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If you are a Professional / Small Business: seek no more
One of the best, if not THE best books on marketing services
Don't leave home without this book, if you're a consultant!

Stylistic MasterpieceI would offer the warning to those who dislike long, tedious readings that this work would not be for them. It is nearly 850 pages with very little action/dialogue. It more a study into the human psyche as it relates to guilt, pity, law, and the moral implications of all these things.
Deja Vu All Over Again
An elegant, subtle undermining of the legal system.

Outstanding bookI highly recommend this book. I have used it many times for Bible studies and sermon material.
I thank God for this focused man of God!
EXCELLENT!!!!

An absolute treasure!
I recommend it without reservation to every O'Brian fan!
An extraordinary reference books about extraordinary novels.

THESE BOOKS ARE GREAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Piers Anthony at his finest!
You Gotta Love These Books!

Finally, Some Added Insight On Anthony Drexel
a good read
The Man Who Made Wall Street

Wonderful recounting of many important womenI especially liked that the book didn't shy away from some of these women's more controversial stands, such as taking on the black person's cause.
All in all, a very good book.
Every Woman should read this book!
What every woman should know

Good sequel to "Phineas Finn."
Extremely satisfactory sequel to PHINEAS FINNBy all estimations, PHINEAS FINN, while a thoroughly enjoyable novel, ended badly. So badly, that Trollope felt compelled essentially to delete the ending of the former novel, and provide a new ending in the form of a novel to correct the error of his ways. In his AUTOBIOGRAPHY, Trollope expresses his extreme dissatisfaction with the ending of that novel. Happily, he more than atones for his literary sins with the sequel.
This novel, like its predecessor, is set against the background of a great political reform. In the former, it was suffrage (i.e., how many people would be given the right to vote), in this one, the disestablishment of the Church of England (i.e., breaking the tie of mandatory local taxes to support the Anglican Church). Perhaps for this reason, Phineas Finn's Catholicism, which was not alluded to in the former novel, is made much of. The same cast of parliamentary characters are brought back for this new controversy. One curiosity is that sometimes Trollope refers by name to the achievements of members of parliament such as Gladstone, Disraeli, or John Bright. What is odd about this is the fact that Gresham is pretty transparently based on Gladstone, Daubeny on Disraeli, and Trumbull on John Bright.
Far more than the Barsetshire novels, a large number of increasingly familiar characters flit in and out of the various political novels. The major characters of one novels are found as minor characters in another. As one works through the novels in the political series, one sees such characters as Glencora Palliser, Joshua Monk, Mr. Rattler, Lord Fawn, Lord and Lady Cantrip, Lizzie Eustace, and a myriad of other characters. One of my favorite Trollope characters is prominent in PHINEAS REDUX, Madame Max Goesler. Dark in her features, thin, beautiful, extremely wealthy, widowed, extremely self-possessed, sharply intelligent, efficient, and very much a woman of action, she seems very much to be a woman before her time. One of the most remarkable things about Trollope, who was in many ways the epitome of the Victorian world, was his obvious love for strong, intelligent, exceptional women. Although there are many such women in Trollope's novels, Madame Goesler is easily the one I find most compelling.
Another Trollope Winner

How not to be a pig.
Mother's message comes across to kids
Loved this book!

with virtues and problemsIt is complete, with both Lorentzian and Galilean fields,
and with care for the discussions to be really introductory.
Confusions phrase: if you worry about small lambda I will be
worrying about big Lambda, is the funniest thing I ever read in
a mathematics book.
I will give it 4 stars for the nonsatisfactory coverage of renormalization. I think that when a physical theory is not pure
mathematics it is not satisfactory. Yet (i do not know if
it is Dr Zee's exposition or a grave problem of QFT, the
renormalization procedure looks a cheap way to get correct answers. A really mathematical exposition would start from
a theory and deduce all results; instaed the hopus-pocus
of renormalization appears. The latter was the reason I
never thought of specializing in QFT some time ago,
and after some years I see that the problem remains.
But nice effort!
Not your father's quantum field theory text
my favorite QFT book by farI haven't reached the "advanced topics" yet, but the foundational chapters have already been a huge boost to my understanding. If the book has a weakness, I'd have to say the intro to canonical quantization is too brief. The emphasis seems to be very much on the path integral approach.