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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Daniels", sorted by average review score:

The Guide to Ekg Interpretation (White Coat Pocket Guide Series)
Published in Paperback by Ohio Univ Pr (Txt) (July, 2000)
Authors: John A. Brose, John C. Auseon, Daniel Waksman, and Michael J. Jarosick
Average review score:

Excellent!! Good source for rapid EKG Interpretation!
Great Ekg pocket!!. Very straight, not boring and easy understanding of the Ekg. Really helpful and time saving. Not a headache anymore on reading Ekg. From simple explanation to more complicated but easy to understand. Great for interns and residents.You should have it!.

You must have this book!!
Dr. Brose's "Guide to EKG Interpretation" is a resource that all physicians in training should seriously consider acquiring. It is an extremely thorough book, and its size is deceptive. You wouldn't think a small pocket-size book could pack this much information! As an illustration, I had a question on my Part II board exam about a "J wave", something I had never heard of, even after my EKG rotation and delivering a few EKG lectures. As it turns out, Dr. Brose's book addresses the J wave, while many other resources make no mention of it. Also, the material is presented in a way that is clear and very easy to follow. Full of cross-references, you can quickly gain a solid understanding of virtually any issue you'll encounter when interpreting an EKG. I believe that medical students, interns, residents, and attending physicians alike will benefit from owning this book. Certainly, it is something that medical students and interns should have in their pockets (it is not cumbersome...it's a perfect size).

A MUST HAVE FOR ALL MEDICAL STUDENTS/INTERNS/RESIDENTS
Dr. Brose's book is an amazing tool for mastering the EKG. I have personally used this text each and every day on rounds and seeing patients in clinic. It is easy to read and contains what every student/intern/resident needs to know. I implore all of you out there that haven't conquered the EKG, to purchase this book and learn how to become a master at interpretation.


The Guilty Teacher
Published in Paperback by Greenleaf Book Group (September, 1999)
Authors: Paulette B. Maggiolo, Elizabeth H. Cottrell, and Daniel F. Burner
Average review score:

Highly recommended reading.
Author Paulette Maggiolo draws upon her many years of work in public school systems as classroom teacher, supervisor, administrator, member of a Teacher's Association, and a member of the Administrator's Association to write The Guilty Teacher, a strong, vivid, accurate, detailed and compelling novel about drugs, students, teachers, and America's troubled public schools. Maybe Maggiolo's The Guilty Teacher can do as much for the reformaton of the public education system that Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin did for the abolition of slavery.

Finally - Great Fiction!
I've been teaching for 13 years and have read almost every book about teaching that I could. Most were fairly good, but they lacked that honest and "been there" view that a real teacher has. This book has it. I can relate to the situations, problems and students. Great book.

Quite Compelling
I really enjoyed this book. I couldn't put it down yet wasscared to turn to the next page. The issue of drugs is so much moreinvolved than I thought, yet as a parent, I needed to know. This is absolutely a must read!


A Hero All His Life: Merlyn, Mickey Jr., David, and Dan Mantle: A Memoir by the Mantle Family
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (October, 1996)
Authors: Merlyn Mantle, David Mantle, Daniel Mantle, and Mickey Mantle
Average review score:

Mantle the Amazing
Mickey Mantle's wife, Merlyn, and their sons tell the unique and inspirational story of their very separate, often harrowing private lives with the husband and father that was there for them through their lives before cancer took him away. Merlyn and the boys discuss how the effects of alcohol and the spotlight of fame play a role on him and how they all came to be. Merlyn talks about Mickey Mantle the most because they were the closest, and she discusses what she went through as a wife and as a mother. The boys tell their vivid stories of what they can remember while the father was emotionally and physically absent. The dexterous Mickey, played ball everyday and is still a very well-known name in the histroy of baseball. This story explains his lief and career while alcohol impacted himself physically, hi gamily, and his life mentally. It also touches base on his career achievements and how he became the amazing Mickey Mantle.

His Most Heroic Role Ever
I have read several books on Mickey Mantle and this one is one of the best. Mickey's story is one of the best in baseball and he remains one of the most popular players in history. This book is an excellent look at the effects of fame and alcohol on the family and how the family members came to grips with things. The stories presented here are told by his wife Merlyn and his sons. Through his family, Mickey's story lives on and he continues to inspire us.

MICKEY MANTLE WAS A GREAT
I'm only 13, and Mickey Mantle is my favorite baseball player to live. I have read about 6 books on the "Commerce Comet" and this book is exceptional. In the first chapter the Mick talks about his alchohol abuse. Then Marilyn talks about her highschool sweetheart. This is a great book.


Kitten in the Cold (Animal Ark, 13)
Published in Paperback by Apple (November, 1999)
Authors: Ben M. Baglio, Shelagh McNicholas, and Lucy Kitten in the Cold Daniels
Average review score:

Don't Miss This Book!
Kitten in the Cold
By: Ben M Baglio

This heartwarming story is about Alex Hastings who is sick in Europe. For a Christmas gift Alex and her family are going to America for the operation. Three days before Christmas, Amber, the cat, is missing. Can they find her, or will she freeze?

I like this book because it has excitement. It takes you and draws you in. It's sad when Amber is missing. I like Mandy in this book because she will do anything to save an animal in need.

I think the main idea in this book is that friendship never ends. Alex doesn't want to leave Amber in Europe. See if Alex will solve her problem! Ben Baglio makes you think about your cat or pet and makes you wonder if your pet would run away in the freezing cold.

Terrible Things!!
When Alex loses her kitten it seems like another terrible thing that happens to her after the disease she already has. Fortunately the Adam Hope family comes down with a plan not only to find the little cat but also to collect money to send her to have treatment in London. This is a very cute cuddling story that will make you cry.

Excellent Book
Mandy and James meet a very ill little girl named Alex who has a beautiful kitten named Amber. Alex has to go to America for a very serious operation, but won't go until she finds Amber, her kitten, because she is too worried about her. Will Mandy and James be able to find Amber to make Alex feel better about getting her operation?


Korean at a Glance
Published in Paperback by Barrons Educational Series (August, 1988)
Authors: Grace Holt and Daniel D. Holt
Average review score:

Extremely beneficial, A MUST - HAVE if visiting Korea
This book is extremely good if your are planning to visit Korea for personal or business reasons, or if you are learning the language and would like to enrich your Korean repetoire. The first part of the book has common expressions, greetings, daily interaction terms, business and travel terms, emergency situation terms, and terms to let you express nearly everything your can think of quickly and easily. The book has the english phrase on the left, its Korean counterpart is then written on the right hand side with the way to pronounce the phrase next to it. In addition to having these phrases, the book takes time out to teach a little about Korean culture, tradition, and etiquette. The second part of the book is a very good dictionary that has a ENGLISH - KOREAN section and a KOREAN - ENGLISH section. The book's small size and the fact that it has a clear, vinyl-like covering makes it the perfect book to take with you.

Korean at a glance
Excellent
This is all i need to say

Koeran At A Glance - Delightful!
I found this book to be quite helpful. I just came back from Korea last month and the book helped me a great deal. I taught myself Hangul and I learned quite a few words from this book. The grammar section is also helpful. And even when I didn't know how to say something, my hosts would pick up the book and look for the phrase in Korean and then point to the English equivalent for me. Between that book and there Korean-English Dictionary, we did quite well.


Literary 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Novelists, Playwrights and Poets of All Time
Published in Hardcover by Citadel Pr (October, 1999)
Author: Daniel S. Burt
Average review score:

A fantastic listing, though I may not always agree...
Mr. Burt has put together a wonderful list of the most influential authors in Western (and a few Eastern) literature. It is a great companion to any literary enthusiast's library; conversly it would also be an excellent guide for someone who is looking to broaden their literary horizons, and not waste any time on overly-obscure or difficult to decipher texts. Don't get me wrong, not everything on this list is easy (If you can get through Joyce's Ulysses you are a better man than I), but each text is well known enough that a wealth of criticism or in many cases reading companions can be found for them.

My only gripe is the exclusion of Dr. Samuel Johnson from the list. The man wrote the first English Dictionary - what's more influental that that? But the fact that you can argue with Burt's lineup while at the same time seeing the sense of his choices - that's what makes for an excellent piece of work.

Great Introduction
This book is a fun introduction to some of the world's greatest writers and their works. It is both entertaining and educating. The whole "ranking" idea is a bit silly and seems to be an american obsession. Like all "rankings", however, it is quite subjective and not that important. The important thing is that its author provides insightful and meaningful introductions to many wonderful writers that make up an essential part of our shared cultural history. Approximately two to three pages are devoted to each writer and the high quality of the individual introductions is maintained throughout. The book is not too scholarly and not too general or simple...just right for the type of book one expects it to be.

Great browsing...
...and good reading. This book presents three-page summaries of 100 great writers, each with an illustration and introductory quote. Different from encyclopedia entries, these pieces emphasize the significance of each writer's contribution, from a literary-academic point of view (good for once-upon-a-time English majors). It's not a stuffy book, however -- it's written for the general reader, with interesting anecdotes. And of course the ranking provides some thought-provoking entertainment.


Little LISPer
Published in Paperback by Pearson Education POD (28 February, 1998)
Authors: Daniel P. Friedman, Matthias Felleisen, and Daniel P. Friedeman
Average review score:

It's a five-star book, but...
...it's been obsoleted by its own fouth edition. No place on the listing for this book do I find a hint that this is the third edition of a book currently in its FOURTH edition. They renamed the book The Little Schemer for the fourth revision. Buy that book instead.

There is no better teaching book, anywhere.
The pinnacle of the act of teaching is to be simultaneously clear, simple, interesting, and complete. This is rarely achieved in person, and almost never in writing; "The Little LISPer" achieves it. I believe this defines what a teaching book can be. It is brief. It can be read in snippets, at any pace. It will maintain the interest of anyone who comes to learn. The reader is left ready to write Lisp code, no matter what background precedes it.

I read this book in high school in 1982; it taught me enough that five years later I aced a four-credit independent study class in Lisp (at an Ivy League college) without any further reading. Hey, I *told* him I already knew Lisp! Dr. Friedman, I hope you come across this endorsement some day; please accept my thanks for creating this wonderful little gem. (Pass the pizza, please, I have a little more to write...)

I cannot endorse this book highly enough. If you want to learn Lisp, I know of no better place to go.

I concur, one of the best computer book I've ever read
I'm still struggling with lisp, but this book was simple, to the point, and clear. I didnt even get annoyed by his goofy attempts at humor.


Harnessing the Power of the Universe: A Complete Guide to the Principles and Practice of Chi-Gung
Published in Hardcover by Shambhala Publications (October, 1998)
Author: Daniel P. Reid
Average review score:

Chi-gung, all you ever wanted to know and much, much more...
Bold, interesting, exciting, surprising, elucidating, sharp... and maybe a little bit too sharp at the edges. Daniel Reid is a wonderfully eloquent spokesman for Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) in general, and particularly of Chi-gung, which he has studied for many years. His opinion about the subject, stated elsewhere, is that "...Chinese chi-gung is by far the most profound and effective sytem for self-cultivation of health and longevity ever developed", and he is probably right, and he goes to great lengths to prove it. This book is Reid's latest, and it is thoroughly researched; his argument presented beautifully, artfully, intelligently, showing true love for and conviction to the philosophy and practice of Chi-gung. There is not a single statement in the book which is not documented by scientific evidence, accompanied by quotes from experts in the fields of biomedicine, TCM, martial arts, meditation, physics, and so on. However, and eventhough Daniel Reid is perhaps one of the best qualified persons in the Western world today to present such a thorough and lucid dissertation on the subject, (in my very humble opinion) I find some of his conclusions a bit too forward, and this, I think, could mislead newcomes to Chi-gung into expecting a bit too much. Now, do not get me wrong, I loved this book. I practice Chi-gung and T'ai chi ch'uan myself, and am deeply interested and involved in the study of Chinese philosophy and the Tao of Cultivating life. And Mr. Reid also states clearly, several times throughout the book, that chi-gung requires serious commitment, but anyway, an ounce of prevention and a good dose of pragmatism is my recommendation for those who read this book as a first introduction to Chi-gung (which is one of the author's main intentions). It's worth what you'll pay for it, as long as you remember that reading about something like chi-gung is only the half of it, and that experiencing it is as thorough and complete a thing as the contents of this great book!

A mind opening experience
This book is simply amazing. From the moment I started reading this book I was hooked. I just could not put it down. Once I started incorporating the simple breathing techniques discussed in the book,I noticed immediate improve ments in my circulation, energy level,flexibility,and mental clarity. Then after trying some of the moving exercises I felt totally charged as if I was being pumped with electricity, I have never felt better. This book is a must if you are interested in learning more about yourself, your inner strength, and your place in the universe.

Good overall guide to Chi Gung
This is a very compact book. It covers many things in CHinese Chi Gung, like Breathing exercises,self-massaging, acupressure, postures, meditation, health. It also covers the philosophy of Tao which Chi Gung itself is based on. Reid explains it in a clear way that's easy to read for Westerners. Personally, I've tried Chi Gung and it does really increase my energy and vitality and clarity. Especially the breathing exercises, god if there's one thing you should improve to make your vitality 'explode', it's by improving your BREATHING. Even Anthony Robbins teaches the 'power of breathing'! So it's not traditional mumbo jumbo. What chi gung is mainly about is, Chi (Air/Energy) Gong (Work/practice) that's what it means! Overall, this is a good guide for those who wants to know what chi gung is. You might also want to read another good book by the same author "The Tao Of Health, Sex and Longvity", it's a thicker book but it covers more subjects like diet, nutrition,fasting,breathing,exercises,correct sexual practice for vitality,meditation etc. Read it and most importantly, USE IT AND DO IT!


Incident at Muc Wa
Published in Paperback by iUniverse Publishing Services (01 May, 2000)
Author: Daniel Ford
Average review score:

Bittersweet; Prophetic
Daniel Ford's novel served as the basis for the excellent Vietnam war film, "Go Tell the Spartans". The movie was generally faithful to the novel, with just a bit of Hollywood added. The story follows draftee Stephen Courcey through special forces training and finally into the jungle of the Central Highlands of the Republic of South Vietnam. There, the experience of his military advisory team seems to be an allegory to the American involvement in Vietnam. One of the characters, a number crunching junior officer, allows that it will take 50,000 American combat deaths to "stabilize" the situation in Southeast Asia. This statement in this work of fiction written in 1967 is pretty amazing when you consider that the final American death count in Vietnam was 58,000 and change.

The novel moves quickly and flows nicely. The characters are strong. You find yourself somehow inside Corporal Courcey's head and laughing at Captain Olivetti's obsession with his CIB, his combat infantry badge. The role of Major Barker in the book is much less central than it is in the movie. But then, Burt Lancaster played the ... out of Major Barker in the film, so they may have made certain adjustments for the star.

There is a sadness and fatalism about the book that may bother some. However, the topic is not exactly uplifting. On the whole, a worthwhile and enjoyable read.

Extremely Satisfying Early Account
Ok, even though this happens to be a fictional account, and the names and places are completely fake, the description of events is extremely eerie and just plain dead-on for what became Vietnam. The book came out at a time when the war was still believed to be winnable, but Ford gives us an honest look at the unwinnable situation of Muc Wa, and what it did to its ever-loving and overwhelmed young commander. I think we've all heard too many storied of this same sort that happened in Vietnam, and here it is again, but its simply one of the best books if you want to get a feeling of what it might have been like to be a young man with what was basically a nearly impossible mission, one he felt a patriotic and militant duty to fulfill, but, like so many other times the powers that be wouldnt allow it. Another strong point is its brevity, it gets the job done without having to do it over a 300 or 400 page novel, the book and the language within it will flow easily for most any high school student. An excellent read on the subject, and highly recommended.

How the Vietnam war began
This is a classic, a story written by a journeyman reporter who was in Vietnam before the war escalated out of control. The story is a metaphor for the conflict: a handful of Americans and a platoon of Vietnamese mercenaries are told to garrison a "town" called Muc Wa. There is no town--just the remains of some French emplacements and a graveyard. (The graveyard becomes a major theme in Go Tell the Spartans, the Burt Lancaster movie made from Ford's novel.) They set up a garrison, the Viet Cong attack, the garrison is reinforced, and onward and upward in a spiral of violence that ends only when the Americans are ordered to "exfiltrate." For a novel that was published in 1967, that was a darned good prophecy. Read it, and wonder how the United States was so pigheaded as to believe it could ever win a war being fought on those terms.


Inside The Works
Published in Hardcover by Necro Publications (November, 1997)
Authors: Edward Lee, Tom Piccirilli, and Gerard Daniel Houarner
Average review score:

Keep on a Shelf Away from Children!
wo side effects from reading "Inside the Works" are blindness, resulting from the weird font, and nausea, resulting from horror so hardcore that you want to wash your hands after putting the book down. Edward Lee along with Tom Piccirilli and Gerard Daniel Houarner, are the writers featured in this "3-way collection of hard core horror". All three have a kind of genius for writing almost pornographic horror that is intense, gut-wrenching, and scary, yet strangely compelling. Although these stories are like skinny dipping in a pool of blood and other bodily fluids, I kept getting the sensation that I was reading something NEW and FRESH. Edward Lee's novella The Pig was drenched in torture and mutilation but amazingly enough these elements were used in service of a great story rather than the other way around! Also worthy of mention i! s that many of the situations in the story had me laughing out loud! Counterbalancing Lee is Tom Piccirilli, whose five short stories were grim little journeys into hellish back alleys of New York. At this time, I have yet to read all of Gerard Daniel Houarner's contribution but I will soon! If he's as good as the company he keeps than I am in for a ride!

Grotesque! Horrible! I loved it!
The Pig was one of the most disgusting stories ever. Buy it. The "Plugger" scene in this story is unmatched to date.

Keep on a high shelf away from children!
Two side effects from reading "Inside the Works" are blindness, resulting from the weird font, and nausea, resulting from horror so hardcore that you want to wash your hands after putting the book down. Edward Lee along with Tom Piccirilli and Gerard Daniel Houarner, are the writers featured in this "3-way collection of hard core horror". All three have a kind of genius for writing almost pornographic horror that is intense, gut-wrenching, and scary, yet strangely compelling. Although these stories are like skinny dipping in a pool of blood and other bodily fluids, I kept getting the sensation that I was reading something NEW and FRESH. Edward Lee's novella The Pig was drenched in torture and mutilation but amazingly enough these elements were used in service of a great story rather than the other way around! Also worthy of mention is that ! many of the situations in the story had me laughing out loud! Counterbalancing Lee is Tom Piccirilli, whose five short stories were grim little journeys into hellish back alleys of New York. At this time, I have yet to read any all of Gerard Daniel Houarner's contributions but I will soon! If he's as good as the company he keeps than I am in for a ride!


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Montana
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