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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Phillips", sorted by average review score:

Kiss and Kin
Published in Audio Cassette by Chivers Audio Books (March, 1998)
Authors: Angela Lambert and Sian Phillips
Average review score:

A light-hearted,fun & entertaining novel about family tensio
This novel follows the paths of a family full of underlying tension because of marital disharmony, and infidelity. The novel centres around an illicit relationship which evolves between the parents of the quarelling couple.Fun,humourous but also sensitive,the book leaves you immediately searching for other Lambert novels.


Kisses from the Father: Coming Face to Face With the Love of God
Published in Paperback by Harrison House, Incorporated (May, 2003)
Authors: Ron, Dr Phillips and Paula White
Average review score:

Amazing book about the love of our Father.
Finally a book that really uncovers the many facets of our Abba Father's love for us. How freeing to realize that He's not looking down on me as some stern judge, but instead He wants a loving relationship with me. I was blessed enough to have a good earthly daddy, but my Daddy God's love for me is even greater. Those who have had difficult or bad relationships with their fathers will really benefit from this book, as they will find a Father's love like they've never known. It's well written and the narratives are reminiscent of C.S. Lewis. All of Ron Phillips' books are definitely worth reading. Can't wait to see what comes next!


Land of the Dragon: Chinese Myth (Myth & Mankind , Vol 12, No 20)
Published in Hardcover by Time Life (September, 2000)
Authors: Tony Allan, Editors of Time-Life Books, Charles Phillips, Duncan Baird Publishers, and Time-Life Books
Average review score:

Another great book from a great series
The Myth and Mankind series is the series for Mythology
lovers. This installment is about China. With beautiful
illistrations and wonderful pictures this book is sure to
make you want to learn more about Chinese culture.


Lass
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Nelson (June, 1997)
Authors: Roland Gebauer, Cheri Bladholm, and W. Phillip Keller
Average review score:

Outstanding
This is an outstanding book not only for children but for adults also. I have 4 children from ages 9-15 and they all greatly enjoyed and loved this book! Highly recommended!


Last of the Romantics
Published in Paperback by 1stBooks Library (January, 2002)
Author: Phillip Ramos
Average review score:

THE LAST OF THE ROMANTICS
tHE POEMS IN PHILLIP RAMOS'BOOK IS WONDERFUL--HE IS SUCH A ROMANTIC AND I RECOMMEND IT TO ANYONE.

AUTHOR KEN ROY
""LOOKING FOR MOZART""


Layman Looks at the Love of God
Published in Paperback by Bethany House (August, 1900)
Author: Phillip Keller
Average review score:

A wonderfully comforting and spiritually upbulding book
Mr. Keller has always had a way of reaching the very best places of one's heart, mind and spirit with comforting, encouraging and spiritually upbuilding words, like very few can. This book is a classic!


Leadership in Administration: A Sociological Interpretation
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (January, 1984)
Authors: Phillip Selznick and Philip Selznick
Average review score:

Basic concepts as mission and distinctive competences
I enjoyed reading Selznick's book since his perception of the organization development is precise and straightforward. His intention is to demonstrate how the mere mechanical process does not stand for the survival of the organizations and moreover that the need of values and leadership will be the basic strength in the institution's perpetuation. In this sense he rejects Simon's approach sharply, since for Selznick the realm of values is not apart, but in the core of the enterprise's success, considering the positivist scope too narrow. While describing how the sustaining principles provide a fruitful field for the development of institutions he states outstanding concepts as mission and distinctive competence. On the other hand the argument he provides is obviously the basis for strategic analysis of internal strengths and weaknesses and external limitations and opportunities.

I am impressed by the lucid comments he makes regarding the relevance of institutional leadership in achieving institutional integrity. Even though, he states he will explore the nature of large organizations I tend to think his insight is applicable to any organization, not mattering the size. This is because his analysis is somehow the extension of an individual analysis and because of the general validity of his remarks. I can even imagine a small shop in the street whose principles will drive all phases of management and therefore create a distinctive competence.

His description of leadership styles is not only deep, but also appealing. When he distinguishes between foxes and lions, quoting Pareto and Machiaveli, defining with these images the innovative and the maintainer, one may find close examples of each kind. Each type having a role in different stages of the enterprise, the foxes as the creators of the institution and the lions as the controllers of the institution. I can think at least of an immediate use of this wonderful distinction, in a classroom using the case method. For this case as a pedagogical tool it would be interesting to confront both individuals, helping them to learn from each other and making them aware of their different capacities.

Selznick starts stating his argument, which is that "the executive becomes a statesman as he makes the transition form administrative management to institutional leadership". To begin with he analyses the perspective of an organization seen as an institution. While an organization is a system of consciously coordinated activities, an institution is a responsive adaptive organism; the former is an instrument while the latter is natural product of social needs. Within the organizations there are social pressures seen through the informal structure and in rivalry among units so one of the objectives of management is to control and direct this social pressures resulting in an adaptive change. However; if the organization is to endure there should exist development of administrative ideologies or doctrine, the protection of elites to create and protect these values and the protection of identity of contending groups. These issues provide grounds for the institutionalization process, reflecting the organization's particular history in the way it has adapted to its environment. When this process occurs for the committed individual the organization changes from a tool to a source of personal satisfaction. As an organization acquires a distinctive identity, it becomes an institution. This process takes values, ways of acting and believing that are deemed important for their own sake and goes far beyond survival. Accordingly the institutional leader will be an expert in the promotion and protection of values.

On a first level organizations must run efficiently, which is a technical task, done by experts, but this is not enough for the organization to adapt to internal and external pressures and to become an institution. Beyond this routine level there is a critical experience, to define ends, to design distinctively adaptive enterprises and to see this design become reality. However, this leadership is dispensable when the range of alternatives is limited by rigid technical criteria.

From the study of character and limitations of an organization emerges its distinctive competence that is the key element in the organization's generation. It emerges in the formation of an institution upon decision of value commitments that fix the nature of the enterprise, its distinctive aims, methods and role in the community. These critical decisions are the policy in its broader sense, where leadership is the driving in choosing key values and creating the structure that embodies them. Administration is of course necessary but the areas where creative men are needed are the ones where the need is to transform a neutral body of men into a committed polity, this is the leader's role. The leaders are permanently called to perform definition of mission, institutional embodiment of porpouse, defense of institutional integrity and ordering of internal conflict. Selznik then analyzes these tasks deeper.

In this critical decision sense and organization may ask itself: What shall we do? and what shall we be? These hard to answer questions will give as an answer the mission of the institution. For its definition leaders must take in account the internal state of policy as well as the external expectations, the former is to consider how will the interest groups within influence the outcome and the latter is how the enterprise tests its environment regarded as a whole. However, in an organization where ends are given, technology will be enough for decision making, but when on the contrary ends are not given but influenced by the external and external forces the process must be controlled and perceived with awareness. On the other hand the mission cannot be adequately defined if its methods and its place among organizations is not defined, this is the organization's role. Nevertheless; these realms are impossible to bind absolutely, that is why leadership is needed to steer a course through uncharted waters.

In the process of transforming an organization into an institution the porpouse must be built into the social structure. In this sense policy is rooted in the daily experience and saved from distortion by extended lines of communication. This process of embodiment of porpouse is not separated form the mission definition, both are identification of opportunities and limitation in terms of self knowledge, determining how far leadership ca or must go in order to change the nature of organization. The problem will be to determine which limitations are unavoidable and which are to be altered to create the institutional conditions for achieving the goals assumed. The process of building a structure is devised by the setting of roles, tasks, procedures and lines of communication, must control internal interest groups, being a source of energy by being not fully controllable and it must provide social stratification accordingly. The leaders must also consider regarding the structure process the system of believes shared by participants, the particular dimension of membership, and the structural dependency. All these elements taken together will be the filter through which policy is communicated.

There are certain problems that characterize phases of organizational history. These are the selection of a social base, regarding customers as well as workers, to build the institutional core by choosing the members that will be the doers of the policy, and formalization of procedure according to policy. The sensitivity to history by the planner will make him modify the institutional structure in order to take advantage of changes in risk and opportunities. On the other hand outstanding stages in the history of institutions are personnel crisis and development stages in which different types of leader will be necessary. This is the image of the fox and the lion, mentioned before. Another outstanding stage is the issue of decentralization and social integration. In this sense the need for centralization decreases as personnel homogeneity increases. Hence, decentralization will be possible then after the centralization has provided uniformity as far s policy interpretation is concerned.

Effective policy is most important when aims are not well defined, when external direction is not easily imposed and when goals and values are easily corruptible. Then it comes the defense of the institution's social integrity, which is the persistence of the organization's distinctive values, competence and goals. For de maintenance of institutional integrity the elite group responsible of policy must be kept carefully and formed by homogeneous individuals and kept autonomous, but especially enforce their power where values are weak. This elite autonomy leads us away form rigid rules and helps us identify key elements that need to be controlled, therefore; helping us determine which guiding principles can be set forth. The defense of integrity is therefore not only a matter of organizational survival it is the mission, the policy and the special capabi


Leaves of Iron: Glenn Murcutt: Pioneer of an Australian Architectural Form
Published in Paperback by Angus & Robertson (January, 1994)
Authors: Philip Drew and Phillip Drew
Average review score:

terrific
just swel


Let Yourself Be Loved (Illumination Books)
Published in Paperback by Paulist Press (September, 1997)
Authors: Phillip Bennett and Nicholas T. Markell
Average review score:

Illumination in a book
A friend of mine loaned me this book to read. I just finished it and am now going to order it to send to my parents because it is that moving. Mr. Bennett has put into words so many of my fears about life and spirituality that it brought me to tears while reading it. Each chapter examines what it means to be loved by others, God and yourself. Then it ultimately concludes in showing that loving God and others is loving yourself and it is O.K., as is contrary in so many facets of our modern society. The sections conclude with prayers that are meant to help implement the teachings in the specific chapters. The language is clear, concise and inspiring. This book is for anyone that considers themselves remotely spiritual, no matter what doctrine of faith you practice. The love and message is universal, so let yourself be loved as the title says.


Letters to a Quebecois Friend
Published in Hardcover by McGill-Queens University Press (February, 1990)
Authors: Phillip Resnic and Philip Resnick
Average review score:

Outstanding Letters
This book is one of the best books I have ever read, because it gave me a lot of wisdom, in the way of marrige. Even though I am not married yet I learned a lot from this series of letters in the novel. It taught me that I should relax more and not be so uptight. This novel also taught me that when I do get married I will follow some of the guidelines of his letters and use them in my everyday married life. The author showed me the importance of marrige, and how highly I should respect it.I recommend this book to anyone who is planing or think about taking the step into marrige. This book devoloped my relationship with my campanion, to an extent were we can talk about or problems. I reliezed through this book marriage is not all fun and games, it is a serious desicion. After reading this book my knowledge about marriage is greater then it ever was. I thought that even though I am not married, I can be a better person if I read this again when I get married, because there was so much wisdom within those letters. This book was so outstanding to read about his girlfriend because I could tell that they are thinking about taking that special step.I hope he learns as much as i did, becauses he will use it a lot sooner than I will. Thank you God Bless

Joshua Thompson


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Arkansas
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