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Poignant, Insightful, Inspirational, a Fuzzy, Warm "blankie"

Great book for every level of reader!

Good Enough to Eat: Bountiful Home Cooking

Great Spaniels Book

A wealth of source materials on Colonial America"Governing and Teaching" is a Sourcebook on Colonial America which contains a wealth of historical maps (Florida in 1564, Massachusetts in 1634), sketches (Columbus landing in the Bahamas, Patrick Henry speaking to the House of Burgesses), paintings (the Pilgrims signing the Mayflower Compact and Governor Thomas Gage of Massachusetts being thrown by his horse in a political allegory), and engravings ( and the Boston Massacre by Paul Revere) from the Library of Congress. There are also contemporary photographs of buildings from this period, such as the oldest synagogue in American and a library, both built in Newport, Rhode Island, as well as the title pages for some of the first books published in the New World, including a Bible in Algonquian and Poor Richard's Almanac, and various headlines from early newspapers.
This volume explores the roots of our government, the founding of the nation's first churches and schools, as well as the events that led to the movement for independence from Great Britain. This book is divided into three parts: (1) 1490-1649, The First Settlers, (2) 1950-1754, Change and Conflict, and (3) 1755-1776, The Way to Independence. Each begins with several pages of time lines, each of which looks at a specific period of years in terms of World History, Colonial Government, and Colonial Religion and Education. The two-page chapters consists of a couple of paragraphs of text and then one to three illustrations, each with its own detailed caption. Other volumes look at the same time period from different perspectives, such as "The Explorers and Settlers," "Battles in a New Land," "Daily Life," and "The Arts and Sciences." All of these sourcebooks are excellent supplemental volumes for studying Colonial America, supplying a wealth of details to augment what you find in your American History textbook. Again, I wish there was some way of making this material more accessible to the entire classroom. Fortunately, most of what appears in this volume is in black & white, which means that teachers (or students) can photocopy pictures for bulletin board displays or reports.


Grant Winner's Toolkit : Project Management and Evaluation

African-American Contributed CookbookThe recipes are credited to individuals, and have some individual eccentricities, as well as being very representative of that era and region.
If you can find a copy to buy, you will be very pleased with this cookbook, which is both usable and collectable.


Guns in American Society: An EncyclopediaCarter's book is THE resource for anyone wishing to explore all aspect of this issue. Each article ends with see also references and suggestions for further reading. A roster of contributors gives their qualifications and lists the entries they wrote. The book explores the historical, social, legal, and political aspects of the gun issue in the US, including personalities of the gun culture. Explanations of legal cases are particularly helpful, and there are entries on the gun laws of Finland, Japan, Mexico, Russia, and the UK.
Carter (sociology, Bryant College) has written or edited nine books, including The Gun Control Movement (CH, Feb'98). This work is a fair, balanced assessment of the issue. Both volumes are indexed; the general index that concludes volume 2 prints page numbers in bold face to denote main entries. Appendixes list organizations and cover key laws and state constitutional provisions. Summing Up: Recommended. All libraries. D. M Buckley,[Reference Librarian], University of Dayton


not for everyone, yet illuminating sometimes,perhaps not!!I suppose Lacan would have or Zizek would find now something fascinating to say with the indulgences in today's new music,what is it, what does it represent, what incomplete dimension of your unconscious does it reside in.
Perhaps music creativity existing within the realms of the modernist language,post-Ferneyhough is harboring an aesthetic in exile,afraid to come out of its embattled neglected shell, like the intimacy of a Dutch lens grinder,a forgotten art.
Today it is actually more interesting, at least with new music, to discover the creative pathways of a work than the actual work itself,like an elaborate dinner setting where the food never comes(John Tilbury,pianist said that on radio) a new work for much of the time under-rehearsed,and played once,perhaps twice never to be heard again, and never recorded for consumption. And then there are primary new works which the citizens of a free democracy never get to hear at all. This the cause of cultural marginalization, we simply never hear some aspects of the creative spirit,even though the Silicon Valley has fashioned a saturation point of image,icon,aesthetic and place. Someone, some human body politically does decide who will get a Pulitzer,or what new premiere work the Chicago Symphony will play this year. In fact we seldom remember the Pulitzer winner's actual prize music,Can you name the work or even remember a moment from it??we listen more to the opaque cultural power a Prize represents, who cares about the music.Well Habermas said opacity"Undurchsichtlichkeit" is what this age is all about, New Age complaisance.
Carter has received numerous prizes but for his body of work the prizes seem to be arbitrary and marginal, we forget them because he has so many of them,like Oscars,who ever has more than one we forget about. We go(should go) directly toward the creative vigours structural or otherwise to the music, its incessant shapes, and convoluted designs,its virtuosic displays and its long range topologies of poly rhythms and other global durational frames.
The Harmony Book here, (actually Two Volumes sewed into one here)began as a fairly modest endeavor, a practical accounting means, a way to remember certain configurations of tones, or intervallic transformations. No one can remember everything, so Carter began making these large 14 inch long sheets of these tones. All of this creative odyssey is retold within the interview with scholar John F. Link, who has devoted his analytic work to Carter's polyrhythms,and also this Harmony Book.A wonderful interview here with Carter. Volume One is a Catalogue/Synthesis of three note, four note, five note etc chords, and their tranpostions. It seems easier to contemplate these chords here as 1+2=3, or 3+2=5, for one isolated tone then followed by 2 more tones can powerfully direct the best,evocative,crisis moments in music, anyones.. This becomes especially relevant when one needs to account for 55 six note chords distribute graciously over the durations of a work,or controlling the succession of 80 or 90 tones followed, staggered, accelerated as the work's discourse unfolds. Volume 2 then is Analysis, a means of looking more deeply into the relationships of all this stuff, the tones, the intervals, the chords. There are moments of pure illumination as in the discussion on Carter's provocative/evocative Night Fantasies or when for instance one learns as in Carter's Third String Quartet, a work shaped by the Duets,One Violin with Viola, One Violin then with Cello, One group more stationary reduced to Five tones, the other Duet ensemble is free to explore all interval rows. I can't help thinking this is how international capital functions,in Argentina, in South Korea in today's neo-liberal mileau.
There are also elaborate yet functional means of simple symbols, as a four note chord represented with a box, four point, then five note pentagon, and six, then what is referred to as the Sigla controlling and defining the entire array of tones,220 intervals and chords with all their additions.... There is a Glossary to help one wade through this fascinating Naming of the Father- game.
There are also nice excerpts from Carter's music that helps embellish a point,much like conceptual menus for creativity. Then there is the dimension as to who or what controls whom. Does one need this Harmony Book to decepher the structural complexity within Carter's oeuvre. Does Carter need his own Book? And the answer is sometimes! for Carter said that he did break the tyranny of these alloted configurations simply to make the music more interesting. I guess that is the last horizon, the music must be interesting, how one got there is also interesting,perhaps more so or less so, it may become part of what we may now think of musical philosophy and the creativity, the last bastion known.


Unique and beautiful"Heaven's All-Star Jazz Band" is a great way to introduce kids to the Jazz greats that may have died, but will always live on through their music. The unique illustrations (which aren't described, but look like oil paint on canvas in a wonderful 3D effect) are brilliant. The last page gives a small bio on each legend mentioned in the story. But the greatest gift this book gives is the obvious bond that has been created between a boy and his Grandfather simply through a love of great music. This is a must-have.