Related Vacation Book Subjects: South_Dakota
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Clark", sorted by average review score:

When I Grow Up: Street Children of India
Published in Paperback by Positive Pr (December, 1999)
Authors: R. Shane Clark, Elizabeth Sabatino, and Kyle Schroeder
Average review score:

When I Grow Up -- excellent
This is at first glance a quite simple piece of work, with significant full-page attention grabbing pictures. As one takes time to study the photos and to understand the experience of the author, however, this book creates for the reader the beginning of an understanding for the basic rights of all humans. Living in the USA, where we take for granted our rights to such basics as survival, protection, development, and particaption, we choose to ignore the fact that Mr. Clark so poignantly communicates with a single word: "Focus" and a picture with two people -- one in the foreground, and one in the background, both fuzzy, while the land inbetween, scattered with garbage, is perfectly clear.


When Someone You Love Is Dying: Making Wise Decision at the End of Life
Published in Paperback by Bethany House (November, 1998)
Authors: Peter, Md. Emmett and David, Phd. Clark
Average review score:

On-target in today's confusing medical technology
After reading Emmett and Clark's book, I highly recommend it to anyone dealing with a loved one's death or terminal illness. In an age of confusing medical technology and loss of moral compass, Emmett and Clark provide sound biblical guidance. This book was very readable as well as providing sound and succinct information about this difficult issue. Thank you Drs. Emmett and Clark for prividing a light in a very dark field.


Where Are the Children? - The Cradle Will Fall - A Stranger Is Watching
Published in Paperback by Pocket Books (September, 1996)
Author: Mary Higgins Clark
Average review score:

The best
I thik that this boxed set is the best they can do with all thebook writen by M.H.Clark. The very well know "a stranger iswatching" and the two other take place in a very good environment that clark made by her own.I suggest you to buy this... 3-books-set/very good quality. END


White Thought (Lingo Books)
Published in Paperback by Hard Press Editions (February, 1998)
Author: Tom Clark
Average review score:

Clark's White Thought is a master work
A groundbreaking book from a living master of poetry, White Thought is an extended meditation on mortality and loss. Although Tom is not all that impressed with Lou Reed, this book resonates on a similar level as the album Magic & Loss. It is simultaneously poignant and hopeful, with tight, brilliant music playing against the capital 'M' meaning of the poems themselves. Perhaps one of the only books of poetry in the 90's that just goes ahead and says what it has to say.


Who Is Amelia?: Caring for Children With Limb Difference
Published in Paperback by Amer Academy of Orthopaedic (September, 1998)
Authors: Hugh G. Watts, Mary Williams, Md. Clark, Hugh, Md. Watts, and American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
Average review score:

A parents view
This book was intended for medical students and doctors, but it was very helpful in understanding some clinical views and treatments.

I recommend it highly.


Who Is Your Doctor and Why
Published in Paperback by Keats Pub (November, 1980)
Authors: Alonzo J. Shadman and Linda A. Clark
Average review score:

Homeopathy, Alonzo Shadman and Me
Folks, the following information you can be sure is true; I have been reading a lot about health and safety, and have learned so much. Even sleeping in a room with moving air (i.e. an open window) interferes with the natural process of elimination of toxins through the skin (sweating)--the results are that we develop (note I did not say 'catch') a cold. Colds are neither caused nor spread by germs, but are developed when we get too cold. The body has a wonderful internal regulatory mechanism in temperature. In a healthy individual it is 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. If the temperature of the air is anything lower than 98.6, it is possible to get too cold. Even if it is 98 degrees, if there is a wind blowing, the body is exposed to a drop in temperature from its natural state. Wind blowing on us interferes with the process of sweating, which is the built-in cooling system our bodies have. And anything that interferes with this most important process of releasing

poisons is going to affect our health. If the toxins do not get sweated out through the skin, because they evaporate too fast by moving air, the next place they go is the mucous membranes (throat, mouth, etc,) and we develop cold symptoms. A runny nose is the body's way of eliminating poisons that did not get to make their way out of the skin, because the body was too cold to sweat. God forbid that we stop a runny nose with antihistamines, because then the problem is only exacerbated, to tonsilitis, bronchitis--however deep we allow the toxins to revert, it is up to us. But they are only trying to leave the body. It is okay even to sleep in a cold room, as long as there is no draft, open window or moving air. This probably sounds extreme, but a doctor whose book I just read (a homeopath, book published in 1958), retells countless tales of problems he cured just by explaining this to his patients. A woman with bursitis of the left elbow was going in for surgery to have the problem "removed" and Dr. Shadman asked to see her. He asked her if she drove with her elbow out the window. She admitted that she did, he told her to stop, and the problem absolutely went away and never returned. Same thing for children who sleep in cold rooms, under drafty windows. Some especially sensitive babies begin coughing as soon as they wet their diapers because the evaporation of water, and cooling down process begins right then. Just think what would happen if we, every day of our lives, used a product specifically designed to stop the release of those toxins, and applied it to the delicate area near our breasts, and near a very dense collection of those glands and pores (the armpit). Imagine if this product were also full of chemicals incompatible with our body makeup, and actually toxic to it. Well, you probably get the idea. Not a cold, but cancer. Most health problems are preventable and treatable--even chronic problems and diseases, if you have the right information. Homeopathy is an invaluable tool, when used wisely by responsible, patient practictioners. It has healed about every "disease" known to mankind, because it actually heals people, not problems, taking into account individual problems and susceptibilities, unlike conventional medicine, which throws pills at named diseases--the same pills to different people with different causes, no less. No wonder we cannot "cure" diabetes, arthritis or cancer. Or can we? People are curable or incurable, in almost every case. Not disease.


Wholly Animals: A Book of Beastly Tales (Cistercian Studies Series, No 128)
Published in Hardcover by Cistercian Publications (December, 1992)
Authors: David N. Bell and Alice Duthie-Clark
Average review score:

The ultimate book of animal tales
What do the following have in common? John the Evangelist, saint Kevin, Macarius the Great, Maedoc of Ferns, Moshe Leib of Sasov, Moses, Muhammad, Owain ap Caradog ap Iestyn. Yes, they are all known as religious figures; they also are known as friends of animals - teaching animals, learning from them, or protecting them (or vice versa). This delightful book tells a variety of tales about the animals. This range from simple observations - learning the stillness of meditation from a cat over a mousehole, to full blown stories. Information setting the story in place, time and manuscript(hagiographic reference) is provided for each story.

This is (a) a perfect antidote to a cold, stormy night (b) a perfect antidote to over-rationalized religion (c) an excellent introduction to hagiography (d) all of the above. The correct answer is, of course, d.


Whose Nose, Whose Toes
Published in Hardcover by Concordia Publishing House (December, 1999)
Authors: Debbie Reinertson and Bill Clark
Average review score:

A delightful introduction to reading for young children
This is a unique little book for very young children. It has thick washable pages with cute illustrations that transcend racial lines. The plastic handle at its binding makes it easy for small hands to grasp. Its message is for younsters to take notice of their physical form and senses with a non-sectarian reminder of their loving creator. Little folks not only enjoy the brief lesson, but also love carrying the book around as a campanion.


Wild Robert
Published in Paperback by Egmont Childrens Books (04 April, 1991)
Authors: Diana Wynne Jones and Emma Chichester Clark
Average review score:

Great Book!
This story is about a little girl who lives in an old house where her parents are the caretakers and tourguides. One day, while trying to escape a horde of tourists, she accidentally wakes the mischievous ghost of Wild Robert.

This was another great story by an author I truly admire. Read it! The illustrations are great, too.


Wild Strawberries and Cream
Published in Paperback by Cumberland House (May, 1999)
Author: Jo-Anne Clark Brown
Average review score:

120 yummy recipes
This must have book for anyone who loves strawberries. The book features delicious recipes including breakfasts, main courses, salads, desserts, frozen desserts, beverages, and jellies all made with strawberries. There are two sections filled with over 30 full-color photos of some of the recipes. Thankfully, the recipes use common ingredients and are fairly easy to make.

It's really hard to choose a favorite recipe. I love the breakfast puff, coffee cake and pizza (a pastry crust topped with strawberries and jelly and served chilled). The chicken fillet with strawberry peppercorn cream sauce and strawberry avocado salad mold are also divine. You must try jubilee, meringue, angel cake, and frozen white chocolate mousse cake with strawberries.

With over 120 decadent strawberry recipes, I promise you will never get bored.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: South_Dakota
More Pages: Clark Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100