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Not as good as the others
WEll.....
The Ending Could Have Been BetterBy Amanda H


An interesting read
Historical reunions - Moody set a course for a happy future.After covering The Nature of Visions in Chapter I, Moody gives a quick and informative review of not only the Greek's use of their underground psychomantiums in Chapter II, Gazing Through History, he also delightfully touches on other gazing forefathers such as the Tungus shamans in Siberia with their copper mirrors, the Malagasy of Madagascar, the Pawnee Indians of North America, the Africans of Fez, and the Nkomis tribe of Cap Lopez to name a few.
After grounding the reader in the history of gazing, Moody shares his own experience in selecting property and adapting a gristmill in Alabama into his own therapeutic psychomantium. He relays personal experiences as well as those of his visitors/patients and left this reader with the impression that the use of a psychomantium, wisely done and well directed, could easily lead to lessening of grief and an increase of spiritual insight. Thank you, Dr. Moody.
Valuable for those willing to push the envelope

The Healing Art of Qigong by Hong LiuThe honorable doctor, when talking about his master, mentions and impresses us with his somewhat skill but does not elaborate on the process of training, or give details of the environment for training. Many things were missing and they are as follows:
a. What was the name of the qigong method trained in?
b. How long did the actual training take place?
c. Is the training longer for an MD vis a vis one who has trained as a qigong practitioner?
d. Other than the master being from Heaven teaching a special technique, does he have other disciples that can elaborate on the skills necessary for the healing art of qigong.
Albeit, beginners will enjoy the book and perhaps be aware of the shadow world of qigong, meaning if more exposure is needed to make citizens aware of this potential healing method, more information has to be forthcoming to propel this from romanticism to real world results and not feel good new age bedtime stories.
I did feel good after reading the testimonials from the people mentioned so this is a good start.
A good book
Must Have for Medical Qi Gong students

Wimpy, gave it up after half the book
To the Point!
Brass never brighter...

Starting to get predictableAlthough I loved the addition of the Great Aunt, I'd like to see less of Charlotte's fascination with other men, and more Charlotte and Pitt working together.
Not quite as good as the first two, but . . .
As intense as the first.

Missing some crucial information- Maps are few and poor. More often than not I found that major streets were missing, making orientation a hassle. So you have to juggle the guidebook and a separate map when walking through cities or driving around. Also, it would be very helpful to mark the recommendations on the maps in the book (which is rather rarely done), so you don't spend hours locating the addresses on the map.
- The guide does not always indicate price ranges for restaurant recommendations (especially in large cities). It is quite annoying if you travel across town to a restaurant (and spend some time on it if you don't have a car) to find that the dishes are... and up. For budget travelers, this guide might be difficult to swallow.
- There's some inaccurate info on hostels and their opening times. So you need to call ahead before you end up in front of closed doors. Also, price ranges for motels are way off.
- There is no section on dangers and annoyances for cities, a section that could be very helpful (although it sometimes warns of some dangerous areas in the text).
Also, the rough Guide might want to consider a better binding, as the book came apart after six weeks of usage. Overall, next time I'd rather go for another guide than this for a trip to the US.
A Great Guide Book marred by political idealogyMy main problem is that the author does not hide his political idealogies. A travel book that calls Rush Limbaugh a "blow-hard"? Various cutting remarks on Confederate die-hards? I found that disconcerting.
still one of the best USA guidebooks

Save your money - you'll need itSave your money - after you're married you'll need every penny.
For unserious grooms
Okay for fun, really already known informationThough this book is informative and fun, a lot of the information is really already known to the saavy groom to be. This book was helpful for an occasional resourece, and to keep me occupied. My wife wouldn't let me do anything that had to do with the planning of the wedding, so at least by reading this book I felt involved.


not half bad
A review from the 'target audience'...
Better Make a sequal

good for starters and for professionals as well
covers design methodology, complements "pure language" booksThe author has a heavy synthesis background (worked for Exemplar, a synthesis tool maker that was bought by Mentor Graphics). This is the only book I've found that goes over design methodology and CAD tool flow. VITAL models are exlained quite well.
"The Designer's Guide to VHDL" is a better language book (ie, reference), but I think "VHDL" is more useful to designers, especially those writing code at the register transfer level. I wish I had this book when I started writing VHDL. I would have avoided a lot of costly mistakes and I would have had a better idea of the overall flow of HDL designs at an earlier stage of my career.
One warning: poor coding style is used thoughout the book! Read "Writing Testbenches" to learn how to create maintainable HDL code (put each port and signal on a seperate line, only use INOUT for bidirectional lines, use white space to make the code more readable, etc...)
All u wanted to know about VHDL but didn't know whom to ask!

Admirable job
It did the job
Great Book