddy mystery. A good fast paced story with gritty, colorful characters and an abundance of violence. Makes me want to read his next outing "Yesterday's News". Was well worth my hunt to find this out of print copy.

Through My Own Eyes: Single Mothers and the Cultures of Poverty
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Univ Pr (February, 1998)
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Average review score: 

Great book!The goal of Through My Own Eyes was to make mothers and their young children who live at the edge of poverty no longer faceless strangers. This was done by telling their story of living in poverty. This book argued that there is not one single culture of poverty, that there are many cultures of poverty. This study focused on fourteen "working poor" mothers in the Boston area who had at least one child below the age of five.
This book discussed the push and pull factors of being a mother and needing to provide for their family. This book worked to dispel the myth that women prefer to be on welfare over working. This was done by looking at the ways and context within which these women pieced together income, from low paying jobs, welfare, and kin and childcare. This was also done by looking at the pressure that welfare agencies and public policy has put on mothers.
Another myth that was dispelled was that families in poverty have low expectations for their children in school and do not care about their child's education. These women's stories illustrated a concern for their child's success and many of them saw education as a tool for success and social mobility.
The last chapter of the book discussed the lessons learned through this study, which included the difference of economic and social context each woman came from and the resources available within those contexts. The authors also outlined the implications and suggestions for policy makers, community practitioners, and scholars and analysts.
The theoretical framework was a cultural model, specifically cultural difference. I also think that there was a lot of sociological influence.
The most interesting aspect of this book was how easy to read it was. I thought that the book was written in an accessible manner. Though it was obviously academic, I thought that it would be easy for the people who this book was written about to read. I thought that that was important because many books and articles that I have read that have used interviews or ethnography have used so much theory that is inaccessible to the people that it is written about.
The evidence of this book was interviews with women who were working mother's in poverty. Additional research and studies that supported the authors' arguments were also cited and used as examples.
The point from the book that I am going to connect to my broader scope of knowledge is from chapter seven. The title of chapter seven was Cultural Models of Education. This chapter included a discussion about each mother's conception of the purposes of schooling and the type of schooling they saw best fit for their child. The authors of this book found that these parents emphasized teacher-structured learning. They also emphasized literacy and numeracy skills. I thought this was interesting because it connected to recent reading I have done, Lisa Delpit's Other Peoples Children Ellen, Brantlinger's Dividing Classes, and Jacqueline Goodnow's Parents' Knowledge and Expectations.
I thought that the perspective of the parents in Through My Own Eyes connected to Lisa Delpit's argument that the constructivist approach is not working for African American students and that these students need a more behaviorist approach that emphasizes skills. Her argument is that low-income parents prefer conservative forms of schooling because they believe it provides more access to power than progressive approaches. This argument connected to the preferences exhibited by the mothers in Through My Own Eyes who did not like preschools that did not have a behaviorist, teacher-centered approach. Many of the mother's believed that education was their child's chance at social mobility and they did not want to waste their child's time in an atmosphere that was not training them to be successful in school. This perspective was similar to Delpit's because both believe that conservative curriculum enhances poor children's chances for social mobility.
The mother's perspective also connected to Ellen Brantlinger's Dividing Classes. Brantlinger argued that, similar to working class and poor parents, the middle class prefers aspects of conservative pedagogy including an emphasis on skills, facts, and standardized knowledge. I think it is interesting that both of these books use interview strategies with their respective group and both showed parents who believe that behaviorist teaching will enable their children to be successful.
In this chapter I also saw connections to Goodnow's Parents' Knowledge and Expectations. Goodnow discussed the circumstances that parents seek out information about their parenting. She argued that parents seek out information when they need it. Questions on page 147 of Through My Own Eyes connect to questions addressed by Goodnow, "If a mother is not confident about her role in preparing her child for school, what does she do? Under what conditions do mothers accept "expert opinion" and when do they reject it?...When expert knowledge is perceived as legitimate, cultural models evolve in response to it; this is the active process of producing culture". The mother's in the study responded to "expert" knowledge on child rearing, though some were more responsive tan others. Though this was not overtly stated I wonder if what the authors were saying was that the level of new information a mother sought out was dependent on her cultural model?
I am curious about how the author's felt that their own class position may have affected their analysis of the experiences of the women in the book.
This book discussed the push and pull factors of being a mother and needing to provide for their family. This book worked to dispel the myth that women prefer to be on welfare over working. This was done by looking at the ways and context within which these women pieced together income, from low paying jobs, welfare, and kin and childcare. This was also done by looking at the pressure that welfare agencies and public policy has put on mothers.
Another myth that was dispelled was that families in poverty have low expectations for their children in school and do not care about their child's education. These women's stories illustrated a concern for their child's success and many of them saw education as a tool for success and social mobility.
The last chapter of the book discussed the lessons learned through this study, which included the difference of economic and social context each woman came from and the resources available within those contexts. The authors also outlined the implications and suggestions for policy makers, community practitioners, and scholars and analysts.
The theoretical framework was a cultural model, specifically cultural difference. I also think that there was a lot of sociological influence.
The most interesting aspect of this book was how easy to read it was. I thought that the book was written in an accessible manner. Though it was obviously academic, I thought that it would be easy for the people who this book was written about to read. I thought that that was important because many books and articles that I have read that have used interviews or ethnography have used so much theory that is inaccessible to the people that it is written about.
The evidence of this book was interviews with women who were working mother's in poverty. Additional research and studies that supported the authors' arguments were also cited and used as examples.
The point from the book that I am going to connect to my broader scope of knowledge is from chapter seven. The title of chapter seven was Cultural Models of Education. This chapter included a discussion about each mother's conception of the purposes of schooling and the type of schooling they saw best fit for their child. The authors of this book found that these parents emphasized teacher-structured learning. They also emphasized literacy and numeracy skills. I thought this was interesting because it connected to recent reading I have done, Lisa Delpit's Other Peoples Children Ellen, Brantlinger's Dividing Classes, and Jacqueline Goodnow's Parents' Knowledge and Expectations.
I thought that the perspective of the parents in Through My Own Eyes connected to Lisa Delpit's argument that the constructivist approach is not working for African American students and that these students need a more behaviorist approach that emphasizes skills. Her argument is that low-income parents prefer conservative forms of schooling because they believe it provides more access to power than progressive approaches. This argument connected to the preferences exhibited by the mothers in Through My Own Eyes who did not like preschools that did not have a behaviorist, teacher-centered approach. Many of the mother's believed that education was their child's chance at social mobility and they did not want to waste their child's time in an atmosphere that was not training them to be successful in school. This perspective was similar to Delpit's because both believe that conservative curriculum enhances poor children's chances for social mobility.
The mother's perspective also connected to Ellen Brantlinger's Dividing Classes. Brantlinger argued that, similar to working class and poor parents, the middle class prefers aspects of conservative pedagogy including an emphasis on skills, facts, and standardized knowledge. I think it is interesting that both of these books use interview strategies with their respective group and both showed parents who believe that behaviorist teaching will enable their children to be successful.
In this chapter I also saw connections to Goodnow's Parents' Knowledge and Expectations. Goodnow discussed the circumstances that parents seek out information about their parenting. She argued that parents seek out information when they need it. Questions on page 147 of Through My Own Eyes connect to questions addressed by Goodnow, "If a mother is not confident about her role in preparing her child for school, what does she do? Under what conditions do mothers accept "expert opinion" and when do they reject it?...When expert knowledge is perceived as legitimate, cultural models evolve in response to it; this is the active process of producing culture". The mother's in the study responded to "expert" knowledge on child rearing, though some were more responsive tan others. Though this was not overtly stated I wonder if what the authors were saying was that the level of new information a mother sought out was dependent on her cultural model?
I am curious about how the author's felt that their own class position may have affected their analysis of the experiences of the women in the book.

Time, the Physical Magnitude (Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science, 99)
Published in Hardcover by D Reidel Pub Co (December, 1987)
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Average review score: 

A fantastic description of a rather common experience: timeThe author makes you feel what's really going on when time elapses: it appears to be incredibly more complex -and theoretical- than you might think, and, after reading this book, you will never consult your wristwatch the same way! It's about time you loose your naivety on such a vital topic!!!

To Weave for the Sun: Ancient Andean Textiles in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Published in Paperback by Thames & Hudson (January, 1995)
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Average review score: 

Hand woven treasures from PeruThis is a 1992 exhibition catalogue from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The museum has an a very diverse collection of pre-Columbian and colonial textiles from Peru.
The catalouge is well presented with a number of essays on these ancient textiles, their method of construction and meaning at the front - followed by a colour listing and description of each textile on show in the second half of the book.
The photography is beautiful in this book and we are shown textiles ranging from 500Bc to the 18th century. There are also a few pieces of featherwork thrown in.
My only dissapointment with this book was the lack of secondary textile objects such as featherwork head ornaments or fans. But you can't have everything.
A good book to buy if you are into pre-colubmian textiles or art work.

Tom Brady: Most Valuable Patriot
Published in Hardcover by Sports Publishing, Inc. (28 August, 2002)
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TOM, NOT A ONE YEAR WONDER!This book was great. It show all the highlights of the season and told you a lot more about mr.Tom. They show how much he has come over the years and how truely talented he is. He definatly deserved M.V.P. Although the pats didnt make the playoffs this year, we'll get em next year!! GO PATS!

The Triumph of Ethnic Progressivism: Urban Political Culture in Boston, 1900-1925
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Univ Pr (September, 1998)
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a great reappraisal of a complex subject"The Triumph of Ethnic Progressivism" is an excellent reappraisal of urban politics in the early part of the 20th century. Connolly provides an exhaustive analysis of voting patterns - sometimes on a block by block basis - throughout the city of Boston. Connolly's approach (as well as research) dramatically moves forward our knowledge of precinct behavior, as well as ethnic association with particular issues. What's best about Connolly's book is that he relies less on inference and assumption that many authors who tackle this material do. Connolly's argument is predicated upon empirical evidence, and that alone is a refreshing break from much modern political history. For a better understanding of the period before Connolly's book picks up, one should read both Stephan Thernstrom's "The Other Bostonians" and Oscar Handlin's "Boston's Immigrants." Gerard Gamm's "The Making of New Deal Democrats: Voter Realignment in Boston, 1920-1940" is an fine continuation after the period with which Connolly is concerned.

Trot, Trot to Boston: Play Rhymes for Baby
Published in Library Binding by William Morrow (April, 1987)
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Delightful for your babyCarol Ra has done an excellent job in extending the importance of reading to your child or grandchild. She includes hints to further enhance these precious moments for both of you.

What's the Matter With the Red Sox?
Published in Hardcover by Dodd Mead (February, 1973)
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Humorous and ironic, a good book.Humorous and ironic. A book that perfectly captured the Red Sox up to the 1972 season. It lists numerous contributing factors on how the Red Sox have through the good old boy network, bad choices, and just plain mismanagement took themselves out of contention, and have contributed to our long suffering.

Where to Eat Boston -- Fall/Winter 2001
Published in Paperback by Where to Eat (09 October, 2001)
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Makes me hungry!This book has become my ultimate resource guide for where to dine in Boston. I love flipping through the beautifully designed pages. It's extremely informative and gives all the essential details as well as providing a real sense of the ambiance and other less tangible aspects of each restaurant -- makes finding a restaurant a real pleasure! The attention to detail makes a huge difference. I wish I had a guide like this for every city to which I travel. I have given it as a gift to a lot of my friends and they all love it too. It comes out every six months and each edition seems to be more comprehensive than the last.

Winter Light
Published in Paperback by Four Way Books (April, 1999)
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A treasureThe poems are brief and gorgeous, but not by any means slight, and each one adds a depth to the entire volume. It's not a novel at all - the author is a highly skilled poet - but it is novelistic: characters emerge and fade into the fabric, time passes, perception changes. Emotional, but not nostalgic; passionate, but not strident, Duehr captures a sense of love and mystery and where they meet one winter in Boston. Many of the individual poems are stunners, but they're set off by short (one line sometimes) poems so you don't feel overwhelmed. Instead, the impact grows as you continue reading. I loved it.