Related Vacation Book Subjects: Arkansas
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Miller", sorted by average review score:

Henry Miller's Hamlet Letters
Published in Paperback by Capra Press (November, 1988)
Authors: Henry Miller, Michael Hargraves, and Henry Millery
Average review score:

hamlet
This edition of the Hamlet letters is a pirate edition as is that of capra press from the late 1980s. The copyright is held by Carrefour archives and a new edition is planned. there are many other carrefour Press titles which deal with hamlet letters in some way. If you require further details contact me karlorend@yahoo.com


Herbal Medicinals: A Clinician's Guide
Published in Paperback by Haworth (T) (November, 1998)
Authors: Lucinda G. Miller and Wallace J. Murray
Average review score:

Helpful herbal guide for health practitioners
I've found HERBAL MEDICINALS to be a frequently-referenced book in my library. The many tables with dosage information, contraindications, potential drug interactions, and herbal recommendations for specific illnesses are most helpful. A very useable and practical guide for both allopathic and natural health practitioners.


The Herman Miller Collection, 1952: Furniture Designed by George Nelson and Charles Eames, With Occasional Pieces by Isamu Noguchi, Peter Hvidt, and (Acanthus Press Reprint Series. 20th Century, Landmarks in Design, V. 5.)
Published in Hardcover by Acanthus Press (March, 1995)
Authors: Inc Herman Miller and George Nelson
Average review score:

First-rate reproduction, great attention to details.
This book is a reprint of Herman Miller company's 1952 catalog and it's a super reproduction. With all the Nelson, Eames and Noguchi material inside, this book shows some of the best furniture produced in the 1950s. Great reprint job.


The Herman Miller Collection: The 1955/1956 Catalog (Schiffer Book for Collectors and Designers)
Published in Hardcover by Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. (January, 1998)
Authors: Inc Herman Miller and Leslie A. Pina
Average review score:

Herman Miller at it's Best.
This book may be the most important Herman Miller reference sorce out there. It out lines, with origanal catalog photos, what most collectors consider the most important design period ever.


Herman Miller: Interior Views
Published in Hardcover by Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. (July, 1998)
Authors: Leslie A. Pina and Leslie A. Piina
Average review score:

Beautiful Book!
This book has lots of beautiful photos. If you like "classic herman miller" by Leslie A.Pina ,You had to buy this one. I promise you like it!!!


Hero tales from American life
Published in Unknown Binding by ()
Author: Francis Trevelyan Miller
Average review score:

Children need heroes
Some quotations from Adam Starchild's wonderful afterword to this book are appropriate:

"Children today are starved for the image of real heroes. Celebrities are not the same thing as heroes. Heroes existed way before celebrities ever did, even though celebrities now outshine heroes in children's consciousness." "Worshiping celebrities leaves children with a distinctly empty feeling -- it doesn't teach that they'll have to make sacrifices if they want to achieve anything worthwhile. No- talents become celebrities all the time. The result is that people don't seem to care about achievement or talent -- fame is the only objective."

"... Despite immense differences in cultures, heroes around the world generally share a number of traits that instruct and inspire people. A hero does something worth talking about, but a hero goes beyond mere fame or celebrity. The hero lives a life worthy of imitation. If they serve only their own fame, they may be celebrities but not heroes. Heroes are catalysts for change. They create new possibilities. They have a vision, and the skill and charm to implement their vision."

"Heroes may also be fictional. Children may identify with a character because of the values projected. People tend to grow to be like the people that they admire, but if a child never has any heroes what images will he copy? Adults need heroes too, but the need is even more urgent for children because they don't know how to think abstractly. But they can imagine what their hero would do in the circumstances, and it gives them a useful reference point to build abstract thinking skills."


Heroes of Hope (Dragonlance Fifth Age Dramatic Adventure Game)
Published in Hardcover by TSR Hobbies (January, 1998)
Authors: Steve Miller, Sue Cook, and Duane Maxwell
Average review score:

Awesome!!!!!!!!!!!!
This is one of the best supplements for the Fifth Age game to date. The roles in this book give a lot of creativity of what a player can do with his character and the optional rules for mysticism are cool. The adventure is also very sweet.


High Stakes High School : A Guide for the Perplexed Parent
Published in Paperback by Kaplan (September, 2001)
Authors: Allison Zmuda, Mary Tomaino, and Jeanetta Miller
Average review score:

A great resource for parents
I bought this book before my son's first day of freshman year, and I have found it to be extraordinarily helpful in wading through the often-confusing rhetoric of public high school. Armed with the knowledge in this book, I feel more comfortable approaching his teachers (and principal) should I have any problems, questions, or concerns about his education. Thanks!


The Hippies and American Values
Published in Paperback by Univ of Tennessee Pr (September, 1991)
Author: Timothy Miller
Average review score:

A Suprising Legacy
Although it has become fashionable to denigrate the whole hippie era as ineffective and counterproductive, Timothy Miller does much in this book to set the record straight about the considerable legacy of the Counter Culture -- for better or for worse.

From the ethics of sex, dope and rock and roll, to the questioning of property rights and greater latitude in daily speech, from New Age spirituality to more ethical investments in the market place - to the very food we eat - hippie culture has had a tremendous and continuing impact on American society.

*The Hippies and American Values* appears to pick up where Theodore Roszak's book, *The Making of a Counter Culture* left off. More than 20 years ago, Roszak showed how an alienated generation undermined the foundations of the prevailing technocracy. Miller acknowledges this but goes on to point out how the Counter Culture gave free press and credence to right-brain values that they saw as much neglected -- this before "right-brain, left-brain" became buzz words.

"Peace, love and flower power are no longer standard argot," observes Miller, "...Hip culture has bloomed and died like a centuryplant..." But the "new ethics" of the hippies are here to stay nevertheless. They are a potpourri of traditional values, untried social experiments, and a few truly original ideas for an American setting. Hippies attacked new icons such as technocracy while honoring agrarian values coupled with a new hip Eco-consciousness. The Counter Culture dropped out, disaffiliated from the prevailing society and changed themselves in order to change the world.

What I like most about this book is that it is a resource. It belongs right up there on my bookshelf with Roszak's classic study and with *Sleeping Where I Fall* by Peter Coyote, for starters. It's no dry old bone, however. There are marvelous pictures of Be-Ins and Drop City, and rock groups and posters. There is a bibliography of both well-known and obscure underground newspapers (from which the author quotes extensively). Where and when was the first Earth Day, the first Human Be-In, that Death-of-Hip coffin? They're all here. And more. Miller points us to where and how the legacy continues even to this day. If you never read another book about hippies, read this one. pamhan99@aol.com


Holographic Golf: Uniting the Mind and Body to Improve Your Game
Published in Audio Cassette by HarperAudio (April, 1994)
Author: Larry Miller
Average review score:

Short but Sweet
Larry Miller is an outstanding mentor. This is the first in a very fine series of books (Beyond Golf and Exploring the Zone being the other two). In this book, he breaks the swing into the three static positions (address, top of the swing, and finish), and provides guidance for mastering these positions. There are a number of great tips in this book, including pretending that the ball is magnetically attached to the face of the club during the swing. This visual swing tip will smooth your swing, and help with the proper release. At the end, he starts to address the mental/spiritual side of golf. Mr. Miller really excels in that area.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Arkansas
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