More Pages: Southwest 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


A new Southwest Airlines employee agrees. . .
An excellent read about an excellent company
weLEAD Book Review from leadingtoday.org
This book is a must read for anyone who wants to see how the concepts of servant leadership are actually put into practice in a real company of over 30,000 employees. You will learn about a company that practices the golden rule as corporate policy-and has paid quarterly dividends for 97 consecutive quarters doing it! The "Southwest culture" described at length in the book gives this company its strategic advantage. This culture genuinely cares about the welfare of the Southwest employees-which are approximately 82% unionized. Southwest Airlines has turned a profit every year since 1973, yet it maintains the lowest fares in a highly competitive industry. It is one of the most admired airlines in the world, regularly ranks best in customer service, and has a consistently high safety record. Southwest was the first airline to establish a home page on the Internet, and was named by BusinessWeek as a "Web Smart 50" company.
Some of the book's statistics about the airline are now out of date due to incredible growth. More recent statistics are readily available at Southwest's web site . However, the principles discussed in this book that are used to guide this most admired airline are timeless.
Review by Dr. J. Howard Baker


An oil-water mix of anti-human polemics and natural historyLots of the book concerns nuclear test sites and vague ruminations. However, the author rarely lets any chance to disparage humans pass. In typical socialist enviro-speak she sees humans and any human sign as an evil scar upon the land - of course with the exception of the house, well, out-buildings and cars on her piece of purchased wilderness in a place where before "there was no one". (Reminds me of the definition of an eco-freak as someone who already has his cabin in the woods.) A typical sentiment would be "In Utah, God wants you to have a lawn". Mildly entertaining when you first read it 50 years ago in Abbey's writings but about as fun as hearing Uncle Morty give you the 800th telling of his hemorrhoid operation - time to move on.
On page 145 she finds a piece of asphalt and yellow paint in her yard (which she thinks is nuclear waste of some kind)and spends until page 194 and lots of dead tree (paper) figuring out that it is harmless and not evidence of the end of life as we know it. This kind of makes the 200 pages of anti-nuclear sentiments impotent. In her defense, she at least tells the truth - unlike many anti-humans who openly state that any means justify the end.
A better question is why do I keep reading these "nature" writings that usually turn into political rants? I think it's because I love these areas and have spent time in them and once in a while - although much too rarely - I find a gem like David James Duncan's "The River Why" or Norman Macleans "A River Runs Through It", and hope to find another. Sadly, what passes for nature writing these days is usually an offensive slur to people I've known and loved in my years of rambling through Western North America with my itinerant geologist father.
In the end, maybe I'm the dumb one because I paid 15.95 for this book. I recommend that whoever reads this not.
A quirky naturalist revisits the splitting of the atomThe contrast between the awesome, quiet beauty of the desert and its use to develop weapons of mass destruction is a supreme contradiction that drives Meloy on a journey that takes her to ground zero at White Sands Missile Range, Los Alamos, and a natural gas field bounded by Navajo, Ute, and Apache reservations. The book closes on a walkabout across the mesas and through canyons near her home in the San Juan River valley, which cuts across the Southwest's Four Corners.
Also a surprise is the ironic humor she brings to the subject. While never forgetting the threat to survival of humanity that nuclear weapons represent, Meloy also marvels at the incongruities in the details of a story that encompasses the worlds of physicists, environmentalists, biologists, geologists, naturalists, anthropologists, Native Americans, tourists, and the ordinary working people and residents of present-day small towns and rural areas. On a parallel course with the story she tells are the incongruities of her own story, which starts with the accidental scalding death of a lizard in a coffee cup and ends on a high bluff in a tumultuous electrical storm.
I recommend this book to anyone with an interest in the American Southwest, its history and geology, and a kind of nature writing that engages subjects beyond itself and attempts to reconcile them. Instead of using wilderness to escape from the realities of the modern world, Meloy attempts to embrace the two, with a wry smile, even while experiencing a shudder that sometimes shakes her to the core.
Irony, humor and compassionHere is a book that keeps people inside natural history where they belong, with all of our gifts and our hubris. In the author's search to understand the role of the Southwest in the nuclear age, she touches a universal humanism beyond the usual confines of nature writing. (What could be more anti-human than an atomic bomb?)
Meloy's tongue-in-cheek phrases, wit and sense of irony may elude the more literal-minded and politically rigid who expect but won't get a polemic. In a few instances this playfulness weakens her serious conclusions about the bomb era in American history (although humor may be used as a catharsis for so horrific a scenario as nuclear war). Best are her fair-handed and lyrical images of the physical world and of places like Los Alamos, the Trinity bomb site in New Mexico, the Utah canyons and her own home acreage, which as a cattle pasture next to town and a graveyard is hardly a wilderness. The weeds and the Pennzoil bottles play starring roles in this funny chapter.
This book inspired me to pay attention, to look harder at our past, present and future. It's well worth reading.


Worried
TENDER, JUICY!
Scrumptious Classmates

Southwest Style: A Home-Lover's Guide to Architecture and DeThank you for carrying this as well as several others pertaining to this area of the USA.
More than the Southwest
SOUTHWEST GALLORE

Nonsense
A delightful little book
Beautiful and Informative

Okay for the Legend, too short for the lifeThis book does have substantial merit as a review of
the many movies about Wyatt Earp. It certainly reveals
the Legend if not the complete Life of its subject.
The definitive book about Wyatt Earp in Tombstone has
not yet been written. The Kansas period has recently been
adequately covered by Lee Silva's Wyatt Earp, The Cowtown
Years. Kudos to Casey Tefertiller and Allen Barra for some
new insights. There is a new generation of writers who offer
promise to finally nail this subject down. In the meanwhile
we will have to make do with what we have - the movies and
fantasies nothwithstanding. The truth is out there somewhere.
It will not be found in short magazine articles of opinions.
This book comes closer than most.
Just read it
Add This to Your Bookshelf

A struggle to read.
Interesting Book!Evelyn Horan - teacher/counselor/children's author
Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Books One - Three
a unique concept well doneI noted some very negative reviews on this book. To each his own. However, it is a short read and I think you may get the same impression I did. It's worth a try.


Disturbing EndingThe questions the ending raised were huge - I would have liked more insight into the characters of Isabelle's in-laws - mainly her husband Etienne, whose cruelty appeared to stem from the influence of his "evil" mother (what else do you call a woman who hates her grandchild to the extent she did)? But Chevalier never really explains why her in-laws did what they did or what made them capable of such an atrocity. Thus, I found that the ending left me with a lot of unanswered questions which I have been turning around in my mind for days...I suppose that was probably Chevalier's intention.
A Beautiful mixture of Genres
Wonderful!

Great photos, inane captions. Other books are better.
Beautiful pictures, infantile text.
Beautiful pictures, hilarious text