D-A Books
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Great readReview Date: 2005-09-25
Doctors Against the WorldReview Date: 2005-05-19
Impressive, beautifully writtenReview Date: 2006-05-13
But the strength of War Hospital ultimately lies in Fink's brilliant structural choice to save the analysis, the conclusions, the politics and policy dilemmas for an epilogue thus allowing the reader to become engrossed with the stories of Drs. Ilijaz Pilav, Eric Dachy, Fatima Dautbasic and a handful of others who serve as the only doctors for the 70,000 or so Bosnian Muslims surrounded in enclaves in eastern Bosnia. From the opening scene where Dr. Ejub Alic, a 32-year old pediatric resident with no surgical training, performs an amputation with a razor cleaned in hydrogen peroxide, you will find yourself caught up in a swift, compelling novelistic reconstruction of events worthy of a future film or television series. Like a special episode of ER, but with our cast operating in a very real dilapidated hospital without adequate equipment or supplies, War Hospital makes you care about Bosnians, makes you feel, see, and smell the fear, despair, humor, bravery, betrayal, and confusion that permeate war.
When Dr. Alic finally gets a surgeon to help him out, the new arrival turns out to be the even younger, 28-year old general practitioner, Dr. Ilijaz Pilav, who has no surgical training either. He must brush aside questions on his past and training if he hopes to avoid creating despair or panic in Srebnenica. And so it goes. As our cast of young doctors is fleshed out, we watch their surgeries, their witness to massacres and gas attacks, their love affairs and infidelities, their arguments, and above all, their moral and ethical dilemmas as they try to live up to their calling to "do no harm" and to remain neutral as it becomes clear that active involvement, interposition with imperiled citizens and soldiers, and even occasionally taking up arms may be essential to survival and carrying out their medical missions. In this sense, War Hospital, in the best sense, resembles a high-toned TV survivor series where the outcome actually matters. As you watch some of our doctors join in fighting with Muslim forces, escape to rejoin families, get caught in ambushes, or leave overwhelmed and disillusioned, you will find yourself, if honest, frequently identifying with and then rejecting a number of moral stances and options. There are no easy answers here.
This combination, then, of vivid narrative with a setting and structure that raises the most important ethical questions of our time for doctors and civilians alike makes War Hospital indispensable reading not only for medical students, physicians, nurses and other health professionals, but also for ethicists, historians, psychologists, journalists, foreign policy analysts and more. I can see it used in many, many university courses and, with decent publicity, selling well and giving rise to that movie.
So. Go get War Hospital and read it now. If we had had it in 1992, genocide might have been averted. But its prose and powerful human insights and ethical engagement are as fresh and relevant today as the daily headlines from Iraq.
A beautifully written chronicle of caringReview Date: 2006-06-02
What was that?
Well, as a social worker I was always quite skeptical of people who complained of `compassion fatigue' or bemoaned their inability to care deeply about the unspeakable assorted cruelties and human rights abuse that scar the globe. I looked at such complaints as little more than excuses for choosing not to care. Yet I couldn't ignore the fact that I was becoming inured to the news of genocide in the Balkans, especially because it was being rapidly supplanted by genocide in other areas such as Rwanda. Although genocide is equally evil throughout the world and suffering itself has no color, I resented the fact that Africans were getting less press and global outrage. and because journalists were also tiring of the Balkans they began to desert it for the next hotspot du jour. In the age of information overload these were all competing for our attention and the surfeit of shocking details were producing a sort of ennui. I would never have admitted to compassion fatigue, but it was becoming harder to access my outrage and easier to fall into a melancholy desire to not know more.
War Hospital proved just the medicine for this sense of paralysis.
First, the book is no preachy lecture: It is entertaining and a gripping story, very well told, that quote effectively puts a human face and universalizes the experience of genocide. And this face is a heroic face, an inspiration. This taut story is as powerful and intoxicating as any mystery novel. It is the story of a group of heroes, but heroes not in the diluted newspaper sense of a fireman saving a child but heroes in the classic sense of people who survive seemingly impossible personal tests as they mature from naïve, idealistic youths to flawed but ultimately successful saviors.
A small corps of very inexperienced young physicians including Drs. Alic, Dachy, and Dautbasic find themselves trapped in the besieged city of Srebnenica, where they must care for an unstemmed flood of Bosnian Muslims. Worse, their patients are brought in suffering from gruesome traumatic war injuries-- shredded arms and legs, and devastating head injuries for which the pediatricians and internists are ill prepared to cope: There are no surgeons. Even anesthetics and disinfectants are in short supply. When the eagerly awaited surgeon finally cheats death through a hazardous odyssey to join them, he is revealed as just another young general practitioner, Dr. Ilijaz Pilav, without surgical training. This ill-equipped band faces the challenge of providing medical and surgical care, hope and inspiration to the remaining residents of the Eastern Bosnia area, including Srebnenica, a former resort town now physically ravaged by war, haunted by snipers and tottering on the brink of despair as it is seemingly abandoned by the world. And outside, the world remains mute as genocide overtakes the country and the city: When the former resort town falls, 8,000 people are massacred .
All this is just the beginning. As Dr. Fink takes us on the roller-coaster descent of Srebnenica's fortunes, she fully fleshes out the individuals, telling their stories and illuminating their characters, warts and all: We know and care for them all by the end of the book. One man stumbled onto medicine because the engineering program he initially wished to attend was in a dull area that would not give him, a village boy, the urban experience he craved. Another must battle his own professional crisis of confidence-- is he really skilled enough to help all these people?-- as he seeks to allay the skepticism of others.
Because we know and care about them, Fink's subtle gradual introduction of ethical and moral issues as the doctors and nurses confront them is very powerful. She avoids the pitfalls of introducing thorny medical ethics issues too early and in too much depth. This means that when characters with whom we empathize ask themselves how to triage the young vs. the armed, when they ask whether they will save more lives by arming themselves against aggressor or how they can morally justify treating an enemy soldier who will turn to genocide or massacre again these concerns become immediate moral crises, not abstractions. When some doctors decide that medical measures are not enough and they decamp to take up arms to rejoin former comrades or simply to abandon their work in the clinic as hopelessly inadequate, this becomes more than a political or ethical argument.
An unexpected virtue of the book is its luminous language. It is written in a clear forthright voice that eschews semantic tricks but unerringly chooses each perfectly apt word in fresh combinations that are at once lyrical and evocative of a disturbing atmosphere: For example, a ravaged leg is `filleted' by a young surgeon in preparation for amputation. A hazard-fraught nocturnal trek to freedom by the survivors is rendered in language that contrasts brute violence with wondrous depictions of the wondrous nightscape.
In the hands of a capable writer this gripping story would have made a rousing book: In the hands of this writer who achieves rich characterization, keen ethical insight, and lyrical prose, it is an inspiration, and the cure for compassion fatigue.
Fabulous Narrative SkillReview Date: 2003-12-23

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Very helpfulReview Date: 2008-07-21
The most influential and life changing collection of text I have ever read.Review Date: 2008-08-20
Also, while I agree that a lot of this information is the same that has appeared in Burns' older classics "Feeling Good" and the "Feeling Good Handbook" I do find that it is presented in a more organized, easy to digest format that is focused on anxiety instead of depression. Despite containing the same underlying theories, it has expansions, re-organizations, and specifics that I feel easily make it a worthwhile addition to the Burns catalog.
I, obviously, wholeheartedly and passionately recommend this book for ANYONE.
Fantastic bookReview Date: 2008-04-29
An easy read, tremendously helpfulReview Date: 2008-04-27
very effective methodReview Date: 2008-03-25

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The Winged Watchman - Hilda Van StockhomReview Date: 2008-02-01
The setting truly showed how hard it was to live during World War II, in occupied Holland. The author showed me this by having the Dutch have a curfew. If they were caught they would be chased down until they were captured. One of the Dutch was so desperate he rode on the wings of the windmill to stay safe. The windmill also played an important roll in the story because that is where they would live and even hide people in them.
The conflict of the story is that the Verhagen family doesn't have any good crop growing soil so they can not produce any food. This conflict is man vs. man and man vs. nature. The resolution is that the Verhagen family destroys the dike and water floods the whole farming community. This in turn waters the soil so it can produce crops. Since they did this the family is rewarded with many presents like food or other household items. One thing I enjoyed about this conflict was that it was realistic and showed that anything could happen. I disliked that it was something someone would have done.
The Winged WatchmanReview Date: 2003-11-18
This is a really good bookReview Date: 2006-10-21
Tour De ForceReview Date: 2007-01-06
A Must Read for Today's ChildrenReview Date: 2006-04-25
They shelter several refugees from the Nazis-- Trixie, a baby whose mother has been sent to a conentration camp, Charles, an airman who is hiding from the Nazi troops, Koba and Betsy, who take refuge with the Verhagens because they have nothing to eat in their own home, and Hildebrand, a student who wishes to study rather than fight. With frequent visits from Uncle Cor, who is active in the resistance, the family draws together, determined not to succumb to the brutality they see all around them.
This book serves as an excellent example to children of a family's bravery and of the importance of doing the right thing. It's a terrific book and is one that will touch your children's hearts as it is teaching them a valuable lesson.


The Aloha Shirt: Spirit of the IslandsReview Date: 2000-11-29
If everyone wore aloha shirts, there'd be no war...Review Date: 2001-03-06
Profusely and beautiful illustratedReview Date: 2001-02-13
Great book, but where's the index? Review Date: 2005-12-05
The Book that Changed my Life.Review Date: 2005-03-13

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It is THAT goodReview Date: 2008-12-16
The code at UCLA (sorry they will not let me post the link here) makes the incredibly good writing even more valuable because, not only will you understand the concepts behind Mixed Effects/Hierarchical Linear Models, you will be able to implement the ideas. If you already have some experience with Mixed Effects/HLM browse the code and you will quickly see this book covers a wide scope. I have worked with the SAS code a lot and even though the book is a bit old (by a programmer's standards) the code still works just fine.
While the book is written to be clear for non-mathemeticians, there are many "intermediate to advanced" statistical topics covered here. These are importantly areas which are typically unintelligible to non-statisticians or are glossed over or ignored by other authors. Here are some noteworthy examples. This book could/should be used as a text on data exploration and visualization. There are many case-studies throughout the book and they all begin with great visualizations (with the all important code supplements showing the novice how to make the plots in the book). Topics like fitting lines, splines, curves are covered clearly and are shown beautifully. The discussion on choosing between sets of models using deviance (-2log likelihood) and AIC has the best coverage of any book. The general discussion of likelihood estimation (maximum likelihood and restricted maximum likelihood) is superb. The coverage of data transformation for model fitting is explained well and is presented with wonderful plots. These "bonus" topics are interwoven into the great explanations of longitudinal data analyzes.
There is so much to like in this book and nothing to criticize (except perhaps the price). It makes the rest of the books in the field look bad.
The Clearest and Most Useful Book on HLM for Longitudinal StudiesReview Date: 2006-07-27
THe authors accomplish the latter by keying her examples to data located at a UCLA website; you can run the same programs on the same datasets used in the book (wow!), and compare your output, troubleshooting any problems you may have. Singer and Willett (her coauthor, not listed here!) provide outputs and programs correspoing to several of the most popular statistical programs, including SAS and SPSS.
SInger and Willet also explain the rationale for using HLM over more traditional techniques such as regression. Simply stated, regression aggregates at a level that cause one to lose information (and hence the power to detect differences.) HLM allows one to look at overall differences due to time, but also the trajectories of individual differences who are "nested" within those time points. It's the (relatively) new thing, and is increasing used by investigators, and desired by peer reviewers.
As supplements, I suggest using the UCLA website mentioned above, subscribing to an e-mail LISTSERV for interesting (though sometimes compicated discussions of "multilevel modeling" (MULTILEVEL@JISCMAIL.AC.UK), and searching for Judith Singer's website through Google or A9 (if you use A9--"Alexa"--enough you'll get a small discount at Amazon.com). Also, compare Amazon's and Judith Singer's (through her website) current prices on this book.
A Wonderful WorkReview Date: 2007-07-15
Breaking down complex analyses Review Date: 2006-03-18
Applied Longitudinal Data Analysis by Singer,et alReview Date: 2007-03-13
I would recommend it to anyone starting to learn about the subject!

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Wartime Love StoryReview Date: 2001-10-29
Another good one by RemarqueReview Date: 2002-03-25
DRINKING AND SMOKING ARE MAJOR SYMBOLS IN
THIS AND IN MOST OF REMARQUE'S BOOK
One thing that struck me in this book and many others of Remarque's is how much drinking
and smoking plays a part of the symbolism. They are props for the characters, in much as they were in real life at the time;
drinking and the requisite cigarette to think with. To most American's, born in the last 50 years, this is the major anachronism
in the book, the incredible role drinking and smoking play in people's lives. To people I know from Europe, this would not
be as much of a surprise. The US non-smoking and drinking in moderation have not yet reached Europe yet. The drinking and
smoking by any means, do not detract from the main story. This is a mature romance that captures your imagination none-the-less.
I wonder what the props for this century will be; Maybe our cell phones and laptops?
MAIN CHARACTERS ARE ALL REFUGEES IN
FRANCE
The main character is a refugee from Germany, a former well-known surgeon, forbidden to operate in France due to
his questionable residency status. He moonlights by doing another surgeon's work. He is a haunted man, by both his past
persecution in Germany and his unstable status in France. Hardly is this a good basis for a romantic situation that leads
beyond living for the day.
RELATIONSHIP WAS NOT SO MUCH PURSUED BUT ONE OF OPPORTUNITY
He meets and helps the woman he
is to fall in love with, under peculiar circumstances. He helps her with no intention to see her again. Time passes and he
runs into her again. They fall into a peculiar relationship that uses "Calvados" an apple brandy as its symbol. For some
reason this drink is frequently mentioned in books of the time. If it were now, I would say it was paid advertising.
ONE
ODD TWIST
Only one twist and it is a major one in the story makes no sense to me, why it is included. I might be missing
something, but the discovery and fate of the German officer, seems tacked on, added as an afterthought. If you read this
story, let me know what you think. I don't see it is so much as part of the same thread, unless it is one of relationships
concluded.
BASIC STORY
So as not to ruin the story, I will allude to the fact that the relationship develops and the
hostilities of the times, intrude, both outside France and within. These events affect the relationship and the way it changes
illustrates the characters of the people involved. The main character you follow with his observation of the things and people
around him. You see his girl friend through his eyes and his Russian friend's eyes only. This is enough they are shrewd observers.
It is apparent from this observation from day one that the events that eventually unfold were bound to happen.
As usual Remarque weaves a compelling and complete story.
An old favorite of mine.Review Date: 2004-09-19
A friend asked me to recommend a Remarque novel. We discussed 'All Quiet...'. My reply follows: 'Sure, in fact one of my favorites of Remarque's books is a thinly veiled portrait of Marlene Dietrich; or rather the intertwining of her life with his in Paris at the eve the period up to war in Europe, the year before the WW2 broke out.---
The English title is 'Arch of Triumph'. Like with all Remarque's books, the title is full of irony, and undercurrents of double meanings. Naturally, the book is not officially about Marlene, but she is hard to miss. Rather the book is personal,and has a good amount of autobiographical flavor. Yet, it is a captivating and suspenseful novel.
Like the two protagonists in the novel, Remarque and Dietrich were themselves at a desparate point in their lives in 1939.
Side comment: I am afraid that a lot is lost in the translation of Remarque's books. He only wrote in German, even when he lived in the US.
In any case, Remarque is a master of a suspenseful openings, in his novels. This one does not disapoint! Lots of his books are about refugee life of sorts. Another of Remarque's novels I often return to is 'Night in Lisbon', and it is again about escape from a Europe at high noon, just as Europe is going up in flames before WW2.' Review by Palle Jorgensen, September 2004.
Good but not thrillingReview Date: 2002-09-19
I don't really have a lot to say. It's not a book that I can enthusiastically applaud, but I won't say it was horrible. I would advise you to just read it for yourself and decide whether you like it or not! : )
If there were such a mark as 6/5, I would gladly mark it.Review Date: 2002-05-12
"I'd pretend that I'm a normal housewife... and that you are not in exile, you have a good passport and don't need to hide... and that I cry if you are not home, if only one night, and that we are always madly love in and jealous of each other even when we are old..."
It pounds your heart, and the charm that each individual shines like a precious gem, is never, never to be found by browsing through the superficial plot line. READ READ READ!!! The best book ever. (Perhaps surpassed only by Bronte sisters and Hesse.)

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Armed and DangerousReview Date: 2007-11-13
Excellent resource for spiritual helpReview Date: 2007-03-28
If there were more then 5 stars I would give it a 100Review Date: 2006-06-01
Must have book for teens, youth leaders and parents. Review Date: 2005-11-10
Excellent for all agesReview Date: 2005-09-30

The definitive reference work for audio terminologyReview Date: 2008-05-29
Review of "the Audio Dictionary"Review Date: 2008-01-15
NecessaryReview Date: 2007-11-01
essential for all audio engineersReview Date: 2004-10-12
Concise and comprehensive source of informationReview Date: 2006-03-23
I consider it a must-have for any Audio Engineer who takes his profession seriously and have at least one copy in the library of each school we operate in Spain.

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Debuts over twenty new talentsReview Date: 2001-03-06
Hattie's HeadReview Date: 2001-02-23
Hattie's HeadReview Date: 2001-02-23
Witchy tales at their very best!Review Date: 2007-04-03
Table Of Contents:
· The Child's Tale by Carole Nomarhas
· The Power Lunch by Janet L. Hetherington
· Six Guns & Six Spells by Paul Victor Wargelin
· A Dichotomy Of Belief by Michael Oliveri
· Spiders Grace All Of Me by Michelle Scalise
· As Promised by Walt Jarvis
· Madly, Deeply by Greg Kishbaugh
· Le Bete Est Morte by Nicholas Kaufmann
· That Old Black Magic by John R. Platt
· Stadium Square by Eric Gregg
· Elena by David A. DeFalco
· Hattie's Head by Kelli Campbell
· Her Place by Joel Ross
· Endemoniada by William O'Donnell
· The Nice House by L.H. Maynard & M.P.N. Sims
· Heavy Sybil by Bob Beideman
· Harm None by Dean H. Wild
· The Island by Whitt Pond
· Trailertrash Annie by Peter N. Dudar
· The Power Doctor by Ward Parker
· Celia by R. Michael Burns
At the end of the book are brief biographies of each writer. All (at the time) were affiliate members of HWA, though many had previous publications and many have gone on to grace us with further proof of their writing skills in other anthologies, novels, and edited collections.
My favorites would be 'The Child's Tale', a fantasy type story of bitter revenge; 'As Promised', the story of how far a witchy mom will go for the daughter she loves; 'Le Bete Est Morte', a creeping story of the witch next door and "it's" ticklish, old time habits; 'That Old Black Magic' which brings a tone of comic relief to witchcraft; 'Heavy Sybil', another semi-comedic tale of an idea that turns on a young heavy metal fan when he drops his girlfriend; and 'The Power Doctor', which will surprise you with its grisly ending.
Ancient and new witchcraft, spiders, spells, love potions, westerns, fantasy, modern, unbearable beauty and hideous ugliness - it's all here in this fantastic collection. If you love witchy tales, don't miss out on this excellent anthology! Enjoy!
Wicked Little Wicans!!!!Review Date: 2004-03-03
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Excellent for new teachers or for a great review.Review Date: 2008-06-15
great informationReview Date: 2008-06-21
good book, poor publishingReview Date: 2007-02-14
IEP GOALSReview Date: 2002-03-30
An excellent primer on drafting IEPsReview Date: 2002-10-30
Reviewing and drafting IEPs can be very daunting. This book helps the reader (whether parent, school official, or legal professional) understand the IEP process. After reading this book, any parent will be able to better understand their child's IEP and even be able to write them.
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