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

On Becoming an Engineer: A Guide to Career Paths
Published in Paperback by IEEE (January, 1997)
Authors: J. David Irwin, David J. Irwin, and IEEE Education Society
Average review score:

Very Helpful; A Must-Read Book for Potential Engineers
This book is very informative. Irwin walks the reader through the steps of becoming an engineer from junior high school course recommendations to professional engineering issues. He summarizes the major engineering disciplines and briefly outlines specialty areas. Students at all stages of study can benefit from this book. He discusses issues for the college student, such as study habits and professional honor societies. High school students considering an engineering major in college need to read this book. Irwin gives examples of day-to-day engineering jobs in each discipline. He also explains accreditation and discusses post-graduate training. He also deals with financial aid questions and other pertinent information. Even junior high school students should read this book. Irwin outlines recommended high school courses, which can help the junior high reader plan his educational strategy. I am a high school senior, planning on majoring in mechanical engineering in the fall. I have benefitted greatly from reading this book. Irwin has clarified several vague issues, and has given me a realistic view of my chosen major. To me, that alone is indispensible.


The Original Freddie Ackerman
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (October, 1999)
Author: Hadley Irwin
Average review score:

Way to go Freddie!
This book has such an interesting number of characters and places that it is hard not to love it. I loved tring to solve Trevor's mystery before he could. I didnt manage it. I got to the very last chapter and still hadnt figured it out. Everyone should read this book.


Our Ordered Lives Confess (American-East Asian Relations Series: No 8)
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Univ Pr (December, 1976)
Author: Irwin T. Jr. Hyatt
Average review score:

An in depth look at late 19th century China missionaries
Often books of this type either make a saint of the missionary or a sinner. This book hits a balance in the humanity as well as the humility (and sometimes lack of humility) of these three pioneers in Christian missions in the northern province of Shandong in late 19th century China. Stands alone as almost a classic in the field. Their problems as well as victories are well stated and make one want to read more of the people and period. Especially to learn more about the Chinese of that time.


The People Side of Project Management
Published in Paperback by Ashgate Publishing Company (December, 1995)
Authors: Ralph L. Kliem and Irwin S. Ludin
Average review score:

People side of Project Management
As a practicing project manager I found this book an excellent source of reference. It is written in plain English and in an easy to follow format. It deals quickly and effectively with the issue at hand. This is a skill that is needed by all to be effective in their chosen field of project management. By following the advice and examples set out in this book you will find your people skills will dramatically improve. I would highly recommend this book to all.


The Perils of Partners: How to Protect Yourself Against Crooked, Conniving, and Incompetent Partners
Published in Paperback by Smith Johnson Pub (March, 1998)
Author: Irwin Gray
Average review score:

Tells the real reason businesses fail and people go broke
This book goes into the real world of business by examining the basic cause of most business failures--a breakup of the partnership among those who started or joined the business. It does not matter what form the business has--corporation, limited liability, partnership, or whatever. When things go wrong, members of the firm can involve others in crimes, tax liabilities, and other personal asset robbing schemes even when the victims have no idea what's happening. This book tells what to look for when joining with others, how to protect personal assets against government, creditors, and others who punch right through the corporate shield to strip personal bank accounts, houses, and other assets from their owners. Even if those assets had been in the family years before the business was started.

Tells what to do in setting up a company, how to use a "Key Indicator" approach to running it so as to catch malfeasance before it even affects the firm, and to keep everyone on the right track to make the firm grow.


Peter Pan 2 - European Edition
Published in Hardcover by Tundra Pub (June, 1994)
Authors: Regis Loisel, Greg Baisden, and Mary Irwin
Average review score:

Peter Pan by Regis LOISEL
Just a little word: PERFECT


Planning & Implementing your major gifts campaign
Published in Paperback by Jossey-Bass (15 December, 2001)
Author: Suzanne Irwin-Wells
Average review score:

Everything I wanted to know about major gifts in one book.
I read this terrific workbook in one sitting - it is very readable, interesting and well-designed. The worksheets are very clear and practical. I can't wait to put the tips and information into practice. I learned a lot and I feel inspired. I know I'll be referring to this book continuously. Major gifts fundraising doesn't seem quite so intimidating now!


Plato's Moral Theory: The Early and Middle Dialogues
Published in Paperback by Clarendon Pr (August, 1979)
Author: Terence H. Irwin
Average review score:

One of the most important book about Plato's philosophy
It's not necessary to know many other books about this subject to understand its importance. This book is indispensable to all the persons who are interested in search Plato's moral theory. You can not agree with the author's point of view but you can not denie his care with the subject.


Polygamous Families in Contemporary Society
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (August, 1996)
Authors: Irwin Altman and Joseph Ginat
Average review score:

An interesting, sympathetic study of a little-known minority

In the latter half of the nineteenth century the LDS (Mormon) Church, settled in what is now the State of Utah, authorized and encouraged men to take multiple wives. This was based on a belief that such marriages were the will of God. The practice led to intense opposition by the US government, causing the LDS Church to officially abandon this position in 1890. Some church members, convinced that plural marriage was correct and the official church leadership had fallen from the true path, separated and formed their own churches where the practice of plural marriage continued. Such practitioners are automatically excommunicated by the official LDS Church. Plural marriage is actually a criminal offense in Utah, but the state has not actively prosecuted it for several decades. The last major organized police raid on one of these churches occurred in the 1950s.

Beginning in the 1970s Joseph Ginat, then a graduate student of anthropology at the University of Utah, began building contacts with these Mormon fundamentalists, estimated to number between 20,000 and 60,000. This was a slow and delicate process because of the long history of oppression. Practitioners of plural marriage are still subject to various forms of discrimination so tend to be secretive. For this reason, it is effectively impossible to gather reliable statistics on these people, so any numbers quoted should be taken as very approximate.

Members of the Mormon fundamentalist churches share a belief in the patriarchal authority and duties of the husband, traditional gender roles, and having lots of kids. About 20% of their families are plural marriages. There are two main fundamentalist churches: one in a rural area on the Utah-Arizona border, and another in urban Salt Lake County. There are also a number of smaller groups and independent families. The rural church is more conservative than the urban church. A few radical or outspoken groups get most of the media attention, but the majority of fundamentalists are very quiet.

Drs. Altman and Ginat studied 26 Mormon fundamentalist plural marriage families by interviewing them in their homes and other locations. Most of those interviewed had been born or raised within the fundamentalist movement. This book is a report of what the authors learned about those families, with some comparisons to other societies with similar practices.

A fundamentalist Mormon plural marriage includes one husband and two or more wives. This is commonly called "polygamy" but is more correctly polygyny, since there are no plural marriages with more than one husband. About 2/3 of plural marriages are one husband and two wives. Frequently two or more wives are sisters. Most plural marriage families are in the middle to lower-middle socioeconomic class, with few members holding professional or managerial jobs. The combination of large numbers of children, middling job skills and the necessity of avoiding persecution places a great strain on the financial resources of many such families.

The addition of a wife to a family ideally occurs with the approval of the new wife's parents, the existing wife or wives in the family, and relevant church leaders. In the rural group, however, some marriages are arranged by the church leaders, perhaps to provide for a widow. In some cases, the addition of a wife is initiated by women who want to become family and so persuade the husband to go along. Failure to achieve consensus before a marriage can produce family turmoil, perhaps leading to divorce.

Weddings are generally officiated by church leaders, and are marriages between the husband and the individual wife. The other wives in a family may take part in the ceremony, but they are not considered to be directly wed to the new wife.

Each wife has a strong bond with her husband, while bonds between the wives are generally weaker. Most wives give each other mutual support, but some have conflicted relationships. The husband is expected to be fair and treat each wife equally; failure to do so sometimes leads to counseling by church leaders or even divorce. Often family members turn to their religious faith to sustain them through periods of family conflict. There is an expectation that the husband's patriarchal authority can be used to settle disagreements that can't be negotiated.

Normally, each wife has her own living space, whether a room or an entire house, where she is sovereign. In some cases two or more wives share a house but have their own rooms. The husband generally rotates among these homes by some arrangement, with the rotation system varying between families. Most husbands have little or no space of their own.

Child care practices vary between families. Most expect each child's mother to have primary responsibility for raising the child, but the actual work is frequently shared among wives in ways that adapt to changing circumstances. Many families house teenagers in shared rooms segregated by sex, with younger children kept closer to their mother. In most families the father has substantially less involvment with his children than does the mother.

Most husbands celebrate the anniversary of their marriage to each wife, generally by doing something special and personal with her. Relatively few holidays bring the entire family together for a celebration; in the largest families, this would be a major undertaking. Common family celebrations are Thanksgiving, Christmas and father's birthday. Several fundamentalist families decline to celebrate Christmas on the grounds that it has become too commercial.

Most plural wives must work, apparently out of economic necessity. A few have their own businesses. Although the husband is the nominal patriarch, most plural wives see less of their husband than a monogamous wife would and most are therefore independent and self-reliant. However, the husband is expected to be there when needed.

Both researchers are male, and most of the interviews were arranged through husbands. In fact, men were in practical control of the interview process with a few minor exceptions. It is interesting to speculate on what might come out if women were to interview plural wives in the absence of any men.


Production & Operations Management: A Life Cycle Approach (Business One Irwin/Apics Series in Production Management)
Published in Hardcover by Irwin Professional Pub (April, 1992)
Authors: Richard B. Chase and Nicholas J. Aquilano
Average review score:

Easy and interesting access to production and operation mgmt
This book contains a broad overview of the methods and instruments of production and operation management. For me it's one of the best books to get an quick and understandable introduction to the status quo in this area. Absolutely recommended.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Georgia
More Pages: Irwin Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46