Customer Reviews:
Why I recommend this book:.......1999-04-22
I am a non-chemist in a market analyst's position previously occupied by a Chemical Engineer. I never even so much as did "Mickey Mouse" chemistry at school, so my learning curve has been a pretty steep one. For someone to write a book like this is very unusual, as the refining industry is typically the preserve of the technical elite, and this book removes the mystique and even manages to deal with a difficult subject with an essence of humour! Thank you Bill - I'm trying to get hold of the rest of the saga - Petrochemicals in Non-Technical Language!
great reference material.......1998-03-23
This book is a great reference tool for people in petroleum related fields who do not have technical training. If you are involved in oil and gas operations, sales, retail, etc., this book really helps you understand the terminology and the process. Everyone in my office uses it!
Amazon.com
Lynching, the extrajudicial punishment inflicted by vigilantes and mobs on often innocent victims, was far from an unusual occurrence, though some historians have depicted it as such. Instead, writes Philip Dray, lynching was part of a "systematized reign of terror that was used to maintain the power whites had over blacks." Drawing on records held at the Tuskegee Institute, Dray argues that from 1882 until 1952, not a single year passed without a recorded lynching somewhere in the United States, most often in the Deep South and Mississippi Delta regions. This violent "justice," meted out "at the hands of persons unknown" (with, therefore, no possibility of attaching guilt to the perpetrators, though, as Dray points out, such seemingly spontaneous events required organization and planning) held African American communities in terror and was one force behind the exodus of black southerners to the north in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Dray's extraordinary study reveals a pattern of crime against humanity, one that, he writes, diminished gradually for various reasons, not least of them the work of reformers and ordinary citizens "who knew we were too good to be a nation of lynchers." --Gregory McNamee
Book Description
It is easy to shrink from our country’s brutal history of lynching. Lynching is called the last great skeleton in our nation’s closet: It terrorized all of black America, claimed thousands upon thousands of victims in the decades between the 1880s and the Second World War, and leaves invisible but deep scars to this day. The cost of pushing lynching into the shadows, however—misremembering it as isolated acts perpetrated by bigots on society’s fringes—is insupportably high: Until we understand how pervasive and socially accepted the practice was—and, more important, why this was so—it will haunt all efforts at racial reconciliation.
“I could not suppress the thought,” James Baldwin once recalled of seeing the red clay hills of Georgia on his first trip to the South, “that this earth had acquired its color from the blood that had dripped down from these trees.” Throughout America, not just in the South, blacks accused of a crime—or merely of violating social or racial customs—were hunted by mobs, abducted from jails, and given summary “justice” in blatant defiance of all guarantees of due process under law. Men and women were shot, hanged, tortured, and burned, often in sadistic, picnic-like “spectacle lynchings” involving thousands of witnesses. “At the hands of persons unknown” was the official verdict rendered on most of these atrocities.
The celebrated historian Philip Dray shines a clear, bright light on this dark history—its causes, perpetrators, apologists, and victims. He also tells the story of the men and women who led the long and difficult fight to expose and eradicate lynching, including Ida B. Wells, James Weldon Johnson, Walter White, and W.E.B. Du Bois. If lynching is emblematic of what is worst about America, their fight may stand for what is best: the love of justice and fairness and the conviction that one individual’s sense of right can suffice to defy the gravest of wrongs. This landmark book follows the trajectory of both forces over American history—and makes the history of lynching belong to us all.
Customer Reviews:
A Very Difficult Book To Read But Essential!.......2007-02-15
This is history book in the purest sense of what a history book should be yet this book is much more than a history of American Violence against African Americans, it's a history of how civilization can be repressive and savage despite it's seemingly enlightened ideology. Philip Dray doesn't hold back in painful details of lynching, the dynamics and psychology behind the mob mentality, and how people actively seek to uphold an illusion of law and order from the bigoted vigilantes to the unsympathetic courts. Collectively we have tried and still continue to try to supress the history of slavery and the bloody history subsequent racial violence. This book needs to be required reading in our schools as a counter to other so-called history texts admonishing certain fathers of the nation.
One word - outstanding........2006-01-29
Quite possibly the best, most well-researched book I've ever read. A smooth read, impeccable use of historical sources, and a clear narrative account of the most tragic era in American history. For scholars who research or teach in the area of social control, legal, and extra-legal punishment, you *cannot* have a full grasp of the topic unless you read Dray's work. A fine work of history...the author is to be commended.
Very informative.......2005-10-05
This book was not only shipped within 2 days but in new condition. The book itself is very informative about other things than lynching. It talks about various people related to the anti-lynching movement tons of other things. I'm currently using this as a text book for a college class. This is a great teaching resource! Buy the book, you won't forget it!
A first rate history of an American tragedy.......2005-09-10
Dray's account, while often disturbing reading, is an essential for anyone who seeks to understand the lynching phenomenon in the United States. Scholarly, but accessible, the history's gruesome recountings of lynchings are balanced by the tales of those individuals and organizations that fought, often at great personal peril, to bring an end to this national disgrace. This meticulously researched volume is recommended for the professional as well as the lay historian. It is a cautionary tale, but ultimately one not without hope.
I only THOUGHT I knew about lynchings..........2005-07-16
I fancy myself a history buff. And as a black man, I like to think I know my history. I knew how savage whites in the South could be to black men who didn't know their place.
I knew what a potent and mix sex and race were - and are - in America.
But nothing I knew prepared me for what I read. Mr. Dray did an incredible job in tying together the long history of lynching in this country, from its origins in early America, to the 1960s - in other words *in my lifetime*.
I gained a appreciation for Ida Wells that I never had; she is often mentioned in Black History texts, but I never understood until "BPU" why she was so amazing.
This book should be required reading for high school students Nationwide (another fact that Dray makes clear is that while Southerners were the worst offenders, lynchings took place in the Northern states as well).
This shameful period of American History is as bad as the Nazis atrocities against Jews - and for a far longer period of time. People who think that post-slavery, Jim Crow was nothing more than a benign embarassment should be made to read this book until they get it.
Hats off to Phillip Dray for a engrossing and educational read. By the time I finished, I understood our country a little better than before.
Amazon.com
The place: London; the time: 1770, when the wealthy denizens of the city walked through London's streets with scented handkerchiefs over their noses to disguise the stench of the poor. As if filthy streets, impoverished beggars, pickpockets, thieves, and prostitutes everywhere weren't enough of an eyesore, the mutilated bodies of young women start turning up around Covent Garden.To Sir John Fielding, a blind magistrate, the crimes are an abomination; he sets out to trap the killer with the help of his assistant, young Jeremy Proctor.
In addition to a fine mystery, author Bruce Alexander offers up a fascinating guided tour of 18th-century London, from the precincts of the Bow Street Runners to the shadowy haunts of criminals. In the characters of Sir John and Jeremy, we are gifted with the voices of experience and innocence--a potent combination in so murky a venue.
Book Description
Eighteenth-century London: prostitutes are being brutally murdered in Covent Garden. Sir John Fielding, the blind magistrate who confounded London's first police force, must call upon his keen intellect and uncommon detecting skills to solve this shocking series of crimes with a plan that is as daring as it is desperate...
Customer Reviews:
Young Jeremy grows up........2007-01-15
This is a cracker of an historical series, and each book seems to get better. In this the fourth in the series, we have Sir John Fielding and his protege Jeremy Proctor trying to determine who is killing prostitutes right in their own neighbourhood. There have been a number of gruesome deaths, and they are anxious to solve the murders. Alexander is a wonderful writer and his characters are richly portrayed. In this book Jeremy is now fifteen years of age, and he is growing up. He is able to take a much more active role in the exciting life on Bow Street. Another nice thing about this series is the real historical people that we meet. Along with Sir John Fielding, we also meet the Irish author Olver Goldsmith, who lived during the time period when this book was set. I also really enjoy this first-hand look at the Bow Street Runners that we get with each book. This is a first-rate series, and I look forward to completing it.
Another Good Story.......2003-04-13
The fourth installment in Bruce Alexander's murder mystery series about blind 18th-century London magistrate Sir John Fielding is another step up. The plot is built around a Jack the Ripper-style murders of a series of prostitutes. Alexander appears to have read liberally from Patricia Cornwell to Patrick O'Brien, for his stories introduce elements of early forensic criminology and O'Brien's careful historical pictures of English life. The stories are good, they are not great. They are fun and easy reads.
Bravo Mr.Alexander!!!!!.......2001-08-29
This is the 4th book in the Sir John series and upholds the outstanding writing and vivid details of daily life in England of the 1700's. I always look fwd to reading another episode in the adventures of Sir John Fielding and his young assistant Jeremy Proctor.The murder investigations they perform are well thought out and hold your interest. I can atribute many nights of reading until the early hours to this series. Keep them coming Mr.Alexander.
The best one yet - a ripping yarn indeed!.......2001-08-04
I enjoyed this fourth novel in Bruce Alexander's Sir John Fielding series a little more than any of the first three for one principal reason. The book appears to be good enough to stand on its own because there are apparently a large number of people who enjoyed it (and maybe some who DIDN'T enjoy it) without understanding what the author did.
But the reason why I enjoyed this book most of all is because I have an interest in the subject matter that this novel REALLY concerns. Because what Alexander did was to take a famous series of serial killings of prostitutes that actually took place in late 19th century London and transpose them into the year 1770, the year in which this novel takes place.
Can it be that so many readers failed to recognize that the details of the killings in this novel match so perfectly with the details of the murders that actually took place in Whitechapel in 1888? Just to make the contract a little more binding, the author also gives us a suspect nicknamed "Jack-the-carver".
"He'll carve you up, see?" Jimmie Bunkins says to his chum, the narrator and main character, Jeremy Proctor, explaining the nickname. "Is he what you would call a 'high ripper'?" Jeremy asks in reply, using the term that was then used to describe a knife-wielding criminal.
The usual cast of characters that Alexander's readers have grown fond of are here: the indomitable Sir John Fielding, his young assistant, Jeremy, Jimmie Bunkins, the reformed former sneak thief and street urchin, and Black Jack Bilbo, Bunkins's guardian and Jeremy's avuncular mentor. And I am happy to report the return of Ignatius Donnelly, the kindly Irish doctor who played a significant role in "Blind Justice", the first novel in the series before departing for Lancashire in fruitless pursuit of the lovely widow, Lady Goodhope.
In addition to that, Jeremy (who seems to have no shortage of worthy adult male role models) is also befriended by Constable Perkins, one of Sir John's "Beak Runners", who has developed his one arm and his fighting skills to such an extent that he can lick any man with two arms. His imparting of some of those skills to Jeremy plays a significant role in this novel.
Jeremy's character development remains of interest to those who have read this series in order. We know of Jeremy's intent to study the law with Sir John, but here we see, for the first time, a "flash-forward" twenty-seven years into the future where Jeremy has actually become a practicing solicitor. Partly consistent and partly inconsistent with that, we also see Jeremy pitting his own judgment against that of Sir John during a criminal investigation for the first time in this series.
And in the third novel, Watery Grave, at the age of 14, Jeremy learns the "facts of life" from Black Jack Bilbo. "Persons Unknown" takes place after Jeremy turns 15 and is feeling the yearnings of puberty. His interest in a female street acrobat- turned-prostitute is an interesting sub-plot.
There are weaknesses in this novel that a less tolerant reviewer might not so readily excuse. Jeremy's treacly personality is less tolerable at a time when he is entering puberty. Surely, even a well-spoken 15 year old lad in the year 1770 had thoughts and instincts and language considerably more coarse than those displayed here by Jeremy.
The fight scene that takes place between Jeremy (after he has received instruction from Constable Perkins) and a street thug is ridiculously one-sided. And Sir John's original plan to trap the murderer is utterly ridiculous and provides more comic relief than the author must have intended.
This reviewer's affection for the characters and for the setting in which they perform and his delight at seeing the Whitechapel mystery moved 118 years back in time into a fictitious setting override his objections, and 5 stars are awarded.
Series Continues to Improve with Each Outing.......2001-05-17
This is the fourth in the series set in 1770 London and featuring Sir John Fielding, the blind magistrate of the Bow Street Court, and Jeremy Proctor, a falsely accused thief whom Fielding proves innocent and then takes into his home. In this outing, person or persons unknown are killing prostitutes in Covent Garden. The Bow Street Runners (the forerunners of the modern-day Bobbys) arrive just after the murder and quickly become frustrated with the lack of witnesses and suspects. As the story progresses, suspects abound, but in the end, it is Jeremy who catches the murderer.
This series continues to excel in several key areas. Alexander spins tales with enough twists to satisfy even the most able among us at solving the mystery. He is so skillful a storyteller that the reader is transported to the squalor and filth of 1770s London. No fancy houses and servants for this series. Alexander's stories are about the every-day lives of people in the lower echelons of society. While Sir John remains, for the most part, just as we met him in Blind Justice, the first book in the series, Jeremy has been developed over the course of the series so that the reader comes to like the teenager for who he is. Alexander's history never overshadows his characters or story, but the reader always has a sense of the place and time.
An excellent series that continues to get better with each entry.
Average customer rating:
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This is the new age, in person,
Samuel L Lewis
Manufacturer: Omen Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
General | Theology | Religious Studies | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 0912358130 |
Book Description
When Harry Keeton disappeared into Ryhope Wood, his sister Tallis was just an infant. Now, thirteen years old, she hears him whispering to her from the Otherworld. He is in danger. He needs her help. To help him, she must find her way to Lavondyss, at the heart of the wildwood, where she will be changed forever.
Customer Reviews:
worthy of the story.......2007-08-22
I loved Mythago Wood, and yet it was with reluctance I bought Lavondyss. Lavondyss was a place simply hinted at in the first book, so intriguing that if there was a chance of it being expanded upon in further books, it would be worth the buy. I was not dissapointed. The time flow is a bit choppy, and I hate re reading what I've alredy been over to figure out how much time has passed or what happened, yet I found myself doing that three or four times in this book. That aside, this book is almost as good as the first one, and better in its own way. The description was amazing, and the end of the story was fufilling and worthy of what it was set up to be in the beginning.
As far from fluff as you can get..........2007-03-06
Generally, I consider myself to be more of a science fiction fan than a fastasy fan. Most fantasy novels seem too much the same to me - wizards, knights, fairies, etc. dressed up in flowery language with cutesy names. Too many modern fantasy writers seem to forget that many of the elements of the fantasy genre are based on much older stories, and those stories on others much older than them. Robert Holdstock quite masterfully taps into the essence of myth, legend, and fairy tale, stripping away all of the modern frippery and exposing them for what they really are - deep rooted stories of fear, desperation and tragedy. For those who felt that the story was too violent, I encourage them to do some research into what life was like in the "olden days." It was not a quaint tale of bucolic bliss but short, brutish, and frequently cruel. Although I loved "Mythago Wood," "Lavondyss" is far superior and complex in examining the genesis and evolution of myth. It is an eerie, uneasy, discomforting book and all the more powerful for that. If you're looking for a story that will give you the warm fuzzies, stick to more standard fantasy fare. If you're looking for a book that will challenge your ideas about myth and story and haunt you for many days after, "Lavondyss" is about as good as it gets.
Stunning Myth-Weaving & World-Building.......2006-09-15
Judging by some of the other reviews, this book is to complex for some people. But if you think you're up to it intellectualy, this is a truly stunning read that will profoundly affect you.
I read this first, and having just finished it's predecessor, Mythago Wood, I have to say that Lavondyss is by far the more developed and powerful of the two. The imagery is simply stunning, particularly the first half of the book. It evokes wonderful images of nature, mythology and fantasy. The second half concerns a quest and it is very abrupt jump from the first half, but you get used to it. While not as visually stunning as the first half, it is none the less very powerful and addictive.
This book is an emotioanlly wrenching tragedy in the classical sense of the word, and the twists and turns are beautifully and wonderfully convoluted and realised, the sort of book that will take several readings to fully appreciate (if I can bring myself to read it again - it is very emotioanlly draining).
If you have a love of mythology, nature, the wildwoods and truly breathtaking fantasy, read this book.
Lacking a strong story line........2006-07-24
Lavondyss tells the story of Tallis, Harry Keeton's much younger sister. Tallis is a strange little girl who likes to listen to Gaunt the old gardner's folk tales, and to bards' songs. Finding the true name of a place and making strange masks out of dead wood and sun bleached animal bones are her favourite games.
One day, while playing in an old oak tree, she catches a glimpse of another world, where she witnesses the death in battle of a handsome young man named Scathach, whom she falls in love with.
Soon she'll understand that she's actually connected to the magic of Mythago Wood, and that she might be able to save her brother, who's been lost in the Wood for years, causing their father much grief. Several years later, deeming herself finally ready, she decides to enter the forest and look for Scathach, as well as for a way into Lavondyss, where she believes Harry is trapped.
To say the truth, even though I found Robert Holdstock's world building and myth creation rather impressive and enchanting, I really missed the presence of a strong story line to keep me in suspense, and as a result I found the book a tad boring at times, as well as confusing.
Somebody keep that man away from the lillies, or he will gild them to death!.......2006-02-21
I read Mythago Wood and loved it. I was excited to move right on to Lavondyss, knowing it was considered perhaps obscure but ultimately more rewarding. Good God, was i wrong. The book is overwritten and hopelessly convoluted. Furthermore it suffers from a preciousness that insists on overdescribing everything. For example, at one point that main character finds a dismembered penis, which she refers to as "a sorrowing." A sorrowing? Dude, it's a cut off penis. Don't get cute on me. Also, cut off penises are the tip of the ice berg when it comes to mangled, slashed, destroyed and burned body parts that litter the pages. The fact that it's so gratuitious makes it absoltuely boring. At some point, you get to your 60th chopped off head or your 20th devoured corpse and your eyes glaze over and you long for the controlled brutality of, say, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, where at least nobody stoops to describing body parts in the romantic diction of an insufferable college poem about losing their virginity. I usually don't write smack down reviews of books that I've read- god knows the poor authors struggle enough- but sometiems you need to step up and say, people, this is not good. This is bad. Looking at all the positive reviews, I am filled with dread. If we continue to encourage and perpetuate this type of writing, my favorite authors will be ruined as they let themsleves get lax and start putting down on the page everything that pops into their heads. We must make a stand against overwritten tripe! Robert Holdstock is a good author. He's written a great book in Mythago Wood. Then he went off hte deep end and wrote this. I almost threw it away half way through, but I became rivited by the desperation in the prose. It's horrifyign and compelling to watch Holdstock struggle to make sense of htis and come up with the most mundane twists on everything. A character can't walk across a room without turning into a giant tree, a wolf, an incarnation of themselves as a child and finally, oh, a steaming pile of horse hockey. Read this to learn how not to write. If you still doubt me, just go through the book and count all the times the characters say, "Of course!" And then proceed to pull some amazing revelation out of their mind that the author just totally made up and is completely not related to the text, or is related in a kind of enjambed forced at sword point sort of way. They say of course like every page. Every. Page. At least for a while there. Don't spend money on this book, send it to a fund we'll set up to hire a roaming editor who will dispense vengence on writers who try to perpetrate this junk under the banner of art. It is really the black flag banner of anarchy.
Customer Reviews:
The Essential Mommsen.......2006-12-15
This is the book that one should seek out if they wish to approach this work in a currently readable and enjoyable fashion. A complete high quality reissue hardbound by Routledge will run you $ 1,075.00. Thanks to computer printing there are now less expensive reissues of the complete work in four volumes with less pages. That means smaller print and lower quality paper. However, the complete work is marred by an uninspired and sometimes wrong headed translation by a 19th century Scottish Divine. I own a complete 3 volume 1908 edition, and the only reason to prefer it to this book is if you are involved with intellectual history as it pertains to "classical" historians. This book is an eminently readable 600 page abridgement by John H. Collins a major mid-20th century classicist and historian. This work lets you know exactly what has been pruned and why. It covers the time period from the end of the Punic wars through the fall of the Republic.
While the complete work starts with the monarchy, the real strength of Mommsen's contribution to Roman Republican history is in the period covered by this abridgement. Almost amazingly, this new translation transports you into the literature of the work with enough verve and acumen to make you, the reader, understand why the complete work won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1902. It is the only work of history ever to be so honored. This is "Classical History" and expect opinion and feeling to be expressed bluntly and with conviction. However, when back checked against Allen M. Ward, et al's "History of the Roman People," 4th edition, which is the current standard "textbook" on Roman history, this abridgement stands up well both factually and interpretively. Rarely, but sometimes, it seems that Ward, et al's book almost borrows a line from Mommsen. Expect to pay between $ 15.00 and $ 25.00 for this item. It is money well spent. If I am right and David Shotter's "Fall of the Roman Republic," is the current scholarly state of the art on this topic, and having compared this book with Shotter's, I am amazed at how fresh Mommsen's work remains to this day. In my opinion, this is without a doubt the greatest work of the "classical" historians on topics Roman available to us today.
Average customer rating:
- A Hellfire book!
- Hilariously bad.
- Absolutely revelatory
- Jesus Christ is not God and never will be
- Jesus Christ is not God and never will be
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Jesus Christ is not God
Victor Paul Wierwille
Manufacturer: trade distributor, Devin-Adair Co
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
General | Jesus | Christianity | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
General | Theology | Religious Studies | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
Similar Items:
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Jesus Christ Our Passover
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Jesus Christ, our promised seed
ASIN: 0910068070 |
Customer Reviews:
A Hellfire book!.......2007-07-22
This book teaches another gospel message. Wierwille was a false teacher and a Spiritual Terrorist. I strongly discourage people from reading the hellfire teachings in this book.
Hilariously bad........2003-05-11
Wierwille's thesis must be taken seriously. His book must not.
Although he makes an attempt at being reader-friendly, he does so at the expense of sound proof of his thesis. This is a laughably bad book, and its primary usefulness lies in reassuring you if you already agree that Jesus Christ is not God.
A much more comprehensive attempt at addressing this issue can be found in Anthony Buzzard and Charles Hunting's "The Doctrine of the Trinity: Christianity's Self-Inflicted Wound" and the book "One God and One Lord" by former Wierwille followers John Lynn, John Schoenheit and Mark Graeser. Of course, defenses of the Trinity doctrine can be found in any Christian bookstore.
If you're going to disagree with the Trinity or try to disprove it, Wierwille's book should be your last resource.
Absolutely revelatory.......2001-08-03
This book really opened up my spiritual eyes. I am going to preaching a lot different now that I understand the truth. No wonder I could never make much sense out of what most preachers said about who Jesus is. I recommend this book for everyone who wants to know God and how Jesus relates to God.
Jesus Christ is not God and never will be.......2000-05-08
I found this book to be a very in depth study on this subject but broke down piece by piece that anyone can understand. Dr. Wierwille handles the few scriptures the trinity stands on and does not miss out that 68 times it says son of God and nowhere does it say God the son. He points out the few scriptures the trinity hangs once looked at from a bibical reasearch method three steps of letting the word interpet itself either in the 1)verse where written or 2)in the context or 3) where the word is used before. This keeps you from just looking at it from a trinity perspective. He also states the trinity is nowhere in the word! His research on the history of the trinity was very helpful for me to start my research to build an even bigger foundation on this subject. Jesus Christ is not God!
Jesus Christ is not God and never will be.......2000-05-08
I found this book to be a very in depth study on this subject but broke down piece by piece that anyone can understand. Dr. Wierwille handles the few scriptures the trinity stands on and does not miss out that 68 times it says son of God and nowhere does it say God the son. He points out the few scriptures the trinity hangs once looked at from a bibical reasearch method three steps of letting the word interpet itself either in the 1)verse where written or 2)in the context or 3) where the word is used before. This keeps you from just looking at it from a trinity perspective. He also states the trinity is nowhere in the word! His research on the history of the trinity was very helpful for me to start my research to build an even bigger foundation on this subject. Jesus Christ is not God!
Average customer rating:
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The Alcohol Troubled Person: Known and Unknown
Alan Willoughby
Manufacturer: Burnham, Inc.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General | Self-Help | Health, Mind & Body | Subjects | Books
General | Health, Mind & Body | Subjects | Books
Family Health | Parenting & Families | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 0882296809 |
Customer Reviews:
Alcoholism.......2003-12-08
I really liked this book because it gives the reader a lot of insight about alcoholism and the effects of it. It hit me on a more personal level because alcoholism runs in my family. I enjoyed reading about it and understanding more about the problem and how to try to fix it. I think this book is a very helpful book and I would recommend it to others who have been exposed to alcoholism in anyway.
Average customer rating:
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Healing the whole person,
Genevieve (Cummins) Parkhurst
Manufacturer: Morehouse-Barlow
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
Pharmacology | Medicine | Subjects | Books | Drug Guides | General | Pain Medicine | Pharmacy | Toxicology
General | Theology | Religious Studies | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
ASIN: B0006BWSFI |
Books:
- Photo Finish: The Digital Photographer's Guide to Printing, Showing, and Selling Images
- Photoshop Elements 3 Down & Dirty Tricks
- Preparing Your Daughter for Every Woman's Battle: Creative Conversations about Sexual and Emotional Integrity (The Every Man Series)
- Relic
- Return of the Prodigal Son: A Story of Homecoming
- Romancing the Shadow: A Guide to Soul Work for a Vital, Authentic Life
- Scorched Earth: The Russian-German War 1943-1944
- Singing Bowls
- Six Months Off: How To Plan, Negotiate, & Take The Break You Need Without Burning Bridges Or Going Broke
- Skills Training Manual for Treating Borderline Personality Disorder
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