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Great read for parents and kids
Another masterpiece!
An excellent book for kids!

A Prophetic piece of work?
Rage Against the Mega-Machine
A damn good read

Great series!
A really good book!
an exciting mystery for kids to follow

Excellent! Excellent! Excellent!
Unique Perspective on C. S. Lewis
Valuable and enjoyable view on a great trilogy

Debating MiltonI have a hard time labeling this as a 'preface'; Lewis was obviously writing to the learned elite at Cambridge, not to new readers of Milton. But Lewis does an excellent job of explaining Milton's worldview and how it works in Paradise Lost. His chapters on Primary and Secondary Epics, Miton and St. Augustine, and Hierarchy are EXTREMELY helpful. (Particularly the helpful to American readers is the Hierarchy chapter; we just don't understand what it means to live under and totally submit to a king or emperor.)
I highly recommend this to readers of Lewis or fans of Medieval and Renaissance literature.
Good Sense Does Not Grow Old
Introduction to Milton's epic poem

This is one of the best books out there. Get it.
Love and Inspiration
Enlightenment Earned the Hard Way

Manchurian Canddate? Not! Good men suffered.This book, at last, gives the men who were incarcerated for months and years in that cold barren countr -a voice. In the tradition of Studs Turkel, they tell of their experience. Mostly men hastily trained, they faced brutal captors and brutal conditions. If few were "heroic",very very few betrayed either country or colleague. Despite the sensational blather that followed. Worse!. When freed, they were put on ships and rather than receive care & TLC they were subject to interrogation Even back home, the Army , the FBI hounded some. This was the time of our own "red terror" I was drafted to the USMC-- and am proud to read that the Marines did not harass their men after they were freed.
Care & treatment floundered . I know, I worked at the VA Hospital in Dayton Ohio for 20 years. Nearly 30 years later the government made rules that made sense. Former Prisoners of War received a special focus, with the presuption that after such lengthy exposure to brutal contidions, many medical & emotional problems were very likely to show up.
Combat vets do not often talk about the events that lead to PTSD. Former POWs. have an additional memory bank of horror This book is not a "plea for help". It is a bit late anyway. But if you can put aside your need for mere flag waving, this book will give insights about war and it cosequences. I found a new respect for these men. I thought I had some understanding, but my vision was nearly that of a blind man
Best book about POWsThis book contains interviews with POWs who have been forgotten over the years. There nightmare has continued to this day. This book gives them the chance to tell there story and debunk some myths about the Korean POW.
Often criticized for being soft and weak, the Korean POW was seen as a failure of American society. Yet as the soldiers tell there story, you can judge for yourself. What is bravery? What is courage? What do these conditions do to a human being?
This book ultimately shows the humanity of the soldiers. The errors, horrors, and joy that they experienced. Its a good story.
REMEMBERED POW OF A FORGOTTEN WARGIVING A TRUE EXPERENCIAL VIEW OF THE POW'S EXPERENCE.
IT IS THE FIRST BOOK I READ FROM AN AUTHOR AND NOT A EX-POW
WHO PROVIDED THE TRUTH IN THIS TIME OF OUR MILITARY HISTORY.
AS AN EX-POW OF THAT WAR I FEEL IT SAID AND INDEED GAVE A PROPER
ACCOUNT OF THE EARLY PART OF 1950-1951, AND THE HERRENDOUS
CONDITIONS THAT EXISTED.
IT IS MY HOPE SCHOOLS WILL SECURE THIS BOOK FOR THE LIBRARY AND THE HISTORY TEACHER WILL RECONMEND THE STUDENTS TO REVIEW IT FOR ASSAYS.


Batter Up!
This true story deserves to be told!
An inspiring, TRUE story

Your Ticket to Becoming a Dominant PresenceHave you ever felt that you could walk into a room without being noticed and leave and not be missed? Your inability to make your presence felt has probably made you frustrated on more than one occasion (as well as costing you $$$ in business matters). This book teaches you some of the secrets of the secret language of silent speech and body language. My, my, my, did this book ever open my eyes to what a profound impact that your body language makes on the impression that you leave with others. Mastering the use of body talk, or "Impression Management", will enable you to take control of almost any exchange, whether formal or informal, intimate or public.
Did you know that the size of your pupils varies according to our degree of interest and physical arousal? According to the psychological tests detailed in this book, of which the reader can take, when we meet someone attractive, our pupils get larger.
This book taught me that being a good listener is acutally a more effective way of making a good impression than being a gifted speaker. And before you can create any sort of impression it is, of course, essential to be noticed. But this book demonstrated to me that it's almost never efficient to attract attention with sledge-hammer tactics. Instead, projecting a successful self-image demands perception, confidence and the ability to control any strong emotions, such as anxiety or irritation. It means presenting yourself in a way that matches the desires and expectations of your audience. It requires the developement of what stage people call 'presence', that special sparkle which transforms a person into a personality. This book gives you some tips on how to have presence whenever you walk into a rooom.
Another great point that I found within one of the chapters within this book (the chapter on self-esteem and body language) is that you should try to match your level of esteem to that of the other person if you seek their cooperation. The chapter presents a couple of fabulous real world examples of how a person goes about that.
This wonderful book also offers tips on perfecting your posture in order to create a favorable impression.
Chapter 8, entitled "Anatomy of an Encounter" was a wonderful one. This chapter analyzes and examines the typical human encounter from acknowledgement (like the eyebrow flash), contact, all the way through to disengagement. Other downright fascinating pieces within this chapter is the explanation of the power of a gaze, how we view faces, and the meaning of smiles (classifications of smile: simple smile, upper smile, high intensity smile, etc). I gained precious knowledge of how people feel just from being aware of what kind of smile they exhibit.
Chapter 9 details where you should stand, either directly opposite or adjacent, in an encounter. It goes on to adduce where each gender prefers to interact. Again, fascinating information. This chapter also analyzes the handshake and the connotation attached to it's duration and style.
Chapter 13 was my favorite. It details power plays. How people can dominate via taking up as much space as physically possible. The chapter tells how one can counter power plays initiated by others towards you.
All in all, this book is one of the best books out there on body language. I am confident making this statement only after reading many other books on body language, none of which I believed to be as good (certainly not worthy enough to take time out to write even a poor review on) as this one.
By adding this book to your library, you'll gain a tremendous edge when communicating with others.
Here's the secret weapon you've been looking for!
"Do You Want To Be More Successful"?

Excerpts from a longer review of Lewis's bookI've always been engaged by the mixing, in Lewis's poems, of near oracular grace with sometimes ungainly everyday speech; by her peculiar balancing of irony, tenderness, and self-deprecation with fierce. . .well, with fierce *crabbiness*. The speaker in these poems, though thoroughly self-scrutinizing, is also a resister, a veritable warrior. And one of the things she seems intent on battling is silence. By silence I mean an ontological space, free and clear of language and the mind; the infamous "outside" or "center" which we still argue with and about. And I mean also the social silence which protects an abuser, any silence that conceals hypocrisy or harm, and the one so often imposed on those with little power over what gets heard. I've always been struck by how Lewis can just *say* certain things in her work, however tabooed they may be. Nearly every poem, in fact, happily violates some unacknowledged, consensus-enforced gag order. Every piece shakes us awake, sometimes gently, sometimes not.
She can say, for instance, that ". . .my students/Are stupid." In one sense, this is an astoundingly rude and crude acknowledgment of what every college teacher in America has surely (in at least one warranted or unwarranted, sacrilegious and punishable-by-death-or-loss-of-tenure moment of weariness and irritation), spoken or thought. "My students," she says, "[a]re stupid." But almost in the same instant in which the statement slams into the reader, it buzzes softly open with all its ironic over- and under-tones. It's an implicit and amusingly deadpan comment, for one thing, on our cherished but mostly unexamined view of teachers as angelic social martyrs. It's also an overtly provocative pronouncement that cannot help but bait someone -no doubt a student or two, no doubt a critic or two to battle, which, for Lewis, seems always preferrable to a life of submission; in this case, the grind of tenure-track teaching. And it's also overt finger-pointing, which, as it typically does in her work, rapidly results in the speaker's awareness of her *own* culpability: "I do what I can butnothing matters..."; "I wanted them to save the world"; "What they don't know is how pissed off I am/I can't just *be* them again,. . ." and so on. Admitting, after all, that one's students are stupid is inherently self-condemning, since it obviously suggests weakness on the part of the teacher. She can identify her strengths as well (she herself was a better student; she "only needed a little help, getting started") but she seems to feel that such strengths are mostly past, unrecoverable ("I can't just *be* them again"), and she is now helpless before the immense power of time, and the insidious glances of students who suspect their teacher is "full of s. . t." This is not a comfortable way to be. Lewis doesn't let anyone off the hook, least of all herself.
So this is a poet intent on looking the world and herself dead-on. Her poems insist on the hard, terrible, sometimes ridiculous reality of an essentially material universe. . . They seek out and try to know or "nail" the awkward social moment, the sexual embarrassment, the difficult memory in all its corporeality -only to find those things, ultimately, unknowable and unsayable.
A rape, for example, is not something which should ever be viewed as harmless or forgivable, especially, one would think, by a committed feminist (Lewis heads the Oklahoma chapter of NOW). In "Bogart," however, a description/nailing of such an event only leads to the revelation of its ambiguity and even, disturbingly, its possible harmlessness. (There are even moments of humor in the poem.) The rape is not, in the end, deemed funny or harmless, but the speaker does not arrive at such a conclusion easily. The process of writing poems, for her, is an affirmation of and engagement with *manners* (in Flannery O'Connor's sense of the word), even as she struggles with the *mystery* that very process unleashes. Language is a glass boat that keeps us above water, safe, bounded, and fixed while at the same time making present to us a vast, deadly, profoundly unfixed thing mere inches away making present, perhaps, the boat itself as that vast, deadly, profoundly unfixed thing. Or perhaps language in its practical and everyday functions creates the illusion of safety so that we may effectively be and act in the world--while language in its literary functions may reveal that illusion for what it is, reveal even the precariousness of language itself. (Literature as the antidote to language!)
For this poet, however, a better metaphor than the glass boat is, of course, the horse. Where would any good warrior be, after all, without one?. . .Poems, like horses, were "invented to bring us back to earth." But if one is brought back close enough to, or confronts deeply enough, that earth (body/memory/love; burdensome everyday life), what seems to be encountered are intolerable contradictions, a profusion of opposites: indulgence in self/erasure of self; talk/silence; isolation/communion; oblivion/godhead, and so on. All things simultaneously resisted and sought-for by this doomed and persistent poet, so intent on *speaking* what the world actually is. . .Language freed of intent, while nonetheless still profoundly grounded in, and grounding, a particular body and life and grammar and readiness and necessity and suffering and *judgment*--such is the language of literature, or at least Lisa Lewis'brand of literature
Excerpts from a longer review of Lewis's bookI\222ve always been engaged by the mixing, in Lewis\222s poems, of near oracular grace with sometimes ungainly everyday speech; by her peculiar balancing of irony, tenderness, and self-deprecation with fierce. . .well, with fierce *crabbiness*. The speaker in these poems, though thoroughly self-scrutinizing, is also a resister, a veritable warrior. And one of the things she seems intent on battling is silence, especially when it conceals hypocrisy or harm. I\222ve always been struck by how she can just *say* certain things in her work, however tabooed they may be. Nearly every poem, in fact, happily violates some unacknowledged,consensus-enforced gag order. Every piece shakes us awake, sometimes gently, sometimes not.
She can say, for instance, that "my students/Are stupid." In one sense,this is an astoundingly rude and crude acknowledgment of what every college teacher in America has surely (in at least one warranted or unwarranted, sacrilegious and punishable-by-death-or-loss-of-tenure moment of weariness and irritation), spoken or thought. "My students," she says, "[a]re stupid."
But almost in the same instant in which the statement slams into the reader, it buzzes softly open with all its ironic over-and under-tones. It\222s an implicit and amusingly deadpan comment, for one thing, on our cherished but mostly unexamined view of teachers as angelic social martyrs. It\222s also an overtly provocative pronouncement that cannot help but bait someone\227no doubt a student or two, no doubt a critic or two\227to battle, which, for Lewis, is always preferrable to a life of submission; in this case, the grind of tenure-track teaching. And it\222s also overt finger-pointing, which, as it typically does in her work, rapidly results in the speaker\222s awareness of her *own* culpability: "I do what I can but nothing matters..."; "I wanted them to save the world"; "What they don\222t know is how pissed off I am/I can\222t just *be* them again,. . ." and so on. Admitting, after all, that one\222s students are stupid is inherently self-condemning, since it obviously suggests incompetence on the part of the teacher, whose job it is to make students less stupid. She can identify her strengths as well (she herself was a better student; she "only needed a little help, getting started") but she seems to feel that such strengths are mostly past, unrecoverable ("I can\222t just *be* them again"), and she is now helpless before the immense power of time, the autonomous flow of events in her life, and the insidious glances of students who suspect their teacher is "full of s. . t." This is not a comfortable way to be. Lewis doesn\222t let anyone off the hook, least of all herself.
So this is a poet intent on examining a flawed and brutal world--as well as her own complicity in that world--dead-on. Her poems insist on the hard, terrible, sometimes *ridiculous* reality of an essentially material universe. . . They seek out and try to know or "nail" the awkward social moment, the sexual embarrassment, the difficult memory in all its corporeality\227only to find those things,ultimately, unknowable and unsayable.
A rape, for example, is not something which should ever be viewed as harmless or forgivable, especially, one would think, by a committed feminist (last I heard, Lewis heads the Oklahoma chapter of NOW.) In "Bogart," however, a description/nailing of such an event only leads to the revelation of its ambiguity and even, disturbingly, its possible harmlessness. (There are even moments of humor in the poem.) The rape is not, in the end, deemed funny or harmless, but the speaker does not arrive at such a conclusion easily. The process of writing poems, for her, is an affirmation of and engagement with *manners* (in Flannery O\222Connor\222s sense of the word), even as she struggles with the *mystery* that very process unleashes. Language is a glass boat that keeps us above water, safe, bounded, and fixed\227while at the same time making present to us a vast, deadly, profoundly unfixed thing mere inches away\227making present, perhaps, the boat itself as that vast, deadly, profoundly unfixed thing. Or perhaps language in its practical and everyday functions creates the illusion of safety so that we may effectively be and act in the world--while language in its literary functions may reveal that illusion for what it is,reveal even the precariousness of language itself. (Literature as the antidote to to language!)
For this poet, however, a better metaphor than the glass boat is, of course, the horse. Where would any good warrior be, after all, without one?. . .
Poems, like horses, were "invented to bring us back to earth". But if one is brought back close enough to, or confronts deeply enough, that earth (body/memory/love; burdensome everyday life), what seems to be encountered are intolerable contradictions, a profusion of opposites: indulgence in self/erasure of self; talk/silence; isolation/communion; oblivion/godhead, and so on. All things simultaneously resisted and sought-for by this doomed and persistent poet, so intent on *speaking* what the world actually is...
Language freed of will and intentionality, while nonetheless still profoundly grounded in (and grounding) the particular human body and grammar and experience and readiness it requires for its very existence--such is the language of literature, or at least Lisa Lewis\222s brand of literature. It is what she says despite herself; it is what gets said despite language itself. Despite silence itself. It is what shakes both poet and reader awake to "sharply human woes."
And it is this book of funny, frightening, wise and accomplished poems.
Lisa Lewis's SILENT TREATMENT is a deeply feminist project.