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

D-A
Cultures of Healing: Correcting the Image of American Mental Health Care
Published in Paperback by W.H. Freeman & Company (1997-02)
Authors: Robert T. Fancher and Jerome D. Frank
List price: $14.95
New price: $10.00
Used price: $10.15
Collectible price: $22.00

Average review score:

Hits the nail on the head
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-03
Dr. Fancher makes many excellent points in this book. There is a lot more reform that needs to happen in psychology and psychiatry. It's good that there are courageous people like Fancher who will raise these crucial issues.

covers topic but not well-written
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-23
I am giving up half-way through. The outline of this book is great, and the points made are valid. But it is not written well. Specifically, it is very wordy and repetitive. The author makes a point, discusses the point, then makes the point again a page or two later. I got it the first time.

I am toward the end of the section on the Behaviorists, and have just decided it is not worth finishing. I would give an example of the wandering wordiness, but it would take too much text to convey this oft-repeated problem. An editor needs to get hold of this and fix it up.

That's a shame - the author does a very good job of defining the theory and the scientific basis of the major schools of psychotherapy, and then noting how far the theory is from its scientific claim. For the intellectual content, I agree with other reviewers that this is one of the best books to do this. However, it is a lot of work to slog through all this writing to cover the wide but discrete range of theses presented.

The author makes profound statements about the human condition, normalcy, and pathology, including as understood by the schools of therapy. But he presents this elliptically. His case could be stronger if he simply stated his counter-arguments, supported them, then went on to the next chapter. The counter-arguments actually add up to a nice profile of what it means to be human, whether disturbed or not!

I was excited to get this book. I have read a lot on this topic. Like the author, I am also trained as a psychotherapist, and like the author, I am quite concerned about the way that therapeutic training ignores the truth that most of what we do is based on philosophy and belief and only to a small (but increasing) degree on science.

I was surprised at the quality of writing when I began reading. I then figured out my mistake: I picked this used book up for a good price, thinking it was written by Raymond Fancher, who wrote the marvelous book, Pioneers in Psychology. That also covers historical and philosophical bases of psychology. When the writing proved annoying, I looked closer and realized it was a different Fancher!

If you conduct research in this area and want a good account of the premises of the major schools of psychotherapy, and you want a good account of their criticisms, this is a valuable book. for example, an ambitious undergrad could write a strong paper with guidance from these arguments. But you will have to work at it -they are not clearly presented.


The book you must read to understand why the psychotherapy hegemony has no clothes
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-08
If there were still hippies, this book would not have to be written. Thinking back to those days, I recall my friend Alex coming from therapy one day and saying, "Psychologists basically want you to conform." He was right then, but in our age of conformity, common sense statements like that will not be enough to educate a public inundated with data showing the efficacy of therapy. This book fills that vaccuum and reveals the hidden ideology of each of the contemporary schools of psychotherapeutic schools so cogently, succinctly, and logically that it would probably be blacklisted by most graduate Psychology departments. It is equivalent to Galileo's revelation that the Church had a vision of the solar system, not based on study but on wish-fulfillment. Taking on the psychoanalytic enterprise, behaviorists, Beck's cognitive psychology, and psychopharmacology in one fell swoop, he demonstrates effectively that that the theorists and practitioners of these various "methods" have molded their views in the same way pre-Columbian map makers designed atlases: through conjecture, impressionism, and powerful cultural biases. Regardless of the implied assertions by many that psychotherapy is rising to the level of a science, Fancher shows this to be far from the case. This is of particular importance today as there is a strong move toward defining evidence based or empirically based therapies that work--probably an artifact of pressures from HMO's rather than greater sophistication of understanding the nature of mental illness. Fancher presents two major problems: one is that in dealing with what is a "healthy individual," one must have an ideological basis; and second, the "subjects" are not reliable. Ever take an employment test with a question "Have you ever stolen from an employer?" How would YOU answer? This is a rather crude example, but you get the point. But if you think about the claims therapies make, and think rationally, it seems fairly obvious psychologists are either poorly trained in logic, poorly educated in the nature of human culture, value, and imagination. One gets the feeling from reading the anayses of the reasoning behind what makes therapy work that most psychologists/psychiatrists don't even read the newspaper. One salient example is the popular Beck Cognitive Therapy industry. Your thinking determines how you feel; change your mind, change your emotions--all in 12 easy sessions. I can imagine Doestoevsky or even John Steinbeck in these sessions. "See, John, when you THINK people are poor and exploited and powerless, you will feel sorry for them and write those pessimistic books of yours. Now, just look around, do you see anyone starving to death in my office?" That might be a bit of hyperbole, but not far from the truth. But it is certainly the truth that such methods--if taken at face value--have the potential of converting the search for the end of psychological suffering and the search for meaning to a reductionist level that approaches the quest for mental health on the same level of taking dance lessons to get dates. Fancher hits home when he challenges each of the popular forms of therapeutic schools, showing even psychopharmocology is an enterprise based on Nielson ratings, figuring out what therapists want their patients to feel, then trying to get the chemistry right. At times the author uses a bit more ammunition than he needs. Having hit the nail on the head, he will occasionaly add a few swings of the hammer. Also, while psychopharmocology does have its ideology, it does appear to relieve some suffering at least some of the time, so I'd be hesitant to throw the baby out with the bathwater. Rather than provide more summary, I'd make the point that if you are interested in the field of therapy or counseling--either as a professional or consumer--if you don't read this book, it would be like trying to play chess without knowing what any of the pieces do or how the game is played.

Most comprehensive comparison of schools of psychology
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-24
This is the best book on comparative clinical psychology/psychiatry I've ever read.

If psychotherapists/psychiatrists were considered faith healers (which this book makes clear they are), this book would qualify as a book on comparative religion, and it would make one question their faith.

Psychoanalysis, Behaviorism, Cognitive Therapy, and Biological Psychiatry are all analyzed, with their core beliefs and assumptions described in detail. Each school's standing with the scientific facts is mentioned.

Cultural reasons why Americans accept certain therapies, or come to accept them in spite of their unscientific bases, are also given.

The most noticable omission is the lack of any discussion of Albert Ellis' Rational Emotive Therapy, although many of the comments about Beck's therapy apply to RET too.

The chapter on biological psychiatry could have provided more background on its history, as well as mention more specific psychiatrists' and pharmaceutical companies' influences. For biological psychiatry, "Blaming the Brain" by Elliot Valenstein (mentioned in this text's acknowledgements) is also recommended.

Without coming out too strongly (which could create a backlash), the book does an excellent job of pointing out how biological psychiatry's illness model is used to justify prescribing psychoactive drugs with no proven specificity in treating "illnesses", in a culture which otherwise wages war on psychoactive drugs.

The only noticable editorial error was a major misspelling of "renaissance".

Soon to be back in print
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-29
Okay, I wrote this, so of course I like it--and since I have to give it "stars" in order to post, I give it five.

But the point of this "review" is to say that the book will be back in print this Fall (2003), from Transaction Publishers/Rutgers, with a new intro and a new title--"Health and Suffering in America: The Context and Content of Mental Health Care."

The hype about mental health care in the last five years or so has grown more and more outrageously false. I'm glad Transaction wants to keep this book in print, as a corrective to the nonsense that those who profit from mental health care would have you believe.

D-A
The Cure D'Ars : St. Jean-Marie-Baptiste Vianney
Published in Paperback by Tan Books & Publishers (1977-06)
Author: F. Trochu
List price: $24.00
New price: $15.46
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Average review score:

Review from the Publisher
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-07
The definitive life, based on the official "Process of Beatification and Canonization," and thus totally factual and documented. Of humble education and assigned to a forgotten farmers' village, he attracted the whole world to Ars and was proclaimed "Patron Saint of Parish Priests" in 1929. Ate one meal a day, slept only a few hours a night, heard confessions up to 17 hours a day, converted thousands. His body remains incorrupt. A grace-filled story of total love of God!

Review from Pope John Paul II
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-22
"In the span of nearly 50 years of priesthood, what is still the most important and most sacred moment for me is the celebration of the Eucharist. My awareness of celebrating in persona Christi at the altar prevails. Never in the course of these years have I failed to celebrate the Most Holy Sacrifice. If this has occurred, it has been due entirely to reasons independent of my will. Holy Mass is the absolute center of my life and of every day of my life. It is at the heart of the theology of the priesthood, a theology I learned not so much from text books as from living examples of holy priests. First and foremost, from the holy Cure of Ars, Jean Marie Vianney. Still today I remember his biography written by Fr. Trochu, which literally overwhelmed me."  (English text of the address given at the International Symposium on the Thirtieth Anniversary of the Promulgation of the Conciliar Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis on Friday, October 27, 1995. Text acquired from L'Osservatore Romano, Weekly English Edition.) Text can also be viewed at the Vatican web site.

Best biography of Vianney
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-27
This is the best biography of Vianney I have read. It is tough going at times, partly due to its length and partly due to its tendency to be repetitious, but it is well worth the time in order to learn more about the personality and life of this exemplary priest.

Hagiography based on facts and research, not fantasy!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-15
Often books about saints are so full of fanciful musings and imaginings that it is difficult to decode fact from fiction. This book is based on the research proceedings and interviews of witnesses for the canonization of St. Jean-Marie-Baptiste Vianney. The book examines the life of the saint through the eyes of those who lived and interacted with him on a daily basis and recounts stories based on theirs shared experiences of the man. The author presents the reader with documented accounts much like what one would hear from witnesses recounting events that had taken place in a court of law. This gives the book a certain authenticity. Clearly, the author has a tremendous amount of respect for the Cure d'Ars but I think that it is the result of what he has uncovered in the collected documents of the saint's life rather than the musings of a man who out of an admiration for a saint, whose life is documented only through fanciful stories based on hearsay or legends, has written a text that is difficult to accept because of the lack of evidence for what is being presented. I would recommend this book because it is well written, balanced and accessible to most readers. I also find that you will get of fairly clear picture of who the Cure of Ars was, how he lived and what he accomplished over the course of his relatively long life. He was truly a remarkable man!

Massive complete, well-documented, inspiring
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-20
What makes this such an amazing and enthralling book is not just the unbelievable life of this humble priest---but the quotes and thoughts of those around him; many impressions from those who knew and worked with him, etc...It also documents extremely well the historical backdrop of France in the eighteenth century; what was going on at the time; how the Church was persecuted, innocent priests guillotined by the savage Revolution; how the Church had to go underground. It was forbidden to say Mass and any priest doing so was punished; families harboring priests were likewise punished. It is a well-documented thorough portrait of a most remarkable saint placed in a historical context. It is engrossing, fascinating and inspiring.

D-A
D & D Poetry: Expressions of Ebony Love
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2004-02-18)
Author: Alexander Smith
List price: $9.94
New price: $4.78
Used price: $4.73

Average review score:

(RAW Rating: 3.5) - Many faces of love...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-01
Love can be found in our happiness, sadness and our desires. In D & D POETRY the author puts his poetic skills, of soulful love, to pages of honest and emotional prose. With 15 thoughtful expressions of love, he tantalizes readers with poems to edify the deepness of one's heart when they find themselves in love. The poems cover love that is unrequited, love so deep nothing else matters, love gone astray and sensual love.

Alexander Smith has put his honest emotions regarding, love, into some in-depth poetry. The prose at times is lyrical and features a nice cadence throughout the collection. I enjoyed the different ways love is expressed because I could feel the pain, joy, sadness and desire in most of the poems. Although not all the poems reached my emotional depths, it is a fine compilation. D & D POETRY extols the multifaceted sentiments of love, being loved and love lost.

Reviewed by Cashana Seals
of The RAWSISTAZ™ Reviewers

The Right Stuff
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-03
I've read the reviews on this book at Barnes and Nobles, but the place to buy it is here at Amazon. I put this book on my coffee table and it always sparks a discussion. Very well done! I truly loved it!

What I Want From A Man
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-30
My girlfriend introduced me to this book over the past weekend. I still haven't been able to part with it. It's nice to know that men are capable feeling to this level. This is a must read!

Buy This Book Today!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-28
I borrowed a copy from a friend and then immediately went out and purchased this book. Every man in this world, regardless of his ethnic background, has been here before in his life. If women wonder how we feel, think, or love, this is a must read. The author really hits the nail on the head. Awesome!!

A Must Read For Women In Love - Melissa
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-26
This book renewed my faith in MEN IN LOVE. I couldn't put it down. Whenever you need confirmation that men actually feel emotions not related to sports or their jobs. Read this book!!!!! Alex definitely says what women always wondered and doubted about men. They do have feelings and emotions. I am not a poetry reader but these really spoke to me.

D-A
D-DAY (History at a Glance)
Published in Hardcover by Savas Publishing (2000-05)
Authors: Randy Holderfield and Michael J. Varhola
List price: $19.95

Average review score:

A day to remember
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-14
Reading this factfilled book by Michael Varhola has again turned my thoughts to all the brave young men who came to fight far away from home to free Europe. This book has many interesting facts and figures that I have not seen in other books. The research has been thorough and put down on paper in a way that makes it easy to read. This book should be read by everyone interested or have family who fought in this battle. Highly recommended.

A great read for those with an interest in World War II
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-08
A well written, thoroughly researched, detailed account of D-Day. This book is a must have for anyone seeking information on this masterful invasion. More than 55 years have passed since the Allies conducted this massive operation and this book is a vivid reminder of the service and sacrific of those brave participants. A great book for veterans or for family members interested in what Grand Father did in the war.

Small in size, large in content
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-18
This book is a must reference source for anyone seeking quick information on the several aspects of one of the greatest military actions in history. The authors have examined, in depth, all factors of the June 6, 1944 landing at Normandy to include Allied and enemy forces, equipment and task organizations. Whether you are a reader with only a casual interest in history, a student, or a history buff, this book is a great information guide. Packed with well-researched facts on air, ground and naval forces, brief biographies of the key leaders, detailed equipment technical data, and personal battle experience of several participants, Varhola and Holderfield have put it all together in a form suitable for ready reference or cover-to-cover reading. Small in size (219 pages), yet large in content, this book contributes to a better understanding of the single most important military action leading to victory in World War II.

Vault of Information
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-15
This book provides an excellent by-the-numbers overview of Operation Overlord. Plenty of background on the various aspects of missions, equipment, the terrain, and the troops. There is a startling amount of information packed into this pleasantly easy to read book. I especially enjoy the way hard facts (for example the number of guns on a beach) are interspersed with interesting vignettes (the fascine tank that became part of the bridge). Strongly recommend this book.

Excellent Overlord Overview
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-19
D-Day is often presented in books, films and other media as a two-dimensional episode between Germans and Americans. In this refreshing volume, the significant roles of the British and Canadian--and even the French--forces are described along with those of the Americans, and the role of Ukrainians, old men, and boys forced into uniform is covered along with that of the Germans.

At the core of this concise, comprehensive overview of Operation Overlord--the Allied invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944--are chapters that provide detailed, minute-by-minute and hour-by-hour descriptions of the action on each of the five Allied beachheads. Sections on weapons and equipment, Allied and Axis leaders, aircraft and airborne operations, and other salient topics help to add depth and detail to these accounts. Brief but detailed introductions and conclusions clearly establish the context of the invasion and describe its effects.

Came across this book after reading another by the same author, a volume on the Korean War titled "Fire &Ice." Was pleased with it, so decided to give this one a chance. Very pleased that I did.

D-A
Dada: Zurich, Berlin, Hannover, Cologne, New York, Paris
Published in Paperback by National Gallery of Art, Washington/D.A.P. (2008-03-01)
Authors: Dorothea Dietrich, Brigid Doherty, Sabine Kriebel, Janine Mileaf, Michael Taylor, Matthew Witkovsky, Hans Jean Arp, Tristan Tzara, Marcel Duchamp, Kurt Schwitters, Francis Picabia, and Max Ernst
List price: $29.95
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Average review score:

dada: zurich, berlin, hanover, cologne, new york, paris
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
dada: zurich, berlin, hanover, cologne, new yorkk, paris

A great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-08
This book is wonderfully informative, plus it has so many full-color reproductions--the type of terrific catalog that inspires one to stroke its pages with a sense of seduction (works in my mind!).

Remarkable
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-01
Coupled with Hans Richter's: "Dada, Art and Antiart" and movement's philosophy and works are clearly understood. Graphics are truly great and commentary enlighten. It might be noted this book is German published as the Max Ernst book "Life and Work". Both with numerous colored plates of the highest quality. The Dada book though excels in text.

Superb
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-05
I have always had a weakness for Dada, and within this quixotic movement a special liking for Schwitters. So I visited the Dada-exposition in the Paris Centre Pompidou last year, and there bought both the Dickerman catalogue of the American exposition, and the (French language) catalogue of the Centre Pompidou itself, which differ in many ways. The exposition was wonderful by the way, and one of the best I' ve seen in many years. Thinking that a morning would be enough to see what I wanted to see, I changed my mind, decided to take dinner in the Pompidou, and stayed for the rest of the day. The immense amount of material was stunning. And the same thing really goes for both impressive catalogues. The American (Dickerman) version (520 pages) follows Dada by way of the cities where Dada developed, and does so in a more or less chronological fashion. Essays are excellent, photomaterial looks great. It is the sort of catalogue you would expect from an exposition like this. The European catalogue, more than thousand pages, printed on very thin paper, treats subjects, artists, and everything else connected with Dada according to alfabet. It seems to me that the catalogue has just about everything that could be seen at the exposition, with exception of the films of course. Although I felt a bit silly after buying both catalogues (spending some 100 euros), I was in the end very glad that I did. Everybody who buys catalogues now and then, know how disappointing these sometimes are. Well, these aren't. They are both superb, knowledgeable. And the people who made them have done a terrific job. In the end you wind up thinking: Hey, these guys (and girls) must have loved Dada as much as I do.

DADA:ZURICH,BERLIN,HANOVER,COLOGNE,NEW YORK,PARIS
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-28
IF YOU LIKE ART THIS IS THE PERFECT MEAL.
BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER AND SNACKS
I WISH I HAD ONE OF THESE BOOKS IN EVERY ONE OF MY ROOMS
OR ANYWHERE I VISIT WHERE THERE MIGHT BE FREE TIME TO LEAF THRU IT!

D-A
Dancing with Power
Published in Paperback by RavenSpeaks Press (2001-11-01)
Author: Francis D. Natali
List price: $12.95
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Used price: $7.20

Average review score:

DANCING WITH POWER
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-05
DANCING WITH POWER is the tale of a 'Zenith Warrior' written with great clarity and soul searching. A must for anyone on the 'path'.

Dancing With Power
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-05
This is a tale of a 'Zenith' Warrior written with great clarity and soul searching. Easy to read. Full of positive energy. A must for anyone on the 'path'.

Brings The Message Home
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-03
A must read! Mr. Natali uses both his own life experiences as well as ones with other people that everyone can relate to. His message is sobering and struck much too close to home for me. If I could apply a minute fraction of what he wrote, I'd be doing well. I've read this book three times, and am currently on a fourth. I hope to one day be able reach the point where I can Dance With Power.

I'm glad I read this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-28
Dancing With Power came into my life at the perfect time. It is one of those books that I need to keep handy and whatever page it opens to is precisely what I am needing to read at that moment. This book presents extraordinary material in a readable, down to earth style, often using anecdotes from the author's life to illustrate his point. Dr. Natali is inviting all of us to live our own unique extraordinary lives and his book gives us the tools to do this.

Finding a life that makes sense
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-23
In the interest of full disclosure, I know Dr. Francis "Nat" Natali, the author of "Dancing with Power." I met him 30 years ago, when he showed up at my house just as my wife and I were sitting down to breakfast. He was accompanied by one of the most striking women I had ever seen in person, a statuesque, olive-skinned, dark-haired beauty a little taller than Nat. He looked to be in his early thirties, she about ten years younger.
Nat quickly and politely explained why they had come. It seems he, a very successful but dissatisfied engineer, as he later explained, had been on one of his many peregrinations alone (described in the book), when he met my wife's father, Dan. Dan, too, was a kind of dissatisfied seeker, a gentleman in his middle fifties who had taken the last of his inheritance and bought a commercial salmon fishing boat.
Nat and Dan met in a fishing port somewhere on the northern California coast. They were both unusual people among the salmon fishermen, in that they were well educated. In fact, Nat approached Dan on hearing him speak, thinking, "He sure doesn't talk like a fisherman." Their ensuing conversation ended with Dan inviting Nat to visit him in Saratoga, California, where Dan lived in a little cabin on his ancestral land. My wife and I lived in "the big house" on the same land.
So Nat and his wife had come to our door that morning looking for Dan. Dan wasn't at home, so we invited them in to share our breakfast with us.
We were immediately taken with both of them. My wife, truth to tell, was a bit threatened by Nat's wife's beauty and was not inclined to pursue the friendship further. But I prevailed and, in any event, she and I parted company a few years later. I stayed in touch with Nat over the years, sometimes frequently, sometimes infrequently.
What I can say here is that his book is an agonizingly true and beautifully told account of the the adulthood of a man who would not settle for anything less than the ever-elusive "life that made sense." Watching his outwardly enviable life unfold, as I did, I eventually saw that he was constantly peeling away layers -- financial, interpersonal, psychological -- in which the world had somehow wrapped him, at first unnoticed, later against his will.
This book is an account of what he learned in that process. One rarely gets the opportunity to look inside the mind of a person who starts with nothing, eventually has it all, including two children by his beautiful wife, then jettisons most of it piece by piece as he keeps looking for the "life that makes sense."
Does he find it?
Read the book.

D-A
Deadly Illusions (Greg McKenzie Mysteries)
Published in Paperback by Durban House (2005-04-01)
Author: Chester D. Campbell
List price: $12.95
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Used price: $1.13
Collectible price: $12.95

Average review score:

A WONDERFUL READ
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-01
I MET AND BOUGHT CHESTER CAMPBELLS SECRET OF THE SCROLL AND LOVED IT, SO I IMMEDIATELY BOUGHT A COPY DEADLY ILLUSIONS. BEING BORN IN NASHVILLE AND RETIRED FROM THE AIR FORCE, I REALLY ENJOYED THE MYSTERY THAT SEEM TO COME ALIVE. CHESTER HAS A WONDERFUL STYLE THAT LETS YOU STEP INTO THE PAGE. I WOULD RECOMMEND THIS BOOK TO ANYONE WHO LOVES A MYSTERY! KEEP IT UP CHESTER!!!!

A Rolicking Good Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-12
In DEADLY ILLUSIONS, Greg and Jill McKenzie have opened McKenzie Investigations, not without trepidation. Can they make this a successful business without pursing domestic disputes and photo-jumping hot pant spouses? Their first case doesn't look promising. Molly Saint, a hottie despite her name, wants our dynamic duo to do a background investigation on her husband,a dark, secretive guy she married without much forethought or background info. She fears Damon may be violent, and she doesn't know what he does or where his money comes from. Damon told her he was a former Special Forces operative, and he claims to do occasional favors for his military buddies. But beyond that, Molly says the guy is a question mark, with a personality becoming more aggressive, violent even. She fears he may kill her.

Greg wants to decline, thinks this may be a hot pants ride, but Jill sets him straight: They need to pay the rent.

And so it begins. Routinely...until Molly disappears. No trace. Just a message that she finally got a look at Damon's basement workshop, and she's terrified. The McKenzies fear the worst. They search the house. Swept clean. But the basement looks like a meth lab. Was Damon a meth'er? Need the cops now. But then the house is torched, all trace evidence gone. Nothing left but a slip of paper with some phone numbers.

Who is this guy, Damon Saint? And why doesn't he have any bank accounts? Is Molly alive? Why did Damon flee a thriving business in Indiana without notice? Where does he get his money? Is he really Damon Saint, or just someone posing as him? Greg and Jill probe deeper and somebody gets offended. Threats, their office is trashed, their home vandalized.

Meanwhile, as if nothing else is going on, the Fed Reserve Chairman is murdered, almost in front of the McKenzies. A black man was seen running away. The feds and locals suspect the wrong man, but the McKenzie's find a witness who can clear him. The witness is murdered.

Greg and Jill find the dilapidated farmhouse where Damon was raised. There's a shovel, some signs of recent occupation. Is Molly buried here?

Not gonna say much more, because I don't want to give anything away. Suffice to say, this is the best of the series, a real humdinger. Chester has developed Greg and Jill into intriguing characters with smarts, wit, grace and charm. But don't take these folks lightly: They're serious investigators and carry serious weapons -- they're not afraid to use them

Becoming one of my favorite mystery series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-27
Greg and Jill McKenzie have opened an investigations firm and are working cases together. In walks Molly Saint. She wants them to look into her husband's past. The McKenzie's, especially Greg, are initially skeptical about taking this case. Molly has been married to Damon Saint for five years. But, Jill has a feeling that something isn't right and convinces Greg to do some preliminary investigations. If they don't find anything alarming, they will stop.

They are already working for Leisure Foods Group investigating missing funds from a King Cole specialty restaurant. Jill goes undercover as hostess in the restaurant. Greg gets friends to eat there so that they can determine if the money they pay to the restaurant is actually accounted for in the deposit the next day.

The day they met with Mr. Logan from Leisure Foods Group in the Opryworld Hotel, Dr. Elliott Bernstein, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, was gunned down at the hotel. Since Greg used to be an investigator for the DA's office, he knows some officers. But since he left that job after some comments he made about Detective Mark Tremaine ended up in the newspaper, he doesn't get along with many of the officers. The one officer that is still his friend is Detective Phil Adamson.

Once Molly disappears, the McKenzie's begin to delve deeply into Damon's background. They never lose sight of their other cases, but this one has become priority.

The Greg McKenzie series is fast becoming one of my all-time favorite series. Mr. Campbell has a great way of telling a story while weaving the various cases that Greg and Jill are working on. I find his characters to be very believable. I like that they don't just center on one case. That's not how it is in real life.

I like the Nashville setting. And the fact that Jill is a pilot and owns a Cessna allows them to travel to gain additional information and not lose much time.

The only complaint I'd have is that they turn off their cell phone too much, especially during important cases. But, since they are older, this is still believable

I can't wait to read the next Greg McKenzie mystery. I highly recommend this book and the whole series.

A unique style of writing that is both dashing and touching
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-03
Chester D. Campbell, former journalist, writer, speechwriter, ad copywriter, public relations executive, and now mystery writer, is someone with an obvious zest for life. He served in both World War II and Korea, and now enjoys life with his wife, children, and many grandchildren.

In this latest Greg McKenzie mystery, the newly formed McKenzie Investigations, run by Greg and his wife, Jill, is off to an auspicious beginning after solving their first case. Greg has run a bit amok with the local police, but still has contacts in the Nashville Police Department. But when a high profile personality is gunned down in a local hotel just when Greg and Jill are dining a new client, they have no idea that their next case will be integrally connected. In the meantime, they take on a case for a questionable character named Molly Saint who is a shirttail relative of Jill's. Molly's husband, Damon, is not quite who he seems, and Molly has a nagging feeling that she may be at risk:

"'As I told you on the phone, Damon's wife Molly hired us to look into him. He had made some threats that were quite worrisome. But before we could get very far with our investigation, she left a message on our answering machine to call her back as soon as possible. She was really excited about something. But when we tried to call, we found they had moved.'"

Chester D. Campbell has his own unique style of writing that is both dashing and touching. His obvious affection for his wife shines through just as he outlines a nefarious plot based on his own military experience. Greg McKenzie is a senior investigator who relies on his experience to compensate for the brawn he might have engaged in the past. His wife, Jill, is an accomplished pilot, cook, and is the perfect partner for her husband. Campbell juxtaposes her correction of Greg's "blue language" and her obvious spirituality with her determination when the going gets rough and she has to use some of the private investigator skills that most people would shrink from. All in all, DEADLY ILLUSIONS is another winner in the Chester D. Campbell literary cabinet. Campbell obviously has many stories to share, and he continues to write fabulous mysteries.

Shelley Glodowski
Senior Reviewer

Compelling
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-13
Chester Campbell has created a unique blend of sleuthing with the Greg McKenzie series. In this installment, McKenzie, retired from the Air Force Office of Special Investigations and former investigator for the Nashville DA's office, has opened an investigative firm with his wife Jill. While investigating the disappearance of funds from a popular restaurant chain, they agree to take on a case for Molly Saint, who asks for a background check on her husband Damon. When Molly mysteriously disappears, Greg and Jill try to track her whereabouts, which leads to entanglement with contract killers tied to the murder of the Chairman of the Federal Reserve.

The McKenzie duo is a fresh addition to the mystery genre. An older couple, Greg and Jill complement each other personally and professionally and make for good reading. Campbell writes in an engaging style, delivering a mystery that twists and turns throughout the book. A compelling read.


D-A
Dear Soldier: Heartfelt Letters from America's Children
Published in Hardcover by (2006-05-01)
Authors: Barbara W. Baldwin, Amber Baldwin D'Amico, and Heather Baldwin Duff
List price: $14.99
New price: $3.20
Used price: $2.44

Average review score:

Hail to the troops.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-21
Excellent book.

Thanks to the writers of the short letters/notes in the book.

Thanks especially to all our Troops around the world, keeping the U.S. free.

A warm tribute filled with children's sincerity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-05
"I pray for you every night before I go to bed."

While volunteering to assemble care packages for our troops serving in Operations Enduring and Iraqi Freedom, Barbara Warfield Baldwin and her daughters came across heartfelt and compelling letters to the troops from local children that served to brighten the Baldwins' days. Dear Soldier is the compilation of many of these letters and pictures.

Meant to uplift the troops' spirits as well as boost the morale of the general public, Dear Soldier will have you reading out loud to whomever is in the room. The honesty and sincerity of kids is great. With phrases like "I hope that yall find that Osama Bin ladin," and "My brother says that he wants to be in the war. I'm thinking I might join him," you can see why these letters mean so much to our troops. And with lines like, "you might think I'm stupid but I made it to forth grade so I make A's and B's, so there," you can't help but laugh and share.

These letters and drawings are photocopied so you don't only get to read them, but see the handwriting and erase marks. Seeing what is important to the children as they were writing is precious. My primary criticism is that for some reason a couple of letters were repeated in the compilation. But don't let that sway you.

Armchair Interviews says: This is a great book to give as a gift, especially to our serving troops.

Reviewed by Ashley Denis
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-13
This collection of letters was both colorful in its words and in its pictures. Whether children are asking our soldiers to please come home safe, what guns they use in Iraq, or telling them about the pets they have in their homes, these children are all very aware of what is going on in Iraq; they know they are there fighting for our freedom and risking their necks to do it.

As you turn the pages, taking a look into each child's perception of the war, and learning what questions they desire to ask of our soldiers, you'll notice you have an array of emotions. Laughter is not a stranger as you read through these letters, especially when you read something like "how do you take a bath?" or "I have lots of friends here. Some are tall like a house, and some are short, but I like them anyways." Other times you feel your heart wrench at how considerate some of the letters are; "Try not to get hurt, ok? One thing the earth doesn't need is more hurt people." Or "You make me confident in everything. You make me feel safe in what I do." Statements like these are raw and real emotions that children are pouring out in their letters to these men and women in Iraq.

It is so inspiring in reading about the concerns children can possess for people they don't even know, as well as the innocence of a child when they ask the most simple of questions because they are truly interested in what type of food these men and women like to eat, and where they live, and what they do in their spare time when they are not being soldiers.

I found myself laughing on one letter, and crying on the next. Not only is this book a compilation of letters to our soldiers, I believe it is also a small piece of the positive side of life; an inside scoop into a child's creative mind as it spills over onto the letters with which they write; "I hope this letter from me will make you feel at home. I hope this letter will make you feel a little less scared. ...Whoever gets this letter, please don't die. If you do die with my letter so that will let the world know that I care for each and every one of you out there in the war."

I think Tim, says it best in his letter when he says "if you get hurt, make sure you get to a doctor!"

just precious!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-19
I saw this book in the store, read part of it...and cried..lol. This is one of the most precious things I have ever seen! As an Army wife, and a soon to be teacher, I got this book to use at home and in the classroom. AMAZING!

Such a Great Little Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-16
I bought five copies to hand out to several military units. They are morale boosters. Those kids are awesome and so endearing. Thanks doesn't do justice the range of emotion their letters caused.

D-A
A Deeper Wound: The South African / Azanian Struggle for Liberation
Published in Paperback by Dorrance Publishing Co., Inc. (2003-11)
Author: Tsoaledi D. Thobejane
List price: $10.00
New price: $8.46
Used price: $8.46

Average review score:

A compelling story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-20
The story of the South African struggle for liberation has been told in many ways by those who participated in this worthy course to liberate the country from the yoke of oppression.Never have I come accross this kind of perspective as postulated by Tsoaledi(Daniel)in his book.

His story is so compelling that I urge you to spare some time to read it in this book.

Amazing!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-05
It is an incredible first hand account of the struggle for liberation in South Africa from the apartheid regime.
A must read for anyone interested in knowing more about the oppressed and exploited masses, in people's struggles worldwide, nature of racism and exploitation.
I therefore recommend you to read this book.

Amazing !
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-05
It is an incredible first hand account of the struggle for liberation in South Africa from the apartheid regime.
A must read for anyone interested in knowing more about the oppressed and exploited masses; in peoples struggles worldwide, nature of racism and exploitation.
I therefore recommend you to read this book.

A Deeper Wound
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-10
The story of the South African struggle for liberation was told only from one perspective for a long time.A lot of people only know about a liberal or a non-racial approach to the struggle against apartheid.

Mr.Thobejane brings another perspective which was not known by many people especially outside South Africa.The Black Consciousness approach, which was mooted by people such
as Steven Bantu Biko and others, as Tsoaledi clearly states,should also be brought to the front so that we can fully understand what entailed this worthy struggle to liberate the oppressed in this country.

By reading his book, I can now understand these different underpinnings of the struggle for liberation especially from the Black Consciousness school of thought.I therefore recommend you to read this book.

Amazing first hand account of the struggle for liberation
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-18
Tsoaledi gives an incredible first hand account of the struggle for liberation in South Africa. He details the apartheid regime's
stronghold on the oppressed and exploited masses, and gives a powerful alternative. A must read for anyone interested in peoples struggles worldwide.

D-A
Designing Solutions with COM+ Technologies (Pro - Developer)
Published in Paperback by Microsoft Press (2001-01-19)
Authors: Ray Brown, Wade Baron, and William D. Chadwick
List price: $69.99
New price: $14.68
Used price: $0.88

Average review score:

The best!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-04
This book goes into great detail and handles the issues that have plagued me all along the path.If I had this book many months ago, I would have clearly saved myself a lot of struggle.This is JUST what I have been searching for.

Excellent book-very detailed approach
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-22
Not only the author knows COM+ in detail, he also knows how to express the ideas very well. The book covers enough details of all the aspects of COM+. The examples are easy to understand. I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in learning this subject.

For C++ developers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-10
Very good book, explains real-worlds issues one faces when developing COM components.
A few first chapters are extremely useful (something I had to learn hard-way. Have I had this book, I would have saved myself many hours restructuring my projects). Basic ATL types are also explained and recommendations given are very good.
Concise but very useful is explanation of BSTR, OLESTR, CComBSTR, _bstr_t types.

Required reading for COM+ developers
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-16
This is an excellent book; a little pricey, but worth the money if you are serious about COM+. And I mean serious! This is not a beginners book, for that I would recommend "Inside COM+ Base Services" by the same publisher. This book is a little too biased towards MS development environments. For example they compare VC++, VB, and VJ++ and casually mention there are "other capable environments". Hmm. Then again, this is a Microsoft press book, and COM+ is a Microsoft technology, so its to be expected.

This book picks up where introductory COM books left off. The first chapter is about error handling in your COM+ objects - not a good place to start learning COM :)

Particularly useful to me was the last third of the book, the design patterns. Here, the authors give us a meaty example of a "real world" COM+ enterprise solution. What other book gives you this? Answer: none. Get this book!

Real-world COM+ solutions laid bare
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-28
An excellent book. The early chapters reveal solid solutions to oft-encountered COM problems - error handling, string manipulation, smart pointers, multiple-reader single-writer locks, streaming and marshal-by-value etc. The later chapters concentrate mainly on design techniques for building scalable applications. In my (humble) opinion, chapter 13: The MTS Revolution is worth the price of the book alone. This chapter describes the evolution of technologies for building scalable systems, introduces the single-concurrent-client model and explains how to write scalable systems keeping code maintainable and in the general case, lock-free. All would-be COM+/MTS developers should read this chapter! I've read both this and Tim Ewald's Transactional COM+ - both excellent books and compliment each other very well. In my opinion, Brown's chapter 13 is far superior to Ewald's chapter 1. Both attempt to acheive the same thing, coaxing the regular developer into the COM+ mindset, but Brown's offers logical facts and reasoning as opposed to Ewald's non-real-world convoluted IPerson examples.


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