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Agreed, but with a grain of salt
Agreed, but with a grain of salt.It's a wonderful beginners study Bible, but you might want to move onto a New Oxford Annotated Bible later on. (Another good one is the Concordia Self-study Bible. It's suitable for all Lutherans, not just Missouri Synod, and any other non-Catholic Christian as well.) The New Oxford is my all-time favorite, with the Concordia following along (the Concordia is actually a heavily edited edition of the NIV Study Bible).
Agreed, but with a grain of salt.It's a wonderful beginners study Bible, but you might want to move onto a New Oxford Annotated Bible later on. (Another good one is the Concordia Self-study Bible. It's suitable for all Lutherans, not just Missouri Synod, and any other non-Catholic Christian as well.) The New Oxford is my all-time favorite, with the Concordia following along (the Concordia is actually a heavily edited edition of the NIV Study Bible).


Good thriller2 years ago, while living in Savannah, Dr. Catherine Cordell barely survived a brutal rape. The serial rapist/murderer known as Andrew Capra, aka 'The Surgeon', had previously raped and killed three other women. His last victim, Dr. Cordell, fought back and killed him.
Now living in Boston and working as a trauma center doctor, Catherine Cordell soon finds out about some recent rapes and murders happening in the Boston area that are very similar to the one's committed by Andrew Capra, the man she killed 2 years ago. This killer starts sending her clues, which causes her to recapture all those hideous moments of the past. She soon finds out that she may be the final target.
Detective Thomas Moore is a rather easygoing guy (with a growing attachment to Cordell) assigned to these recent killings, along with lead detective Rizzoli, who happens to be a women struggling to prove herself to a mostly male police force.
Filled with well-choreographed emergency room action and engrossing scenes of life and death, this novel does not disappoint. It seemed very emotional and personal due to the often-brought up issue of rape. A well-rounded medical thriller.
'Where we go depends on what we know, and what we know depends on where we go'
Recommended
THE BANALITY OF EVILWhen Dr. Catherine Cordell arrived in Boston from Savannah two years ago, she thought she had left a nightmare behind her. She had shot and killed a serial killer as he was about to make her his fourth victim. Now it seems that either his ghost has shown up in Boston or there is a copycat on the loose as women are once again being killed and the modus operandi is the same as it was in Savannah -- chloroform/Rohypnol, duct tape and the removal of the woman's womb.
There's always a detective willing to go that extra mile to solve a crime and in this case it's Thomas Moore, a cop who is so well respected that he is referred to as Saint Thomas in his precinct. There's a good mix of other supporting characters and just as the serial killer has made Dr. Cordell the center of his focus, so have all the characters in this book. Gerritsen's cast will be jealous and envious and lonely and chauvinistic but they will all pull together to get the job done.
I found myself locking the doors in my home this weekend as I finished reading this book. Gerritsen points out that evil can be so ordinary that people you see on an everyday basis could be thinking of ways to kill you. It's an eerie thought. If I have one complaint about this book, it's the fact that there were some obvious clues sitting right there that the cops were not following up on. At one point, I wanted to take their hand and help them solve the crime. Authors can manipulate their stories any way they please and this reader will gladly be manipulated by Gerritsen as I see her as a primo author in this medical thriller genre.
Startling and satisfying!Dr. Catherine Cordell is the cool-headed surgeon, but she is also a former rape victim. As a string of rapes remarkably similar to her own begin to occur, she is startled. They are happening closeby, and detective Thomas Moore singles her out as the only possible connection. The only difference between Cordell and these new rape victims...she is the only one surviving.
As the story continues, we realize that the killer is now stalking Cordell's movements. Moore becomes her guardian, and later in the story, something more. However, until the killer is found, neither can rest...
The climactic ending leaves you gripping your seat and holding your breath. I salute Ms. Gerritsen for knowing how to formulate the medical thriller with such dexterity, wit, and sincerity.


Weird, Wacky, Wild, and... um, did I mention Weird?Smith is from Britain, so it's understandable that there might be some British slang in. But making the slang contemporary throws the reader off a bit (since it's ostensibly set in the future, see). On top of that, I was reading an American edition of the book, so many (although not all) of the Britishisms were Americanized. The final result is a book written in partially Americanized contemporary British slang, which leaves no room for doubt as to which side of the 'wack' line this book falls.
Another hallmark of reviews of these sorts of books is the phrase, 'I don't want to give anything away, but...' There's so much going on in this book that it's hard not to. I'll do my best to keep revelations to a minimum, but read no further than this paragraph if you want to stay spoiler-free. The short answer is that this book is great. If you love science fiction, this'll be a keeper.
So, quick and dirty introduction: Stark, the book's narrator, is a sort of a futuristic hard-boiled private eye. He's got contacts everywhere, he's 100% sure of himself at all times, and he seemingly can get any job done no matter how unusual. His speciality, apparently, is finding lost people, which brings us to this story wherein things don't go quite as they'd been planned. Enh, gotta have conflict somewhere, right?
Smith paints an unusual world in this future Earth. Most of the land is covered by The City which is, itself, divided into Neighbourhoods, each of which has its own rules and regulations. But there's nothing normal about these neighbourhoods -- there's Cat, which is apparently run by cats; there's Action, where you can be blown up if you visit for too long; there's Red, which is run by gangs and thugs. C.f. the 'wack' statement I started out this review with. Of course, Stark has contacts everywhere, so the sense of danger is combined with a sense of extreme confidence, and the reader is just swept along, absorbing the events.
Cross that with an unreliable narrator -- an admitted unreliable narrator -- and you end up with a story that's nearly as bizarre as it thinks it is. Obscurity is built up, layer upon layer, until you're not sure what is real and what Stark's just making up, or what Smith is making up, and then you pause and realize that of course Smith is making it all up, so why should we care about Stark anyway and then you take a deep breath and put the book down for a minute and watch TV instead.
I'm a TV addict, what can I say?
Seriously, though, it's tough to know what to believe, even at the end where Stark pretty much gives the game away. Or, at least, claims to. There's always the undercurrent that there may be something more to the story, but this is a review, not a critical analysis, so I won't go further than that here. That's not to say I haven't been thinking about this, off and on, ever since I finished reading the book.
At the end of the day, all you have to go on is the text of the story, so you have to either believe something or just mark the book down as a waste of time. And it's not even close to being a waste of time. Smith has managed to tell a story where the reader must constantly reassess what has transpired. You read along, assuming one set of facts, and then learn something new which changes what has gone before and you think to yourself, "Ah, now I get it." And then Smith lets another bomb drop later on and you think to yourself, "Oh, now I understand." And so on, and so on. By the end, your disbelief suspenders have been given an incredible workout.
Funny 'n' NastyThe second time I read it, the comedy wasn't as sharp, which was fine, because it made the real story, the tragedy, stand out all the more.
I'm not doing this book justice at all. I can't. Buy it, borrow it, do anything to wrap your hands around it. And read it. And read it again. I'm going to.
A brilliant introduction to a talented writerNow that ONLY FORWARD is available here in the states, it would be a shame for anyone to miss it. Read it. Be amazed.


Questions, questions? Answers, answers.I Preliminaries
Introduction - Basic C++ Syntax and Semantics - Understanding the Management Perspective- The Architectural Perspective
II Object-Oriented Design
Object-Oriented Fundamentals - Specification of Observable Behavior - Proper Inheritance - Detecting and Correcting Improper Inheritance - Error Handling Strategies - Testing Strategies
III Language Facilities
References ('&' type) - New and Delete - Inline Functions - Const Correctness - Namespaces - Using Static - Derived Classes - Access Control - Friend Classes and Friend Functions - Constructors and Destructors -Virtual Functions - Initialization Lists - Operator Overloading - Assignment Operators - Templates - Exception Tactics - Types and RTTI - Containers
IV Topics
Mixing and Overloading with Inheritance - The Big Three (destructors, copy constructors, assignment operators) - Using Objects to Prevent Memory Leaks - Wild Pointers and Other Devilish Errors - High-Performance Software - COM and Active X - Transitioning to CORBA - C Language Considerations - Private and Protected Inheritance - Pointers to Member Functions - The Transition to OO and C++
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I don't think there are any great C++ books. A great book would eliminate the need for others, which none that I've seen do. Even if not great, this is a good book, and worth reviewing. The book attempts to be two things: first, a programming style guide, and second, a nuts-and-bolts C++ reference book. (Incidentally, the cover is somewhat misleading: it also trumpets coverage of ActiveX, CORBA, and COM, but the material on them here is very thin - if you need to understand them, look elsewhere).
As a programming style guide, it is rather a mixed bag. Its main weakness is a tendency towards salesmanship - that is, the authors are trying to sell you something and are therefore quite aggressive in discussing the merits of their wares and tend to be silent when discussing the weaknesses of them. A particular problem I could point out is the use of C++ in DLLs. If you follow the style guide in this book, and try to put your code into DLL's, you will find that you have some very serious versioning problems, problems the advice in this book was instrumental in creating but useless in alleviating. This doesn't mean that the advice isn't generally good, but there are issues here that the authors are not as frank as they should be in discussing. (I don't know why propaganda of this sort is so common in C++ books, but it is. I've never seen one without it.)
Whatever it may be as a style guide, as a nuts and bolts problem solving book this is really very good. C++ is a large language - it is by far the largest, most complex language ever to find wide use, and there it contains many pitfalls. This book's great strength is in identifying many of these problem areas, and providing solutions to them. The discussion of object construction, copying, and destruction, alone, for example would make this book worth owning. The coverage is not, however, complete. Reader knowledge of language basics is assumed, and some advanced topics, such as multiple inheritance, are not covered. Because of this, you will not find this a good book for learning C++, nor should it be the only C++ book you own.
That said, of all the C++ books I own, this is the one that most often contained the easiest to find, clearest, and best answer to the problems that I actually had when using (as opposed to learning) the language. The answers were generally easiest to find because of the extensive table of contents (it averages about one entry per page) and very complete index. In addition to being easy to find, the answers were also clearly written. There is a lot of sample code in this book, and it is generally very good code for teaching its points. The authors also clearly understand their stuff, and I did not find any of the dreadful this-is-too-technical-for-the-reader hand-waving that so often mars computer industry books. Finally, in addition to being clearly written, the answers were also usually the most complete and thorough I found among the C++ books I own - the problems the book addressed, it addressed very well.
In summary, until and unless that great C++ book is ever written - and I'm not holding my breath - this is a book that almost any C++ developer would do well to have, limits and all.
A great reference
Excellent concise reference.The entire book is a series of FAQs, organized extremely well. Each topic has its own chapter. Within a chapter, the questions progress from general to specific, often in the same order that they pop into my mind. Each question is followed by a cut-to-the-chase 1-sentence answer, followed by a more detailed explanation. Finding your question in the book is facilitated by a table of contents that lists each FAQ, and a detailed index.
I also like the editorializing. ("Arrays are evil.") One reason I find C++ baffling is that there are so many ways to do something. The authors pick a way and tell you why it is better than the alternatives. That's information I can use.
As a bonus, there's a chapter on understanding management's perspective. For example, when you're trying to convince management to adopt the object-oriented paradigm, "Show why it's relevant... don't use the 'it will keep the developers happy' approach ... most managers think that they are the people who need to be kept happy ...".
Incidentally, when I find the time, I plan to systematically read the book start to finish, just to fill in gaps in my knowledge. It is entertaining enough that I'm actually looking forward to it.


A wonderfully comprehensive insight to the Phish experienceAs Mike has said, "I always liked a good bar chart." (See phish.net FAQ) This book is chock full of useful information not only about setlist openers and closers, comprehensive information (compiled by ZZYZX) on individual tours, a complete "Every Time Played" in addition to multiple essays, interviews, reviews of shows and venues.
One of the most interesting tidbits I found was a multi-region area chart showing the rise and fall of "I am H2" within the Mike's Groove. Really neat stuff.
This book is truly a taper/trader's almanac with the most complete setlists available for every show the band has played with circulation and scarcity guides to match.
I can't say enough about it, this book is a must for any phan. Kudos to the Mockingbird Foundation for producing a book worthy of the hype which preceeded it!
PS. It's complete through 10.7 Shoreline!
Want all the facts and stats on Phish? Look no farther!I had purchased this book originally when I was getting into tape trading. I needed reliable setlists, basically. What I got with the Phish Companion was reliable setlists. And information about every single show, too. And reviews. And an invaluable taper's guide. And on and on and on....I'm sure there's more things I'm forgetting about, but it's just that great and jam packed with info. I can literally pick up the book anytime and read for hours and find something new every time ( also great bathroom reading... ).
I really don't know how this book could be improved on. I suppose if ( or when, hopefully! ) Phish comes off their hiatus and starts touring again, the book will have to be updated. But as far a complete and comprehensive guide to all Phish activity up to 10-7-00, this is THE book to buy. And hey, it's for a good cause too. Now get out and see some shows!
An admittedly biased review...The book contains tons of new setlists and stories that have never been seen by fans. It is also chock full of statistics, reviews, song histories, and informative side chapters that will inform the newest and oldest fan alike.
For more information on both the book and our upcoming tribute album, check out the Foundation's website.....


Common sense from two "real" guys who have heard it all...The Dr. Drew and Adam Book is a comprehensive collection of all those priceless nuggets of advice that I wish EVERYBODY could hear. Therefore, I think EVERYBODY should buy this book. It's content is served up in the "Complete Idiot's Guide To..." style, so even a fourteen year old with Attention-Deficit Disorder won't be able to put it down. There's lots of interesting sidebars, input from celebrities who have been guests on their show, etc.
This book is like Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus... only it's funnier, shorter, more practical, more hip, is about more than just relationships, and just better. The government should buy this book by the millions and make it required reading for all high school freshmen. Adults (especially parents) will love it, too. And it's cheap!
A guidebook to life--enlightening and entertaining.Dr. Drew and Adam are an unlikely pair who share an original chemistry. Dr. Drew, a board-certified physician and addiction medicine specialist, provides easy-to-understand, authoritative information on a variety of topics critical to every human. Adam Carolla, a radio personality, comedian, actor and former construction worker, provides the wit, charm and humor that make even the hard answers easy to swallow.
Learn what Adam believes a cat can teach men about handling women. Hear Dr. Drew separate the myths from the truths about sexuality. Read Adam's rules about who should be banned from having sex. Listen to Dr. Drew's advice on abuse, drug use, STDs and many, many more topics.
This is a great book for parents to use to initiate discussions with their kids about these difficult topics. If you can't bring yourself to talk to your kid, at least let Dr. Drew and Adam do it. They bring a sense of moral conscience and responsibility back to relationships.
WowP.S. I live with my aunt and my mom died in a car crash. I never knew my dad.


How can intelligence survive or be revived?Dr Jacques COULARDEAU
We're still living in itMost academic books are about ten percent new. Inovative ones are about 20 percent new. McLuhan claimed his was about 40 percent new, which is what makes is such a rough read. It isn't his prose style, which is charming and felicitous. But when introducing a new discipline, there must needs be enough bridges left to the old ones (in this case sociology, history, rhetoric, etc.) that redundancy occurs. That explains why you'll see some repetition in this book, as well as what appears to be disorganiztion. This leads some reader/critics to assume that UNDERSTANDING MEDIA is simply sloppy and poorly edited but far from it: it's a powerful, almost radical way to restructure our view of American (and hence the world's) society.
For what it's worth, I was a communications major in college (UVA 1977) with several McLuhan papers to my credit. charess@ync.net
McLUHAN IS STILL "FAR-OUT MAN"In his third book, McLuhan reviews the evolutionary extension of humans, and notes the impact that they have had, and the toll they take on consciousness. He asserts that this evolutionary progression, now manifested in the extensions of electricity, has placed our nervous system around the world. (The instantaneous, electric information carried inside by the nerves, is now externalized.) This is "media," and it impacts our perception of reality (what a concept,) and that to be forewarned of its impact is to be forearmed.
McLuhan is still "far-out man." Written in 1964, this book is more insightful and current than any present media pundit's prognostication. Hear in our lessons on how to surf the electronic wave into the shore light of the next millenium. But be advised, once you read McLuhan, you will never be able to ignore the media's massage again.


Interesting if cliched characters, but too cutesy
This book is now more important than ever.
A Heartwarming BookThis heartwarming story is about the relationship and concern of an aunt and her niece. They both try to accept that there's someone important and new in their lives.
Meet Pollyanna, and her aunt Polly, they both live in Vermont. Pollyanna and her aunt devolp trustcin each other after facing many obsticles.
Eleanor H. Porter brought in very discriptive detail. She changed font and size when she expressed what each of the character did, said,see and thought. Eleanor H.Porter is a very talented author. She convinces the reader with her expressive chapter endings.
You will find this story irrestible if you love stories that have characters who devolp many relationships. Adults and kids who have read this book will say its hard to put down. Don't miss this wonderful oppertuinty to see how this very good relationship begins, devolps and ends.


Wonderful!
A great workbook for self-discovery and family history
Specific yet flexible topics...would get anyone's pen going!
It's a wonderful beginners study Bible, but you might want to move onto a New Oxford Annotated Bible later on. (Another good one is the Concordia Self-study Bible. It's suitable for all Lutherans, not just Missouri Synod, and any other non-Catholic Christian as well.) The New Oxford is my all-time favorite, with the Concordia following along (the Concordia is actually a heavily edited edition of the NIV Study Bible).