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How much blood had to be shed for this review to be written?
Best Book of the Year!In keeping with the genre's prime exemplars, plot is sacrificed at every turn to the joyously detailed gross-out, but the story goes something like this. Crackpot scientists get the idea that our intestines are not a part of us but in fact a symbiotic organism. In attempting to contact these independent organisms they inadvertently spark them into rebellion. Dragging themselves free of their host bodies, the hate-filled intestines go on the rampage, wreaking terrible vengeance on the human race.
Somehow relevant to all this are such items as a vast sentient cheese that must be placated by daily, doggerel-filled rites; a neo-Nazi desperate to find someone to persecute because, in dismay at falling membership, his movement has had to recruit members of every conceivably minority in attempt to bolster the numbers; a sexual encounter with the Sphinx; as many deliberately asinine pseudoscientific theories as can reasonably be fitted in among the gross-outs; an R2D2-style robot that is not only cuter than its movie counterpart but also a Biblical fundamentalist and a lesbian; a tabloid journalist trying despairingly to change the habits of a lifetime and tell the truth; and much more besides.
The jokes come fast and furious as the book races along. The inventiveness never flags. What more could you ask for?
I laughed until I was ready to burst -- which latter is exactly what, in the final cataclysmic scenes of this laugh riot, the giant cheese does. But that's another story.
Intestinal Fortitude!Well now you can. Cosmos Books have taken the plunge and published it - thus proving yet again that there is no subject matter so vile that the book can't find a publisher somewhere.
The "plot" (for want of a better word) revolves around the exploits of the sentient intestines of the major characters. The intestines rather resent their interior functions. They want to break out into the world, to live and love in the open air. (It gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "communicating with your inner being"). The bulk of the novel is made up of a series of set piece encounters between the rampant intestines and the populace at large.
Every intestinal joke you can think of and huge number that you can't think of and many that you wouldn't like to think of desecrate the text along with a lot of sly nudge, nudge, wink, wink digs at pseudo-scientific nut-cults, the reading room of the British Library and the sexual attractiveness of the Sphinx. I think there might be a kitchen sink in there as well.
That's not bad for a mere 173 pages! Langford's right - it's a rotten book. I loved it.


Nice and Inexpensive!
A Good View of the Forest
Fowle's classic still covers the basics 25 years later

A classicJust beware: not all the facts are considered to be true.
A must for advocates of democracy opposed to demagogues
Read your primary sources people!

Grant creates another book worth as much as (...) paper!
what me, worry?
Please Buy This Book

The 5th of "Friction's" best
A BIG TURN ON
FEEL THE FRICTION!

big star but boring author.
The story of Grant Hill through his first year in the N.B.A.Matt Christopher does a nice job of relating key moments in Grant Hill's career in some detail, such as the spectacular dunk he made in the NCAA championship game as a freshman or the famous pass to set up Christian Laettner's winning buzzer shot against the Kentucky Wildcats the next year. Young readers will get a sense of Hill as a scholar athlete, who never too his basketball talent for granted. The book includes black & white color photographs, mostly of Hill playing for the Blue Devils and Pistons, along with his stats and accomplishments on the court in college and the pros. This was one of the first titles in the Matt Christopher: Sports Bio Bookshelf, along with Michael Jordan, Steve Young, and Wayne Gretzky. Reading this book can certainly give young readers a sense for why it is not just Hill's talent but his character that makes him so popular with fans.
Well writen book I enjoyed it dearly

This is more about well-known generals not the great onesAnd Jeb Stuart, the Confederate General that Grant could never hold a candle to??? Perhaps this generals are great but the author seemed to deem "great" those generals to whom history has given us more inforation in our history books instead of those who were truly great.
hmmmm....how come the author only put a few Generals?
The best military history book I've read.

Very Spiritual People
Lectionary Resource
Powerful, Versatile, Deeply Spiritual, Risky Book

"Lord, parts of her were gone."Scott hunts the jackals. That's what he's done since the heartbreaking loss of his beloved sister to one of their packs. Convinced that there is still something human about these jackals, Scott grapples with some guilt over murdering them, but along with the help of other hunters (Maurice is a particularly intriguing character), he is determined to prevent the jackals from destroying more lives. The novel begins with a bloody and beaten Rachel literally crawling her way to Scott's cabin for help. From then on, the novel never stops delivering with haunting writing and nightmarish visuals. Grant is one of the masters of the genre; he relies on our own fears rather than basic gross-out value to scare the reader. If you haven't read Grant, do so now! You won't regret it.
Excellent reading
Mesmerizing, Haunting & Unputdownable !don't even think about looking at this one.
This haunting & fastpaced tale of hunting and being hunted by
otherworldly creatures leaves you with a racing heart and a
fear of shadows in the night.
Never once before have I had such a strong urge after a chapter
to go on reading the next, and the next, and the next, ....
I am sure looking forward to Mr.Grant's next book.


Simple Easy Lessons for Leaders and ManagersIt's a small book, with more white space on the page then words, but the power and effect of the words included are tremendous. No fancy, long, complicated wrtiing, but just right to the point writing that will make it's impact. If it takes 4 hours to read the whole thing, you're a slow reader. But it's the lessons, the lessons that will be around you for a long time. And it's all so simple. That is the truly amazing aspect of the book, simplicity.
Dr. Holton, in discussing General Grant's leadership qualities, in fact uses them in his writing. Every character that he discusses is reflected in the writing style of the book. The section on "Brevity", well it's the shortest of the book. See what I mean? Dr. Holton also shows the greatness of Grant through the eyes of others using their own words to describe the man who was the General.
This is a very, very good book for learning and studying. I didn't enjoy it as some other reads that I've made recently, but I have not a single regret. The time went fast, and the book succeeded in it's goal, to teach me about the great man that was General Grant, and also about the tools he used, that I can use, to lead people.
Thank you Dr. Holton. R. E. Lee is next.....
The Manager of the Civil War"Eat to live, and not live to eat," Franklin advised in 1732, without crediting his wisdom to Socrates or Moliere. The result was a very practical book, for people who consider themselves to be very practical Americans. This book is similar, except for its somewhat narrower emphasis on leadership rather than the all-encompassing appeal of Franklin.
Holton, Ph.D., does something better than Franklin -- his method of instruction is by citing examples and then offering an explanation.
"I never learned to swear . . . I could never see the use of swearing . . . I have always noticed . . . that swearing helps to rouse a man's anger," is one such observation, from 'Campaigning With General Grant.' Bil (sic) Holton, Ph.D., explains, "Profanity is nothing more than a vulgar descendant of Neanderthal grunts" and goes on to point out that "Leaders who use it are suffering from delusions of its relevance."
It's a book of common sense. Grant was not a man who would ride past marching troops, splashing them with mud and water; he was not a man who demanded better food, instead he often ate the same food as his men; and to have a well-disciplined command, he did not consider it necessary to have an unhappy army. Compare that to modern executives who think an imperial limousine, an executive dining room and the fear of employees are necessary elements of modern management.
The book is successful on two levels; first, it explains why Grant was the most successful general in American history, and secondly it explains how his methods can be applied to modern business and everyday life. For example, Grant once asserted, "It is men who wait to be selected, and not those who seek, from whom we may expect the most efficient service." Holton, Ph.D., points out "Those who covet the next promotional opportunity usually miss relevant -- and defining -- work experience. Fast-trackers eventually suffer from competence anorexia . . ." Time and again we see this fault in modern corporations, the Business School graduate promoted into middle or upper management without having a clue about the product or employees who make the product. Likewise, the employee who is always a toady to the boss without ever caring about fellow employees is an eventual loser.
This is a book about common sense. Grant was superb at it, which is why he so out-classed Robert E. Lee when it came to winning a war instead of fighting clever battles. It's not manpower or supplies that make a conquering army, it's leaders such as Grant for whom the soldiers are ready to die. There are two types of armies -- those who fight, and those who run. Grant's army knew it would never have to run.
Grant was a winner, primarily because his soldiers respected him. It's a good lesson for modern executives. After all, if his attitude was more widespread among modern managers, there would be little need for books such as this or motivational experts such as Holton, Ph.D.
Good management isn't in bossing people around, it's convincing people that they want to do what needs to be done. When dying is a big part of that equation, it requires some mighty fine management. That, in a nutshell, was Grant.
Take away the glamor, the pomp and circumstance, the haughty style of a Napoleon, Pakenham or Lee -- and the result is Grant. This book beautifully explains why.
Excellent
(Guts, page 51)
Well, if this is the truth, I'd hate to hear about the unsaleable plotlines...
Guts is a spoof horror novel, and tasteless it most certainly is. The plot (if that's the right word!) runs a little something like this: a scientist hypothesizes that the human stomach is intelligent, finds a way to communicate with it, then the stomachs rebel (literally) and start killing people in various unpleasantly gory ways.
Still here? If so, Guts may well be your sort of book! The trouble with reviewing something like this is that, awful as much of the book is, it's all deliberate. So we can note the cardboard characters, the flour-and-water plot, the excessive amounts of bodily fluids, the howlers ('After the research paper on termites which had brought him his master's degree in etymology...'); but we can't criticise them because they're supposed to be bad.
So we're just left with the jokes then. And, luckily, the jokes are very good. No horror cliché is left untouched and the whole thing is just gloriously silly. The one downside is that, since the object of most of the satire here is a certain kind of book, there's a lot of reference to the fact that this is a novel, which can grate after a while. But there are enough other jokes to make up for it.
In short, if you can stomach gross-outs, there's a good read to be found in the bowels of this book. It will be at-tract-ive to some... okay, that's enough.
Another plus point is that the book is quite short. I wouldn't have the guts for any more!