Customer Reviews:
Thank You.......2007-07-03
This product is in amazing shape, thank you for being so eager to send it out so quick. It came just in time and I love the book. Thank you Jamie
Indispensable.......2007-01-10
This is a truly indispensable guide-- I keep one at every site where I work (I am a primary care nurse practitioner). I highly recommend it for any health care provider!
Must need for most docs.......2006-11-10
The classic guide. A must for any med student or resident as well as anyone who might prescribe antibiotics.
Little all the series.......2006-11-04
Anually rewised and printed, always with the same good quality information.
Presented in a practical and easy to use form !
Impossible to live without in a critical care unit
A must-have!.......2006-10-06
This little guide may seem confusing at first glance, but it is quite helpful once you figure out how to use it! You'll still need a prescribing reference for dosages, etc. but this gives you a place to start.
Book Description
Gilbert Law Summaries are America's best selling outlines and have set the standard for excellence since they were introduced more than thirty-five years ago. It's Gilbert's unique combination of features that makes it the one study aid you'll turn to for all of your study needs! Walk into class prepared with a comprehensive outline of the law, a concise capsule summary perfect for a quick review before class, charts of every kind, a text correlation chart so that you can match your specific reading assignment to the relevant pages in the Gilbert outline, and an index and table of cases. Ace your final exams with a step-by-step approach to attack your exam, exam tips, and sample multiple choice, true-false, and essay questions.
Customer Reviews:
Crash Course on Crimes.......2006-08-12
I left first year criminal law a little underwhelmed. After a lifetime of Law & Order, I just assumed that a law school crimes class would overwhelm me. But when class ended - and I felt normal - I figured I must have missed something.
This book put criminal law into prospective and made it a little clearer. It's pretty much in outline form, with some memory aides, and a lot of sample questions (essay and multiple choice). What I found helpful, though, was that it found a way to be concise while still be thorough.
The reality is that Criminal Law class really isn't that intense. You'll cover murder, privileges, common law crimes, and perhaps some of the Model Penal Code changes. Other study aides I've seen however, are overly long and unnecessarily complex. Criminal Law isn't that complicated. And this book makes no bones about it.
The bottom line is that if you are looking for a criminal law study aide, this is a fine book to go with.
Gilbert Law Summaries: Criminal Law.......2006-03-18
This is an excellent book. It is clear and easy to read. Of all the material that we are using in my law school, this one is the most information dense. In fact, it condences information from the lectures, casebook, and handouts from class.
We are told to concentrate on the casebook and what those cases illustrate, but it isn't until I get to the Gilbert Summary that I actually understand the issues clearly. Because of a slow start, I changed my angle of attack to the materials I'm using in class.
The summary was assigned as reading *after* the casebook, but it's become my first reading, and in so doing, I have a grasp of the material before we even discuss it. The cases are so large a body of reading that some of the finer points tend to get lost as you are learning new ones.
Don't make the mistake I did of thinking the summary was redundant and not necessary (particularly if you're getting behind on the reading, which you unvariably will from time to time), because if you don't read it and depend on your casebook only, you will miss the better and finer points under all that language.
This was a big mistake for me, because it was only when I read the summary that I actually "got it". You can read tons of cases to gleen maybe a dozen ideas that Gilbert puts together in one section.
I have a background in law enforcement and am trying to make the transition to practicing law, and it is very refreshing to see obscure and current changes in law illustrated clearly in this book. It is current and up to date, even with information my own professor is rusty on. This and the Casenote Legal Briefs have saved me untold times.
I am so satisfied with the information in this book, and how it's layed out, that I am using it as a guide for my personal outline.
Even if you're not in law school, for anyone entering related fields, this is an outstanding book.
Book Description
Gilbert & George are among the foremost artists of their generation. A collaborative team, they were early to explore performance as an art form, and early to explore the idea that every aspect of daily life could be classed as such. They were early to mingle photography and graphics in a style reminiscent of advertising, and early to address sexual identity in that work. In fact, they were early to do much that viewers now take for granted. Their work has been exhibited worldwide since the beginning of the 1970s, and is either unusually accessible or completely unpalatable, depending on the viewer's mindset. It has attracted both fierce controversy and enormous acclaim, including the 1986 Turner Prize and the U.K.'s slot at the 2005 Venice Biennale. At last, on the fortieth anniversary of their meeting (September 25, 1967, Saint Martin's, London) and on the eve of a major retrospective that will tour six venues around the world-including Tate Modern, the Brooklyn Museum, the Milwaukee Art Museum and the de Young Museum in San Francisco-here is a book that does justice to the scale, depth and ambition of their artistic achievement. Or rather, here are two books: designed and produced by the artists, this luxurious two-volume hardback set, which comes in a customized carrying case with handles, documents every picture the pair has created over the course of their 35-year career.With details and installation views of many significant pieces, it includes 1500 color illustrations. The Complete Pictures will be the most thorough and extensive publication on the artists' work ever assembled. Copublished with Tate Publishing, London.
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Donadieu's Will
Georges Simenon
Manufacturer: Harcourt
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Striptease
ASIN: 0151263108 |
Average customer rating:
- VERY helpful
- A tremendous help
- good to read with the book
- read the book
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1984 (Cliffs Notes)
Nikki Moustaki , and
Gilbert Borman
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1984 (Signet Classics)
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Huxley's Brave New World (Cliffs Notes)
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Nineteen Eighty-Four
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1984
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Macbeth (Cliffs Notes)
ASIN: 0764585851 |
Book Description
The original CliffsNotes study guides offer expert commentary on major themes, plots, characters, literary devices, and historical background. The latest generation of titles in this series also features glossaries and visual elements that complement the classic, familiar format.
CliffsNotes on 1984 introduces you to the modern world as imagined by George Orwell, a place where humans have no control over their own lives, where nearly every positive feeling is squelched, and where people live in misery, fear, and repression.
Orwell’s vision of the future may be grim, but your understanding of his novel can be bright thanks to detailed summaries and commentaries for every chapter. Other features that help you study include
- Character analyses of major players
- A character map that graphically illustrates the relationships among the characters
- Critical essays
- A review section that tests your knowledge
- A
Resource
Center full of books, articles, films, and Internet sites
Classic literature or modern modern-day treasure — you'll understand it all with expert information and insight from CliffsNotes study guides.
Download Description
Published in 1949, Orwell's representation of a future society projected certain aspects of life in his contemporary world. It is an anti-utopian novel, foretelling a future that is too centrally organized and controlled to allow individualism and creativity.
Customer Reviews:
VERY helpful.......2005-12-01
I'm usually the type to read a book and not use the Cliffs Notes for it (mainly because their use is discouraged in my AP English class). However, I found this particular Cliffs Notes to be very helpful. The authors expounded on some topics I already knew were there and showed many others that, had I not read the Notes, probably never would have picked up on. It is also very well-written, in language that even someone who hasn't already read 1984 would understand. It helped me out a lot and I will keep using Cliffs Notes- if their quality is as good as this one's.
A tremendous help.......2002-07-30
As an English teacher, I really hate it when my students read the cliff notes instead of the book, but I do believe well-written Cliff notes can dramatically increase a student's understanding of a book by introducing ideas, concepts, and symbols the student might have missed and by presenting issues that help the student think about the book. That's just what these Cliff Notes do, and I even use them in my class. I've found they really help to fuel discussions and increase everybody's meaningful experience of the book. I highly recommend them.
good to read with the book.......2001-08-03
I had to read 1984 for a class I was taking and I bought the Cliffs Notes to go with it and it really helped. A lot of 1984 was pretty obvious, but most of it wasn't, and the Cliffs Notes to it were really good and made me understand the book a lot better. I highly suggest that someone reading 1984 buy it.
read the book.......2001-06-16
I decided to read the cliffnotes instead of rereading the book before I had a test on it. It was awful, the cliffnotes completely fail to really illustrate the ideas George Orwell was trying to convey. 1984 is an excellent book and well worth the time to read it.
Customer Reviews:
Check with your friendly drug rep first........2006-11-30
Not a bad little book to have in your pocket if you are a physician who takes care of HIV patients. Probably not at all helpful for anyone else. Nevertheless, if you take care of HIV patients, then you are probably already acquainted with drug reps who will likely get you a free copy in return for a few minutes of your time ;)
Product Description
The year is 1968, and as France is torn apart by social and political anarchy, the noted eccentric and insomniac Anton Vowl goes missing. Ransacking his Paris flat, his best friends scour his diary for clues to his whereabouts. At first glance these pages reveal nothing but Vowl's penchant for word games, especially for "lipograms," compositions in which the use of a particular letter is suppressed. But as the friends work out Vowl's verbal puzzles, and as they investigate various leads discovered among the entries, they too disappear, one by one by one, and under the most mysterious circumstances ...
A Void is a metaphysical whodunit, a story chock-full of plots and subplots, of trails in pursuit of trails, all of which afford Perec occasion to display his virtuosity as a verbal magician, acrobat, and sad-eyed clown. It is also an outrageous verbal stunt: a 300-page novel that never once employs the letter E. Adair's translation, too, is astounding; Time called it "a daunting triumph of will pushing its way through imposing roadblocks to a magical country, an absurdist nirvana of humor, pathos, and loss."
Customer Reviews:
A fantastic book.......2006-08-08
You may think that a book omitting a particular character (okay, I can't do this without the letter "e") may get monotonous. But the book held my interest with a good plot, characters, and development. It catches the reader off guard with twists and turns and resolves with a conclusion that leaves no loose ends and provides a very satisfied feeling in the reader.
A few caveats; take your time reading it, don't be afraid to read something again, and researching some of the influences on Perec's life that affected how the book was written open up a new dimension to A Void (I know this because I did a paper on the themes and influences present in the book).
Book Description
Chapter 1: An Introduction to the Theory; Chapter 2: A Summary of the Theory; Chapter 3: Approximation; Chapter 4: Variational Crimes; Chapter 5: Stability; Chapter 6: Eigenvalue Problems; Chapter 7: Initial-Value Problems; Chapter 8: Singularities.
Customer Reviews:
A classic.......2005-09-12
If you're a numerical analyst or an engineer interested in the basic theory of the finite element method, this book belongs on your shelf. If you have no interest in finite elements but enjoy well-written mathematical literature, this book still belongs on your shelf. Though some sections are dated, the contents of this book remain a solid foundation for understanding the behavior of finite element techniques in theory and in practice. Furthermore, while the contents are mathematically rigorous, the authors largely avoid the theorem/lemma/proof of most mathematical books, and instead describe the analysis in an almost conversational tone. Reading Strang and Fix reminds me of reading Lanczos: the book is dense with ideas which are both mathematically and practically interesting, but the presentation is so smooth that one can almost read it as one reads a novel.
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- By G*org*s, '*'s Got It!
- A Void: A peculiar piece of literature
- A stupendous feat of verbal acrobatics
- Highly good book, ya
- More than a Void
|
A Void
Georges Perec
Manufacturer: Harvill
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Alphabetical Africa (New Directions Book)
ASIN: 0002711192 |
Customer Reviews:
By G*org*s, '*'s Got It!.......2003-03-16
Whatever happened to the French novel? There was the immediate postwar era, when once could read Camus, Sartre's post-"Nausea" novels, the rise of Jean Genet. But in the fifties and sixties, the "nouveau roman" developed, which in the hands of Robbe-Gillet, Sarraute and Butor, sought to deconstruct the possibilities of fictions, and which in the hands of such writers as Robbe-Gillet, Sarraute, and Butor. The result was very complex and subtle and elaborate, with much on the ontological significance of the novel. But it was not the sort of fiction that people liked to read, and it left most English speaking critics very cold. The late Georges Perec was connected to this sort of school, and at least one intelligent English critic has thought that Perec wrote some of the most boring novels of the twentieth century. This book, however, is manifestly not one of them. Indeed it's a remarkable hoot, at times quite funny, and throughout consistently ingenious and clever. What Perec has written is a lipogram, a book which follows a special grammatical rule. In this case there are no "e"s in the entire work. Writing such a book is incredibly difficult, and translating it into another language would appear to be impossible. Fortunately this is not the case, as Gilbert Adair has demonstrably shown. There has been at least one lipogram in English that includes no e, and the unimaginative writer, when he wished to have his characters talk, only used "said." Adair, rather helpfully, prefers to use the present tense. Certain words in French, such as "juif", "mort" and "Amour" have to be replaced with unusual English equivalents.
The result is an incredibly strange novel. At times the sentences are full of proper nouns that exist for no purpose than their e-less nature. At other times the necessary twists and turns are odd and unusual, and the result feels like you are reading a book of palindromes. (Another Perec specialty, and he wrote the longest ever, 5,000 words long). But more often there are brilliant flights of baroque fancy, such as the dinner Augustus Clifford prepares for his unfortunate guests on p. 115. The plot starts with France in chaos, and an insomniac critic Anton Vowl, who goes missing. His friends find strange notes and letters. They find his lipogramatic versions of Edgar Allen Poe's "The Raven," Shelley's "Ozymandias," and Vowl's version of the most famous soliliquoy in English ("Living or not Living: that is what I ask). But gradually a plot begins to develop, in a way worthy of "A Manuscript found in Saragossa."
Can Vowl's friends find out who or what is behind the strange deaths and disappearances? Who stabbed an Arab solicitor who smoked a cigar in a zoo, and then absconded with his corpse? What is the secret of the strange ruby-like zahir that brings death to those who mention it? What secret does a carp named Jonah carry within himself? Why does Clifford's son, Douglas Haig, die a horrible death while dressed as the murdered father in Mozart's "Don Giovanni?" Why is one of the chapters missing? There is an especially vicious Albanian brigand who who we learn, long after his death, has been particularly humiliated, along with the lust of his life. But there are important moral lessons as well. The novel agrees with Jefferson and Danton that primogeniture is a really, really bad idea. Also, there are certain perversions that one should never undertake, especially when your brother is trying to dynamite you. And why is the French title of the work the same as the certificates the Vichy regime gave to those inquiring about those deported to Auchwitz, one of those being Perec's mother? There are strange secret baths, the most incredible revelations, the oddest connections between the characters are revealed, and wealthy Ottomans who are turned into peanut butter sundaes. There is deliberate anachronism and the solution is not entirely coherent. But be aware that the villian is not among the characters who in the course of the novel attempt or succeed at murder and manslaughter. As a novel, "A Void" is not at the height of Calvino and Garcia Marquez, who provide love, compassion and hope to their magical games. But this is a better novel than "Pale Fire" and comparable to Borges and Pavic, a Faberge Egg novel in which something nasty ticks.
A Void: A peculiar piece of literature.......2002-01-25
A Void by Georges Perec, is a book with a clever mystery aura surrounding it. This book centers around the disappearance of Anton Vowl, characterized as a insomniac with a love of writing. The story unfolds with Vowl suffering from insomnia, and sending postcards to his friends, which are interpreted as suicide letters. Amaury Conson is the first friend of Anton to begin to question his friend's sudden death. When he searches Vowl's now deserted apartment, he finds no trace of Vowl, nor any violence occurring in the area. All of Vowl's possessions are still present, including his car. Amaury suspects an abduction, so the search begins. Ottavio Ottaviani, a Corsican detective, joins the hunt, along with Aloysius Swan, his boss. Olivia Mavrokhordatos, who had an affair with Vowl at one point, also receives a postcard, and her clues alluding to a "zoo" takes her to the Paris Zoo, where she teams up with Amaury Conson. Hassan Ibn Abbou is a Moroccan "solicitor" with links to Vowl. But before he can spill any secrets he might be concealing, Abbou is stabbed in the back by a poisoned poniard. When the entire group, except for Ottavio and Swan, meet at Olivia's father-in-law's house, the mystery begins unravel. Olivia's father-in-law, Augustus, is killed mysteriously, and Squaw, their dedicated Iroquois servant, begins to piece together information, with the help of Anton's friends. Characters continue to die, and in almost Agatha Christie-like terror, the friends hope for some clue to lead them to the guilty.
George Perec(1936-1982), who wrote this book without the letter E in it, was a truly bizarre individual. He loved wordplay and parody, and was a expert on the game of GO. Perec loved to write things that were almost incredibly unique. One excellent example is his 5000 word-long "ça ne va pas san dire" which is the longest written palindrome ever created. However, when he wrote A Void, the fact that he concentrated on wordplay and the lack of E negatively influenced his writing style, especially the plot, which is confusing and almost nonexistent. First of all, many of Vowl's diary entries, which Perec intended to be puzzling conundrums for the reader, ended up being very tiresome. Gilbert Adair translated the original La Disaparition (Perec's French version), into readable English. The most amazing aspect of this accomplishment is that he managed to keep the lack of E through translation. However, the lack of E forced the story to be in the present tense, something that is unique to this book, yet somewhat annoying. The most damaging aspect of the translation is that the story is not very easy to read. The writing style is difficult to comprehend, and the sentence construction is, at times, bizarre. The eccentricity of Perec himself is reflected in the personality and character of Anton Vowl. The bizarre state of Vowl's mind is displayed when, through a complex trail of hints in the postcard's writing, he tries to subtly tell his friends of his fate. This trail is left unanswered at the end of the book, and serves as a mark of Vowl's (and Perec's) peculiarity.
This story is a good match for wordplay fanatics, and other people that share in Perec's interests. This is not however, the perfect "casual reading" book. The writing style (part due to translation) makes the story extremely difficult to follow. Even the biggest aficionados of wordplay and other novelties will be stymied at times by the multiple untrackable plotlines. Therefore, this book is interesting, and certainly a humorous read, but not deep enough in plot to truly be worth the effort for the casual reader.
A stupendous feat of verbal acrobatics.......2002-01-21
Half the fun of reading Perec's "A Void" is when you're about halfway through a sentence, or even a paragraph, and you know you've figured out what Perec is trying to say, and you can't imagine how in hell he's ever going to say it without using the letter "E". The other half of the fun is simply because this is an amazing book, with a plot and style that both echo the central conceit of the novel in an awe-inspiring fashion. I've not read the French original version, so I cannot comment of the fidelity of translation, but I thought that Adair's translation was immensely readable and enjoyable.
Highly good book, ya.......2001-09-04
Six plus six plus four months ago, I bought a book: A Void. Originally, an author (G. P*r*c) first thought of A Void (or La Disparition) in 1967. In 1994, it was brought out from a country at a north Atlantic location in which Français is usually a normal way of articulating in writing and out loud and into a form of communication which most inhabitants of this country (US of A) know. This translator was a Mr. Adair. This book is a highly fantastic book. A linguistic madman who thought it up was choosing to put A Void on papyrus without a symbol in a form of communication, this missing fifth symbol. This author, or madman, was brilliant and did it without any faults, as did translator Adair. Why? I don't know. Author was crazy as a fox is crazy.
In this book, this Void, I found no lack of things for stimulation of my mind. In fact, Void is not a void at all. Pagination # 104:
`Twas upon a midnight tristful, I sat poring, wan and wistful
Through many a quant and curious listful of my consorts slain.
"Aha!" you shout out (not vocalizing too loudly, I wish), "that's a translation of an 18-stanza rhyming story by--"
But I cannot put to papyrus what you shout. I can, though, say that A Void lists author of rhyming as "Arthur Gordon Pym," thus naming a man from a work that this actual author did not finish. (Two or 3 of a group would say this man was too full of phobia at his own construction, à la an individual of physics, biology, and so on, in Mary's horror story about a monstrous guy known as Frank in a common-drinking-glass [I ask your pardon for this bad pun].) That rhyming is uno of many mind-stimulating "yummy things" you'll find in this book, which riffs on such works as Moby Dick, Milton's "Utopia" Lost, "Bill Bard's" Danish King Jr., and many classic puzzling/frightful works.
Only complaint: whodunit halts, stops at finish: author can't hold on to organizing thoughts to make whodunit work.
In conclusion: look at this book.
More than a Void.......2000-11-16
I just don't get the point of those who rated that book with only one or two stars. It can't be lower than five. Some of the reviewers wrote here that it is a tour de force to write a book without using the letter "E". But Perec do more than that: he tells us, page after page, that the "E" is missing. Moreover, he tells us that he is telling us that the "E" is missing. The book must not be read only to discover that missing "E", but for all the details that tell us of that void. Perec transforms other texts in lipograms: Poe, Melville, Hugo, Flaubert, etc. That book is simply unbelievable. I did'nt read the translation, but I must congratulate the translator who decided to do that translation. It is a more difficult tour de force than Perec did himself. Simply remarquable!
Book Description
Two families--the Wakefields of nobility and the lower-class Morgans--are the focus of this sweeping generational saga, joined by intriguing personalities such as Elizabeth I, William Tyndale, and John Bunyan. Linking the people and events through the ages is the struggle of men and women who sought God as the answer to their difficulties.
#5: The Ramparts of Heaven
Follow the quest of Andrew Wakefield, a ministerial student at Oxford University, as he joins these shakers and movers in their attempts to advance the Methodist movement--and bring the realities of the gospel of Christ to a needy world.
Customer Reviews:
an excellent book.......2001-09-26
I love all the Wakefield books, they are fantastic! My favorite is the first. But I have to critisise it a little. The rest have new characters and you start to miss the other charaters. The main ones in one book are dying of old age in the next. It seems that the family traits of the red hair and blue eyes are disapearing too. Still, good books.
Intriguing mix of Wesleyan history and English Romance.......1999-12-04
This was a wonderful read. I was impressed with the mixing of church history and fictional romance. My mother has read this entire series and she enjoyed every book. I would even recommend these books for teens interested in epics or history and who enjoy reading juvenille romance novels.
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