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You need this one, too.
A maxum for True Leadership: dedication with heart."Leaders do not force their fellow citizens to follow, they inspire them to do so."
If there is one thing to learn from this book, it is the true meaning of leadership and how important willing-loyalty is to our basic survival. Seen in the face of unimaginable odds, they survived - and they survived in whole: worn and frazzled from nearly 2 years of struggle, they were rescued mentaly tough and spiritually whole. In no small part, this was due to the quality of leadership demonstrated by Shackleton: it was embraced and reflected in his men.
It is amazing, this entity we call 'the human spirit'. If trained - but, not broken - like a fine horse, it has great wonders to show and is a true beauty to behold. Such are the many lessons learned from the tales of this "Endurance" voyage: did anyone ever wonder about the naming of that ship? What started out as a championing exploration, became a struggle with life itself to survive.
Likewise, what most will perceive as an "interesting read", will soon become an invaluable source for life-guiding principles. Get the book - read it - and put these incalculably precious lessons into practice in your own life. You never know when you'll need the endurance.


Excerpts from the plays are analyzed for literary devices
Shake Hands With ShakespeareThe author's broad knowledge and lively enthusiasm for Shakespeare's life, the theater of his time, and his plays and poems is downright contagious. Reading the brief but comprehensive discussions of all the plays and poems made me hustle back to my own copy of The Complete Works to reread Shakespeare with countless new insights and deeper appreciation for his genius. The book also sent me running to the videotape section of my local library and to video-rental stores to see and hear the plays so lucidly discussed in this user-friendly book.
Christ draws numerous parallels between the theater and actors in Shakespeare's time and those in our modern theater, movies, and TV. In this way, he brings his subject vividly alive for modern readers in terms they can easily and enjoyably follow. I highly recommend SHAKESPEARE FOR THE MODERN READER as a treasure chest in the library of any lover of great literature.


Excellent guidebook to Silicon ValleyThe book has a big reference table to illustrate how different Silicon Valley entrepreneurs are from small business owners and traditional entrepreneurs, and describes four distinct types of entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley. The book also enumerates ten reasons why Silicon Valley has been prosperous.
This is really a good book for a reader to learn what Silicon Valley is like.
A Fantastic Book with Intensive Stuffs

Update on Sir Philip Sidney, a study in conflict
One of the few major studies of Sir Philip Sidney

Shockheaded Peter
Classic collection of old-fashioned childrens' parables

Smokey Yunicks Power Secrets
Automotive Genius, far ahead of his time

"Soldiers, Sailors, Slaves and Ships" Highly Recommended!
Vivid, unusual pictures from the Civil War

An excellent book for exploring who you are.
A ground breaking work and a must read.

Special and Unique
Great Gift Book

a clear vision of Miller's life-affirming philosophy
As Fresh As Flowers that bloom in the snowMiller's genius for comedy is at its best in "Money and How It Gets That Way"-a tongue-in-cheek parody of "economics" provoked by a postcard from Ezra Pound which asked if he had "ever thought about money." Stand Still Like the Hummingbird provides a right and perfect metaphor for this outstanding collection, one of Henry's Miller's most luminous statements of his personal philosophy of life. Much of this book, while previously published, appeared only in foreign magazines or in small limited editions which have gone out of print.
If you're an artist (starving or successful), you'll appreciate Miller's deep concern for the role of artist in society, in "An Open Letter to All and Sundry," and in "The Angel Is My Watermark." If you're a writer (struggling to be or already published), you'll find inspiration in words like these, scattered like gemstones--generous and true-throughout these pages: "...when you are convinced that all the exits are blocked, either you take to believing in miracles or you stand still like the hummingbird. The miracle is that the honey is always there, right under your nose, only you were too busy searching elsewhere to realize it. The worst is not death but being blind, blind to the fact that everything about life is in the nature of the miraculous." In short, there is much for many: timeless wisdom, not only for us still living "in this world," but also for us, who, like Henry Miller, have always suspected we are "not of this world."
I haven't really found a book on the Shackleton story that is horribley bad. Maybe the story is so inspiring it tells itself. Trapped by The Ice, the picture book for kids by Michael McCurdy, is the worst example I know and I still like that for the rendering of the sea leopard leaping at Ordes-Lee, the officer in charge of food supplies. There are better children's books, Sea of Ice, by Monica Kulling, a fairly easy read for upper elementary students with beautiful watercolors, Trial By Ice, by K. M. Kostyal, a photobiography of Shackleton, Ice Story for middle school students, with black and white photographs and a magnificent large picture book with paintings and photographs, Spirit of Endurance, by Jennifer Armstrong. Get them all!