Comanche Ethnography: Field Notes of E. Adamson Hoebel, Waldo R. Wedel, Gustav G. Carlson, and Robert H. Lowie (Studies in the Anthropology of North Ame) Review

Comanche Ethnography: Field Notes of E. Adamson Hoebel, Waldo R. Wedel, Gustav G. Carlson, and Robert H. Lowie (Studies in the Anthropology of North Ame)
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Dr. Kavanaugh has done a tremendous service in the area of Comanche ethnography by compiling and annotating the various notes of the Santa Fe team who interviewed Comanche informants in the 1930s. Hitherto, the literature on Comanche ethnography has suffered from basic lack of information, as the daily lives and customs of Buffalo Days Comanches has been sparsely documented. Of additional value is the use of so many Comanche language terms which can now be added to the lexicon being collected by Comanches seeking to revive and preserve their language. Though the informants were 1-2 generations removed from the Comanches of the Indian Wars Period, their data and reflections are the best we're ever likely to find for that period. The information in "Comanche Ethnography" will help correct errors and fill omissions in earlier works on the Comanche people and their history. I highly recommend this excellent work.

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In the summer of 1933 in Lawton, Oklahoma, a team of six anthropologists met with eighteen Comanche elders to record the latter's reminiscences of traditional Comanche culture. The depth and breadth of what the elderly Comanches recalled provides an inestimable source of knowledge for generations to come, both within and beyond the Comanche community. This monumental volume makes available for the first time the largest archive of traditional cultural information on Comanches ever gathered by American anthropologists.

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The Legends of Tono Review

The Legends of Tono
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Much of what we know of Japanese folklore might have been lost forever if it were not for two authors, Lafcadio Hearn and Kunio Yanagita. Both were avid collectors of the mysterious tales of weird and imaginative creatures that were passed down as oral folklore but never written down. Both did their work at the start of the Meiji era, a time when, in the name of modernization, the government and scholars of Japan were actively attempting to wipe out the beliefs and superstitions of previous eras which were thought to be embarrassing to a country entering the modern age.
"The Legends of Tono" (Japanese title "Tono Monogatari") is the most famous of Yanagita's works, collecting the narratives of the small town of Tono in Iwate prefecture, as told to him by local resident and storyteller Kizen Sasaki. The stories collected in "The Legends of Tono" include some of Japan's most famous monsters like the kappa and the child-ghosts zashiki-warashi. Along with Hearn's Kwaidan: Stories And Studies Of Strange Things and Ueda Akinari's Tales of Moonlight and Rain, "The Legends of Tono" is one of the most classic and important books on Japanese folklore.
A surprisingly small book for one that carries so much weight, there are exactly one hundred and nineteen legends spread out over fifty-eight pages. Many of these legends are only a sentence in length, and often there are three to four different legends on a page. Some of them are a bit longer, maybe a paragraph or two, and typical of Japanese folklore they do not tell a complete story but rather just describe an odd circumstance or the history behind some strange stone or tree local to a certain village. Many explain customs of the time in Tono village, and the movements of household gods and festivals. Some are sexual cautionary tales, and other frights designed to keep people in their proper place for fear of punishment. Yanagita's style was to record the legends in a straight-forward manner without decoration and little elaboration.
However, packed inside Yanagita's short sentences is an ocean of depth, one that is almost impossible to know just through a quick reading. Indeed, in Japanese there are annotated versions of "The Legends of Tono" that go on for four hundred pages or more digging into each of Yanagita's terse sentences as if mining for gold. His simple and direct writing style would become a massive influence on author Mishima Yukio (The Sailor who fell from grace with the sea) who considered "The Legends of Tono" to be the finest-written work of Japanese literature.
There was more to "The Legends of Tono" than simple folklore gathering and writing however. This was a book with a political agenda. Yanagita was protesting against official histories at the time, which concentrated only on the rich and powerful and ignored the lives and hopes of the millions of poor peasants who, in the words of someone with similar inclinations, "did most of the living and dying" in Japan. Yanagita did not want to see the stories of these people lost to the tides of time, and so he gathered them up and wrote them down for future generations.
This "100th Anniversary Edition" celebrates the original 1910 publication of "The Legends of Tono." It reprints the 1975 translation prepared by Yanagita-scholar Ronald A. Morse. Morse includes a preface to the 100th Anniversary Edition, the original forward to the 1975 edition written by Richard M. Dorson who had actually worked and studied with Yanagita, and a new introduction discussing the relevance of Yanagita's work today. These three introductions add a bit of bulk to the publication, and some background on Yanagita and his relevance.
Morse also includes a "Guide to English-Language Writings on Kunio Yanagita and "The Legends of Tono"" in the back of the book for those interested in pursuing further study on the man and his works.


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In 1910, when Kunio Yanagita (1875-1962) wrote and published The Legends of Tono in Japanese, he had no idea that 100 years later, his book would become a Japanese literary and folklore classic. Yanagita is best remembered as the founder of Japanese folklore studies, and Ronald Morse transcends time to bring the reader a marvelous guide to Tono, Yanagita, and his enthralling tales. In this 100th Anniversary edition, Morse has completely revised his original translation, now out of print for over three decades. Retaining the original's great understanding of Japanese language, history, and lore, this new edition will make the classic collection available to new generations of readers.

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Their Eyes Were Watching God Review

Their Eyes Were Watching God
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"There Eyes Were Watching God," by Zora Neale Hurston, is widely acknowledged as a beloved classic of American literature. This novel is truly one of those great works that remains both entertaining and deeply moving; it is a book for classrooms, for reading groups of all types, and for individual readers.
In "There Eyes," Hurston tells the life story of Janie, an African-American woman. We accompany Janie as she experiences the very different men in her life. Hurston's great dialogue captures both the ongoing "war of the sexes," as well as the truces, joys, and tender moments of male-female relations. But equally important are Janie's relationships with other Black women. There are powerful themes of female bonding, identity, and empowerment which bring an added dimension to this book.
But what really elevates "Their Eyes" to the level of a great classic is Hurston's use of language. This is truly one of the most poetic novels in the American canon. Hurston blends the engaging vernacular speech of her African-American characters with the lovely "standard" English of her narrator, and in both modes creates lines that are just beautiful.
"Their Eyes" captures the universal experiences of pain and happiness, love and loss. And the whole story is told with both humor and compassion. If you haven't read it yet, read it; if you've already read it, read it again.

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100 Media Moments That Changed America Review

100 Media Moments That Changed America
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From the hand-printed broadsheets of the 17th century through our present electronic age of twitters and blackberries, mass media has had two consistent qualities in the shaping of American popular and political culture -- scandal and violence. In "100 Media Moments That Changed America", former journalist and active academician Jim Willis (Department of Communication Studies, Azusa Pacific University, California), presents a chronological history of media's influence in shaping American culture beginning with the first printed newspaper, through the advent of radio and television, to the age of the computer and the internet. Professor Willis has selected one hundred distinctive and iconic examples ranging from Orson Wells legendary 'War of the Worlds' radio broadcast, to the Kennedy-Nixon debates, to the JFK assassination, to the Pentagon Papers, to the devastation of hurricane Katrina. Informed and informative, this 260-page compendium of detailed, documented, and superbly presented information is an especially recommended and seminal addition to both academic and community library Journalism and Media reference collections and supplemental reading lists.

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To Dance On Sands: The Life and Art of Death Valley's Marta Becket Review

To Dance On Sands: The Life and Art of Death Valley's Marta Becket
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It always seems that the people who are very quiet and soft spoken are the ones who have the most to say. They only have to whisper, for you to hear them loud and quite clear. Marta Becket is herself a tribute to that very rare individual who has heeded to the calling of their inner voice, and without question proceeds down the unknown path which has been laid before them. Marta Becket finds joy in the creation of her art, rather then seeking the elusive rewards that art might possibly bestow on you, if it finds you worthy. Rather then exploit her art, and as is usually the case, art ends up exploiting you, Marta Becket shares herself through her art, which amongst other things includes her love of dance, painting, music, and probably so much more than I could even begin to guess at. Before I recommend Ms. Becket's book, "To Dance on Sands," I would first recommend that you see the documentary, "Amargosa," (Sold on DVD and VHS exclusively at this time through, "Carlson Films.") about Marta Becket and her vision that she has created and worked hard on in, (of all places), the middle of the Death Valley desert in California, where dreams, and water are scarce, and inspiration is discovered by only those very few individuals who have such an abundance of life within themselves, they have more than enough to share with others. Second, you simply must see Marta Becket live and in person, dance her dance to the celebration of individuality, the joy of creation, and most important, her inspired dance to the spirit of life that each and every one of us shares with each other on this planet. (AND THEN BUY THIS BOOK!)


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To Dance on Sands is the autobiography of Marta Becket, artist, dancer, performer and subject of the Academy Award-nominated documentary Amargosa. From her childhood in bohemian New York of the 1920s and 30s to her career as a successful - but often financially insecure - painter, designer and chorus performer on Broadway and television. Beckett tells, in honest prose, the story of the many ups and downs she faced living a life in the arts.In To Dance on Sands, Becket reveals the obstacles she had to overcome on her way to becoming a dancer and artist - a distant, judgmental father she almost never saw.a mother who both encouraged and tried to smother her ambitions.the grueling regimen of rehearsals and auditions. the lack of money and the heartbreak of unrequited love. It's a tale of victories (starring roles as a ballerina), defeats ($10-a-night engagements in the dying days of variety), and her eventual artistic rebirth as the owner, choreographer, and star performer for almost 40 years at the Amargosa Opera House in Death Valley.

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Weddings Review

Weddings
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Colin Cowie's book begins with examples of weddings that most people could never afford, which can be frustrating. However, once he moves into designing your own wedding, the book becomes much more exciting. As a matter of fact, I suggest reading the wedding examples after everything else, to provide a better sense of how Cowie puts his ideas into action. Cowie offers some basic ideas that really do help you plan your wedding in a unique way. His approach is incredible, and his book is worth buying for that fact alone. This book is a must for anyone who has read the magazines, seen the planners (i.e., any girl who has dreamt of a wedding all her life), and is ready to create something very personal and special. Don't buy this book off the bat; buy it 3 months into your wedding planning. This book is a lifesaver for anyone who is burnt-out on the wedding plans and needs a source of inspiration!

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Psalty's Kids Bible Revised Review

Psalty's Kids Bible Revised
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Over ten yrs. ago, the Sunday School teacher of our elementary kids ordered 10 Psalty Kids Bibles for her class. They have been a great asset for our church. I often borrowed them for my 12th grade English class when teaching the unit on classical heroes in the Bible. My students loved them. Today they are the Bible of choice for the senior citizens Sunday school class. In fact, some have ordered their own. I can only sing praises for the Psalty Bible because it is "good for any age." Janice, North Carolina

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Psalty's Kids Bible uses the most read, most trusted New International Version of the Bible.Includes 48 colorful, fully illustrated pages: -8 presentation pages-32 pages of Psalty's adventures-8 pages of basic Bible truths Also included are a subject, a song index, and a glossary of Psalty characters and inventions. Look for these exciting features: -'Psalty Says': Illustrated lessons throughout Scripture-'Words to Sing': Words to songs that Psalty and his friends have made popular-'Open Your Eyes, Memorize': Short verses from the Bible for memorization-'Psalty Introduces': Interesting information about each book of the Bible

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Painters of Utah's Canyons and Deserts Review

Painters of Utah's Canyons and Deserts
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This is a tremendous book - almost as big as a canyon itself. It's full of superb paintings and I like the broad selection with its wide appeal. This is much more than a coffee table book, it includes a series of essays giving a background to the painters that have visited and painted this region. Is there anything more wondrous than the canyons of this area? These painters capture the essence of the canyons - the quality of the light, the texture of the rock surfaces, the scale of the magnificent scenery and the colours of the desert and canyon. I have too many favourites to mention them all here. Some of the paintings are breathtaking. I think in this huge selection, there is something for everyone. This is a dramatic book that serves its dramatic subject well. This review first appeared on Karen Platt's book review website.

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Bernie Wrightsons Frankenstein Review

Bernie Wrightsons Frankenstein
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Frankenstein is by far one of the greatest books ever written. Few other novels measure up to it. I did not realize this the first time I read it, when it was required reading for high school. At that time, I hated it. But, as was usual in my high school experience, the life was sucked out of it and it was greatly misinterpreted by the teacher. So, if you have had such a reading experience with this book, please do not judge it based on that.
If you are not familiar with the actual tale presented in this work of literary brilliance, please pay NO attention to Hollywood's portrayal of the story. This is not a tale about a scary, soulless, killing machine that goes on a rampage whilst the poor, defenseless creator sits back helplessly and innocently. It is a sad, touching tale about abandonment, prejudice, acceptance, and much more. In reading it, you will discover who the true monster of the tale is - and it isn't the poor creature.
As for this edition of the novel, I think that it is fantastic. I love this books so much that I really felt that I needed to have a hardcover edition. I'm very happy that I selected this one. The illustrations are excellent and plentiful. I am easily amused, so I was delighted to discover that the book has a ribbon attached to the spine so you can easily mark your pages. This is by far one of the most unique books in my collection. I love it. Buy it!

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Few works by comic-book artists have earned the universal acclaim and reverence that Bernie Wrightson's illustrated version of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's Frankenstein was met with upon its original release in 1983. Twenty-five years later, this magnificent pairing of art and literature is still considered to be one of the greatest achievements made by any artist in the field. Now, Wrightson and Dark Horse Books are collaborating on a beautiful new hardcover edition of the book, published in a larger 9' x 12' format intended to show off the exquisitely detailed line art of one of the greatest living artists in comics today. This book includes the complete text of the original groundbreaking novel, and the original forty-seven full-page illustrations that stunned the world with their monumental beauty and uniqueness.

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The Bedside Book of Beasts: A Wildlife Miscellany Review

The Bedside Book of Beasts: A Wildlife Miscellany
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to Graeme Gibson's The Bedside Book of Birds: An Avian Miscellany. Both books are absolutely beautiful: heavy paper, excellent binding, gorgeous reproductions and printing. The page images here on Amazon are really excellent, but don't convey the full beauty of the images on paper. Best of all, the books nestle in your hands -- a book lover's ideal.
Gibson has collected not only beautiful and interesting images, but also interesting quotes about beasts that prey on other animals:
""The term `beasts' belongs properly to lions, leopards and tigers, wolves and foxes, dogs and monkeys, and all others (except snakes) which rage by mouth or with claws. They are called `beasts' from the force with which they rage; and they are termed `wild' because they are by nature used to freedom and they are motivated by their own will. They do indeed have freedom of will and they wander here and there, going as their spirit leads them." --The Peterborough Bestiary (14th C.)
The OED entry for "beast" is a great supplement to Gibson's collection reflecting the diversity of definitions of the word; for example, 1751 CHAMBERS Cycl. s.v., "Beasts of Chase, in our statute-books are five; the buck, doe, fox, martin, and roe. Beasts of the forest are, the hart, hind, hare, boar, and wolf. Beasts and fowls of the warren are, the hare, coney, pheasant, and partridge."
Fantastic beasts appear: the Minotaur, Grendel, and the Leviathan, in words and wonderous images. Knopf Doubleday has added a number of pages showing these and other wonders on its website devoted to the book.
Gibson's broader message is environmental; his excellent short essays tie the book together and he seeks to instill a sort of reverence for animals and their "elemental' connection with humans. For example, he quotes a 19th-century Canadian explorer who shot a bear. The Indians with him rejoiced -- but told him he must now blow tobacco smoke into the dead bear's nostrils to appease its anger. In the next passage, Elizabeth Marshall Thomas describes a puma that kills a sheep, and the "gazes fondly into the sheep's eyes". (The Tribe of Tiger: Cats and Their Culture.) Gibson seems to be demonstrating that it's easy to swing between the reverence and the maudlin.
He recognizes that humans have always hunted animals and he quotes his wife Margaret Atwood's poem "It's Autumn" to demonstrate the conflicting feelings about the hunt (from The Door):
It's autumn. The nuts patter down.
Beechnuts, acorns, blackwalnuts --
tree orphans thrown to the ground
in their hard garments.
Don't go in there,
into the faded orange wood -
it's filled with angry old men
sneaking around in camouflage gear
pretending no one can see them.
***
They shoot at any sign of movement -
your dog, your cat, you.
They'll say you were a fox or skunk,
or duck, or pheasant, maybe a deer.
These aren't hunters, these men.
They have none of the patience of hunters,
none of the remorse.
They're certain they own everything.
A hunter knows he borrows.
***
Gibson has a light hand on the environmental issue, though -- many of the quotations describe other aspects of the complex relationships between the hunters and the hunted. This wonderful book makes a great present for any nature lover, and even better accompanied by a copy of The Bedside Book of Birds: An Avian Miscellany. Triumphs, both.
Robert C. Ross 2009

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PRETTY FLAMINGO Review

PRETTY FLAMINGO
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Perry Martin's first novel "Pretty Flamingo" is a thought provoking story of love's healing power and understanding. I found myself flying thru the pages experiencing the joy of first love, enduring the sorrow of profound loss and finding renewed hope in trusting the unseen.

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Lemurian Scrolls: Angelic Prophecies Revealing Human Origins Review

Lemurian Scrolls: Angelic Prophecies Revealing Human Origins
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I have just read the Lemurian Scrolls and I am amazed and pleased and totally in tune with the material. I've spent thirty plus years doing past life consultation (approximately 50,000 to date). Plus I've taught classes, seminars and retreats. But I've never found as complete a book on many important pieces of information as Lemurian Scrolls. The Lemurian Scrolls will enlighten all who read it and it will become a "Source" that will constantly be referred to by serious students, teachers, leaders and metaphysical and spiritual groups. I've told many clients and students about their origin from the Pleiades, and it's exciting to know that we've discovered the Eighth Sister (only one more to find in the next century). It's now time for the people on Earth to remember who they were and what their original purpose is about. There are a few who are remembering their origin and what their purpose is on Planet Terra (Earth). As they awaken they will start to awaken others and they in turn will awaken others, etc. When humankind gave up their "spiritual bodies" and took on earthling bodies, they forgot who they really were. Now is the time for them to reawaken, so they can help the rest of the people on the planet. The time is now! Thank you so much for the wonderful information in your book! It has also opened up many new doorways for me.

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The Lemurian Shastras, which make up the first half ofthese scrolls, unfold a remarkable story of how souls journeyed toEarth in their subtle bodies some four million years ago. Thenarrators of the ancient texts explain that civilization on theirnative planets had reached a point of such peacefulness that spiritualevolution had come to a standstill. They needed a "fire planet," suchas Earth, to continue their unfoldment into the ultimateattainment--realization of the Self within. To persist in the lushatmosphere, genderless, organic bodies were formed throughfood-offering ceremonies. Later, through a slow process of mutation,the fleshy bodies we know today as human were established as vehiclesfor reincarnation. As the book progresses, a diminishing of thespiritual forces radiating from the Central Sun of the galaxy isdescribed. As spiritual awareness wanes, the life force of man,kundalini, sleeps and instinctive desire manifests in abundance. Theseamazing chronicles of early man's life on Earth are told fromwithin great, walled monasteries where narrators look back and forwardat the same time, often reading from ancient texts, describing thedaily life of those within and outside these sacred citadels. Thetheme throughout is to continue channeling the pristine spiritualvibration from the Central Sun as long as possible and to preserve theLemurian culture, its wisdom and knowledge for generations far intothe future. This, under the guidance of powerful gurus working closelywith great Gods, was the spiritual mission of the dedicated monasticsof these eras. Largely it was done by implanting sacred writings inthe akasha by mystical means.The Dravidian Shastras, which make up the second half of LemurianScrolls, will interest you from the point of view of how humans livedat the end of the Dvapara Yuga, their society, internal and externalgovernment, the culture of those early years on the Earth and how someof it carried forth to this very day. Our narrators explain that itwas in the far distant past that the people who formed societiesrealized they needed group spiritual guidance. This group guidance is,to this day, recognized as a viable form of community andleadership. Examples that come to mind are the Dalai Lama's Tibet,where something like one-third of the social order is a monasticgroup, serving the religious and political needs of the two-thirdsfamily group. Thus their society was transparently stable for hundredsand hundreds of years. This and other societies, such as villages inEurope, where monks and nuns were valued, were settled with a certainpercent of monastics who served the religious needs of the otherresidents. The division of lay community and monastic communityresults in a wealthy, highly productive, harmonious society. We learnin the Dravidian Shastras just how this was accomplished in the long,long ago. It is prophesied that sustainable societies will once againemerge when mankind returns to the wise protocols of these earliertimes, where spiritual men and women, spiritual principles andspiritual sharing guided both individual and society, where religiousleaders were valued and sought after, for the populace knew that ifthey could be engaged in the social effort, they would lend it a lightand wisdom that would not otherwise be available or important. Theselast sixteen chapters of Lemurian Scrolls explain the procedures ofmanagement, their gurus and their protocol. We can see its wisdomreally worked, and our monastic order endeavored to emulate it as muchas was possible in this modern, diverse age where divisions arenormally accepted as signs of an advancing civilization and religion is considered an interference with scientific points of view.Migrating to this planet in their subtle bodies, many of our forebearers traveled through the Sun. The beginnings of mankind's mission on this planet came in a far-away time, when the atmosphere was dense with waters and gases. Flowers and animals were larger and more exotic than today. At first, the transformation from etheric to physical form was difficult, but ceremonies evolved which, using the fragrances of fruits and flowers, brought devotionally to special pedestals, assisted in bringing through beings who absorbed these organic essences to materialize a denser, earthly, fibrous body. These beings loved the many jewels and golden ornaments that were crafted to bedeck and help support their flexible forms. Human life did not evolve from lesser earthly species.Yugas before mankind arrived on Earth, celestial beings in wingless spacecraft spread seeds from other planets. Souls arriving in the last Sat Yuga eventually formed monasteries in which experiments were conducted into the nature of life, designing forms it should take on this planet. Their flexible bodies were light and easily flew in the dense air. Occasionally, one would be devoured by an animal, thus capturing this soul in the incarnation cycle of that species. Through the long mutative process of repeatedly reentering these instinctive bodies, they finally cultivated a body similar to, yet cruder than, the first fibrous bodies. To release a soul caught in an animal reincarnation cycle into human birth, ceremonial sacrifice was conducted, with the knowledge and silent consent of the animal. Fruits, honey, milk, nuts and seeds formed the basis of the pure and simple Lemurian diet. A most delectable dish called Lemurian prasadam was prepared daily in large vats, made of various combinations of fresh milk products such as yogurt, along with several fresh fruits, dates, nuts, seeds and honey from the bees, all gathered from the forests and fields in large baskets--mixed together and eaten from natural goards. It was a sattvic and invigorating meal, especially for those who deeply meditated. This was all they consumed day after day. To help keep the body flexible and easy to live in, exercises were performed at dawn, noon and sunset. Working with mental powers, they provided equilibrium for the planet, and nearly everything could be done with the mind, even moving and lifting things.

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From Elephants to Mice: Animals Who Have Touched My Soul Review

From Elephants to Mice: Animals Who Have Touched My Soul
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As in his previous book, "Saving Molly", once again Jim Mahoney gives us a unique peek into the lives of individual animals and animals in general. There are many thought-provoking questions regarding animals and how we relate to them, as well as how we use them. These are left for the reader to ponder. Thoroughly enjoyable. Hope there is a sequel to this one.

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A heartfelt narrative on the many ways animals touch our lives
Join veterinarian and animal lover James Mahoney as he shares heartfelt and often heart-wrenching stories of a cast of creatures who left a permanent mark on his soul. More than just a sentimental memoir, this thought-provoking collection raises such issues as whether animals experience the same types of emotions as humans, whether it is right to use animals in medical research, and even whether animals might have a sense of humor.
Whether you're a dedicated animal activist or just a compassionate animal lover, these unlikely stories of survival, freedom, dignity, courage, and love will leave you deeply affected.

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The Power of Two: A Twin Triumph over Cystic Fibrosis Review

The Power of Two: A Twin Triumph over Cystic Fibrosis
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As a person with cystic fibrosis, I have always shied away from CF memoirs. My attitude has been "I have CF, why do I need to read about your CF?" I can not tell you how thankful I am that I did not shy away from this extraordinary story of struggle, strength and love.
Ana and Isa are twins of Asian descent who both have cystic fibrosis. Statistically, the chances of this genetic combination is 1 in 1.8 billion. The uniqueness of these two women does not stop with their genetics.
Ana and Isa immerse the reader in the world of their mother's Japanese culture mixed with that of their German father. This alone makes the story fascinating. Add to it the bond between twins and the brother who sometimes stood on the outside looking in, and you have all the makings of a complex family drama. But the story is so much more than this reader could ever put into a few sentences.
Throughout their childhood, across the seas in Japan and Germany, on into their time studying at Stanford and into adulthood, there is another character that is a constant: cystic fibrosis. I, too, have struggled with CF but after reading this book, I feel as though my "fight" pales in comparison. Never have I been witness to such an intense will to live and to thrive. There are many authors who might try to convince a reader to believe "life is precious" or to "seize the day." For these twins, no such statements were necessary. I was inspired to live harder and better only by their example. These strong individuals rarely felt self-pity and I never felt their tales to be histrionic. I so appreciated the clean, simple and honest way they allowed this breathtaking story to unfold.
In addition to feeling humbled by these women, I also felt a little bit jealous. As the only child in my family with CF and as a person who had no friends with CF during the younger years, I could not help but to wish I had my own Ana or Isa by my side. The devotion these twins had for each other was astounding and, in all likelihood, life-saving. In times when there was no one else, they gave each other the strenuous therapy needed to clear their sickly lungs and provided the emotional support and understanding that could only come from someone who has "been there, done that."
All in all, this is a book about "A Twin Triumph over Cystic Fibrosis" but it is also so much more. Many books about CF leave the reader feeling sad and overwhelmed. I am happy to say, this book left me rejuvenated and excited about life. I am a member of this club--the cystic fibrosis club. Ana and Isa's wisdom, strength and resilience make me eternally proud to be a member to which such amazing people belong. I can not wait to read this book again and again.
This is a book for everyone, inside the club or not!
Tiffany Christensen
author, Sick Girl Speaks!

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The tragedy of cystic fibrosis has been touchingly recounted before, but this is the first book to portray the symbiotic relationship between twins who share this life-threatening disease through adulthood. Isabel Stenzel Byrnes and Anabel Stenzel tell of their struggle to pursue normal lives while grappling with the realization that they might die young. Their story reflects the physical and emotional challenges of a particularly aggressive form of CF and tells how the twinsbicultural heritage Japanese and German influenced the way they coped. The Power of Two is an honest and gripping portrayal of day-to-day health care, the impact of chronic illness on marriage and family, and the importance of a support network to continuing survival. These two remarkable sisters have much to teach about the power of perseverance and about the ultimate power of hope.

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From the Ground Up: The Story of A First Garden Review

From the Ground Up: The Story of A First Garden
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Amy Stewart tells the story of how she got to Santa Cruz & took over a patch of seaside earth in which a couple of fruit trees, a handful of shrubs & a host of weeds fought for life.
Each chapter includes helpful tips on neighborly propagation, composting, worm juice, rose pruning techniques, how to make a bug love you & concocting a gardener's bath. They are not what you think - some of this novice's results are hilarious while others are downright commonsensical. One of the first tips she gives us is on Making a Sun Map - do give it a go - I haven't looked at my garden the same since I discovered this clue.
Alongside the story of this young woman's determination to create a garden in which the plants will live up to her vision, she remembers family moments from her childhood while facing down obstinate natives more wily than her. Talk about turf wars!
A fine companion for anyone contemplating becoming addicted to gardening! Amy Stewart has since moved to northern California where she is hard at work on her second garden &, I hope, her second book.

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Bartlett's Poems for Occasions Review

Bartlett's Poems for Occasions
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Well, at least I like it. Who knows? Anyone would want their particular favorites included in such a collection. Just check the Look Inside for what it includes.

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Bartlett's Poems for Occasions, an entertaining, thought-provoking companion to the bestselling Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, is the book to turn to for any circumstance-from birth to death and everything in between. Under the direction of esteemed poet and writer Geoffrey O'Brien, Bartlett's Poems for Occasions will inspire you to turn to poetry to celebrate a new baby or marriage, toast a colleague, cheer a graduate, honor a birthday, deliver a eulogy, or add zest to a holiday party. It is the perfect solution to the age-old question, What should I say?

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Here Lies Jim Crow: Civil Rights in Maryland Review

Here Lies Jim Crow: Civil Rights in Maryland
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C. Fraser Smith has made a very important contribution to the knowledge and understanding of the Civil Rights struggle in Maryland. This book could serve as a textbook for a high school history honors class or college history class. But its readability takes it far beyond the textbook category. Very well written. More Americans, regardless of their race or ethnicity need to to understand what a long and arduous struggle it has been to "implement change" in improving rights for blacks. This book explains that struggle largely within the context of the State of Maryland's own story.

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Though he lived throughout much of the South-and even worked his way into parts of the North for a time-Jim Crow was conceived and buried in Maryland. From Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney's infamous decision in theDred Scott case to Thurgood Marshall's eloquent and effective work onBrown v. Board of Education, the battle for black equality is very much the story of Free State women and men. Here,Baltimore Sun columnist C. Fraser Smith recounts that tale through the stories, words, and deeds of famous, infamous, and little-known Marylanders. He traces the roots of Jim Crow laws fromDred Scott toPlessy v. Ferguson and describes the parallel and opposite early efforts of those who struggled to establish freedom and basic rights for African Americans. Following the historical trail of evidence, Smith relates latter-day examples of Maryland residents who trod those same steps, from the thrice-failed attempt to deny black people the vote in the early twentieth century to nascent demonstrations for open access to lunch counters, movie theaters, stores, golf courses, and other public and private institutions-struggles that occurred decades before the now-celebrated historical figures strode onto the national civil rights scene.Smith's lively account includes the grand themes and the state's major players in the movement-Frederick Douglass, Harriett Tubman, Thurgood Marshall, and Lillie May Jackson, among others-and also tells the story of the struggle via several of Maryland's important but relatively unknown men and women-such as Gloria Richardson, John Prentiss Poe, William L. "Little Willie" Adams, and Walter Sondheim-who prepared Jim Crow's grave and waited for the nation to deliver the body.

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