More Pages: Butler Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57


A stimulating source of information and ideas.
A beautifully produced book!
A specially significant book!

Book replaced anti-inflammatories and gave me my life back.
Great book!I have tried almost all the exercises in this book. Thank you Sharon Butler - you've made my life a little less painful!
There are a few exercises in this book that gave me instant relief which I found pleasantly surprising. I have been to an orthopedic surgeon and physical therapist for a year now. None of them have given me the quick relief I got from doing some of these exercises. There is one exercise in which you pinch the skin between the thumb and fore finger in a certain way. That exercise greatly reduce the pain in the palm and my thumb. Also some of the exercises for fore arm pain reduced my pain considerably.
This book gives you a better understanding about why stretching helps and what is happening internally to the fascia.
There are details of symptoms and what exercises to do to alleviate those particular symptoms along with diagrams. I bought this book along with "Reptitive strain injury" by Emil Pascarelli. Both the books compliment each other pretty well.
I now have a pretty good picture of what is happening when you have carpal tunnel or/and RSI and how you can get some relief.
My suggestion: Buy it!
Indispensable for anyone suffering from RSI

A much needed resource on care for the elderly!Details relating to the physical, emotional, and cognitive aspects of aging are addressed as well as dying and bereavement issues. Likewise, housing alternatives, financial, and legal aspects are presented in a readable and clearly detailed manner.
The challenge of caregiving for parents can be monumental at times. I only wish that this book had been in print sixteen years ago when I became a caregiver for my father following his stroke. Kudos to Virginia Morris for offering this much needed book. It will inform and encourage anyone who cares for our elderly.
Tremendously helpful during a difficult time
Highly recommended and very helpful

The work of a true Maestro
Excellent discussion of the creative process in art.
Why Insight?

lovely plethora of Indian wisdom
A taste of spiritual honey from a giant of world literatureThis English version of "Gitanjali" is a series of prose poems that reflect on the interrelationships among the poet/speaker, the deity, and the world. Although Tagore had a Hindu background, the spirituality of this book is generally expressed in universal terms; I could imagine a Christian, a Buddhist, a Muslim, or an adherent of another tradition finding much in this book that would resonate with him or her.
The language in this book is often very beautiful. The imagery includes flowers, bird songs, clouds, the sun, etc.; one line about "the riotous excess of the grass" reminded me of Walt Whitman. Tagore's language is sensuous and sometimes embraces paradox. Like Whitman and Emily Dickinson, he sometimes seems to be resisting traditional religion and prophetically looking towards a new spirituality.
A sample of Tagore's style: "I surely know the hundred petals of a lotus will not remain closed for ever and the secret recess of its honey will be bared" (from section #98). As companion texts for this mystical volume I would recommend Jack Kerouac's "The Scripture of the Golden Eternity" and Juan Mascaro's translation of the Dhammapada.
A treat to the spiritI would enthusiatically recommend this book by my favorite author. Like the Psalms of David, Gitanjali is a soothing balm to the spirit. I read this entire book in less than two hours and has been my long-trip travel companion ever since. The introduction to the book by W. B. Yeats is magical and all the poems in this book transcend your imagination. The variety and quality of the poems are unbelievable!


An excellant review.Light a Single Candle, a story of a courageous girl who is diagnosed with glaucoma at the age of fourteen, is a very well written book by Beverly Butler. Cathy has a hard time accepting the fact that she will never see again. The author, who is blind herself, tells of the simple daily tasks Cathy must learn to do and how she feel when she loses a friend but gains a few others. One friend for Cathy is essential to every day life. This special friend is Trudy, a German Shepherd, and Cathy make an excellent team and learn to defeat many of the twists that life throws at them. This book is good for anyone who likes books about people who are survivors.
A timeless good readI only wonder however whether it will still appeal to 14-year olds today - I don't think it has dated but maybe I'm nostalgic. What it has to say about the difficulties of being a teenager and growing up to my mind are just as relevant (it was several reads before I could read about Cathy's experiences with Earl without squirming). To sum up, I was miserable when someone borrowed my copy and lost it and delighted when on holiday in Washington the Library of Congress traced it for me. Learning that there is a sequel was a mixed blessing - I want it desperately - as another reviewer says, it's a book that leaves you feeling good and wanting to know what happens to Cathy.
To Light a Single Candle

An unsentimental view of human societyButler sees human nature as paradoxical: people need communities and families to be healthy and sane, but humanity is inherently hierarchical and compelled to compete for power. Human society fosters both love and violence.
Butler is pretty honest about the uglier aspects of the Pattern, a society where mind-control is a regular practice, and non-telepathic "mutes" are well-tended slaves. However, when you compare it to life without the Pattern, thousands of people living in hopeless schizophrenia from uncontrolled telepathy, you can understand their decisions. As in most of Butler's fiction, it's about how people live in imperfect situations. Ask yourself what you would do in their place....
The book is a bit talky in places. The strength of the book is the characterization and dialogue, and Butler's perspective is unique and thought-provoking.
Spoilers
My only real complaint about this book is Anyanwu/Emma's role in the story. "Wild Seed" ends with her winning the war of wills with Doro, retaining her personal autonomy. I thought she would jump at the chance to renegotiate the terms of the society Doro created, but instead she just has a few cameos and sides with Doro to the end. It undermines the strength and integrity of her character as established in "Wild Seed".
My Favorite Book, I've read it at least 5 times!!
Great Read One of my fav. O.Butler books

Great book!
Excellent book for new Windows 9x computer ownersWin9x experts probably won't gain much from this book. However, they're not the intended audience, and I wholeheartedly believe The Unofficial Guide to PCs is well worth the price for any new Windows user.
Useful book for both novice and expert PC users

A Classic--Teri
_Wild Seed_ has it all.
Simply amazingAll her books showed a rich mixture of imagination, interesting characters and conflictive situations.
*Wild Seed* is a complex story about Doro and Anyanwu, two extraordinary beings, their encounter and relationship expanding over three centuries.
I refuse to say Doro is a male, he may acquire any physical nature, so I think the character as a Self, each reader may assign he/she/it any attribution. This trait only, is enough to arouse many questions and situations, other writers may stick only to the rich action line. Octavia doesn't, she dig deep into each character, giving them soul and flesh, going into what they feel, their ethical (or unethical) considerations, their whole conception of life, their struggles for power and love.
All this blended in an inspired story full of action. A very commendable book.