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

The Return of Grand Theory in the Human Sciences
Published in Paperback by Cambridge University Press (December, 1990)
Author: Quentin Skinner
Average review score:

The one best single source on the topic
If you are looking for the one best single source that will supply you (or your students) with a sound understanding of the salient "Grand" social and critical thinkers of the last 50 years, this is it! Not only are "all the usual suspects" covered (Derrida, Foucault, Kuhn Habermas, etc.), but they are covered by the leading commentators in the philosophical world (Barnes on Kuhn, Giddens on Habermas, Philp on Foucault). Most remarkably, however, the essays are well written, clear, and comprehensive. The book has become a staple on my syllabi.


Revelation: God's Grand Finale
Published in Paperback by Harrison House, Incorporated (December, 1984)
Author: Hilton Sutton
Average review score:

Revelation: God's Grand Finale
This is book is concise & accurate. It gives an accurate account of prophecy & leaves the reader with a feeling of peace & hope for the future for those that are on the road to heaven. For those that are unsure it will enlighten & encourage them to get on that road.


The Search for Security : A U.S. Grand Strategy for the Twenty-First Century
Published in Hardcover by Praeger Publishers (July, 2003)
Authors: Max G. Manwaring, Edwin G. Corr, and Robert H. Dorff
Average review score:

Brilliant, Coherent, Holistic, and Above All, Sane


This book is a gem, and it is worth every penny, but it is a pity that it has not been priced for mass market because every U.S. citizen would benefit from reading this superb collection of chapters focused on how to keep America both safe and prosperous in a volatile world of super-empowered angry men, ethnic criminal gangs, mass migrations, epidemic disease, and water scarcity.

President David Boren of the University of Oklahoma, himself a former Senator and former Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, provides a non-partisan foreword that clearly indicts both Democrats and Republicans for what he calls a "zig-zag" foreign policy that is guided by TV images and weekly polls, rather than any coherent and calculated evaluation of ends, ways, and means.

Divided into three parts, the book first addresses the Global Security Environment (2 chapters), then discusses elements of a grand or total strategy (5 chapters), and concludes with a prescription (2 chapters). Every chapter is good.

Chapter 1 by Richard Millet does an outstanding job of discussing the global security environment in terms that make it crystal clear that the highest probability threats are non-traditional threats, generally involving non-state actors in a failed state environment. These are not threats that can be addressed by a heavy metal military that is not trained, equipped, nor organized for humanitarian or constabulary operations. Among his most trenchant observations: America can not succeed when the local elites (e.g. Colombia) are not willing to pay the price for internal justice and stability; sometimes the costs of success can exceed the costs of failure (Afghanistan?); what America lacks today is any criteria by which to determine when to attempt coalition building and when to go it alone; the real threat is not any single government or non-state organization, but the millions of daily decisions (e.g. to buy cocaine or smuggle medicine) that incentivise crime and endless conflict.

Chapter 2 by Robert Dorff dissects existing U.S. national security "strategy" and shows clearly, in a non-partisan manner, that the U.S. does not have a coherent inter-agency capability for agreeing on ends, ways, or means. He calls what we have now--both from the past under Clinton and in the present under Bush, "adhocery" and he makes the compelling point that our failure to have a coherent forward-looking strategy is costing the U.S. taxpayer both money and results.

Chapters 3-7 are each little gems. In Chapter 3 Max Manwaring suggests that our existing assumptions about geopolitics and military power are obsolete, and we are in great danger if Americans cannot change their way of thinking about national security issues. He suggests five remedies, the most important of which is the establishment of a coherent inter-agency planning and operational control process for leveraging all sources of national power--political, diplomatic, economic, military, and informational--simultaneously and in balance. In Chapter 4 Edwin Corr and Max Manwaring offer a fine discourse on why legitimate governance around the world must be "the" end that we seek as a means of assuring American security and prosperity in the face of globalization. Chapter 5 by Leif Rosenberger addresses the economic threats inherent in globalization, including free flows of capital, concluding that fixed exchange rates divorce countries from reality, and that the US must sponsor a global early warning system dedicated to the financial arena. Chapter 5 by Dennis Rempe is good but too short. He clearly identifies information power as being the equal of diplomacy, economics, and military power, going so far as to suggest an "International Information Agency" that could eventually become a public good as well as an objective arbiter of "ground truth." I like this idea, in part because it is consistent with the ideas I set forth in NEW CRAFT, to wit that we need to migrate from secret intelligence intended for Presidents (who then manipulate that intelligence and lie to their people) toward public intelligence that can be discussed and understood by the people--this makes for sounder decisions. Chapter 7, again by Edwin Corr and Max Manwaring, discusses deterrence in terms of culture, motive, and effect--they are especially good in pointing out that traditional deterrence is irrelevant with suicidal martyrs, and that the best deterrence consists of the education of domestic publics about the realities of the post-Cold War world.

The book concludes with 2 chapters, the first by Edwin Corr and Max Manwaring, who discuss how values (education, income, civic virtue) must be the foundation of the American security strategy. They then translate this into some specific "objectives" for overseas investments and influences by the U.S., and they conclude that the ultimate investment must be in better educating both domestic and international audiences. They recommend the legitimacy of all governments as a global objective; End-State Planning (ESP) as the way to get there; and a new focus on holistic and long-term programs rather than "adhocery" as the best way to manage scarce means. One can only speculate how differently Afghanistan and Iraq (and Haiti, now discarded for a decade) might have turned out if the US had rolled in with a Marshall Plan or Berlin Airlift equivalent the minute organized hostilities ceased. Robert Dorff closes the book by pointing out that state failure is not the root cause, but rather the symptom, and that the U.S. must intervene before a state fails, not after.

I recommend this book, together with Colin Gray's "Modern Strategy" as essential reading for any national security professional. The publishers should consider issuing a more affordable paperback (books cost a penny a page to produce, perhaps a penny a page to market, so anything over $5 on this book is pure profit). This is a book, like Harry Summers on strategy, that should be available for $15 in paperback--if it were, I would buy 200 for my next conference.


Secrets in the Grand Canyon, Zion and Bryce Canyon National Parks
Published in Paperback by Natl Photographic Collections (September, 1998)
Authors: Lorraine Salem Tufts and Tracey I. Holmes
Average review score:

Secrets in the Grand Canyon,Zion and Bryces Canyon
An extremely well presented book. Very informative ,well written and brilliant photography. Excellent stuff.


Selected Papers of Abdus Salam: (With Commentary (World Scientific Series in 20th Century Physics, V. 5)
Published in Paperback by World Scientific Pub Co (May, 1994)
Authors: Abdus Salam, C. Isham, T. Kibble, A. Ali, and Fayyazuddin Riazuddin
Average review score:

Ideals and Realities
This book is an oasis in the world which reflects the legendry work of Professor Abdus Salam (Nobel Laureate in Physics). This book contain the research work of Professor Abdus Salam in the Gauge Unified Theory and the prediction of proton decay which is now the most current concern of Physics.


Sinan : the grand old master of Ottoman architecture
Published in Unknown Binding by Institute of Turkish Studies ; Ada Press Publishers ()
Author: Aptullah Kuran
Average review score:

tireless
Prof. Kuran's book on Sinan is an excellent introductory study for the students of Islamic architecture. I highly recommend this book to the readers of art and architectural history in general. In their library, like Goodwin's History of Ottoman architecture, this colossal book will be a main source of reference on Ottoman architecture. It relates the life and deeds of the creator of a unique tradition. In this book, you can discover that, very similar to the evolution we see in pre-modern European architecture, there was a development from classical to post-classical in Ottoman architecture. This book contains detailed descriptions of Sinan's grand and relatively minor structures and includes a catalogue of buildings and an extensive bibliography at the end. As a matter of fact, it is the end-product of Prof. Kuran's attempt to create a series of colossal studies on Turkish architecture in Anatolia. He began with Seljukid madrasas, continued through Early Ottoman mosques and concluded with Sinan's buildings. Each of these studies are steps in his inclusive narrative and also in the evolution of Ottoman architecture.


A Single Grand Victory: The First Campaign and Battle of Manassas (The American Crisis Series, Book 7)
Published in Hardcover by Scholarly Resources (April, 2002)
Author: Ethan S. Rafuse
Average review score:

Every phase of the first major clash of the Civil War
The seventh installment of the Scholarly Resource "American Crisis Series" on the Civil War era, A Single Grand Victory: The First Campaign And Battle Of Manassas by Civil War scholar and historian Ethan S. Rafuse is a meticulous, exhaustively researched, well written examination of every phase of the first major clash of the Civil War which came to be known as the Battle of Manassas. From the march on Centreville to the savage slaughter on Henry Hill, A Single Grand Victory is painstakingly researched, and presented with exquisite detail. A Single Grand Victory is a strongly recommended addition to Civil War Studies supplemental reading lists and academic reference collections.


Sister Wendy's Grand Tour: Discovering Europe's Great Art
Published in Hardcover by Stewart, Tabori & Chang (October, 1996)
Authors: Wendy Beckett, Sister Wendy Beckett, and Sister Wendy Beckett
Average review score:

A Thoroughly Absorbing Book for the Lay-Person
In a world where so many things compete for one's attention, the world of fine art is often overlooked for more contemporary and, as we often see it, more relevant media. This book opened up a whole new world for me as I read it, on an eight hour flight home to my native Britain from the US. I've since taken several art history courses and read a great deal more. Sister Wendy has had her critics in the art world, invariably from those elitists who would use art as a means to promote themselves, and perhaps don't wish to see any kind of knowledge or familiarity of great art trickle down to the person in the street. Sister Wendy, far from popularizing art in the trendy sense, individualizes it, not by personalizing it, but by humanizing it. While some of her interpretations may not always coincide with the the received criticism, she does something far more important and far more indicative of the true Christian nature of the woman; she humanizes it for us and thereby makes it accessible. What once looked like a painting of some people from the past on a balcony is now a comment on ourselves and our society, as relevant today as when it was painted, and that is the great truth Sister Wendy gave me: that art is not something to be afraid of but, like the great literature and music of the ages, with which many of us are infinitely more familiar, art is as important and as rich a source of the human experience, its moments and its continuity, as is any novel or symphony. I used to think that it was only given to a few people to really understand art, and that "I must not have a very visual mind" but I failed to see what is, in retrospect, quite stunningly obvious. Art was always, after all, meant to be seen, and with a little work to understand the references in a work, which viewers of the time would have often have immediately understood, and by not being afraid of it or thinking it obscure, one can find every bit as much satisfaction and humanity in a work of art as one can in literature. For me literature was always my habit, now, thanks to Sister Wendy, I have an art habit (all accusations of a very poor nun pun there are denied in the strongest possible terms). To be honest, I wasn't even all that interested in art. I knew nothing about it and didn't try to find out with any seriousness of intent, mostly because I thought it was all too terribly serious in itself and the arty people I knew all took themselves way too seriously. So, to her critics, I say, Sister Wendy has done more than anyone or anything I have encountered to truly bring art to the people, where it is meant to be. She does not jealously guard her knowledge of art, only to be shared with an elite few but, in true Christian spirit, is spreading an appreciation of it to those who might not otherwise care all that much, and gently opening up whole new amazing worlds for them. I thoroughly recommend this book to everyone.


Some Grand Dust
Published in Paperback by Chatoyant (June, 2002)
Author: William Minor
Average review score:

Superbly crafted verses of life, longing, loving, & family
Some Grand Dust comprises two poem cycles ("Our Peasant Life" and "Moker") by jazz authority and writer William Minor. These are superbly crafted verses of life, longing, loving, family, and neighbors - both real and imagined. Moker's Unborn Daughter: Today she wants to take a walk/and talk about men, his least favorite subject./"What can you tell me about them?" she asks./"Nothing," he replies. "Not a thing." Well,/you must know something," she snaps back./"As much as I know," he says, "about myself."/"Is that all?" she cries, and clasps her hands/before her face, tossing her not so delicate/hair. "See? See?' she chides, peeking through/the game they used to play: "This is the church/and this the steeple." "See what?" he cries./She dances away. "See? See?" she calls/back over her truly beautiful shoulder,/Moker's mocking unborn daughter.


Secrets in Yellowstone & Grand Teton National Parks
Published in Paperback by Natl Photographic Collections (May, 1997)
Author: Lorraine Salem Tufts

Related Vacation Book Subjects: Colorado
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