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

The BREAKTHROUGH FACTOR : CREATING SUCCESS AND HAPPINESS THROUGH A LIFE OF VALUE
Published in Paperback by Fireside (December, 1998)
Author: Henry Marsh
Average review score:

Inspiration from Beginning to End!
I've had the opportunity to hear Henry Marsh speak and was very impressed. He is dynamnic, funny and his topics are relevant and important.

His book is just as good, maybe even better. I just loved the personal stories and how much he overcame to accomplish the things that matter to him.

This book has truly helped me be a better person.


British Dramatists from Dryden to Sheridan
Published in Paperback by Southern Illinois Univ Pr (Trd) (November, 1975)
Authors: George Henry Nettleton, George Winchester Stone, and Arthur E. Case
Average review score:

Nettleton rules!
Desperation can be the source of wisdom. I've known for a year that this fall I'll be teaching restoration and 18th century drama. Worse, I volunteered to do so. Worse yet, as of yesterday I had only 7 weeks left in which to pick a text of plays. And absolutely worst of all, while trying to look up restoration and 18th century texts on the Web, I found my own course staring me in the face: "English 232, Smith College, Gillian Kendall". Yikes! It was definitely time to find a text.

Nettleton saved me. I had been about to order a completely new edition of the plays (sample copy graciously sent to me by the publisher), albeit the edition was in many ways, well, let's say "not quite right for the course". Then I went to the library. Despite the recommendation of a friend -- a renowned 18th century expert -- I had been suspicious of Nettleton. The copyright on the edition I looked at was 17 years before I was born (sorry about the ageism, Mr. Nettleton). But the volume has everything. Lovely grandiose heroic drama (but not too much of it); Dryden's adaptation of Shakespeare's *Antony and Cleopatra*; five classic comedies of manners (the backbone of restoration drama), and a pleasant smorgasbord of the best of the 18th century.

I have a text. My students have a text. Life is good.


Browning As a Philosophical and Religious Teacher
Published in Paperback by University Press of the Pacific (May, 2003)
Author: Henry Jones
Average review score:

More than just a poet
Deals with Robert Browning not simply as a poet, but rather as the exponent of a system of ideas on moral and religious subjects, which may fairly be called a philosophy.


The Buccaneer King: The Biography of Sir Henry Morgan, 1635-1688
Published in Hardcover by Dodd Mead (March, 1978)
Author: Dudley Pope
Average review score:

Captmorgan1670
Outstanding account of this period in history. Mr. Morgan's reputation of a conniving thug are dispelled. This is a fun and informative book.


Bundling
Published in Paperback by Consortium Book Sales & Dist (March, 2001)
Author: Henry Reed Stiles
Average review score:

Hey Amazon! Fix your typo!
This title should read "Bundling: Its Origins, Progress, & Decline in America". The use of "Its" (without the apostrophe) is correct here, since what is needed is the possessive form of the pronoun "It", NOT the contraction for "It is".

Hey, Amazon! Fix it: it makes you look stupid.


Cabbages and Kings
Published in Hardcover by Amereon Ltd (15 May, 2002)
Author: O. Henry
Average review score:

I'm glad O Henry escaped prison
I am glad O Henry escaped from his Texas prison, because his period of exile in Honduras provided him with beautiful fodder for this book. Actually, it is a series of linking vignettes about a mythical town (Coralio) in the mythical Central American "Banana Republic" of Anchuria. The protagonists are American and other foreign misfits who have formed a colony along the disease ridden coast of Anchuria. Achingly funny stories populate Cabbages and Kings, especially the one about an Irish Soldier of Fortune who gets swindled by a Guatemalan general and seeks revenge. Although extremely humourous, Cabbages and Kings is historically valuable as well. It provides an accurate representation of turn-of-the-century life in Caribbean Honduras.


Calculus and Analytic Geometry
Published in Hardcover by Prentice Hall College Div (January, 1990)
Authors: C. H. Edwards, David E. Penney, and Henry Edwards
Average review score:

another good book on calculus
This is the typical first-year college textbook on calculus. Nothing especially remarkable about it. It may be a bit stronger on multivariate calculus than most first-year books, but that's about it. Colour figures are good. Explanations are clear. Proofs readable. Lot's of exercises with and without answers. And it includes some relatively silly BASIC programs to illustrate numerical methods.


Calculus With Analytic Geometry: Student Solutions Manual
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall College Div (June, 1999)
Author: C. Henry Edwards
Average review score:

A wonderful resource
A wonderful companion to a geniously written textbook. An absolute must for a calculus student.


Caliban's Reason : Introducing Afro-Caribbean Philosophy (Africana Thought)
Published in Library Binding by Routledge (March, 2000)
Author: Paget Henry
Average review score:

Afro-Caribbean Philosophy, Politics, and Thought
Afro-Caribbean Philosophy? Is there such as thing? Antiguan scholar-activist Paget Henry makes this question moot by more than introducing the reader to Afro-Caribbean philosophical thought. He shows magically how the thought of black peoples in the Caribbean has changed not only the region, but the world. He dedicates the work to some of the 'anchors' of Afro-Caribbean thought(Frantz Fanon, C.L.R. James, Sylvia Wynter, and Wilson Harris), and also to fellow Antiguan Tim Hector(author of the literary column "Fan the Flame"). Invoking the Shakespearean metaphor of Caliban(the Arawak, Slave, descendent of both) from Shakespeare's "The Tempest," Henry shows how peoples of the Caribbean have had reason and rationality that has survived the Middle Passage and racist notions of European Enlightenment era philosophies. He starts off by framing the African philosophical heritage of the Caribbean, then discusses the work of Fanon, James, and Harris. He then moves on to the work of Sylvia Wynter, a critique of Jurgen Habermas's notion of communicative reason and rationality(a thinker whose discussions lack the role of myth and to a lesser extent race in the discourse of political philosophy), a Caribbean perspective of Afro-American philosophy, the state of Caribbean Marxism, and delves into Pan-Africanist thought. The overarching categories Henry deliniates in the book are two traditions of Caribbean black thought and activism: (1) the poeticists and (2) the historicists. Henry concludes with attempting to link these two traditions and show how futher contributions from Caribbean peoples can further humanity in understanding the relavance of black thought. If you want to be exposed to the world of Afro-Caribbean philosophy, run and pick up this extraordinary and challenging book.


A California Dreamer in King Henry's Court
Published in Hardcover by Silver Dawn Media (01 December, 1989)
Author: Robert L. Plunkett
Average review score:

A reviewer from Texas
"A California Dreamer in King Henry's Court" is the story of adventurer Harold Hurgood who journeys back in time from twentieth century London to the year 1535 during the tyrannical reign of King Henry The Eighth and his Tower of London horrors. From chapter to chapter the reader travels along with Hurgood along a circuitous and sometimes dangerous route meeting interesting characters along the way. Who could not forget "John The Large" and little "Annalisa?"

And who could not be amused at times by Hurgood himself as a bard and then a knight, and then not fear for him when he comes to realize his tenuous place as a subject to the tyrant King.

The historical details and splendid dialogue of the time are well researched, from the major events and people true to life down to little things like unwashed boards for plates, and to own a Bible risked the stake.

As an author, Robert L. Plunkett is on a par with the likes of Jules Verne and H. G. Wells. "A California Dreamer in King Henry's Court" is a "must have" for science fiction and history buffs. You won't be disappointed.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Tennessee
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