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Madeline Baker will have trouble topping this one.
Absolutely the BEST
Incredible Story

Perfect, Beautifully Perfect!
Cute, Funny, and Very Very True
BEEN THERE.....THIS BOOK IS A PERFECT READ!

The best technical book on photographyA must read for any aspiring b/w photographer.
The Negative is all PositiveWhen I looked at the three books of this series, The Camera, The Negative and the Print, I waded into each wanting to choose only the best one from the series. I quickly realised that neither of the other two had what The Negative had and I have subsequently realised that this was by far the best choice for me. The negative deals with Visualization and image values, Light and Film, Exposure, The Zone System, Filters and Pre-Exposure, Natural Light, Artifical Light, Darkroom processes, Dark Room equiptment and procedures and value control in processing.
This book is an absolute must for intermediate photographers who have mastered the basics and want to take a step up into the world of greater control over their imaging with an eye to developing and processing their own film and prints. Everything you need to know about getting your images right before you even hit the shutter is in this book, all you need to do now is accentuate the positive by going and buying The NEGATIVE!
The Best Black & White Photography Book Written

Velveteen Rabbit story good for parents and children(And I'm not going to tell you the end hahahahaha!!!)
It was great having that read to me, while I was hugging my stuffed animals in bed.
But -- in a way, at first glance it looks like a simple story, but it is actually a surprisingly complex story. Leave it on your child's bookshelf as he/she grows up and he/she will reread it again and again as he/she questions issues such as "who am I?", "what does it mean to be 'real'"?, "what is my role in this world?", and even "what is death"?
It's wonderful every time I read it!
An extremely touching book

Now, this is the only bread baking book you ever need!
An extraordinary bookHis explanation of the science of how bread is mixed, baked and even tasted is definitive and clearly written. The section on shaping dough is aptly photographed and understandable. It is, by far, the clearest description of shaping dough found in the current crop of baking books.
The bulk of the book consists of recipes, more accurately, formulas, for baking various kinds of bread. I've tried only two of them so far and both came out excellent. And one of the things that makes this book so helpful is that if your bread doesn't come out excellent you'll learn why it didn't and what to do about it.
This book amplifies Reinhart's previous book, Crust and Crumb, and like that book the formulas will help you bake the best bread you've ever made. And the theory will help you to create your own signature variations.
This is a priceless book and it is also a definite classic. If you don't bake, buy it for someone who does.
Baking heaven!... [I'm making] rich, decadent cinnamon buns (using the RICH man's formula) are undergoing final proofing before being popped in the oven. They have risen phenomenally, sitting as they are atop a 1/4 inch layer of homemade caramel. I cannot remember having made a dough so light, bubbly and elastic. ...
What I love about the book is that, while giving you "formulae," as he calls the recipes, he NEVER FAILS to encourage to experiment. He may have a formula with little fat, but he'll tell you what'll happen if you put a bit more or a bit less, if the fat is lard or butter. You make the final call in your kitchen.
There is something odd, though. There is a formula that calls for 5 1/2 tablespoons of butter and 6 1/2 tablespoons of sugar, for example. Couldn't this have been rounded to 1/4 or 1/3 cups? I suppose it gets important when scaling up, and although the calculations maybe easy had the metric system been used, the ornery imperial system is very unfriendly for this purpose.
The photos are fantastic; sometimes they are indeed worth a thousand words. I look at the photo, and as I feel my bread I know what to "shoot for" so to speak.
Ah well, gotta go! Those sweet cinnamon rolls must be just about ready now. Buy the book!


Hygieia in review (Hygieia, A Woman's Herbal, by JeannineParvati-Baker's book is not so much intended as a guide to how to USE herbs to build health as a guide to new ways of thinking and feeling about women's reproductive and sexual lives. There are chapters and sections devoted to thinking about sexual desire, about natural birthing options including natural home birth and non-separation from the placenta (Lotus birth, about re-visioning menstruation as a time to celebrate, about Western and Asian myths of heraling and women;s power, about re-thinking fertility itself, and about many types of spiritual and psychological practice, especially those that have leant meaning to the author.
Hygieia is a personal book, a sort of a glimpse into the inner as well as the family life of its creator, Jeannine Parvati. It is about many aspects of being a woman involved in creating one's own healing, as Parvati-Baker experiences this. The openminded reader is drawn into her world, where she (or he) can pick and choose those ideas and images that speak to her (or his) psyche, while leaving that which does not work as well to bloom in the same garden for another. It reads as a journey into a way of being where healing and honoring one's reproductive and living self is a birthright that can be claimed by all.
Those lookig to use this book as a sort of alternative pharmacopeia will probably be disappointed, for the author is calling the reader into a more broadbased, holistic understanding about the relationship between plant allies, the earth, and women's health and well-being.Hygieia does not prescribe; it brings seeds for further contemplation on ways of regarding botanicals, health, adn the experience of being female.
A Herbal for Changing WomenIt is written for those wise women seeking to deepen their knowledge of themselves through contemplation. It is for those fortunate maidens and mothers who enjoy being in tune with their lunar bodies, women who think and dream and live moment to moment, day by day. It is for Changing Women, and not the clinical, bare females of medical journals and anatomy books. Hygieia is for responsible women who first take their inner wisdom as gospel, before that of any book or doctor or even healer.
Those women who are open and ready for such an approach will love coming back to it again and again, picking it up with a specific question or simply leafing through it and letting it guide them to what is right for them. It is a guide for finding our own relationship with plants, our own balance in healing ourselves. Jeannine Parvati Baker's herbal is akin to a philosphy, a way of life. It is a herbal for a lifetime, not simply for a "quick fix."
Hygieia: A Woman;s HerbalHygieia imparts the knowledge and wisdom of herbals for the needs of women. Letters from women, dream interpretations only add to the delight of this wise-women book. It is easy to use, with an organized format and thorough index, but also a pleasure to simply browse. I find myself returning to this book often as it is in invaluable tool for women at any age or stage in their life. Even though I share most of my day, every day, with books and purchased this book for our collection at the library, it is truly such an outstanding book in both wisdom and beauty that I had to buy my own copy!


A true family heirloom.
It will endlessly amaze you!
Soak in a Book Well Worth Every Cent (it sells itself)

Pretty Darn Readable
The best introductory book bar noneI especially liked Part IV, which covers secure electronic commerce because it covered the full spectrum of technologies and the information is immediately useful to all IT and security professionals. Like in the first three parts of this book I came away with a complete understanding of how everything works.
This book epitomizes clear writing. Moreover, it is simply amazing how much knowledge can be relatively painlessly gained from reading this book. Although I am sure the authors intended to make the inner workings of cryptography accessible to non-security professionals (which they unquestionably accomplished), they also set a standard of excellence in technical writing by producing a book that is, in my opinion, near perfect in its ability to seamlessly use lively prose and well thought out illustrations to convey highly technical information. If you need to learn cryptography but are challenged by the math and the impenetratable writing of other books on the subject, start with this one.
excellent explanation of cryptography and it's usesA must read for anyone who wants to understand the fundamentals without getting a brain fog.


This is going to be one hell of a motion picture...
Quite simply, AWESOME!
A Book That Really Fuels Your Imagination

The Story of a FoundlingThe action of the novel begins with a view of the Allworthy family, a landed gentleman, Thomas Allworthy and his sister, Bridget. Into this family is dropped an orphan, a foundling - a child, if you will, of questionable parentage. This child, Tom Jones, is raised alongside Bridget's child, Blifil, as relative equals. Both are tutored by two ideologues, the philosopher Square and the theologian Thwackum. Jones is a precocious, free-spirited youngster, spoiled by Allworthy while Blifil, the heir apparent to the estate, becomes the favourite pupil and spoiled accordingly by his mother. As the two youths age, Tom develops a fondness for the neighbour's daughter, Sophia Western.
Tom's sexual development begins to get him in trouble, as it tends to throughout the novel, and as a result of one such incident, coupled with the goading jealousy of Blifil, Tom is driven out of the Allworthy home, left to seek his fortunes in the world. Meeting his supposed father, Partridge, on the road, the two begin a quixotic ramble across England. Sophia, meanwhile, pressured into marrying Blifil, runs away from home, beginning her own voyage of discovery.
"Tom Jones" begins with the narrator likening literature to a meal, in which the paying customer comes expecting to be entertained and satisfied. All 18 books of "Tom Jones" start out with such authorial intrusions, each cluing us into the writer's craft, his interactions with his public, and various other topics. This voice is actually sustained throughout the novel, providing a supposedly impartial centre of moral value judgments - each of which seems to tend toward enforce Fielding's project of a realistic, and yet, didactic portrayal of a world full of flawed characters.
Some of the issues the novel deals most extensively with are modes of exchange, anxieties over female agency, and the power of rumour and reputation. Exchange and the ways in which value is figured include a wide range of goods - money, bodies, food, and stories - and are integral to the story. The treatment of women is a great concern in "Tom Jones": from Partridge's perpetual fear of witchcraft to the raging arguments between Squire Western and his sister over how Sophia should be treated, to general concerns about sexuality and virtue. A novel that can be in turns hilarious, disturbing, and provoking, "Tom Jones" is never dull. Despite its size, the pace of the novel is extremely fast and lively. So, get thee to a superstore and obtain thyself a copy of this excellent and highly entertaining novel.
A long read. . . but well worth it. . .Guffaw your heart out
It's not unusual...Though frequently termed an immoral book, Tom Jones holds up rather well in the early 21st century. Even Fielding's comic characters seem to have a dimension often lacking in 18th and 19th century novels. Fielding is a genius.