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

Playoff Dreams (AllStar SportStory Series)
Published in Paperback by Peachtree Publishers (September, 1997)
Authors: Fred Bowen and Ann Barrow
Average review score:

This was a great sports story!!
I am six years old and just started playing baseball this year. It was great to read a book about a boy who loved baseball so much even if his team wasn't winning. The end was very good and very exciting.

A terrific book for kids who love sports.
Our family loves Fred Bowen's books because each story includes a little real sports history. The history in Playoff Dreams is about Ernie Banks of the Chicago Cubs. He was a fantastic player with a fantastic attitude. He never got down on the game even though his team never made it to the World Series. The main character in Playoff Dreams is a centerfielder named Brendan. He is a really good player but he's bummed because his teammates stink. He goes to a game at Wrigley Field (home of the Chicago Cubs). The whole scene at Wrigley Field is very interesting and readers will be surprised at what Brendan does (reluctantly) because of a long-standing real-life tradition with Cubs fans. (It's really neat the way the author pulls in real history.) Brendan learns about the legend of Ernie Banks at Wrigley Field and the lesson about optimism takes root slowly in Brendan. Parents will love the moral of the story and kids will love all the sports action (there's lots of it.)


The World Within the World
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (July, 1990)
Author: John D. Barrow
Average review score:

The World with the World
The World Within the World written by John D. Barrow is a book about the laws of Nature and explains why things are as they are. This book presents a wide-ranging interdisciplinary study of the evolving concept of the laws of Nature. Chaos, black holes, inflation and superstrings are just some of the subjects that are given attention to in this book. Also, mathematical topics are discussed and why this is important to philosophers and scientists, but ever mindful that the reader may not have a serious science background, the author discuses these new ideas in a serious but nontechnical style.

In this book the aim is not simply to pick again upon one of these esoteric fields at the frontiers of fundamental science and attempt to expalin it in simple terms. Rather, it is to pick upon the traitional unspoken assumptions to which we owe all these abstract and pragmatic developments: that the Universe is ordered, that it is logical, that it is mathematical, that it is predictable, that it is governed by something outside ourselves which is the same everywhere, but which has a deep resonance with the workings of our own minds: to explore something of the origin and possible meanings of the idea that there exist "laws of Nature" and some of the unsuspected realms that such an idea has led us.

So, with this being said, I found that unless you have some science background you will not get much use from this book as it is. Also, there is a message in the book, although laws of Nature may be necessary for such grand explanations, broken symmetries, organizing principles, selection effects, and human categories of thought all play essential and irreductible role in augmenting any law of Nature to determine a picture of the Universe in which we live.

This book has seven parts and each of these has various topics that are discussed in detail, giving the reader a dose of historical context along with cutting edge science. From inner space to outer space, there are mathematical laws of Nature that explain what nature is. A changeless world of order and certainty, impartial to our actions and desires.

I found the book can get difficult at times and I had to stop and ruminate, contemplate, and engage in serious thought... not that that wasn't a good thing. This is a book that will make you think.

Excellent exploration of philosophy, cosmology, and physics
The World Within the World is a rich and engaging exploration of the concept of laws of nature. Combining cosmology, relativity, quantum mechanics, philosophy of science, and philosophy of mathematics, Barrow asks fundamental questions about the nature of reality and the limits of human understanding: Are there really laws of nature existing independently of us that have been discovered by scientific method, or are the laws we've developed simply the result of order being imposed on the chaotic phenomena of experience by our categories of thought and perception? Why are the laws of nature written in the language of mathematics? Are mathematical laws merely the best approximations we can come up with of a deeper underlying reality which may be non-mathematical? What limits on our understanding of the universe does the mathematical nature of such laws present? For example, do there exist laws of nature which are expressed in terms of non-computable equations whose complexity is so great that they cannot be solved within the lifetime of the universe? If such non-computable laws do exist, we could never discover them due to their inherent complexity.

The World Within the World also addresses some other interesting philosophical questions that have been inspired by developments in modern physics. For example, within the infamously counter-intuitive world of quantum mechanics we find that when neutrons are fired at a screen with two openings, even when fired one at a time, they arrive at a target screen behind the double-slit screen like particles would be expected to, making distinct hits on the target screen, yet creating an overall interference pattern which is exhibited in wave phenomena such as water or sound waves. When golf balls are 'fired' in this way through a double-slit screen they do not create an interference pattern. This wave-particle duality is often taught to be a characteristic of light, but it applies to all elementary particles on the subatomic scale. Water and sound waves are waves of a medium--of water and air, respectively. But what does it mean to say that light or a neutron is a wave when these can exist in a vacuum? They are not waves of a medium; rather, they are waves of probability--of information--telling us the probability of finding a photon or a neutron in a particular place when we make a measurement. Heisenberg's Uncertainty principle also tells us that when we try to measure both the position and momentum of a particle, not only are we incapable of measuring both simultaneously, but, far more incomprehensibly, both the position and momentum cannot exist at the same time! This implies that such properties, which we are inclined to think of as inherent properties of the particles, do not exist until they are measured. This is known as the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics, which holds that particles are really nothing more than probability wave functions that expand infinitely across the universe and simply have a far higher likelihood of being measured at a certain spot; in other words, the actual location of a particle does not exist until it is measured! In the terminology of quantum mechanics, the act of measurement collapses the wave function.

There is one way out of this dilemma which is consistent with quantum mechanics and allows the position of a particle to be a real property of the particle and not merely a measured property existing only when a measurement takes place. However, while the alternative keeps the observer separate from the observed, it is equally troubling: The Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics implies that every time the measurement of a particle's position or momentum is made, all possible results obtain--the result we measure obtains in our world, and all the other possible results obtain in an infinite number of worlds for that single act of measurement. This implies that there are an infinite number of versions of you existing in these parallel worlds making these measurements! And you thought science fiction was strange! Perhaps at this point the best option is to maintain that--despite its unprecedented success in explaining the physical world--quantum mechanics is incomplete and therefore neither of the two interpretations adequately characterize the real world. The fact that we have yet to develop a successful quantum theory of gravity suggests that either general relativity or quantum mechanics is incomplete, if not both.

Barrow addresses other interesting issues in modern physics in this book: the categorization of the hundreds of particles that have been discovered into three basic types based on their interactions with the four forces of nature; the possibility of the existence of 10 or 26 dimensions and why only 3 dimensions of space grew larger than microscopic size; the attempt to unify the four forces of nature into a 'Theory of Everything' (TOE); a brief overview of superstrings, a possible candidate for a TOE; some practical diffulties in actually finding a TOE; features of cosmology that make it uniquely different from other sciences; whether the universe is infinite or finite in extent; the evidence that the universe began with the Big Bang; the difficulties in determining whether the universe with expand forever and die a 'Heat Death' or whether it will collapse to a 'Big Crunch'; and the different 'arrows of time' that cosmologists employ. There is also a very interesting dialogue debate in chapter 5 (p. 247-254 in the paperback edition) about whether abstract objects such as numbers exist independently of the mind in some Platonic realm outside of the physical universe, outlining the arguments for and against Platonic abstract objects.


101 More Hymn Stories
Published in Paperback by Kregel Publications (February, 1985)
Authors: Kenneth W. Osbeck and Cliff Barrows
Average review score:

XLNT resource for Christians, especially home educators
101 More Hymns provides not only the histories of by-gone hymn authors and composers. It provides the complete sheet music. Some of these hymns are not found in the current hymn books. This is an excellent resource for anyone interested in older hymns and hymn histories. My children highly recommend this book as does as their mother.


Access 2002 for Dummies Quick Reference
Published in Plastic Comb by For Dummies (15 January, 2001)
Author: Alison Barrows
Average review score:

Simple
The Dummies series lives on and this small desktop companion is a handy reference. If you're a Dummies series fan, you may benefit more by spending a little extra on this book's big brother "Access 2002 for Dummies" because it goes into more depth than the brief introductions in the "Quick Reference" version.


Albion Fellows Bacon: Indiana's Municipal Housekeeper (Midwestern History and Culture Series)
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (October, 2000)
Author: Robert G. Barrows
Average review score:

Well deserved credit.
It's good to see Albion Fellows Bacon get some well deserved credit and attention for her hard work during her live. Although not as famous as her older sister, Annie Fellows Johnston, Albion probably did more for the needy. Very well wrote with lots of information I never knew existed.


Amateur Magician's Handbook
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (February, 1986)
Author: June Barrows Mussey
Average review score:

Teaches Magic as entertainment, not just as puzzles
This is one of the finest modern magic books available to the general public. It teaches how to entertain with magic, not just how the tricks are done. It is an all-encompassing book, with major sections on all types of sleight-of-hand, mentalism, self-working (head) magic, and apparatus magic. Couple this book with the Mark Wilson Complete Course In Magic and Bill Tarr's 101 Easy Magic Tricks for a comprehensive library for beginners and intermediates alike. I have dozens of other, more advanced fine magic books, and I have done magic for 30 years as a hobby, but I refer to Amateur Magician's Handbook regularly. Very Highly Recommended!


"The Barrows Popularity Factor"
Published in Spiral-bound by R M Barrows Inc (August, 1996)
Author: Robert M. Barrows
Average review score:

Now you can QUANTIFY the effectiveness of advertising!
Anyone who spends any money on any advertising anywhere, should buy this booklet immediately! It will show you an easy-to-use mathematical formula that will actually let you quantify the relationship between your advertising and sales. You can use it to help you increase your sales, increase your profits and decrease your risk! Plus, you can read the whole booklet in about an hour and all of the calculations can be done by one person, in moments, with just a simple calculator. It will give you more of the information you need to make key marketing decisions with far less risk and it can help your company make a lot more money starting right now! It's a major breakthrough in marketing...and it's not just marketing man's mumbo jumbo, it's cold hard math that can help your company make a lot more money starting right now!


Big Blue
Published in Hardcover by Tailwinds (July, 2003)
Authors: Shelley Gill and Ann Barrow
Average review score:

Great info on blue whales
I thought this book was enjoyable to read and important in its information about an endangered species. It shows respect for whales and conveys the awesomeness of the blue whale, the largest animal on earth. The illustrations were especially beautiful and made me want to swim underwater.


The children's hour
Published in Unknown Binding by Grolier ()
Author: Marjorie Barrows
Average review score:

A must have for anyone who loves children's books
I first ran into The Children's Hour several years ago while on vacation when I stumbled across volume 1 in an antique store. Although I don't have any children of my own, I was so completely charmed by the illustrations and the stories (many of which I remembered fondly from my childhood) that I had to buy it. Later I was able to pick up the other volumes in the series at a used book store. Each volume (at around 350 pages) has a different theme. The first is "First Story Book" and contains illustrated stories including The Velveteen Rabbit, The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins, Curious George, Muggins Mouse at the Seashore, The Puppy Who Wanted a Boy, The Littlest Angel, and many more (55 in all). Themes of some of the other volumes are Favorite Fairy Tales, Myths and Legends, Favorite Mysteries, Science Fiction and Fantasy, Westerns, and ten others (16 volumes in all). This is an ideal series for bedtime stories to read to your young ones (if you don't already do that, these stories will motivate you to do so!), for children who like to read themselves, or even for adults who loved books as children and enjoy traveling down memory lane.


Common Sense God
Published in Paperback by Xlibris Corporation (September, 2002)
Author: Mark Barrow
Average review score:

What a wake-up call!
Common Sense God is the most down to earth, smack-yourself-on-the-head wake up call to enlightenment. Mark Barrow cleverly applies common everyday experiences to demonstrate that God is always with us -- and that instant enlightenment is right there under our noses if we would just pay attention. CSG is a highly entertaining, mind-opening paradox as the most simple experiences unlock the secrets behind the most complicated mysteries. This book is a classic, it's a must-read for anyone who wants to wake up. As Barrow puts it, "you can either play the game or let the game play you."


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Georgia
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