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

The Civilization of China
Published in Digital by Amazon Press ()
Author: Herbert Allen Giles
Average review score:

Wonderful Book!
This is a wonderful book about history of china.Thousands of years of passing time of China is a miracle.


Cock a Doodle Doo!: Barnyard Hullabaloo
Published in Hardcover by Tiger Tales (March, 2002)
Authors: Giles Andreae and David Wojtowycz
Average review score:

Beautifully illustrated!!
This book's simple rhythm and beautiful illustrations of barnyard characters make this one of my son's favorites(age 23 months). The brightly colored pictures of animals with large text make this book eye-catching and appealing to the very young.


Competitive and Ethical?: How Business Can Strike a Balance
Published in Paperback by Kogan Page Ltd (November, 1998)
Author: Giles Wyburd
Average review score:

Easy to read, thought provoking and controversial.
This book stimulates ideas and offers support and advice to people at all levels of business that would like to go about their work with integrity, however tough the competition may be. It poses controversial questions that are central to business and its place in society. Competition is complicated, tough and constantly demanding. This book is a map to flourishing in this area of constant challenge to corporate and personal ethics.


Creek Walk and Other Stories
Published in Audio Cassette by Audio Literature (May, 1998)
Author: Molly Giles
Average review score:

An exquisite, compelling visit with the estranged.
Giles' stories are subtle, bizarre, and believably human. Her versatility comes through beautifully in this collection, though the consistency of her literary ethos is striking. Deliciously comic and tragic.


The Crying Game (Bfi Modern Classics)
Published in Paperback by British Film Inst (February, 1998)
Author: Jane Giles
Average review score:

in depth look at TGC history and production
PROS: Good chapter on director Neil Jordan's background and
artistic interests. Apparently, the love triangle is among his favorite themes to explore. Very detailed chapters on UK and American audience and critical reaction. Interesting tidbits about the producer's (Stephen Woolley) desperate ploys to get
funding.

CONS: I wanted a lot more information about Jaye Davidson's
audition. The book mentioned that he was tricked into it, but
I'd like to read comments from him. Would also like more information about some of the minor characters (Col the bartender played by Jim Broadbent and Maguire played by Adrian Dunbar).
Too short at 80 pages.

OVERALL: This should be mandatory for all TCG fans!


Dale Carnegie: The Man Who Influenced Millions
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (August, 1989)
Authors: Giles Kemp, Edward Claflin, and Selene Yeager
Average review score:

Helpful in clarifying Carnegie's legacy
Dale Carnegie's works, HOW TO WIN FRIENDS AND INFLUENCE PEOPLE being the most famous, are very well known. But little is known about the man himself. He is buried under myth and assumptions. Wouldn't you assume that the man who wrote such huge best selling books on human relations would be very outgoing and have a great social life? This book says otherwise.

This book is surprising because it says that Dale Carnegie was always a shy and awkward man who occasionally went through periods of being a recluse. Despite the success of his books, he never became an out-going person and he was awkward about his newfound fame and fortune.

This book is helpful because it traces the Dale Carnegie Seminars from their genesis, and even lets you know what goes on in some of the seminars. The book, interestingly, says that when one graduates from Dale Carnegie's "Human Relations" class they aren't so much masters of social skills, rather they have developed the ability to be more comfortable with themselves and who they are. They have learned to not be controlled by their insecurities.

Dale Carnegie, the man behind the best sellers, was far more interesting, complex, and surprising, than one would think (i.e., wouldn't one imagine him to be the "man about town"? I had expected him to be). I recommend reading this book if you are interested in learning about that man. I thoroughly enjoyed this book. My favorite part of this book was reading that upon his arrival in New York City he learned a word that fascinated him, "intuition."

A section of photographs is included in this book.


Dewey Decimal Classification and Relative Index (Dewey Decimal Classification and Relative Index, 22nd Ed)
Published in Hardcover by OCLC (July, 2003)
Authors: Melvil Dewey, Joan S. Mitchell, Julianne Beall, and Giles Martin
Average review score:

the book is very useful for classification.that's why its us
ddc is a very useful classification scheme.about 98%libraries through out the world uses this scheme.so i recommended this scheme for all kind of libraries.


The Enduring Hills
Published in Paperback by University Press of Kentucky (September, 1988)
Author: Janice Holt Giles
Average review score:

A Wonderful Book about the Things that Matter
Janice Holt Giles is one of my favorite authors, and her first novel is excellent. Anyone who has ever read "Miss Willie" or "Tara's Healing" will love learning how it all started with Hod and Mary. Her descriptions of the Kentucky mountains and the lifestyle there are concise. I especially enjoy reading about Hod's thoughts and the moral dilemmas he faces as he grows older. This book contains several interesting points for us all to ponder, and the plot moves along nicely. I highly recommend it, as well as any other books by Janice Holt Giles!


England's Lost Houses: From the Archives of COUNTRY LIFE
Published in Hardcover by Aurum Pr Ltd (September, 2002)
Author: Giles Worsley
Average review score:

A superb memento to lost beauty - and ugliness...
In `Brideshead Revisited` Charles Ryder worries about the triumph of `Hooper`, the epitome of all that's mediocre and commonplace, over history, tradition and style. His thoughts are visualised to perfection in a deeply depressing photograph in this book, showing a brand-new street of featureless, drab modern 'cottages' perched literally on the doorstep of dilapidated Beaupre Hall, that is about to be torn down altogether. If you have any feeling at all for English country house traditions and architecture, this book will make your heart ache for all the beauty that was burnt, mutilated, abandoned and left to decay, or, most often and worst of all, deliberately demolished - at a staggering rate of one house a week during parts of the fifties. (Some offering fierce resistance though, like the domed core of magnificent Nuthall Temple, that defied all attempts at demolition and was left to itself for decades, until finally a big load of dynamite blew it away so that the M1 motorway could run its course; Nuthall's foundations remain buried underneath it).
Well, as you can see it would be very easy to write a soppy, sentimental book about the subject - but fortunately Giles Worsley sticks to an eminently sober, scholarly (but lively!) approach. He notes that we lament the loss of 1 in 6 country houses during the 20th century, but that we might rather wonder at the fact that in a century of such huge political, economical and social changes, 5 in 6 survived! Also, he stresses that the downsizing of huge piles into something more convenient or fashionable is not a 20th century invention, but is of all ages. And who could blame the latter-day nobleman for not wanting to maintain a draughty, 150-bedroom Victorian colossus? (the Duchess of Westminster apparently once said that she thought of Eaton Hall as a town rather than a house - and a stay in the immense, British-designed Lalgarh Palace (now hotel) in Bikaner, India, has certainly taught me that Victorian buildings of that size are hardly fit for human occupation!). In fact, the 20th century is exceptional only because it was the first century to produce legislation AGAINST such activities. And finally, not all that was lost was of great historical or architectural importance - much of it was in fact second-rate, plain or downright ugly.
Country Life liberally documented the good, the bad and the ugly (at times snubbing the ugly with elegant irony, some amusing examples of which are cited; at other times providing invaluable visual documentation to inspire later reconstructions), and the breathtaking photographs in this book seem to offer a fairly representative cross-section of all that was destroyed or downsized. The quality of the (black and white) pictures is exquisite. They show a wealth of architectural and interior detail, but many of them are also highly atmospheric, mysterious and haunting. The accompanying text is concise, instructive and always interesting (though inevitably a somewhat depressing recital of fires and bankruptcies). I was surprised, by the way, that the book contains no pictures at all of the process of destruction itself; also, for some houses that were dramatically reduced, I would have been interested to see a `before-and-after' comparison. But these are just minor quibbles. This is a magnificent book, beautifully produced on heavy, glossy paper, and is a definite must-have for anyone even remotely interested in this subject!


Everything in the Garden
Published in Hardcover by Scribner (June, 1968)
Author: Edward Albee
Average review score:

Surreal Suburbia
Albee's Everything in the Garden is a superb, if surreal attack on suburban complacency. In the course of an evening's house party, participants are discovered to be engaging in racism, bad business ethics, drunkeness, prostitution, and ultimately, murder. Then everyone goes home as if nothing had happened. But something has happened--the central couple, Richard and Jenny, have become financially secure, albeit at a great price. But perhaps they're happier for all this than they have ever been, at the end of a hellish evening in which many of their middle class mores have been abandoned in the name of keeping up with their Long Island neighbors (friends they wouldn't have, by the way, if they were not so well off). The story has absurd plot twists and one or two incredible coincidences, but, accepted on their own terms, these add to the general interest the play's dialogue and plot provide. This play is not performed much now, but it makes for an extraordinarily involving read.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Virginia
More Pages: Giles Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21