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

Fundamentals of Biochemistry , Student Companion
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (May, 2000)
Authors: Donald Voet, Judith G. Voet, and Charlotte W. Pratt
Average review score:

Very helpful!
Excellent text to supplement the hard back book. This companion provides an outline and THE ANSWERS to questions and the Study Excercises from the main text. Easy to understand and all calculations shown. Money well spent-too bad you have to buy the main text!


Garden Folklore That Works: Hundreds of Practical, Tried and Tested Gardening Tips Collected Through the Ages
Published in Hardcover by Readers Digest (01 March, 2001)
Authors: Charlie Ryrie and Charlotte Ryrie
Average review score:

Good for beginners
Combines scientific fact with age-old wisdom, to give garden enthusiasts all round coverage on many aspects of gardening. It talks about the indoor as well as the outdoor garden, with practical tips on seeds, potting, soil composition, fertilizers, weeds and even details on insects and small animals you may encounter. There's also a section on flower arranging, your tools, growing and preparing your own herbs, and how to take care of yourself to avoid strain. Lots of snippets of information on all kinds of topics, with colorful illustrations and photographs.


Gender and Family Therapy
Published in Paperback by Karnac Books (01 June, 1995)
Authors: Charlotte Burck and Gwyn Daniel
Average review score:

Publisher's comments
Burck and Daniel share the personal meaning that gender holds for them, and the open and enquiring, rather than definite, style of their writing makes it easy for the reader to grasp their ideas. The author's handling in the early chapters of the many intellectual conundrums about gender is clear and assured, and through their many citations of the other literature in the field they have managed to align this volume with other scholarly works while at the same time ensuring a very readable and practical book.

Charlotte Burck and Gwyn Daniel's book shows us how richly productive good conversations can be. They have taken our current crop of favoured ideas and stances - second-order cybernetics, post modernism, social constructionism, feminism, narrative and discourse theory - added what's best about systems theory (in their words, an interactional understanding and a sensitivety to context, framing and level) - and then orchestrated a contrapunctal dialogue where each discourse comments on the other, producing newsworthy fresh ideas.

In their dense and nuanced discussion of how gender's language and discourse possess us, Burck and Daniel give us new analytic tools and creative clinical strategies with which to mobelize women to embark on this research for themselves (and to help men see through the illusion that, unlike women, they are coherent, sovereign subjects).

In the process, the authors show us how therapy can foster a stance of critical inquiry towards the truths of one's time and place, especially about what it means to be a man or woman now. From the Foreward by Virginia Goldner


The German Shepherd (Learning About Dogs)
Published in School & Library Binding by Capstone Press (October, 1996)
Author: Charlotte Wilcox
Average review score:

The German Shepherd
I read THE GERMAN SHEPHERD.
I thought it was a very good book because it tells you about German shepherds.
About the book it tells you everything you need to know about German shepherds what the eat and what they do. It tells you breeding German Shepherds and cops mostly use German shepherds because they're more protective. They also used German shepherds in the war to bring notes to other people to tell them what to do. And German shepherds where the first train dogs to use! German shepherds make a very good family pet as long as they have a lot of fun!
A police dog is an officer's best friend! If you have or want a German shepherd give them fresh water every day.
I think this is a good book for everyone to read because it's not too hard to read! I recommend this book because it's easy to read and it's a guide to have a German shepherd so you can have fun with your German shepherd.


Gerontological Nursing
Published in Paperback by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Publishers (January, 2001)
Author: Charlotte Eliopoulos
Average review score:

Excellent with a great deal of infromation
The book was great it had a lot of information. It gave a lot of insight into the process of aging and the help that elders may need and what the nurse needes to know.


A Ghostly Affair (Harlequin American Romance No. 16488)
Published in Paperback by Harlequin (May, 1993)
Author: Charlotte Maclay
Average review score:

Synopsis
He Had to Be Real

Did ghosts have black silky hair and piercing dark eyes?Were their bodies lean and hard?Emily Morrell didn't think so.

But Captain Calvert. T. Witherspoon, late of His Majesty's Service , WAS walking through walls. Emily had heard the rumors about Henderson House being haunted...and suspected her residend ghost was up to no good.

What did this intoxicating soldier want from her? He had already undressed her with his eyes, branded her with a kiss, set her body on fire with a soft touch.

With startling certainty, Emily knew her fantasy ghost was more man that she could handle.


Gifts of Age: Portraits and Essays of 32 Remarkable Women
Published in Paperback by Chronicle Books (October, 1985)
Authors: Charlotte Painter and Pamela Valois
Average review score:

Beautiful Photography , Outstanding Format
The book would make a wonderful gift for elderly friends and relatives. It takes an in depth look at seniors (some famous faces included) living exciting and productive lives well into their golden years. Pamela Valois' beautiful photography complements the interesting side bar text making for a perfect addition to your cofee table.


Good Charlotte: The Girls of the Good Day Orphanage
Published in Paperback by Scholastic (February, 1994)
Authors: Carol Beach York and Victoria De Larrea
Average review score:

good chrlotte
its a awqward book bout a girl who sees another person with blue hir which she belives is a princess.


Gracious Gifts: Japan's Sacred Offerings
Published in Hardcover by Shufu No Tomo (1999)
Authors: Gorazd Vilhar, Charlotte Anderson, and Gorazd Vilhar
Average review score:

The Art of Life
"Gracious Gifts: Japan's Sacred Offerings" is a lush book of beautifully composed color photographs by Gorazd Vilhar and knowledgeable, well written interpretive text by Charlotte Anderson. The authors have lived in Japan for 15 years, and their reverent, yet dramatic presentation of more than 100 sacred offerings left at Buddhist and Shinto sites gives the Western eye a rare glimpse into the Japanese custom of leaving small gifts in daily rituals honoring their gods, ancestors and lost loved ones. Even with little knowledge of Japan or its customs, readers of this book will be thrilled with the simple elegance of Japanese form, as well as the intense color and remarkable variety of the offerings. From daikon radishes carved into genitalia, offered to encourage fertility, to the 1000 handfolded origami cranes in every color, offered up for learning, the offerings shown in this book provide the reader with a feast for the mind and the spirit. Vilhar's photographs respect and preserve the sacred nature of the offerings. In fact, his careful attention to the form, color and precise arrangement of each offering provide one with a sense of awe that was surely felt by the bearer of the gift, but which might not be as immediate if one were to encounter these simple offerings in person. In the interpretive text, Anderson carefully and reverently provides enough background to enhance one's appreciation of the images, without presuming to explain the religion or its role in modern Japan. She accepts and describes what is. This beautiful book teaches one how to pay attention with a higher level of awareness.


The Grub-And-Stakers Move a Mountain
Published in Paperback by Avon (April, 1987)
Authors: Charlotte MacLeod and Alisa Craig
Average review score:

Grub and Stakers Move a Mountain
An excellent start to a wonderful series, Move a Mountain has humor, humanity and characters that are as whacky as they are likeable.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Florida
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