D-A Books


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D-A Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

D-A
Freedom Summer
Published in Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (2005-01)
Author: D Wiles
List price: $16.45

Average review score:

Freedom Summer - a school story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-18
Freedom summer is a story of 2 little boys one black one white who are friends during the desegregation movement. They really do not understand that skin color was supposed to make a difference in their friendship. An excellent book for the classroom showing that color doesn't matter.

Young Heroes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-16
An emotionally charged story for all readers, Freedom Summer is not a book to soon be forgotten. While its focus is on segregation, students of the current time can relate it to issues of bullying and prejudice. The painted pictures match the text and convey deep emotion through the use of color and texture. While the text is criticized for being overly contrived and romanticized in places, it often matches the message and mood of the pages. As a story for younger readers, it conveys a depth of emotion during a difficult time in history without overwhelming the reader with facts and information.

Freedom Summer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-24
The story is told with a variety of colorful expressions and analogies. Illustrations are simply beautiful. The story was one that touched my heart and flooded me with memories of my own childhood, when this could have been my own town. I immediately shared the book with my own 9-year old granddaughter. Wonderful, powerful!!

Beautiful Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-24
This book won the Coretta Scott King award and the Ezra Jack Keats Book award. It is easy to understand why. Gorgeous illustrations belong in a museum; what appears to be oil or acrylic is rendered in a naturalistic, painterly style.

At the beginning of the book there is a historical note on the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which forms the basis for the action in the story. Two boys, one white and one black, are best friends in the deep South. They enjoy playing together in the summer in the river and on the fields. The black child's mother works as a domestic for the white child's family.

The summer of 1964 brings changes that some white people resent. The Act makes it illegal to bar blacks from businesses, public pools, and other places where they had been unable to go freely. Initially the boys were elated because that meant they could both swim in the public pool. But the pool is being filled in with asphalt when they arrive.

The level of hatred towards African Americans is palpable when reading Freedom Summer. It succeeds on all levels; a beautiful, educational, moving book. White attitudes are depicted honestly, but there are also open-minded whites who help the Civil Rights Act succeed. At the end of the story the two boys are entering a store together to buy ice pops. The reader is left rooting for them.

Freedom Summer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-09
Have you ever felt bad because of how people treat you because of your color? Well if you have, you can make a connection with this book "Freedom Summer". "Freedom Summer" is about how two friends, no matter what people say, they continue being friends. That's how people treat one of them just because of his color black. If you want to know more about the book "Freedom Summer" just read it.

D-A
The Frog and Prince: Secrets of Positive Networking To Change Your Life
Published in Hardcover by Frog and Prince Networking Corporation (2003-01-29)
Authors: Darcy Rezac, Judy Thomson, and Gayle Hallgren
List price: $19.95
New price: $15.49
Used price: $11.52
Collectible price: $50.00

Average review score:

If you've tried networking without much success...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-24
... then try this book! There are no cheesy gimmicks here, just simple and sound advice on how to bring people you meet into your fold by asking, "What can I do for this person?" rather than "What can they do for me?".

Even experienced networkers could learn something valuable from this book.

life on my lilypad
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-28
Thank you Darcy, Judy and Gayle for this wonderful book. With the tips & best practices you laid out so clearly, I have gained substancial confidence this past year with my "Tribal Introduction". Your abundance message rings true with the dramatic increase in my personal network within my community and business organization. As a recruiter and President of my district's Netwroking Association, your book has inspired me to 'work my pond' with ever increasing success.

It's Just Common Sense!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-28
This book was a disappointement for me, yes, I does give some useful insights into networking and what it is all about. However, most of the chapters are based on common sense that you would do anyway (I hope!!) such as being polite and striking up conservations with people and being nice to everybody regardless of class.

It doesn't give much insight either how to approach contacts at later dates once you have established informal relationships.

If i had to say the one thing i learned the most from this book was to carry business cards where ever i go, they are the golden key to networking.

Give yourself "Permission to Network"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-02
I loved this book - I see so many people either not giving themselves permission to network and/or not allowing others permission to network at events everyday. Coming to events without business cards and not being ready to introduce yourself is such a loss for all involved - Top it off with showing up but only wanting to speak with the party you came with is so limiting - I love this book and the concept of "Permission to Network" as a focal point was fantastic to see. Everyone needs to read this and then apply the practice at every networking function they attend as well as apply this in general life skills. Good things can only come to those open to recieve them! ;)

Excellent book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-15
I considered giving this book only 4 stars, because it occurred to me that the authors don't live in my world, instead they live in a world where people don't do anything else but jet around the world and network with each other - whereas the furthest I've travelled in my job is Chatswood, a few stops further along the railway line.

But then I thought, that possibly a reflection of differences between Australian culture and the field of work that I'm in (I.T., where people are notoriously insular). I also thought that if they can manage to create relationships like that and have so much fun, then best of luck to them... who am I to hold it against them? Plus, they would obviously know what they're talking about in regard to networking.

So I gave it 5 stars on the basis that the authors have put together a witty and fun book that somehow did wonders for my networking *confidence* - and lets face it, the only person whose attitude you can change is yourselves. And somehow this book managed to do this.

D-A
General Anatomy and Musculoskeletal System - Latin Nomenclature (THIEME Atlas of Anatomy)
Published in Hardcover by Thieme Medical Publishers (2006-01-18)
Authors: Michael Schuenke M.D. Ph.D., Erik Schulte M.D., and Udo Schumacher
List price: $119.95
New price: $110.34
Used price: $115.14

Average review score:

the best around
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-03
I used to swear by Netter's atlas. This took my breath away with the refined muscle force diagrams. I had to have it.

amazing for bodyworkers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-23
This book is phenomenal if you work are doing any soft tissue work. the format is more informative, using subsections to examine the components of joints such as the knee in a fashion that more efficient and comprehensible. The quality for the price is amazing.

The best Anatomy Book I have ever seen
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-13
I am a Physical Therapy student in his second semester. In our first semester, we used Netters and we have just switched to Thiemes this semester. At first I did not want to order a new Anatomy book...until I saw my friend's Thieme. The presentation, organization and explanations are all logically put together. The pictures are extremely clear and easy to understand. This book is worth three times the asking price and I highly recommend it.

good simplified pictures but lacking a lot
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20
I purchased this atlas for anatomy lab because it was recommended by my professor. Looking through the book, it has wonderful pictures and really simplified structures so you can actually see what you are looking at rather than a portion of it and the rest hidden behind other structures. However, it is not a very complete atlas. The most glaring example - there is nothing about the head and neck. I had to buy another atlas just to get through this past test. I personally recommend Netter's as a reference atlas because it has EVERYTHING in it. I know the pictures and millions of lines coming out can be overwhelming, however, if you are looking for a specific structure you are way more likely to find it in Netter's.

absolutely gorgeous
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-14
Honestly, I find studying A&P tedious and generally boring. Purchasing Thieme's was the best move I've made. The plates are so beautiful that I want to linger on each page for a long time. Every person whom I've shown this book to said they wished they had bought it instead of Netter's.

D-A
Godric
Published in Hardcover by Atheneum (1980-10)
Author: Frederick Buechner
List price: $10.95
Used price: $11.95
Collectible price: $200.00

Average review score:

A great yet difficult to read story.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-12
It's a wonderful story that explores what makes a man "good" or "bad." However, it is not an easy read and requires some patience. The narrative shifts in and out of 1st and 3rd person for no apparent reason, and the writing frequently becomes prose/poetry that leaves the story behind. Some people really enjoy this style of writing but I find that it distracts from the story (which should be the focus of a novel, right?). Thankfully, after the first few chapters the story does become the main focus and most of my complaints become moot. Despite the issues I find with it, I'd still recommend this as a great and worthy novel.

A book to treasure
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-07
Beautiful, profound book. Buechner is one of those rare authors that seem to "get" spirituality and his prose is better than anybody.

Excellent read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-11
In Godric, Buechner brings to life a twelfth century hermit, a topic I had previously considered dry and uninteresting. Through beautiful, often poetic language and a first person account of the man's life, Beuchner effectively humanizes the ascetic holy man and manages to interpret quite an interesting tale. The novel is separated into very short chapters of stylized first person narrative, many of which I read multiple times for the sheer music of the author's words. Godric is a quick, fairly easy read, but certainly a thought provoking novel that you may choose to read an extra time or two.

Interesting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-05
Godric is a historical novel based on the life of a real person. What makes this book unusual as historical fiction is its written as if Godric himself wrote it 1000 years ago, as if we are reading a historical document, including period grammer and sentence structure (although not scholarly or difficult for the modern reader to read and understand). This made Buechner's job difficult considering nothing of this type of literary work exists from the period, thus it is fundamentally anachronistic. Further, while we know broad brushstrokes of Godrics life, Buechner filled in many details from the period we simply dont know about.

If you can see past the obvious anachronisms (which I had trouble) there are some valuable descriptions, such as a blood libel, that are imaginative and help to better understand the Middle Ages and how people thought and why.

Moving, Funny, Poignant, Poetic
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-18
Everyone points out that this little novel is graceful and poetic, and they couldn't be more correct. Throughout the novel, I marveled at the simple beauty of the words and the way they are put together, and it wasn't until later that I realized why. This novel is so meticulously put together that each sentence is written in iambs. I think that fact kind of holds within how wonderful this novel it is. It is a carefully constructed and beautiful portrait of a life persevering, persisting toward sainthood.

Everything about this novel is perfect. Of course, each sentence is perfect, and at times, I would go back a read and reread certain chapters which strike me so profoundly. The relationships held herein, such as Godric's loving relationship with Burcwen, with Mouse, and with Reginald, are subtle complex and really touching. And of course, Godric's own characterization is the biggest strength of the novel, as he moves from the worst of sinners to a godly, compassionate, and humble man.

I can't say enough for this perfect novel. I am sure that I will return again and again to its pages for the humor and warmth and beauty held therein.

D-A
Hair Story: Untangling the Roots of Black Hair in America
Published in Hardcover by Diane Pub Co (2006-11-30)
Authors: Ayana D. Byrd and Lori L. Tharps
List price: $24.00
New price: $24.00

Average review score:

I found my beauty in this book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-25
This review is more on a personal note, than an explanation of what the book entails (the other reviews have got that covered!). As a newly natural black beauty - I was still struggling with others perecptions of me and my "new" (e.g. natural hair). And of course - I was struggling with my own perceptions of beauty as well. This book allowed me to finally see that our hair is a unique source of pride that needs to be flaunted - not "fixed". Something shifted for me when I read this book, and I finally was able to own not only my new hairstyle (a budding 'fro) but to love my hair in its natural, uninhibited glory. Black women, regardless of our hair texture - straight, wavy, curly, kinky, nappy - we are all so wonderfully beautiful! Hallelujah - I FEEL SO FREE TO BE ME! This book is a must read - share it with every black woman you know - and encourage them to teach our children and our men how to live a life that says "black is beautiful". Spread the knowledge to people of other cultures as well! God bless!

Bravo
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-11
Excellent book about black hair and black culture. Would recommend it to anyone wanting to know more about both and how they relate to the "American" ideal.

A beginning...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
This book is great begining for people that are redescovering themselfes aftermaking the decision or are trying to decide wheter go natural or not. It helps you to understand how we got here , how black beauty is not well accepted and why. It make you wonder, questionning yourself and others, and in my case keep learning.

Very informative
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-18
If you don't already know, this book is definitely worth the time that it takes to read. The book goes into detail about the history of Black hair. Prior to slavery, Africans took pride in their hair. The intricate braid designs date back to that time. It wasn't until after the slave trade that hair straightening became common. Also, it's a little known black history fact that Annie Tumbo Malone was the first black woman entrepeneur to market black hair products. Madame CJ Walker actually worked for Malone before going into business for herself. This book chronicles so much history about Black hair. After reading this book, I was really encouraged to stop chemically processing my hair.

A Must-Read for Black Women Everywhere
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-04
I've recently made the decision to go natural and as I did, I pondered, "Why do I have to 'decide' to be the way I naturally am?" It was then that I realized how unfortunate it was that black women, more than half, find their "naturalness" to be unattractive. I myself have gone through hair extensions, braids, and the dreaded relaxer that has damaged my hair and scalp for years. Now I wonder what it was all for. I wasn't being true to who I was.

This book helped be to know something that I should have already known: my hair. The history of black hair is one that is very interesting and telling. I learned more about my hair in this book than I have ever learned, even from members of my own family. There is also a sense of confidence one gets from reading books like these. I am letting all of my friends and family read it as well.

You will not be disappointed in your purchase.

D-A
Honor bound : the history of American prisoners of war in southeast Asia, 1961-1973 (SuDoc D 1.2:H 75/3)
Published in Unknown Binding by Historical Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense (1998)
Author: Stuart I. Rochester
List price:

Average review score:

A gripping history
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-12
While as comprehensive and extraordinarily detailed as a college text, and as fully annotated, this is a great example of a 'popular' history at the top of its game. The enormous amount of (often grueling) material is nicely organized across time, place, and category, the many significant characters are well-delineated, and there is a sense of narrative flow and pretty steady momentum to this highly readable book.

must read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
This is a excellent, outstanding and informative book, that every patriotic american should read. These men are real American Heroes, I needn"t say more.

This book defines Honor.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-29
Definitely one of the best books I every read. It's amazing what a man will do for honor, to protect the life and dignity of another, at his own peril. There are scores of examples of this in this book. On the down side, what men bent on tyranny and oppression will do to break the will of another. However, light truly shines through darkness. If you think you have it rough, read this book.

Ultimate Book on Vietnam POW's
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-12
This is a lengthy but well written book. If you are looking for an excellent history of the POW's from the Vietnam war, this is the one to get. If you are interested in history or the human aspects of the Vietnam POW's this would be very valuable. I have read a number of books on POW's and this is by far the best of the lot.

Great Work of Military Schlorship
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-02
This observer has followed the POW situation since 1972, when he was still on active duty. He is familiar with many POW memoirs, so the men in Messer's. Kiley and Rochester's voluminous work are no strangers. Most of the prominent POWs are well known to many and they are certainly all here: Ernest Brace, Robinson Risner, James Stockdale, Jeremiah Denton, Frank Anton and Everett Alvarez-plus many more. If this reviewer had to choose a favorite memoir, it would be Anton's "Why Didn't You Get Me Out?" Honorable mention certainly goes to "A Code to Keep" by Mr. Brace. HB goes into far deeper detail than do individual stories, yet necessarily lacks the personal touch folks like those two gentlemen provide. Those in the amazon community who have read no POW tales and are satisfied with one big picture have the perfect book in HB. The back cover noted that HB "combines rigorous scholarly analysis with moving narrative". That it certainly does, in fullest detail. All the torture, all the mind games, all the coming and going and transfers, all the gripping boredom and fear, all the gruesome details of prison life are here. It will be clear that the POWs were anything but one big happy family. Disagreements abounded, especially that nebulous subject regarding compliance with the Code of Conduct. Some favored active resistance, some a "cooperate-graduate" approach. The authors also do an excellent choreographing of the release of the Spring of 1973. They were not repatriated on one fleet of C-141s but came home in stages. We learn that a handful of guys were released through Saigon and 2 through Hong Kong (!). There are some caveats attached to this review: HB cannot be skim read. It demands attention and a substantial investment of time upfront. Casual readers are in the wrong place! They won't appreciate the 88 pages of appendices and notes/footnotes. HB also concentrates on prisoners held in the major North Vietnam detention centers. The missing in Cambodia, Laos and even China are outside the scope of HB. But HB is also silent on the fate of the discrepancy cases of those lost in the 4 countries. One hopes that the authors, writing a book that admits to being "an official publication of the Department of Defense", are not attempting a "Case Closed" on the 1,783 still unaccounted for. This observer will give the authors the benefit of the doubt here. Still. FAR more disturbing is a gratuitous remark on Page 589 that those who continue to press for a fullest accounting of the missing are "a swarm of polemicists and opportunists". This reviewer is one of them! He belongs to neither of those species! Since it is most likely that no offense was intended, none is taken but that comment demands an explanation! It certainly merits an unfortunate reduction in rank to 4 stars. That there even is a page 589 is the essence of HB. This one is not for those with a passing fancy on the Indochina War. A final note: There is a new, voluminous publication available on amazon-"An Enormous Crime". That particular 566 page volume-in small type no less-claims to be the "definitive account of American POWs abandoned in Southeast Asia". The different scope of EC should encompass what HB did not. Maybe these 1,000+ combined pages of text will shed a final light on the thorny question of POWs/MIAs in Indochina. Congressman King (R-NY) is also attempting to convene new hearings on the same subject. This painful matter will be with us for a while. The bottom line to "Honor Bound" is the headline above. This is indeed a great work of military scholarship and for that the authors deserve their due.

D-A
I'd Rather Be in the Studio!
Published in Paperback by Pentas Press (2008-02-03)
Author: Alyson B. Stanfield
List price: $24.95
New price: $16.47
Used price: $41.87

Average review score:

Excellent Book (but it won't happen overnight)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-04
I thought this book was a good start in learning how to sell your art. You do have to take action, but there is some luck involved as well. This gives you the action part. I am a professional artist already, but I am going to use the tips from this book to make my art career even better. For one thing I plan to stop procrastinating :^). If you'd like to see my work, check out www.wworcesterart.com

I'd rather be in the studio!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-13
Alyson did a great job on this book. A must have for any artist. Invaluable. Laura K. Aiken

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
Combines conceptual strategies with practical advice. I highly recommend this book for self-employed artists of all kinds.

useful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-21
I would recommend this book to anyone and everyone who is beginning a career, or would like to increase their art business. Very informative,it will get you excited about the business end of art!

This book is not just for artist
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-12
I LOVE this book and I am not an artist. The tips and techniques that are shared in this detailed and well researched book are amazing and will help anyone that needs to market themselves. I launched my blog and have done really well with it using the information Stanfield provides in the book. One of my marketing mentors advises to check out what other people in other industries are doing. If you only do what everyone else in your field is doing you will have a hard time standing out. Not being an artist I found this book to have fresh new ideas and concepts with new twist on things I already had been doing. I haven't taken it off my desk since I got it. I keep referring to it and using it over and over.

D-A
L'ECUME DES JOURS
Published in Paperback by Union Generale D'Editions (1963)
Author: Boris Vian
List price:
Used price: $8.25

Average review score:

Exquis, magnifique, superbe verbe et texture
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-18
Ce livre est un chef-d'oeuvre que l'on déguste du début à la fin et que l'on apprécie de plus en plus à chaque relecture. J'adore Boris Vian et l'aurait marié sans même y penser après avoir lu ce qui coule de sa plume. Les mondes qu'il crée sont fascinants, et celui-ci est le plus beau de tous.

Exquis, magnifique, superbe verbe et texture
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-18
Ce livre est un chef-d'oeuvre que l'on déguste du début à la fin et que l'on apprécie de plus en plus à chaque relecture. J'adore Boris Vian et l'aurait marié sans même y penser après avoir lu ce qui coule de sa plume. Les mondes qu'il crée sont fascinants, et celui-ci est le plus beau de tous.

searing, unmissable love story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-19
L'Ecume des Jours (or, John Sturrock's translation, Foam of the days) tells us a story of Colin and Chloé and their love.
Of love that - however pure, serene and (perhaps) unbelievable it may appear to our everyday eye - is very much innocent. Like the one that, at least some of us, have always wished to experience.
The whole story has, unfortunatelly, a tragical end. But then, it wouldn't be one of the nicest books I have ever read. Only to express myself better through similarity, it is Jamiroquai's "Falling" that makes me think of Collin's falling in love with Chloé - except that Collin's love is 'returned' - they both love each other dearly and very much.
The whole story is divided in two parts - two worlds where love stays the same (even grows!) only the encompassing world undergo (terrible) changes. It's the careless world of Colin's and Chloe's love before they get married, full of warmness that only two suns may produce, and of the world after their wedding. The moment they say final yes at their wedding, Chloe gets ill and the whole preceding atmosphere suddenly changes from "happy" to "gloomy." As I said, the love stays, even gets greater, but the whole story then leads to an inevitable tragical end...
In Vian's own words it's a history that is "...entirely true as I made it up from the beginning to the very end." ["...entierement vraie, puisque je l'ai imaginée d'un bout a l'autre"] I would not quite say it is wholly made up although it's only my opinion. Yes, the story is a bit unreal, perhaps exaggerated, but I think it needs to be in order to let us feel and (hopefully) realize, that as 'panta rei' (as Time flows by) we should pauper our friendships and, when being loved and loving ourselves, then we should love sincerely and happily.

Une histoire triste
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-11
This brilliant work of fiction, akin to a fairy-tale, combines science-fiction, surrealism, absurdism, lyricism...
One of the highlights of post-war French litterature, it has become somewhat of a cult favourite for teenagers, as it relates the lives of yound adults who refuse to accept the responsabilities of adulthood, preferring to live according to principles eerily similar to those held by hippies, refusing to temper idealism with the demands of reality.

A fresh and poignant tale
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-01
It is a pity that Boris Vian has no name recognition in the anglo-saxon world. Much to blame is probably the uniqueness of his language and unconventional writing approach. This refreshing tale encompasses youth, love and the fleeting aspect of all that is precious in life.

D-A
Mots D'Heures
Published in Hardcover by Angus & Robertson (UK) (1977-11-17)
Author: Luis d'Antin Van Rooten
List price:
Used price: $18.49
Collectible price: $24.00

Average review score:

Impossible to put down!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-15
This is one of those classic funny books that you'll want to give to special friends. The entire series of Mother Goose Rhymes is hilariously rendered as medieval French quatrains a la Nostradamus, replete with detailed annotations. If you majored in any language or literature you'll be LOL at the absurd, pompous intellectualism of the academic style. Simply brilliant.

Mots d'Heures: Gousses, Rames
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-10
We have an old copy of this wonderfully irritating book. It takes time to work out which nursery rhyme you are trying to decipher but do not expect the verses to translate from French into English as the words have no connection with any nursery rhyme you might know. We managed to do a similar thing with Spanish which was hilarious, but we still haven't worked out whether this was written as an enormous joke or is deadly serious! It has given our family a lot of fun.

Clever and funny
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-08
I don't know why this book is so little known - it's very clever and it's hilarious fun. I wish I knew about it sooner. But if you're thinking of buying it, beware: there's no key. You'll have to figure these puzzles out on your own.

Wonderful puzzles
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-29
If you can read French and if you grew up heaaring Mother Goose rhymes (in English) this book is a MUST HAVE. It presents an almost credible scholarly work about some fragments (in French) from an old civilization. If you will read those fragments aloud, you"ll be able to hear (in English) well known nursery rhymes. Truly fascinating, and soetimes challenging! (Especially if you had never known THIS rhyme in English!)
--And the "scholaraly" footnotes are great!

Great book but bad production quality
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-11
Zebu qui se regrette: there's no question about that, and I _am_ grateful that it's back in print. BUT, buyers beware: the print in this edition looks like it came out of a cheap photocopier. Van Rooten deserved better.

D-A
Pharmacotherapy Handbook
Published in Paperback by Appleton & Lange (1998-03-28)
Authors: Joseph T., Ph.D. Dipiro, Terry L., Ph.D. Schwinghammer, and Cindy W., Ph.D. Hamilton
List price: $44.95
New price: $41.00
Used price: $17.88

Average review score:

great for any pharmacy student!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-12
Love love love this little book of end-less information. I have the HUGE regular DiPiro which isn't a joy to lug around. This handbook is the perfect reference for any pharmacy/med student. It covers the same topics as DiPiro 6th edition, but in a much more condensed, straight-forward way, including foundation & therapeutics. Very happy I purchased this book!

great book for any medical/pharmacy student
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-14
I bought this book hoping that it would serve as a shorter version of the larger and more detailed textbook. It turned out to do just that. I have used this book on many occasions to review the key things about certain conditions without having to read the lengthy chapters of the textbook.....this is a must have for anyone in the medical field....it provides a concise summary and key points from the bigger version.

nice book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-30
Great therapy book to have in your pocket, but doesn't discuss much on etiology of diseases. Basically it's good as a review, but it's not helpful if you are trying to learn the disease for the first time.

book is actually really helpful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
much more concise than Depiro; it's like ESPN for therapeutics, all the best highlights... but if you have a very picky professor they might bring up something specific enough that it isn't included in this book.

pharmacotherapy handbook
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
gives a detail summary of the book... a must have for all pharmacy students.


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