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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Edmunds", sorted by average review score:

Angkat: The Cambodian Cinderella
Published in Hardcover by Shen's Books (June, 1998)
Average review score: 

An attractive tale that can be savored by readers of all ageUnderneath the vast differences between the customs and way of daily life in this colorful Eastern land of long ago and the settings of the traditional Cinderella story are enough similarities to enlist the interest and sympathies of the modern-day reader. More important are the universal values which permeate this charming tale-compassion, fidelity to one's family (even if it brings pain,) and justice. An attractive, multicultural tale that can be savored by readers of all ages.

Antarctica: The Ross Sea Region (Dsir Information Series, No. 165)
Published in Hardcover by University of Washington Press (March, 1991)
Average review score: 

A very comprehensive and well written book about this areaA very comprehensive and well written book about the Ross Sea region of Antarctica. There is no better way to learn about the verious aspects of this region, than reading this book. It also contains a lot of very good pictures.

Art Nouveau: An Anthology of Design and Illustration from the Studio.
Published in Textbook Binding by Peter Smith Pub (June, 1969)
Average review score: 

Art Nouveau graphics booksThis is a great book, covering a broad range of Art Nouveau styles & designers. If only it were available on CD!

Aubrey's Brief Lives (Nonpareil Books, No 77)
Published in Paperback by David R Godine (July, 1999)
Average review score: 

A Fine Edition of a Classic"Brief Lives" has always been a delight, but it was Oliver Lawson Dick's scholarly editing that revealed Aubrey's genius. And Lawson Dick's Introduction, "The Life and Times of John Aubrey", is a miracle of synthesis and compression: certainly one of the finest biographical essays ever written. This Nonpareil Books edition is sumptuous - a joy to read in these days cheap, quickly produced paperbacks.

The Autobiographical Consciousness of Aging
Published in Paperback by Edmund Sherman (July, 2000)
Average review score: 

A truly inspiring bookThis is a truly inspiring book. It presents a way of understanding and expanding one's "autobiographical consciousness," and achieving optimum aging, through reminiscence about one's own life. Sherman presents an impressive, learned exposition of the relevant thinking of many great minds in his explanation of the meaning,elements and processes of aging and consciousness. He gives examples of ordinary people who are very much alive in their accounts of their lives and how they achieved an expanded and self-accepting autobiographical consciousness. This book made for a very helpful emotional and intellectual experience in self-examination of my own life.

Beauty of Britain
Published in Hardcover by Outlet (February, 1984)
Average review score: 

An Amazing Journey!I love to travel, both physically and mentally. This book is the ultimate scenic route through Britain. I've walked down some of those lanes and stood in front of some of those old town buildings. I've shopped in some of those quaint little old shops and I've stood on some of those cliffs and looked out over the English Channel.
I use this book now mainly as a reference for sketching, but also as a reminder of all those ancient and beautiful corners of England's green and pleasant land.
I cannot recommend this visually overwhelming resource highly enough!

Beethoven: The Philosophy of Music
Published in Hardcover by Stanford Univ Pr (May, 1999)
Average review score: 

Adorno returns Beethoven,as if the ink never driedOf all the composers Adorno has thought about intensely, writing essays which merged into book lengths on Mahler,Berg, or Wagner, as well as countless articles and essays on music, Beethoven seems to be a high special preserve within his body of work. This is a work of fragments, and notes,incomplete thoughts collected into notebooks throughout Adorno's life which never was able to solidify under one leaf,or merge into a completed work. But if you've read his brilliant and overwhelming intellectual discourses in his "Philosophy of Modern Music" or "Negative Dialectics" or lastly, his posthumous "Aesthetic Theory" this is more a threshold unto perhaps Adorno's working methods, unformed thoughts and frequent postponments of thoughts, concepts and directions to be takened up later,perhaps for the reader to fulfill. Beethoven was the consummate artist, one committed to the musical subject,the continuation of time, a composer who sought to break rules as well as follow them. And in following them there is a liberation for what this allows,sometimes new forms,a breakage of the tonal scheme or creating a piano sound almost provincial yet innovative,as the "Waldstein Sonata". Adorno frequently draws on Beethoven the craftman, the manipulator and purveyor of materials, on tonality,motives,variations, and form in a state of becoming, and makes us aware once again, that the process of music is a time-bound one, one of an incessant durational frame. Beethoven dealt with first and foremost with reprisals, with materials, themes and harmonic schemes we have heard and will hear again. He dealt with something which is already in the world, and his music simply deals with the inevitability of those moments and their fate redemption or demise. Late Beethoven as well we learn was not a state of increased polyphonic complexity, "Missa Solemnis" was a retrogressive act,not one of innovation as his "Piano Sonatas" frequently were. Adorno reminds us of the dimensions of Beethoven's art we seem to forget,as the simplified moments, the economy of means reduced to pure power as the "Ninth Symphony" or reduction of subjectivity as the late "Sonatas" proclaims. The Late Music "Spatstil" was a music of reduction of harmonic schemes beginning too soon as the late "Quartets" the "C# minor". The editor here Rolf Tiedemann long an Adorno executor trys to make the fragmentariness of this incomplete work cohere with copious notes placed at the end, even interjecting excerpts from completed essays and entire works, as "Aesthetic Theory". Although useful I found this distracting and not all that absorbing.It seems we've never understood Beethoven or that the dimensions of his creativity have been layered,Adorno returns him back to a composer status, a contemporary or visitor of the postmodern field as if the ink never dried.

The Best of Burke: Selected Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke (Conservative Leadership Series)
Published in Hardcover by Regnery Publishing, Inc. (December, 1999)
Average review score: 

The Best of Burke is the best Burke I've readFor the student of politics and politcal philosophy this compilation is a wonderful 'must-read'. I was captured at times by the power of Burke's writing. Occasionally I was so taken with the majesty of his language and the power of his logic that I found myself reading aloud, savoring each word. For example, try rolling these phrases off your tongue: "Liberty...is a general principle, and the clear right of all subjects within the realm, or of none. Partial freedom seems to me a most invidious mode of slavery. But unfortunately, it is the kind of slavery most easily admitted....The true danger is when liberty is nibbled away, for expedients, and by parts." Burke's erudition and style are refreshing in a modern political landscape of mediocrity and mindless soundbites. Editor Peter Stanlis divides the book into eight roughly chronological sections from Burke's seminal writings in the mid-1700's through his celebrated expressions as a member of Parliament debating the American Revolution, Ireland and Catholic Emancipation, Economic Reforms, British misrule in India and the subsequent impeachment of Governor-General Hastings. The Book concludes with selections from Burke's exceptional observations on the French Revolution, thoughts which galvanized British opposition to the revolutionary regimes and gave the intellectual undergirding of the Napoleonic Wars. Stanlis also provides the reader with helpful prequels setting the stage for each of the selected writings or speeches, a chronological table of Burke's life, a handy selected bibliography and a concise indroduction to the whole work which is an excellent summary of what follows. This hardback edition is well bound on quality paper. It will survive the many re-readings and quick searches it deserves. The one flaw in this edition is the lack of a helpful appendix or index. Even though my copy is well underscored and highlighted with marginal notes to flag key thoughts or expressions, appendices would save time thumbing through nearly 700 pages to find a particular quote. The book is not a quick read, yet it is surprisingly relevant to today's headlines. Burke's brilliant insights into human nature and the practical workings of governments far outshine most modern pundits. This book is now a standard reference work in my personal library, sitting on a close-at-hand shelf for ready access.

Bibliotheca Curiosa: A Treatise of Magic Incantations 1700
Published in Paperback by Kessinger Publishing Company (March, 1997)
Average review score: 

I loved the contents of this book.This book helped with many of the incantations I wanted to know. Now I have no more questions about the unknown.

Biology of Emotions: New Understanding Derived from Biological Multidisciplinary Investigation: First Electrophysiological Measurements
Published in Textbook Binding by Charles C Thomas Pub Ltd (January, 1967)
Average review score: 

Wrongly forgottenThis book remains today one of these old books that contain essential ideas that have been forgoten, and therefore not researched. It is therefore one of these old books (most ideas date from the 1930s) that every young (and less young) psychologist should read. It contains crucial notions on how brain and muscles coordinate.