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Report of Explorations...
I think that the last reviewer was/is confused.

Think carefully about something!of the Names in the book's....which is a good thing.....
One is on the Durbin's and the next is half of the Logsdon.
The Images from the photographs displayed are very pore:
And are the images of map's ect..
I have found that some of the photo's have mixt info....and
no infomation about them!
Did not carefully put it together......
There is however a lot of infomation in which i believe;
was year's of study.
There are other people who gave information of there line.
to put in this book.
Perhaps if one is looking for his or here line........ they may fine it here....


ONLY the Holarctic Embrizines (defined by Sibley & Monro)!

Cut and paste jobThe author chronicles the season from begining to end but in the interim, his narrative is sadly unable to capture either the drama of the season or the personality of the team. There is no effort to get behind the headlines and boxscores to the real story within the story.
Save your time and money or, better yet, spend it on the Roberts/Rogers version of the Whiz Kids historic season. Their book is a page turner that will not disappoint you.
Fire & Spirit disappointing
JUST THE FACTS

Don't buy it: Save yourself some confusionSo I ended up downloading the examples. The build.xml files in the download are laughably different from the book, and several steps need to be taken which the book mentions nothing of.
It's a major shame since the book looked very good. But I completely wasted my £38 and have wound up using the (confusing) online tutorial.
Apparently a FCS version of the book is coming out in several months. Wait for it. Assuming that they haven't changed version yet again it should be a good book. Right now it is a waste of money.
Why not just read these pages on line
TerseAfter skimping thru it briefly, it appears to be very terse and I'm not sure if it can be said as a helpful "tutorial" as such for any beginning/intermediate Java Web Service learner other than showing what EAE(Early Access Edition) is all about.
This book in my opinion needs to be evolved into 3 volumes:
1) Basic XML parsing(SAX, JDOM)
2) XML Schema & Java mappings
3) Java Web Services implementation framework(HTTP, Servlet,RMI,etc).
My verdict is this book is not worth its weight and price at the moment.


DisappointingThe rest of the book contains profiles of professionals in healthcare administration. Most of these professionals are in very senior positions in the industry, and talk about the path they took to get there.
Before reading this book, my impression of professionals in the healthcare industry was that they are generally noble people who care about the well being of fellow humans. However, after reading the profiles in this book, I get the impression that these people are just as ruthless, career oriented, and money driven as people in any other profession.
Starts of good, then looses focusThe second part (which is the rest of the book), contains profiles of healthcare managers. These profiles are authored by the managers themselves. The book states that the profiles are diverse in every way, and are therefore truly representative of careers in healthcare management. But almost all the profiles are of people in senior level management positions, and the majority are of Vice Presidents and Presidents/CEOs.
A few of the contributors have gone to the trouble of giving good career advice.
However, the vast majority have taken up most of the space to tell us about the impressive job titles they have held, and the associations they belong to. Towards the end of their profiles, they have dedicated hardly a sentence or two to giving advice, which is mostly common sense (such as getting proper education, finding a mentor, volunteering, etc).
Looking at the profiles of these people, it is not surprising to note that most of them ended up either as VPs or Presidents/CEOs, given that most of them graduated from the top ranking universities in the country.
So if you have graduated (or expect to) from an Ivy League school, you stand a good chance of following the career path of one of the people in the profiles. But this book is definitely not a very useful guide for the rest of us.


More Than Nausea
For Carson FansKasoff's book is a collection of anecdotes of booking various guests and what they were really like. Henny Youngman was a nice guy, Bob Hope did not have an entourage, Tommy Smothers worked without a net, Buddy Hackett was surprisingly professional, and so on. Along the way, there are enough stories and reactions of Carson and McMahon as to provide personal perspectives on these men the drier ones offered by other biographies out there.
Why the three star rating? First, the book needs the help of an editor, as some things we may say verbally just don't work in print as sentence fragments. Second, it is of most interest to Carson fans and less so to outsiders. While it is not a deep, analytical work, it is a pleasant light read, and I do recommend to Carson/Tonight Show fans.


A One Coffee Pulp WesternKit and his fellow trapper friends are on their way to the annual summer rendezvous, where mountain men throughout the frontier trade items and recieve money for the many animal pelts they have collected throughout the past year. Blackfoot Indians have eyes for this large bounty of animal pelts and decide to take them. They do, .... Go git 'em, Kit!
This is the first book I've read from Doug Hawkins and the Kit Carson series. I'd have to read one or two more to get a good feel of him, but judging from this book, the Kit Carson series appears ho-hum. Kit Carson, the way Hawkins writes his character, doesn't stand out. The most interesting character in this book was a loner mountain man named Petey. He's a slightly touched, contentious trapper whose best friend is a grizzly bear. He has spent so much time alone, trapping and fending for himself, people are an aggravation to him. I liked what Hawkins did with his character.
In any case, it's a quick read. You can pick the book up cheap and spend a day lost in a light adventure. Better than spending the day lost in TV's fast food fare.


Soldier in Buckskin

It's the worst book ever written