Related Vacation Book Subjects: Minnesota
More Pages: Douglas 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 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Douglas", sorted by average review score:

Vault.com Guide to the Top 50 Law Firms, 3rd Edition
Published in Paperback by Vault Reports Inc (August, 2000)
Authors: Vault.Com Staff, Steve Gordon, Hussam Hamadeh, Mark Oldman, Douglas Cantor, Catherine Cugell, Michael Erman, Marcy Lerner, Chris Prior, and Vault Com Inc
Average review score:

Order it from Vault.com
This is a great book, but if you need it right away and don't want to pay a special handling fee order it directly from Vault.com. The eBook version is also available there as well as the new 2003 edition that is not available yet in bookstores.

a superb book and the only one of its kind
i don't normally write reviews as i'm too busy slaving away as a lawyer...but i must add my $.02 this vault guidebook is astonishingly good. my fellow lawyers and i can't get enough of "The Buzz" which tells what lawyers are saying about various firms. this is the ONLY resource that tells it like it is in the arduous, sometimes rewarding, sometimes nauseating world of BIGLAW

The best edition yet!!!
The folks at Vault have really outdone themselves. This new edition is huge and very much expanded from previous editions. The material inside is all new as well. The have increased the detail and have done an incredible job providing the scoop on the top law firms in the country (including many that didn't make the top 50). They have included information on the quality of life rankings and their methodology. The book is invaluable for any law student as well as any lawyer considering a lateral move. I have a copy on my desk at a prominent law school and find people constantly borrowing it. Highly recommended.


When Going Through Hell Don't Stop: A Survivor's Guide to Overcoming Anxiety and Clinical Depression
Published in Paperback by Pallas Communications (26 November, 1999)
Authors: Douglas Bloch and Douglas G. Bloch
Average review score:

Very comprehensive and compassionate
I appreciated his thoroughness. Lots of web sites to contact for all types of depression. Also a strong focus on spirituality. It gives everyday help.

An Invaluable Resource
Since reading When Going Through Hell...Don't Stop I have put its coping strategies to use in helping a good friend recover from depression and anxiety. So far, there has been definite improvement in his depression. Everyone involved is thankful for Mr. Bloch's sound words of advice. This book has a wellspring of information to offer for anyone who is suffering from depression or their friends and caregivers.

A powerful healing resource
When Going Through Hell...Don't Stop! is a monumental work. It offers a compelling story of one person's valiant struggle against a life-threatening depressive illness as well as a comprehensive self-help manual on treating depression. What I liked most is that the book is so accessible. It lays out practical coping strategies that a person suffering from depression or their caregiver can use on a daily basis. I also like that the author was healed by spiritual intervention, showing that alternatives do exist when drugs don't work. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is struggling with depression or anxiety, or to anyone who wants to give a loved one with a depressive disorder the gift of hope.


Wild France: A Traveller's Guide (Wild Guides Series)
Published in Paperback by Interlink Pub Group (December, 1999)
Author: Douglas Botting
Average review score:

A great place to start, but you'll need more
If you breeze through France on a package tour, you'll probably never realize there's a wild part of France anyway. On the other hand, trekking 200 miles cross-country on foot or bike might be totally beyond your ability. "Wild France" is designed for travelers who fall somewhere in between these two categories. While it lists information about outdoor activities (like walking, biking, etc.), it doesn't go into a lot of detail about things like trails, roads, and lodging -- information you'll need. Instead, it lets you glimpse the wide variety of France's national and regional parks so you can decide which ones you might want to visit. It's useful for planning your trip, but come departure time, you'll probably opt to leave it at home.

The maps, for instance, will get you to the vicinity of a park, but you'll also want to buy more detailed road maps or even topographical maps. The photography is excellent and will help you decide what you want to see, yet at the same time, the book isn't overloaded with it.

The book is 220 pages long and spends about 20 pages on each of the regions it covers (Brittany and Normandy, the Northeast, the Alps, Central France, the Loire and Burgundy, the Pyrenees, the Atlantic Coast of Gascony, the Eastern Mediterranean and Corsica, and the Western Mediterranean). All in all I found it a great book to help me plan my trip to southwestern France, but if you can spring for the money, look for some detailed regional guides (the Rough Guides are almost always strong on the outdoors, and aren't necessarily as rough as they sound). Lonely Planet's "Walking in France" is also excellent.

Great Book for France
We used this book to supplement a two month trip to France. It provides information that you will not find in other guide books and if you are used to mixing nature with culture, then it is a must to have along. We saw things we would never have seen, but for having this book. Places that one might think are insignificant take on added importance and meaning. We also used Wild Italy in Italy. Note that these books are not the only travel books you should have in France and Italy. They supplement your other travel books.

Forget Paris - Go Wild and Wonderful
Okay, spend a few days in Paris, and then when the crowds, the traffic and the little dogs overwhelm you, get out your copy of Wild France and seek some serenity. Packed with information, this reliable, portable and well-organized guide to wilderness areas of France is valuable for planning your trip and contains many evocative color photos to help you remember your adventures when you get back home. The book divides France into nine natural regions and suggests the best wild habitats to visit in each one. The sections are written by different experts, with insider views on the local environments. Easy-to-read maps at appropriate scales help you find your destination by car or public transit and then hike, bike, ride or row to viewpoints. In addition to the color photos, there are detailed line drawings of special trees, plants, birds and animals that you may encounter. Included are addresses, phone numbers and websites of tourist offices, park offices, museums and outdoor adventure firms, plus suggested hotels and camp sites. Our favorite walk: through the Massif de Ste. Baume in October, walking out of farmland into open oak woodland, and then into the deep shade and silence of an ancient European forest of oak, beech, holly and yew, meeting an occasional family picking wild mushrooms, climbing higher and higher on a path that pilgrims - including popes, saints and kings - had taken for almost two millennia.


The World of Goods: Towards an Anthropology of Consumption
Published in Hardcover by Routledge (October, 1996)
Authors: Mary Douglas and Baron Isherwood
Average review score:

A Classic
This is one of the early anthropological critiques of neo-classical economics. Many of the ideas expounded here are now being seriously pondered by economists who are attempting to find ways around them. Douglas,who is arguably the best known British anthropologist of her generation, has a particular insight into the way economist think - possibly because her husband is an economist. This makes her uniquely qualifed to provide us with an anthropology of consumption, that does not dismiss economists, as much as show how much they miss by not understanding the cultural dimensions of consumption.

An excellent discussion of consumption and culture.
Written in 1979 and revised recently in 1996, Douglas and Isherwood's classic breaks through our own love/hate relationship with consumption and the biased interpretations of history and the present to look in a reasoned fashion at the patterns with which all people choose to buy things and the affiliations we create using these things. Lamenting the fact that economics has restricted itself by limiting human tastes to a black-box phenomenon, Douglas (a renowned, now retired, anthropologist) rips open the box and finds many convincing arguments for the uses of goods as a means of communication in all societies.

Additionally, they discuss previous and current ideas about why people save, or don't consume, and provide excellent comparative analyses between societies in Great Britain, blacks and whites in the US, the Nuer of the Sudan, and Zimbabwe's Lele people. What the reader comes away with is a deeper understanding of how people use consumption, both consciously and unconsciously, to provide information about themselves, send messages to others, and try to control the flow of culture and information to best benefit themselves and their interests.

The writing, which I have the impression was mostly written by Douglas since I'm familiar with her style from other books, feels a bit cerebral but is extremely lucid and will keep you on your toes with novel interpretations of familiar cultural phenomena.

Accounting for tastes
In this book, a renowned structural anthropologist collaborates with an economist to propose an explanation for one of the great mysteries of economics: where do "preferences" come from? Much of neoclassical economics rests on the assumption that, once we know the basic desires and tastes for a given population, we can then understand how people make rational decisions about how to acquire them and how to allocate their resources. The actual preferences themselves, however, are a black box. Douglas & Isherwood tackle this problem, evaluating several theories of "rational" economic actors from cross-cultural and systems theoretical perspectives. Their answer is that many of these mysteries are not so mysterious after all: we have good reasons for valuing the things we value, and many of the apparently frivolous fads and fashions are in fact life-and-death matters. "Good taste" is an index of social connections, of reproductive fitness, of one's ability to mobilize resources -- and in a society increasingly dependent on information and services rather than physical products, the race to remain on the cutting edge becomes like traveling with the Red Queen, faster and faster just to stay in place. Along the way, Douglas throws out a number of gems which are incidental to her argument, including a proposal for why women's work is always and everywhere valued less than men's. This book is a must-read for anyone interested in what anthropologists can tell us about the deep logics of behavior in the consumer society.


World War I and the Cultures of Modernity
Published in Hardcover by Univ Pr of Mississippi (July, 2000)
Authors: Douglas P. Mackaman and Michael Mays
Average review score:

The Inland Fishes of Mississippi
If you are looking for a comprehensive guide to the native fishes of Mississippi, you need look no further. Not only does this work include all native and exotic species of fish in Mississippi but also extensive biological information on each. This volume should prove useful to not only a well versed field biologist, but also anyone interested in fish.

A lot of Fishes for the Price
I have to say up front that I am a bit prejudiced here. Dr. Ross is responsible for my current interest in fishes and I have been looking forward to this book for a while. That being said let me tell you what is good about this book... #1 The keys are outstanding, they are made so that the expert or layman can use them. Key identification points are well illustrated and explained #2 The species accounts are the best I have ever seen. There is excellent information on the biology and conservation concerns of each species. There is also a brief section on the meaning of each scientific name that will be of interest to the professional and beginner. #3 Dr. Ross included an excellent glossary and bibliography that will make further research and understanding easy. #4 There is also a section on the history of Ichthyology in the Southeast US in general and Mississippi in particular.

If you are interested in the fishes of the Southeast US this book will be useful and entertaining. It will be indispensable if you study fishes in any Mississippi river or Gulf drainage. I can remember my first day in class, thinking that we where just going to look at a bunch of minnows. I know better now, and this book will explain why.

More than just catfish...
I found it very useable and well organized - great pictures! We have been waiting years for this reference!


The 16mm Camera Book
Published in Paperback by Long Valley Equipment, Inc. (01 June, 1993)
Author: Douglas Underdahl
Average review score:

A must-have for the guerrilla film maker
If you've just bought your first 16mm camera or thinking of hiring one for a shoot, this book is invaluable. It's a fascinating subject and Douglas Underdahl manages to make it funny too!!! There's also plenty of advice for the first time director. What more can I say? The book makes you want to grab your Bolex, run into the street and start making a movie!!

excelent guide to 16mm cameras
this book covered all of the major and minor parts of the different cameras.an easy read...and a must for all new film students!!!!!


Abnormal Psychology
Published in Paperback by Pearson Allyn & Bacon (August, 1997)
Authors: Douglas A. Bernstein, Michael T. Nietzel, Elizabeth McCauley, and John Foust
Average review score:

excellent book
I liked all the case studies, it makes it easier to learn. Also it was interesting to read and

well writen.

easy to understand
I read this book when I was a year two social work student. This book provides us a detailed examples and explanation for each type of mental disorders.


Activating Leadership in the Small Church: Clergy and Laity Working Together (Small Church in Action)
Published in Paperback by Judson Pr (March, 1988)
Authors: Steve Burt and Douglas A. Walrath
Average review score:

Good helpful stuff
It's about time somebody spoke a good word for our small churches. For too long they've been treated like the poorer cousins, the second class citizens, when they're really something altogether different. Dr. Burt has surely shown himself to be a champion for the cause in this book, and his suggestions and ideas are appropriate to the small church. Liked his stories and illustrations, too, because they made this easy to understand. The book also has an outstanding Annotated Bibliography listing other helpful books on small church topics.

A most helpful look at small churches!
This author looks at small churches and helps the reader to see that they're a different critter than their larger cousins. They have different characteristics, different behaviors, and different needs. Burt writes with an easy style and uses plenty of helpful "folksy" illustrations to make his points.


Adventism and the American Republic: The Public Involvement of a Major Apocalyptic Movement
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Tennessee Pr (April, 2001)
Authors: Douglas Morgan and Martin E. Marty
Average review score:

Fending off the "time of trouble"
As a former Seventh-day Adventist and current "card-carrying member of the ACLU" I have long pondered many of the themes dealt with by this very interesting book. I think Morgan and Marty deal with the subject-matter in a very unique and fairly non-offensive way and get quite a bit about Adventism right, although there are some errors. You guys know Adventist is pronounced with an emphasis on the first syllable and not the second, right? As in AD-vent-ist, not Ad-VENT-ist.

I think some of the more educated, liberal, and objective Adventists I know (especially ones secure in their faith) would enjoy this book. People interested in the intersection of religion and politics in general would definitely find it an easy, entertaining read.

I plan on passing it on.

An American Tale - God and Country
"Faith-based organizations?" The odd term had not yet entered the media lexicon. American politicians had only seen a glimmer of the power offered by open alliances with conservative religious groups. But, in this adventurous probe of the odd-couple pairing of Seventh-day Adventism, a quintessentially American institution, and the Republican party, Dr. Morgan opens a clear panoramic view of one church's struggle with these reformation-esque issues.

Separation of Church and State? Money to do "good" things? Where do well-meaning people draw the lines? How do they decide? What goes on behind closed doors - in the cloistered halls of power on Capitol Hill and in the hushed offices of ecclesiastical politics?

Doug Morgan's "Adventism and the American Republic" is a scrupulously documented look at one church's awkward lurching toward civic engagement. The view ranges from sweet to painful and back again. But Doug's description carries the reader through the arc with a sense of being there -- in the rooms, reading the letters and watching the frustrating twists, embarrassing turns, and occasional successes in this theological/political pretzel.

If you've every wondered what "Faith Based" means for the future of American social or religious institutions, this book is a must read. If you don't care about church and state, but like a curious American tale, it's even better.

Somebody should make the movie!


All You Ever Need
Published in Hardcover by Crossway Books (May, 2000)
Authors: Max Lucado and Douglas Klauba
Average review score:

Visually stunning!
Max Lucado has another book that shines! Wonderful parallels from scripture we all can understand and relate to. We all need to give, love, and forgive more and this story provides us with some great examples. Douglas Klauba's artwork beautifully compliments Max's latest endeavor. Our hearts are stired visually as we read along. With masterful use of composition, color, and design and characters with great emotion and expression, he leaves a lasting impression upon the reader. Looking forward to see what he illustrates next. Thank you both, for producing a vivid, thought provoking, stunningly illustrated book.

Must be good
I read most of Max Lucado's books and I guess this will be as great as the others. His writings keep touching me and some of his writings keep hanging in my mind. I believe this books will bring your kids to a more simple faith to God.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Minnesota
More Pages: Douglas 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 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100