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

MBA in a Nutshell
Published in Hardcover by Aspen Publishers, Inc. (December, 2001)
Authors: Milo, Ph.D. Sobel and Dr Milo Sobel
Average review score:

Fabulous find!
This volume is just what I needed to get a leg up on those Harvard snobs! Everything you want to know on what MBA's do and how they think but were afraid to ask is here. My compliments to Dr. Sobel- he knows what it's all about. Worth TWICE the price!


Merry Christmas: Festive Stories, Songs, Poems, Recipes, and Gift Ideas for the Holidays
Published in Hardcover by Clarkson N. Potter (October, 1992)
Author: Barbara Milo Ohrbach
Average review score:

Old Fashioned Fun
The book contains numerous quotes, words of wisdom, song lyrics and recipes. All relate to the Christmas season. Great reading for children's bedtime stories.


Milo's Friends in the Dark
Published in Hardcover by Milo Productions (March, 1994)
Authors: Richard K. Koslowski, Craig T. Ploetz, and Rich Koslowski
Average review score:

Now here's a book your child will love to read over & over
This delightful book helps young children deal with the normal sounds that a house often makes, but may frighten them at bedtime The book is delivered in verse and features a cute little bespeckled read-headed boy, who discovers the causes of the creaks and squeaks in the dark. The author & illustrator have made a name for themselves in their hometown of Milwaukee by giving readings at the local schools.


Milo's Trip to the Museum With Grandpa
Published in Hardcover by Milo Productions (March, 1994)
Authors: Rich Koslowski, Craig T. Ploetz, and Richard K. Koslowski
Average review score:

A book to spark a young child's interest in museums
If you have trouble getting your child to tear away from TV and explore a local museum, this book may do the trick. Put into verse, this beautifully illustrated book turns a visit to the museum into an adventure that brings the museum relics to life. The author and illustrator have generated interest in their books by giving readings at schools in their hometown of Milwaukee. Milo's trip to the Museum with Grandpa can now be found in museum gift shops.


Music in the Age of Confucius
Published in Paperback by University of Washington Press (15 June, 2000)
Authors: Jenny F. So, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery (Smithsonian Institution), and Milo Cleveland Beach
Average review score:

Fascinating glimpses into another time
Imagine that the chief executive of a major record company died of a heart attack. His staff strangle all the members of the in-house orchestra, say the Vienna Philharmonic, chief conductor to the fore, laying them carefully in performance layout in an underground concert hall. The executive himself is placed with attendants (also strangled) in a fully-equipped recording room to one side. Next to each player was his (or, occasionally, her) instrument on which the murderer had first inscribed its tuning. Beside the bodies were illustrations of the musicians in performance, though sadly no scores. Then a roof was put up and the whole tomb encased in earth for a little over two-thousand four-hundred years.
This scenario may sound fantastic, it may even sound curiously tempting to some. It is also exactly what happened in central China. In the Winter of 1977 a unit of the Chinese People's Liberation Army was called in to level a small hill, such that a factory could be built near the town of Suizhou, which lies to the north of the city of Wuhan in Hubei Province. Breaking into a hitherto unknown burial pit of obvious antiquity, the soldiers quickly called in the archaeologists. The discovery that followed was the most remarkable in Chinese musical history to date, and one unparalleled among any of the other ancient cultures, whether in Asia, Africa, Europe or the Americas.
Laid out according to the model of a classical Chinese palace, the stone-lined tomb contained everything the Bronze Age despot would need for a successful, upwardly mobile after-life: an ornately lacquered wooden double coffin to shield both his bones and his dignity; several thousand weapons, pieces of armour and bronze chariot fittings; the bodies of twenty-one women (each strangled-presumably to keep her body pure) and a dog (method of death sadly unrecorded); and, best of all, a full set of ritual musical instruments, including a sixty-five-piece ensemble of studded bronze bells and thirty-two tuned chime stones. Inscriptions on the bronze implements identified the tomb's incumbent as Marquis Yi of Zeng, a minor and long-defunct state in central China. They also recorded that the bell set was presented to Marquis Yi by his powerful neighbour the King of Chu in the King's fifty-sixth year (i.e. 433 B.C.).
Superbly well-preserved in the central "ceremonial courtyard" of the subterranean palace, each bell produced two distinct pitches, depending on where it was struck. The set as a whole had a range of over five octaves, much of it fully chromatic in semitones. Drums, stringed instruments and wind instruments, as well as the above-mentioned lithophones, completed the ensemble. Some of the instruments or other ritual materials found in the tomb bore scenes depicting the making of music. The bells themselves were decorated with both the names of their two pitches in absolute terms and the identification of these in terms of relative pitch, a duplication that means we can today measure both their respective pitches and establish the tonal systems within which the set as a whole was played. The inclusion of five sets of beaters even gives a fairly strong hint as to how many musicians were required to perform the bells.
Discovered at the very beginning of the period of reconstruction following the Cultural Revolution, these instruments, most especially the bell set, have already attracted major attention in China. Recordings of a replica ensemble are available at many tourist sites across the country (though sadly the music chosen is less interesting). By the mid-1990s, enterprising Hubei peasants had taken to buying replica bells from Shanghai's Jiaotong University. These bells are then buried in the paddy fields for a year or two to age them and then sold on to unsuspecting foreign tourists, who are warned not to tell Chinese Customs-antiquities not being legally exportable). Whatever the moral issues of this exchange, the bells are extremely good-looking objects, and they deserve to be better known overseas.
Music in the Age of Confucius (or, actually, a century or so later) is exactly the book to carry out this process. Drawing together the widely scattered fruits of twenty years of research, it talks the reader through the various unprecedented discoveries, and was published on the occasion of the exhibition of instruments from the tomb of Marquis Yi at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington in 2000. Lavishly illustrated with photographs, many of them in colour, it is expertly written by a team of contributors who have kept in mind the intelligent, lay public likely to attend the exhibition. Five chapters examine, in turn, music at the time of Marquis Yi, percussion instruments, strings, winds and the importance of the instruments for our understanding of Chinese music history as a whole. In each case, the material from Marquis Yi's tomb is used as the focal point in a review of discoveries from other sites and references in the surviving literature and relics of the period. Supporting material in the book includes a chronology, map, glossary of characters, reference list, scale diagrams of instruments and an index. This adds up to a fascinating and engaging read, eminently open to the reader new to Chinese music.


The New Complete Great Dane,
Published in Hardcover by Hungry Minds, Inc (August, 1977)
Authors: 197 New York Howell Book House, Book House Howell, and Milo G. Denlinger
Average review score:

Most informative of all of them.
This is no lightweight with a few pictures and general dog stuff. A great book about a great breed. It offers history of the breed, care and characteristics. A must-read for all enthustiasts or people just thinking about their first Great Dane!


An Outline History of Western Music
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages (February, 1994)
Authors: Gary Martin, James Miller, Edmund Cykler, and Milo Arlington Wold
Average review score:

Valuable resource
Concise, but inclusive. Would make a valuable text for undergrad Music History or for general graduate study.


Pharmacokinetics
Published in Hardcover by Marcel Dekker (15 September, 1982)
Authors: Milo Gibaldi and Donald Perrier
Average review score:

Now Classic but Valid
This is the well-known book to ALL the pharmacokinetists and clinical pharmacologists.

This book is not easy and there have been many new concepts and findings since the publish of this book.

But, anyone who want to know the very basic and behind ground of pharmacokinetics (that is to say, who want to go to the bottom of the pharmacokinetics), should read carefully and study this book.

We now long for the next edition of this book.


Please Don't Kill Me: The True Story of the Milo Murder
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin Co (March, 1989)
Authors: William C. Dear and Carlton Stowers
Average review score:

Outstanding!!
If true murder mysteries are your thing, this book may well become one of your favorites. I literally had to read the entire book the very day I purchased it, trying more than once to put it down. Having lived within 20 miles of the actual murder scene while attending college in the late 90's, I was drawn into the mystery like none other. Worth every penny!


Roses for the Scented Room: Beautiful Ideas for Entertaining, Gift-Giving and the Home
Published in Hardcover by Clarkson N. Potter (14 March, 2000)
Authors: Barbara Milo Ohrbach and John Hall
Average review score:

Roses for the Scented Room: A Scrapbook of Ideas, Recipes,
Like the other books that have been put out my Ohrbach and Milo this book is joy! It is filled with beautiful photos of ways to use one of natures most beautiful creations - the rose. It includes recipes for things such as teas and potpourri and includes other ideas for lovely items that make perfect gifts or decorations for your home. The imformation is presented in a simple and thoughtfull manner so that it is relatively simple to complete the projects shown. The ideas are realistic - they are things that you really would do . There is also good information on how to care for roses in the garden and as well as great arrangement suggestions. All in all I really love this book. I'll be ordering at least 2 more since it will be the perfect mothers'day or easter gift. A must have for all of those who appreciate the beauty of roses!


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Maine
More Pages: Milo Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15