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

Born to Reproduce
Published in Paperback by Navpress Publishing Group (July, 1975)
Average review score: 

Best Discipleship tract I've ever readThis was a truly life changing tract to read. It changed my whole orientation to ministry. It is probably one of the two best tracts I've ever read and has had a profound effect on my Christian life. It will really encourage you to focus your life on pouring yourself into others to help them follow God.

Borrowing to Build Your Business: Getting Your Banker to Say "Yes"
Published in Paperback by Dearborn Trade Publishing (April, 1997)
Average review score: 

Highly recommended primer of solid, basic, practical adviceBorrowing To Build Your Business: Getting Your Banker To Say "Yes" by small business advisor George M. Dawson (University of Texas at San Antonio Small Business Development Center) is a straightforward, "reader friendly" guide to convincing any bank loan officer to solidly back an entrepreneurial or corporate enterprise. From selecting the best possible banker, to being aware of the pressures on banks and bankers, to the test of the five big C's (Character, Capacity, Condition, Collateral, and Capital), Borrowing To Build Your Business is a first-rate and highly recommended primer of solid, basic, practical advice that every business owner should know before seeking to secure financial assistance from a lending institution.

The Call Center Dictionary
Published in Paperback by Miller Freeman Books (01 February, 1996)
Average review score: 

The Call Center DictionaryEl uso del diccionario es con fines de ampliar mis conocimientos de centrales telefonicas para optener un mayor rendimiento academico en el desarrollo de mi ptoyecto de tesis de grado para optar al titulo de Ingenieria de sistemas.

The Cambridge Companion to Jung
Published in Paperback by Cambridge University Press (July, 1997)
Average review score: 

A Useful CompanionWhile the work of Carl Gustav Jung is of immense importance to the development of psychological and philosophical thought in the 20th century, the written works of Jung and many of his followers are framed within the historical context of the first half of the century. In more recent years, many volumes have been published to explain Jungian thought, often to popularize it, occasionally to excoriate it. This collection of essays edited by Polly Young Eisendrath and Terence Dawson is an excellent critical introduction to Jungian and post-Jungian thought from a 21st century perspective. While very readable, the essays are scholarly and avoid oversimplifying the ideas to make them more popularly palatable. In addition to being a useful introduction, the depth of the essays should make them interesting even to readers who are familiar with Jung and his work.

The Chinese experience
Published in Unknown Binding by Weidenfeld and Nicolson ()
Average review score: 

Outstanding overview of timeless Chinese peculiaritiesThis book is an extremely well-written overview of the major distinctives of Chinese culture throughout the centuries. I didn't realize until I read this book why so many other Chinese history/culture books have not resonated well with me. It's because all the others have tried to tell the Chinese story linearly and chronologically, which is a good way of approaching Western Civilization (The Greek period, the Roman period, the Dark Ages, the Medieval Ages, the Rennaisance, etc) but not at ALL the way to look at Chinese history, where so many ideas have remained timeless from dynasty to dynasty, and progress is not measured from one epoch to the next. This book takes a more "horizontal" approach and zeroes in on various aspects of the culture, illuminating the Chinese presuppositions and where they differ from those of the Western mind. It's lucid, entertaining, and fascinating, neither insulting nor presumptious about what the reader knows.

Chuck the Puck (Good Sports Series)
Published in Hardcover by Zondervan (June, 1999)
Average review score: 

Great for kids starting sportsThe book is fun for kids to play with and it rhymes while telling a story of sportsmanship. I would recommend it to anyone with kids starting sports.

Comic Captioned Capers: Of Lil' John and Company
Published in Paperback by Sunstone Press (March, 1995)
Average review score: 

I laughed so hard I had to go to the bathroom!Mr. Dawson taught journalism in Gladewater High School. Creative and super bright, nothing he wrote was like other writers' works. He took pictures of his son and put captions that are really funny. I mean how many kids in diapers would say, "Know what I'd be if I ate Mom an' Dad? I'd be a orphan.." Put this coming out of a little kid with two teeth, and it is as good as the Sunday comics. or better. This book will tug at your heart strings. LUTHER BUTLE

Confucius
Published in Paperback by Hill & Wang Pub (October, 1982)
Average review score: 

Great book! A must read for students of Confucius.Excellant study of Confucius's teachings organized by topic.
Here are the chapters: 1. Confucius, 2. Learning and teaching, 3. Ritual and music, 4. Humaneness and other virtues, 5. Gentlemen and knights, 6. Government and people, 7. A Confucian China.
Here are the chapters: 1. Confucius, 2. Learning and teaching, 3. Ritual and music, 4. Humaneness and other virtues, 5. Gentlemen and knights, 6. Government and people, 7. A Confucian China.

The Consumer Trap: Big Business Marketing in American Life (The History of Communication)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Illinois Pr (Txt) (05 May, 2003)
Average review score: 

A Brilliant CritiqueThis is no mere academic exercise despite its having been published by a university press. "The Consumer Trap" does for understanding contemporary commercial culture what Manufacturing Consent did for modern media studies. It is one of the most important and persuasive books I have ever read, and I compare it to the best of C. Wright Mills - which it resembles. Not since Veblen has a literate analyst taken on what capitalism has been doing to American life, gloves off, like Michael Dawson does. The statistics he cites about the staggering amounts being spent by business to keep the madness of our time-deprived and consumption-obsessed way of life going are worth the price of the book. Fans (like me) of Jacoby's "The Last Intellectuals" will keenly note that Dawson, albeit a Ph.D. in sociology, is making his living as a paralegal - and hence is free from the toady disciplinary and departmental politics that would have aborted this brilliant book. Tell your friends - and get together to discuss this book while we still have a remaining few shreds of social fabric which have not been turned into rubbish.

The Country Kitchen (Great Lakes Books)
Published in Paperback by Wayne State Univ Pr (T) (November, 1992)
Average review score: 

Michigan's answer to MFK FisherMildly intrigued by the title of this book, I bought a used copy...a flea market in Lunenberg, Mass. this past fall. It turned out to be a real gem. Superbly well-written, it weaves together accounts of the author's family life in rural Michigan at the turn of the Twentieth Century with recipes of the food the family ate. The effect is very much along the lines of MFK Fisher's books about her life in France. But unlike Mrs. Fisher, Ms. Lutes is no self-conscious bohemian. Very much a woman of her time and place, she is nonetheless independent, intelligent, and very funny. That is, there is nothing genteel and Victorian about her, and nothing pretentious. She is modern, one of us. Who was Della T. Lutes? Hard to tell at this late date. My 1965 edition of "The Reader's Encyclopedia" has no entry on her. Amazon.com has only this title for sale. But she must have had a considerable following in her day. My copy of "The Country Kitchen," printed in 1948, was apparently the 22nd printing of a book originally published in 1936. The flyleaf lists four other titles by her. I gave "The Country Kitchen" to my wife, a chef, for Christmas. She has yet to stop raving about it. More than a cook book, a culinary history or a social history, "The Country Kitchen" qualifies as capital-L Literature.