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i am not related
Fantastic Book
Stars Fall

This is the worst gift I ever received.
Very Funny
A fun and fancy free book of kitty romance

Slow Moving Western Tale
Interesting Account of the Texas Plains of the 1870'sEvelyn Horan - author
Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Book One
Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Book Two
This is a very good book, BUT. . .

Ick
An exceptable peice of Liturature
my favorite set of books

An invaluable resource
Excellent!
worth every penny

not for the beginnerThe book assumes that you have a working knowledge of computers. It would be helpful if tasks were assigned and were solved.
Great introduction to Windows 98
Clear, complete & funny, too

The Quest of the Historical Jesus
Very well laid out, but somewhat outdated...Scweitzer, however, outlines the book MASSIVELY well. He does not skimp on details and progress of the studies for each scholar he mentions and being a Theology professor himself, I do tip my hat to his studies. He does them well. He states more the studies of other scholars and does not go so much into what he has discovered. But I do feel that since this was written, there is much evidence against claims made in the book and, if you agree with the progress of the Historical Jesus studies, much better work out there, even by the Jesus Seminar.
This book is a great read, I recommend that if what I wrote interests you, buy it. However, you will definitely need much supplementary materials from both liberal and conservative scholars to revise your frame of thought.
A sweeping indictment on an era of pretentious scholarshipSo who was the historical Jesus? For Schweitzer, he was an heroic, albeit deluded, messianic prophet dominated by the conviction that he was God's chosen instrument to announce the imminent end of history -- burning with apocalyptic zeal, marching to Jerusalem, confident that he could compel the Kingdom's arrival on earth through a voluntary death. But the anticipated divine intervention failed to occur, and Jesus was crushed by the system he defied, the entire drama ending on the cross. No resurrection.
Even if Schweitzer's portrait of Jesus is a bit extreme, he at least got the basics right -- that is, Jesus as an eschatological prophet -- and he rightly sounded the death knell for the liberal quest of the historical Jesus. And Schweitzer was a true prophet, for there has been a resurgence of the liberal quest, particularly in the work of the notorious Jesus Seminar. Just as the quest of 1778-1901 made Jesus into a liberal German Protestant, so now the Jesus Seminar has made him into a liberal North American humanist, fitting this mold in the guise of a non-eshatological cynic-sage divorced from Judaism. This Jesus is, as Schweitzer could have easily predicted, made over in the image of the Jesus Seminarians.
For more up-to-date works which follow Schweitzer in depicting Jesus as an apocalyptic prophet, see E.P. Sanders' "The Historical Figure of Jesus", Paula Fredriksen's "Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews", and Dale Allison's "Jesus of Nazareth: Millenarian Prophet". Allison's book, in particular, is worth its weight in gold.


Authors should take fresh approach to convey materialSadly, this text, in its 22nd edition, is the standard real estate "salesperson" study manual in the state of Florida.
It is far too long and boring. Much more could be conveyed in fewer pages if the authors either undertook an overhaul or let a creative writer edit the copy.
But hasn't this text already been through 22 editions? Yes, but changes only seem to be made to reflect changes in law and not in updating or freshening the overall presentation.
This oversized book is nearly 500 pages long! In my estimation, more could be said in half the space.
As far as the end of chapter and end of book test questions go, they are too simple. The authors review manual, sold under seperate cover, includes many more questions that more closely reflect the standard of difficulty the state uses in its actual exam.
The authors of this text know they have the monopoly on the "salesperson" text book in the state of Florida. Because of this, do they really have an incentive to make it better? No, not unless they want to challenge themselves to improve it.
If the text were better it would most certainly make the practice of real estate in Florida...better.
A good starting point
THIS IS THE KEY TO PASSING THE SALESPERSON EXAM

Never Read It
Worth Five Stars!I am sure that by the time you are done, you will be so in love with this family of the Tuatha that you will be so happy that you, too, bought this book that began it all.
Now, not to forget the other stories in this book, as they, too, are marvelous. I truly loved the story "Magic and Mahem" and the tiny Irish Sprite, Misty Dawn, sent to protect her mistress in the new land.... well, unbeknown to her people back in her Irish homeland. Misty just wanted some excitement and when Shawna was sent to live in the new land, well, what a perfect chance, but to stowe away in her pocket.
Equally cute is the story "Ever True." Never underestimate the power of your assistant for he/she might just be a fairy!
"Fairies Make Wishes, Too" - what a marvelous story of a young fairy in love with a mortal she watches below her fairie realm. She grieves for the love she'll never know except in his dreams.
When the Queen Fairie forbids young Enya to visit the mortal world she falls victim to the temptations of an offer by an ugly troll who gives her 3 days to win the love of her dream man or loose her life. The catch? She can't tell him that she's his dream lover or that she'll die in 3 days if he doesn't profess his love to her by then. What's a girl to do?
Anyway, I love this book! I hope you will, too.
Sheer Magic