More Pages: Lewis Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100


Neato, Wally; from a Cleaver fan
A perfect book for all of us who remember life as a child
this book is a wonderful view of life thru a childs eyes

an brilliant way to learn history!Complete with a Shoshoni vocabulary, quotations from the Lewis & Clark journals, interpretive notes, a timeline, biographical sketches of Sacagawea, her family & members of the Corps of Discovery, together with over 100 photographs & illustrations, SACAGAWEA SPEAKS is an awesome experience! Eloquent, elegant, filled with information & quirky historical footnotes.
All that is missing is a CD of this author speaking her story.
A piece of American exploratory history
Terrific, Well-Researched Book

"Search for Serenity", Lewis F. PresnallPresnall leaves us something timeless to read again and again.
fabulous bookPerfect for anyone interested in changing your in-self.
Perfect book for recovring from any kind of addictions.
It's an amazing book about addictions and recovery.
Pls read this book and I garanty you will read it again an again.
Good bless Lweis Presnall
The Search for Serenity (and how to achieve it)

Break Those Addictions!
Awesome Book
Excellent read and thoughtful...

After reading this book, you just might glow!
A Rich Insightful Look at the Ten CommandmentsHer insight is only matched by her style. This book is easy to read and, quite frankly, a page turner. Her theological, yet literaturily approach, places many deeply thoughful ideas into a richly receptive form. The insights exposes God's wonderful wisdom and our sins, yet, we are challenged to accept this answer and move on in the journey to living holy lives.
She skillfully uses information from Moses' area, as well as the days of Christ, and the 20th century which aids the reader to understand the applicability of these treasured laws.
This book is so skillfully developed, my only question is "Why she did not write mor in the realm of religion?" (Joy was an accomplished auther and poet). The forward is by then friend C.S. Lewis (they married a few years later). A great book!
Fresh perspective and radiant insights in this book!

Beautiful artwork and delightful plots.
One of the best Illustrators in comics today.
One of the most touching stories

Peorth rocks!Anyway, read this book! In fact, read the whole Oh! My Goddess! series if you haven't already! You won't regret it!
Goddessess up the Yin/Yang!As a consequence of that wish, he now lives with Belldandy, her half-demon older sister Urd, and her mechanically inclined and overprotective younger sister Skuld. He's coping. Sort of.
So what are the odds of someone making the same mistake twice? Whatever they are, Keiichi beats them when he manages to dial up Peorth, a beautiful goddess who happens to know what Keiichi's secret desires are, and wants to grant him his fantasy.
Peorth will stop at nothing to get Keiichi to admit his desire for intimacy. Showing up nude in the bath to scrub his back? Getting into his bed in black lingerie? Wrapping herself over him as a wake up call? Trying to get him to drown so she can perform mouth-to-mouth? She'll do it.
Things only get worse when Peorth meddles with Urd's love potions, accidentally creating one that makes ANY woman Keiichi looks at fall in love with him. And wouldn't you know it, his sister Megumi is visiting for the day!
Keiichi and Belldandy's love for each other is put through trial after trial, as Peorth attempts not only to seduce Keiichi, but to make Belldandy remember an insult she gave Peorth long ago.
This is romantic comedy at its best, with some of the most gorgeous art I've seen in a long time to help tell the story.
ANOTHER????!?! Oh, jeez!A mix of hilarity and romance, "The Fourth Goddess," is well worth the money.


Wow!!!
Nice Surprise!!
My new favorite author

An Excellent Addition to the Horror Film Fans Library.
AN EXCELLENT GUIDE TO THE WIZARD OF GORE: H G LEWIS
A Definitive Look at the Films of Herschell Gordon Lewis

CompleteExcellent source for everyone wanting to reflect deeply on technology.
An Enduring Classic by an American GeniusTechnics and Civilization is Mumford's pioneering study into the past, present, and future of technology. It is a damning indictment of Western culture and a sober reflection on the consequences of allowing ourselves to become enslaved by the product of our own design: "How in fact could the machine take possession of European society until that society had, by an inner accommodation, surrendered to the machine?" Mumford argues that the rise of technology not only changed the way society functioned, but changed the very essence of the human soul. He identifies the major technological innovations that revolutionized history and penetrated deep into the collective psyche, often to the detriment of humanity. Strangely enough, these innovations were often rooted in the most religious and ascetic dimensions of European culture. For example, the clock was the result of the almost fanatic obsession with the rigorous order that characterized daily life in medieval monasteries. Out of a holy desire to mimic the order of the cosmos, European monkery felt spiritually duty-bound to lead equally ordered lives. Everything from praying, studying, eating, sleeping, and relieving oneself was subjected to "the iron discipline of the rule". Pope Sabinianus insisted that the daily routine of the monks be kept in check by ringing monstrous bells at the appropriate times. What better way to ensure the precise timing of these bells than a mechanical device by which to accurately and reliably measure time? From the monastery, the clock was exported to every domain of society, and thus began the routinization of daily life. However, what these men of God did not realize was that the clock was thoroughly and completely foreign to human nature. Mumford contrasts "organic time", which follows the natural cycle of "birth, growth, development, decay, and death", and "mechanical time", which follows a consistent rhythm, which can be artificially set at rates that nature cannot follow, and which continues to tick after organic time has ceased to exist. In modern times, the clock has come to play such an important role in society that it is "second nature" to obey mechanical time. Mumford insightfully points out the most tragic consequence of the clock - the expression and dogmatic conviction that "time is money". The preposterous equation of time with money has led to the "increasing tempo of civilization" and to "a demand for greater power: and in turn power quickened the tempo". The result of all of this? We eat when it's time to eat, not when we are hungry. We sleep when it's time to sleep, not when we are sleepy. Even in school, children think only when its time to think. The subjugation of natural life to the "iron rule" of the clock might very well explain the psychopathic tendencies of those who cannot function in the most industrialized and "advanced" societies.
Yet, this is but one of the innumerable and brilliant insights the Mumford provides. The clock is but a metaphor for the modern age. Mumford divides technological progress into three definitive phases - Eotechnic, Paleotechnic, and Neotechnic. The division of technics into these phases gives us a framework through which to understand the defining characteristics of human civilization during each period, the rate of technological development, and a sense of where we now stand in the evolution of technology. Mumford also draws insights into organizations and their remarkably mechanical nature. The factory, the corporate office, the school, the army, the sports team, the supermarket - these systems are modeled upon the machine. To ensure seamless functionality, the machine must eliminate the domain of chance. Chance is anathema to the machine. And as the whole of society has become mechanized, our instincts yearn for something unpredictable. Hence, the obsession with sports, which provides "the glorification of chance and the unexpected". If only Mumford could have been alive to witness the debauchery of modern television…
The critical reader will forgive the book's factual shortcomings, given that it was originally written in 1934. Scholarship has since made major advances on this inquiry, albeit with the help of Mumford's groundbreaking work. The cynical reader will likely deplore what amounts to Marxist fantasies in the last few chapters. In any case, it should be pointed out that modern technics and civilization can indeed be socialized for the betterment of humanity without delving into the abysmal nightmare of Soviet-style communism. No amount of Cold War nostalgia and conservative fetishism can negate the environmental horrors and social putrefaction that are the chief products of decay by unrestrained technology. Mumford has a surprisingly positive attitude towards the potential of technology to actually improve civilization. He places strong hopes in alternative forms of energy, in socialized modes of production, in humanized work environments, and restructured economies.
Technics and Civilization is a work of history, anthropology, sociology, and philosophy. It uses a long lost, multidisciplinary approach to weave together a variety of different issues and perspectives, and with the sort of scholarly authority that only Mumford can command. Consider yourself truly uneducated until you read this singular American masterpiece.
The First Critique of the Myth of TechnologyMumford was the first to take a critical look at technology and its accompanying mythos, and even though this book was later surpassed by his masterpiece, The Myth of the Machine, it is still worth reading for its approach to the tenor of its time (written during the Depression).
You can safely ignore the last chapters when Mumford attempts to offer an alternative to the technological society. Like most critics, he is mercifully short on alternatives. (Considering what alternatives were given humanity over the centuries, you can understand why I said that.) Until we truly understand technology and the role it has taken in our lives, we will be no closer to a solution than Mumford was in the Thirties.
For anyone who wishes to study the intellectual history of the West, this is an indispensible volume.