More Pages: Douglas 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


Order it from Vault.com
a superb book and the only one of its kind
The best edition yet!!!

Very comprehensive and compassionate
An Invaluable Resource
A powerful healing resource

A great place to start, but you'll need moreThe maps, for instance, will get you to the vicinity of a park, but you'll also want to buy more detailed road maps or even topographical maps. The photography is excellent and will help you decide what you want to see, yet at the same time, the book isn't overloaded with it.
The book is 220 pages long and spends about 20 pages on each of the regions it covers (Brittany and Normandy, the Northeast, the Alps, Central France, the Loire and Burgundy, the Pyrenees, the Atlantic Coast of Gascony, the Eastern Mediterranean and Corsica, and the Western Mediterranean). All in all I found it a great book to help me plan my trip to southwestern France, but if you can spring for the money, look for some detailed regional guides (the Rough Guides are almost always strong on the outdoors, and aren't necessarily as rough as they sound). Lonely Planet's "Walking in France" is also excellent.
Great Book for France
Forget Paris - Go Wild and Wonderful

A Classic
An excellent discussion of consumption and culture.Additionally, they discuss previous and current ideas about why people save, or don't consume, and provide excellent comparative analyses between societies in Great Britain, blacks and whites in the US, the Nuer of the Sudan, and Zimbabwe's Lele people. What the reader comes away with is a deeper understanding of how people use consumption, both consciously and unconsciously, to provide information about themselves, send messages to others, and try to control the flow of culture and information to best benefit themselves and their interests.
The writing, which I have the impression was mostly written by Douglas since I'm familiar with her style from other books, feels a bit cerebral but is extremely lucid and will keep you on your toes with novel interpretations of familiar cultural phenomena.
Accounting for tastes

The Inland Fishes of Mississippi
A lot of Fishes for the PriceIf you are interested in the fishes of the Southeast US this book will be useful and entertaining. It will be indispensable if you study fishes in any Mississippi river or Gulf drainage. I can remember my first day in class, thinking that we where just going to look at a bunch of minnows. I know better now, and this book will explain why.
More than just catfish...

A must-have for the guerrilla film maker
excelent guide to 16mm cameras

excellent bookwell writen.
easy to understand

Good helpful stuff
A most helpful look at small churches!

Fending off the "time of trouble"I think some of the more educated, liberal, and objective Adventists I know (especially ones secure in their faith) would enjoy this book. People interested in the intersection of religion and politics in general would definitely find it an easy, entertaining read.
I plan on passing it on.
An American Tale - God and CountrySeparation of Church and State? Money to do "good" things? Where do well-meaning people draw the lines? How do they decide? What goes on behind closed doors - in the cloistered halls of power on Capitol Hill and in the hushed offices of ecclesiastical politics?
Doug Morgan's "Adventism and the American Republic" is a scrupulously documented look at one church's awkward lurching toward civic engagement. The view ranges from sweet to painful and back again. But Doug's description carries the reader through the arc with a sense of being there -- in the rooms, reading the letters and watching the frustrating twists, embarrassing turns, and occasional successes in this theological/political pretzel.
If you've every wondered what "Faith Based" means for the future of American social or religious institutions, this book is a must read. If you don't care about church and state, but like a curious American tale, it's even better.
Somebody should make the movie!


Visually stunning!
Must be good