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

Busy machines
Published in Unknown Binding by Golden Book ; Western Pub. Co. ()
Author: David Lee Harrison
Average review score:

FABULOUS!
This book is so fabulous! When my first brother was little I used to read it to him all the time. And, it was the first book that he learned to read. He took it everywhere with him, and now there is only one page, and the cover left. I found one copy used for him for Christmas, and now want five more, one for each of my other 3 brothers, one for my mom, and one for me. The poetry describing all the "busy machines" working is great, and the illustrations are wonderful too.

We love this book!
I remember reading this book to my baby brother eons ago, and it was his very favorite! Now my own daughter is into "big trucks" and nothing currently out there comes close to comparing with this book. It had all the machines from loaders and backhoes to graders and pavers. It tells you what each machine does in a catchy, rhyming way. Now if I could only find a copy of it...


Charmed: Something Wiccan This Way Comes
Published in Digital by Pocket Pulse ()
Authors: Emma Harrison and Diana G. Gallagher
Average review score:

great book
when paige comes home all excited about a convention in las vegas for wiccans, her sisters are non too excited. but when they find out that there has been a stream of murders involving
wicans all accross the country, they decide to go to the convention and see if the murderer shows up. this book has enough surprise twist and turns, good characters and i think any
charmed fan will love it.

Wonderful book!
This was a execellent Charmed book, it was written beautifully and good discription. I felt like i was one of the Charmed ones. If this is the first Charmed book you ever buy you will know enough stuff to understand everything, and if its not i recomend this book highly.

When the Charmed ones here of missing wiccans they go to the resucue, in Las vegas (of course piper is agaisnt it becasue she thinks wiccans are wanna-be's, but she goes because its to save them.),and risking there life as well. Because the most powerful wiccian is taken from each Coven, Will it be Piper, Pheobe or Paige? and will they get the sister back in time, and all the other wiccians? read and find out.


Close to Home: Revelations and Reminiscences by North Carolina Authors
Published in Hardcover by John F Blair Pub (October, 1996)
Authors: Lee Harrison Child, Fred Chappell, and Daphne Athas
Average review score:

California "Tar Heel" Longs for N. C. Home
If this book of short stories does not make a former Tar Heel homesick, then I have not a clue as to what would... it made me want to go home immediately. The stories are funny, sad, and range in levels from wonderful to great. A librarian friend gave me this book and it is one of the best gifts I have ever received. I plan to purchase several to give as gifts. My home is now in California, but my heart will always be down home in North Carolina.

Great for giving.......just TRY hanging on to your own copy!
I'm ordering what must be my fourth or fifth copy of this terrific little book. It's a comforting, warm, fuzzy, and sometimes funny set of recollections sure to regenerate the reader's own rememberances of home. I try to keep a copy beside the bed in my guest room, but alas, my guests are always so taken with what they've read before turning out the light that I always have to say "Just take my copy along with you. I'll get another." I've also given it to friends in the process of fighting terrible illnesses. They find peace in the authors' accounts, conjuring up their own memories of home.


The Corruption of Economics (Georgist Paradigm Series)
Published in Paperback by Shepheard-Walwyn Ltd (September, 1998)
Authors: Mason Gaffney and Fred Harrison
Average review score:

Exposes the anti-Georgist origins of neo-classical economics
In the late 19th century, economist and social philosopher Henry George achieved international fame by calling for the abolition of all taxation save that upon land values -- a tax reform that would reconcile the conflict between economic liberty and social justice. So persuasive were George's arguments that landed elites, desperate to protect their vested interests in unearned wealth, set out to undermine George's immense popularity.

In "The Corruption of Economics," the precise manner in which Henry George was neutralized is uncovered by professor Mason Gaffney. That manner -- which later became known as neo-classical economics -- was to corrupt economic science. How? By blurring the traditional distinction between capital and land (and hence between earned and unearned income), by glossing this blurred distinction with jargon and abstract models, and by recasting economics generally to make free-riding by landowners seem just and moral.

Unable or unwilling to address Gaffney's arguments head-on, some economists are fond of dismissing this book out of hand as nothing more than a "conspiracy theory." In reality, it's a scholarly analysis of the anti-Georgist origins of the neo-classical school of economics, and how this school made an artform out of justifying landed privilege. Every single one of its claims in that regard are supported by credible references.

"The Corruption of Economics" is a must-read for anyone who suspects there is something inherently flawed with "mainstream" economic theory -- particularly when it comes to reconciling the seeming conflict between economic liberty and social justice -- but is unsure as to what that flaw is.

The Corruption of Economics
Anyone who has ever spent a half a day in a university getting lectured on economics should read this book. To academics it is a must. To ordinary folks it reads like a crimi. Best insight book on the market as why economics is such a muddled science and why lawyers, historians, politicians and journalists have no clue about todays whereabouts. Or did you ever wonder why you work like a slave and get stripped down to nearly nothing by the state and its "social" agencies. Ever wondered why we face so much sprawl, poverty, blight? This book explains neatly what happened to the once grand sience of political economy and the real effects on todays world.


Dear Bear
Published in Paperback by HarperCollins Publishers (09 June, 1994)
Author: Joanna Harrison
Average review score:

Great Book
My five year old loved this book. We read it every night for a week. She loved the story of how the Bear gradually became a friend. The story inspired her to ask a lot of questions and led to some very insightful discussions. The pictures really added to the story. I highly recommend this book.

Dear Bear
This is a wondersul book about a girl who writes letters to the bear that lives under her staircase. Dear Bear is a great book about friendship, trust, and overcoming fears.


Deindustrialization of America: Plant Closings, Community Abandonment and the Dismantling of Basic Industry
Published in Hardcover by Basic Books (October, 1982)
Authors: Barry Bluestone and Bennett Harrison
Average review score:

An Enduring Classic
Out of print? This book should never be out of print. But then again, Jean Renoir's Rules of the Game was almost destroyed during the Second World War. Greatness is sometimes fragile.

Barry is something of a personal hero of mine so I do have a bias of sorts regarding this book and its follow-up, The Great U-Turn. Reviewing this book is like reviewing a classic music album: everything written in the last 20 years about Economic Policy and investment has been influenced by what Barry and Bennett wrote here and there is no more hated book by Reaganauts who would like you to believe THIS NEVER HAPPENED.

This book was the first book to talk about how industry in the United States was dismantled, in particular the Auto and Steel Industries of the midwest. The book traces decisions made by corporations in the 1970's and why these decisions were made, in light of perceived opportunities in Central America and the Far East. Could have the decision been made to do the reinvestment in the US (particularly in light of the modern day relative success of Saturn)? The answer is clearly not without the calculated weakening of powerful unions in auto and steel. If the unions were weakened, however, communities such as Flint, Michigan and Youngstown, Ohio were almost wiped out by disinvestment. There was considerable denial at the time about what was happening but Barry and Bennett's book makes clear that industry was dismantling and disinvesting and not coming back.

The awareness raised by this book probably saved a bad situation from becoming much worse. If the dinosaurs left the continent, though, maybe in retrospect we are better off for their having left. Car makers from Japan and Korea have been willing to make the autos that US carmakers have only made with the greatest of reluctance, and creating assembly plants here in the US as well. But it has taken a generation to recover from the wholesale deindustrialization and the cost was much greater than people should have been asked to bear.

Never again should American industry be allowed to tear out its roots and toss them aside. If you want to know why, this is the book to read. Please read the great final chapter on Reindustrialization with A Human Face for helpful guidance and insight on where to go from where we are at, insight that 20 years later still makes a great deal of sense.

Transition from manufacturing to service industry
From the backdrop of World War II, American business emerged as the World's undisputed industrial economic leader and lender. The expansion of American investment in Europe, Asia, the Americas, and further assured its prominence by the establishment of the U.S. currency as the capitalist world's principle reserves, while labor strenuously acquired the motifs of a welfare state. Such unprecedented success created an ambivalent relationship between capital and labor where each party had acquired a win-win situation. This brief cease-fire came to an abrupt halt with the threat of foreign competition and sluggish growth development spurred what Bluestone and Harrison termed as the 'deindustrialization' of America. In a panic to maintain the capitalist status quo, business owners closely emulated Japanese zaibatsu's in purchasing many non-related businesses to expand their economic clout versus improving their current facilities. The failure of industries meeting excessive profit percentage justified many corporate executives of closing down factories to minimize labor costs and outsource to less constraining economic contingencies and forever disrupting people's and the communities livelihood. Drastic improvements in network technology, communication and transportation permitted micro and macro control of factories despite distance. Thus companies are no longer confined by regional or national boundaries can effectively utilize segmentation tactics against unions, local, state, and national officials in gaining unequal terms. Corporate outsourcing has manifested itself into dual the phenomenon of boom-town and bust-town causing unforeseen problems. American urban areas such as Houston and Silicon Valley have grown in attracting Northern city businesses, foreign investment, and becoming known as tax heavens.


Dutch Colonial Homes in America
Published in Hardcover by Rizzoli (October, 2002)
Authors: Roderic H. Blackburn, Geoffrey Gross, Harrison Frederick Meeske, and Susan Piatt
Average review score:

wonderful visuals!!
This book contains some of the best visuals I have seen in quite a long time. The useage of lateral light to bring out texture, color, and ambience is striking. The authors have succedded in isolating commonplace daily scenes found in everything from common humble surroundings to the grandest settings. All scenes are presented equally well, and ,most important, in a new manner- Thus allowing the contemporary viewer to more than glimpse into the past. The visuals are accompainied with an informative, very readable text to greatly aid the reader in interpretation of the scenes depicted. Well done!

great book on a little known subject
The material culture of the Dutch in America has always been misunderstood, mis-interrupted, and ignored. Now a book which gives visual evidence of the major contributions of the Dutch in the New World- how this culture in large part contributed to the newly emerging American culture and society.
This is a must read for anyone interested in early American history as well as the colonial era.


Electronic Structure and the Properties of Solids: The Physics of the Chemical Bond
Published in Paperback by Dover Pubns (August, 1989)
Author: Walter A. Harrison
Average review score:

Without parallel in Materials Science literature
This book has no parallel in the literature of theoretical materials science. The information contained in the book allows first principle calculations of properties of important technological materials like perovskite oxides, semiconductors, etc. I would suggest the reader to consult the papers by R. Haydock and others in Solid State Physics, vol.35 of 1980 to
complemment the methods presented in the book.

Essential book for condensed matter physicists
If you are studying the solid state physics, it is a necessary book for you. It covers various properties of almost all kinds of solid state materials and shows pretty new experimental data from reliable sources. This book also starts with a clear introduction in each chapter so that even for a beginner, it is easy to read. This book will be a good reference book for you to find out the definition of terminologies in this field. Personally, I use this book as a referece frequently.

This book is definitely not a book you can read through quickly but a book where you find out information through your life.

If you are a scientist and interested in solid state physics like semiconductor or metal, this is also a good book to get a good guide and introduction.


Engineering Rock Mechanics
Published in Hardcover by Pergamon Press (01 June, 1997)
Authors: J. A. Hudson and John P. Harrison
Average review score:

Complete rock mechanics book
When I took rock mechanics at Berkeley we used Prof. Goodman's book (of course), but I have found this book to be far more user friendly and complete. Although an understanding of geology and earth processes is essential for the subject to be understandable, this book and the accompanying book of worked problems will teach you the subject well and thoroughly. I just wish they'd make the accompanying book of worked problems in paperback becuase it's too expensive!

basic and helpful
This book really introduce to the reader in the basic principles of the rock mechanics apply to the engineering projects. The authors starts from the review of the rock as an engineering material, and relate this with the behavior of the rock masses as a materials studying in they the stress definitions, the strain concepts firstly from the intact rock point of view and after as a rock masses. Please note that the order of the development of the units is going with the support of the basic mathematical analyses as well as relation with the matrixes framework as is shown in the connections between the attributes discontinuosness, inhomogeneity, anisotropy and non elasticity. Another example of this is the definition of the architecture of the elastic compliance matrix, which gives to the reader a really easy view of the properties that, governs the behavior of the rocks as materials.

The book also introduce the concept of the rock engineering systems (RES) and linkage with the rock mechanics interaction, to become the introduction in temas such excavation principles, stabilization principles and others.

They divide the excavation principles in design and unstabilities. Is very important to understand the difference between the Design Rock Mechanics (DRM) and the Response Rock Mechanics (RRM).

The Design Rock Mechanics gives an approach of the behavior of the rock materials from the point of view of their intrinsic properties. However the Response Rock mechanics give an approach of the practical behavior of the rock engineering system due to scale effects, strain and other practical conditions that can change the behavior of the rock masses depending with the time and the engineering uses.

In conclusion this book is very good work tool in the understanding of the Engineering Rock Mechanics from the undergraduate and graduate points of view, because the easy on going terminology makes fruitful the reading for any public.

FABIO ANTONIO GIL ESCOBAR SPECIAL GRADUATE COURSE DEPARTMENT OF GEOSCIENCE FACULTY OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING SHIMANE UNIVERSITY JAPAN


Exploration Fawcett
Published in Unknown Binding by Arrow Books ()
Author: Percy Harrison Fawcett
Average review score:

a real hidden gem - fascinating adventure story
During a summer in college, I travelled around South America, and spent a good deal of time backpacking and exporing northwestern Bolivia, following overgrown Inca Trails and taking boats up into the deep jungle and mining country.

I had heard about Fawcett's adventures during my travels, and I was delighted to find out that the book surpassed my expectations when I finally got the chance to read it.

Fawcett worked for the British government (the Royal Geographic Society, I believe), and was sent to the Brazillian-Bolivian frontier in the early 20th century to server as an impartial third party in a border dispute.

The book, written by his son who went on to become a railroad expert in Peru, is a chronicle of that trip and his later adventures into the South American wilderness in search of a lost city he believed to exist.

Fawcett kept great journals, and his descriptions of the time are fascinating. Having travelled in this area, I can say that Fawcett's descriptions are dead on, and for anyone looking for a true frontier adventure in the early 21st century, not a whole lot has changed in the past 100 years.

'Brazillian Adventure' by Peter Fleming (the brother of James Bond author Ian Fleming) is the semi-comic story of a British journalist who went on a search for Fawcett several decades after the former disappeared in the early 1920's (the date might be slightly off).

It's great to see that this book has finally been put back in print. A true gem.

Adventures of the legendary Colonel Fawcett
A true boys own adventure, the quintessential English explorer in his own words. This was written by his son Percy based on the journals and correspondence of his father. Deatils all his expeditions in South America, his views on the lost cities of Brazil, Peru & Boliva and much much more. It has it all!


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Missouri
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