Change Your Brain, Change Your Body Cookbook Review

Change Your Brain, Change Your Body Cookbook
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I perused Change Your Brain, Change Your Body Cookbook at my local bn and found it to be really pretty but not up to what I was hoping for. It lists 50 brain boosters such as salmon and almonds and then has recipes that include those brain boosters with notations on the recipe as to how many brain boosters it has. these 50 superfoods are also listed on his website which you could look at for free and then apply this to any old cookbook. I much prefer the The Younger (Thinner) You Diet: How Understanding Your Brain Chemistry Can Help You Lose Weight, Reverse Aging, and Fight Disease that breaks it down to which neurotransmitters are being supported in each recipe as well as list of spices, herbs, foods, ingredients so that you can customize your own meals; in that book each menu is notated with whether it boosts GABA, dopamine, serotonin, or acetylcholine. This information helps you to boost the aspects of your brain that you want boosted and not possibly cause more of an inbalance to your neurotransmitter ratio levels by further stimulating those that are already too high in relation to the others. Change Your Brain, Change Your Body Cookbook is also one of the thinnest cookbooks I've held in years. However, Amen's cookbook is prettier with beautiful photos; I will pass on it though as I already know what is in this cookbook; if you want a basic beginning superfood cookbook, though, you might really enjoy this one.
Another cookbook I prefer for more nutrient-dense foods is Eat For Health: Lose Weight, Keep It Off, Look Younger, Live Longer (2 book set) and Dr. Fuhrman's Secrets to Healthy Cooking DVD

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My Navy Too Review

My Navy Too
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I was very impressed with the author's writing style. Her story is one that needs to be told and she shows much courage in the telling. The Navy, like all our institutions, must move into the 21st Century and away from the "good ol' boy" management style that has prevailed far too long. Beth Coye gives a sound and eloquent discussion of the problems involved. Her story draws the reader in with each event. She is to be applauded for her fine book. I recommend it highly.
joemurphy33@yahoo.com

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The Dorr War: Treason, Rebellion and the Fight for Reform in Rhode Island Review

The Dorr War: Treason, Rebellion and the Fight for Reform in Rhode Island
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Rory Raven's concise history of The Dorr War is a valuable account of a little-known battle to impose democratic ideals on a system ruled by corrupt elites--and the unlikely champion who led the fight. Reading this book, I couldn't help comparing Thomas Dorr's struggle to the John Brown uprising: both men were idealists who attempted to achieve undeniably virtuous goals through force of arms...with similar sad results. The Dorr war is an exciting history lesson and a welcome reminder of what democracy really means: the right of everyone to vote. Not just a wealthy elite, but every American. That was a dangerous, subversive idea back in 1841, and we should all be grateful that Dorr's impossible dream is our reality. Let us make the most of it.

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The short and portly Rhode Island aristocrat was hardly the image of the people's champion, but in 1841, Thomas Dorr became just that. At a time when only white male landowners could vote, the idealistic Dorr envisioned a more democratic state. In October of that year, the People's Convention ratified a new constitution that extended voting rights to those without land, and Dorr was named governor. That act would spark a small civil war, and violence erupted as the people of the state stood sharply divided in a conflict that reached the president and United States Supreme Court. Author Rory Raven charts the tumultuous and ultimately tragic history of a man and a movement that were too far ahead of their time.

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The Next Archaeology Workbook Review

The Next Archaeology Workbook
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The Next Archaeology Workbook is a great educational tool for students and anyone interested in archaeology. Are you sick of talking about archaeology as an abstract concept? Then this book is for you. The book includes an number of fictionalized archaeological problems situated all over the world. Answering these questions educates and entertains. This is how learning should be

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Puritans at Play: Leisure and Recreation in Colonial New England Review

Puritans at Play: Leisure and Recreation in Colonial New England
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The popular American view of Puritans is usually something out of Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter." That is, a bleak, dreary group of religious fanatics who take themselves entirely too seriously. While they did take their religion very seriously (your life on earth does determine whether you will spend eternity in heaven or hell, after all; it's best not to take chances), they did have fun. Bruce Daniels does an excellent job researching the relationship between Puritans and What did they do?; How much time did they spend doing it?; What DIDN'T they do that might surprise us?; Did some groups have fun one way while others had fun another way?; and the all important question for historians: Why?
Two themes run through Daniels' work: the Puritan ideal with regards to fun is that recreational activities should a) not be sinful b) give one rest so that he or she can serve the Lord more efficiently c) be productive and d) not be an end unto itself. The second theme that runs through "Puritans at Play" is that, while the first generation of Puritans in America came pretty close to this ideal, as the years went on and New England became more heterogeneous, the ideal had great influence, but was viewed more as a guideline for recreation as opposed to a matter so grave as to have long-lasting (read: eternal) implications.
In this amazingly well-researched book, Daniels analyzed how reading (the ideal recreational activity in Puritan America), music, church related activities, public gatherings (such as public hangings or military training days), dancing, eating, sex, bars, gambling, and sports (among others) fit into both the Puritan ideal and the Puritan reality.
The beauty of this book is that Daniels tackles such an all-encompasing subject with apparent ease. I feel he has accomplished the goal he mentions in his preface, to write a book suitable for both the serious scholar and the recreational historian (although my one complaint is that his first chapter made for dry, difficult reading). From Chapter Two on, Daniels introduces the reader to Puritans on their own ground, always making sure to put things in a cultural context. I would definately recommend it to fellow amateur historians.

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Duel of the Ironclads: USS Monitor and CSS Virginia at Hampton Roads 1862 (General Military) Review

Duel of the Ironclads: USS Monitor and CSS Virginia at Hampton Roads 1862 (General Military)
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I thought this was a great read. Splendid illustrations, well written text. Qucik, easy, and enjoyable. I wanted to know more about the famous battle between the Monitor and Viginia, but didn't want to be bogged down with the text, and I wanted a well illustrated volume. I'm sure that this subject has been written on to no end, but I was more than pleased with this work.

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To Try the Bloody Law: The Story of Mary Dyer Review

To Try the Bloody Law: The Story of Mary Dyer
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She was hung for defending freedom of choice. Choice to believe in a religion that was contrary to the pilgrim beliefs. 17th century Bible belt??? Moral Majority??? Thirty years before the Salem witch trials - did anyone listen??? Do they listen now? Mary Dyer had the courage to walk to Boston from Rhode Island to her persecutors more than once. She did not waiver.
P.S. William and Mary Dyer were co-founders of the State of Rhode Island!!!

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On the Wind: The Marine Photographs of Norman Fortier (Imago Mundi Book) Review

On the Wind: The Marine Photographs of Norman Fortier (Imago Mundi Book)
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I found this book to be immediately inspiring as it is very well written and the photography is nothing short of beautiful. It is unfortunate that I should learn about my uncle from a book, especially since he is still alive... But I will rectify this. Regardless of my obvious bias toward the subject, this book is filled with great photos and equally interesting stories about the man known as Norman Fortier.

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Since 1947 the marine photographer Norman Fortier has embraced the south coast of Massachusetts and Rhode Island as his studio and his inspiration. His cameras have captured images of every conceivable description on the waters from Block Island to outer Cape Cod and the offshore islands: yachts and small craft under sail and at anchor; draggers and trawlers bound to and from Georges Bank; runabouts and sportfishermen dockside and at speed; commercial vessels and tall ships. And, always, his images capture the beauty and ever-changing moods of the region's coastline, harbors, and islands.Over the years his photographs have appeared in America's best boating magazines. In 1967 he published his first collection of yachting images, The Bay and the Sound, which rapidly went through four printings. More recently, the New Bedford Whaling Museum celebrated Fortier's six decades as a professional photographer with a major retrospective exhibition of his work displaying his deep roots in New Bedford, his intense love of Buzzards Bay, the Elizabeth Islands, and surrounding waters, and his uncanny ability to depict the complex interrelationship of humans, boats, and the sea.Beginning with early images of Padanaram Harbor, On the Wind carries the viewer west to Rhode Island Sound and Newport, east to Mattapoisett, Marion, and harbors at the head of Buzzards Bay. Succeeding chapters cover Martha's Vineyard and the offshore islands, the port of New Bedford and working craft, the grand spectacle that is the New York Yacht Club's annual summer cruise, and boats designed and built in South Dartmouth by the legendary Concordia Company.Printed entirely in duotone, this is a book about sailing and sailors, harbors and fishermen, selected from more than 100,000 negatives. It is also a moving and unforgettable evocation of a time and way of life that have already passed into memory.

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Vadriel Vail Review

Vadriel Vail
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Basically, the story is about 22-year-old Vadriel Vail, wealthy, handsome, beautiful, whose parents and brother died in a boating accident, leaving him in the care of an old business manager. Sheltered from life in an English public school, and preoccupied with his spiritual life, he is actually too beautiful to stay in a monastery he retreats to because he upsets the tranquil balance of the monks. So he is forced to re-enter the world. On the other side, there is Armand de Guise, rich, beautiful, older, far more sophisticated, who feels the world is his to own, including the people in it. He fancies the cute younger brother of one of the Italian call boys he uses, and, when the younger man (Angelo della Fiore) resists him, Armand rapes him. When Armand runs into Vadriel in Newport, however, he begins to change, and over the course of the book his love for Vadriel causes him to become a much better man, devoted to Vadriel, though their relationship is something that is difficult for both of them. Meanwhile, naive Vadriel has also met a beautiful young, headstrong woman named Placide Van Leer, who falls in love with him and they marry. Vadriel does not understand that the friendship he has with the woman, whom he actually loves, is not Love in the passionate sense.
The marriage to Placide, however, is not the only complication standing in the way of the two men, though it is a big one. There is also the world's approbation about two men making love together, far more acute in the early 20th century than in the early 21st, where it is still a strong factor in many places. Also, there is the matter of Armand's rape of the young servant Angelo, which comes back to haunt him in a dramatic moment. Vadriel, too, has to deal with his own strong Catholic convictions, his attention to good and evil and his spirituality, and whether or not succumbing to physically expressing his love for Armand is evil or the true expression of God's love. It takes literally the whole book for the men to come together, and in the final few pages it seems almost too much verbiage. But then it is written like a nineteenth-century romantic novel.
Hey, though the novel moved me and made me hungry for the kind of passions the two heroes feel, it isn't a perfect novel- in many places, like Gaywyck, it is sometimes over-written, with lots of classical allusions and quotations. Armand's conversion seems almost too easy- it is like once he sees Vadriel he decides to completely reform himself and never falters. And the fact that he and Vadriel are another pair of absolutely gorgeous people that are filthy rich and can indulge their every whim (provided their consciences allow it), make it so much more unreal. But that is part of the romantic form, I suppose. There is a lot of symbolism of angels ("Vadriel" is an angel's name, there is a character named "Gabriel" who introduces Vadriel to sex between men and, of course "Angelo della Fiore," which means "Angel of the Flowers". When Armand begins to feel guilt over what he did to Angelo, he comes down with a huge psychosomatic allergy to flowers, which are everywhere in the huge summer homes of the rich in Newport). Another failing of the novel is the cliche that all of main characters in the early 19th century have enlightened, late 20th century attitudes about labor, gay life, women's rights, etc., as if to make them more palatable to the audience who would be reading the book.
I enjoyed the fact that Donough Gaylord and Robert Whyte (who has taken the name of Gaylord in the book as well, since he has discovered he is a cousin of Donough's) are important characters in this book, in the last third, especially "Robbie," who becomes Vadriel's best friend. It is nice to see them a few years down the pike from their novel, and there is a conceit where Donough talks Robert into writing their story, which Robbie says he will do when he is older (that book is penned as a memoir by an older Robert Gaylord).
The arc of the book, really, is that angelic Vadriel comes to terms with his earthly, physical side, and realizes that human, physical love is a manifestation of God, and Armand represents the earthy, base side of human nature. He learns to love on a more spiritual basis and changes his selfish attitude into one of benefices for all humanity when he learns to love Vadriel.
I was extremely moved by the emotional cat and mouse game between Vadriel and Armand and their feelings for each other; I am sorry to have finished the book, but it was getting tiresome near the end. There isn't a lot of sex in this book, but there is a lot of emotional turmoil. The book, though, is written in the Grand Romantic Tradition, and no doubt (as with Gaywyck) through the years I will re-read it several more times.

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Peabody & Stearns: Country Houses and Seaside Cottages Review

Peabody and Stearns: Country Houses and Seaside Cottages
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Ms. Robinson made a vital contribution with the first monograph of the residential work of Peabody and Stearns. Per the title, this monograph omits most of the firm's non-residential buildings. The history of the commissions and the rediscovery of many little-known works makes this book a valuable resource. Except for mention by Vincent Scully and a few others who have written about the Shingle Style and Queen Anne architecture, the firm of Peabody and Stearns has been neglected. Many period photographs are included, and serve to document the work shown. However, many of the reproductions of some of the historic construction/design drawings held by the Boston Public Library are shockingly poor. The worst images are of the drawings for the Fitz house and Green Acres. Photographs of these elevations and plans are grossly distorted, undersized, and look incredibly amateurish. One drawing was photographed on a table with other objects visible. Someone did not know how to photograph drawings properly and make the images ready for publication. I am surprised the publisher sent the book to press with these issues. Norton usually has high production standards for its architectural books. Some of Peabody and Stearn's more interesting drawings are not included. The omission of drawings for Kragsyde, other than the oft-published perspectives, is unfortunate. The George Nixon Black house, Kragsyde, was one of the most significant Shingle Style buildings ever built. The Boston Public Library has original drawings of Kragsyde - I believe they were used to build a reproduction of the house in Maine about a decade ago. Given the cost of architectural books and their specialized audience, I expect better. Having these criticisms, I still give this book 4 stars instead of less, due to the scope of the research and the photographs. I am disappointed, though, in the overall quality. There is certainly room for another book on this firm.

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A view of the resort and leisure architecture of one of the most popular and prolific firms of the Gilded Age.
Robert Swain Peabody and John Goddard Stearns Jr. led one of the most popular and prolific architectural design firms in the Northeast, securing more than one thousand commissions and building a vast and vibrant repertoire, from warehouses and town houses to retail stores, banks, schools, railroad stations, libraries, playhouses, and country houses. This survey is the first of its kind to focus on the firm's country house commissions, offering a fascinating glimpse into the social and economic vitality that epitomized the era-one that gave rise to a robust clientele for resort architecture and second homes. Indeed, the economic developments of the time spurred a vast market for houses of recreation and leisure-time buildings, including casinos, boathouses, stables, gentlemen's farms, and cottages, all of which Peabody & Stearns had a leading role in creating. With this book, Annie Robinson establishes Peabody & Stearns as a significant contributor to the development of an American architecture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This comprehensive catalog showcases more than eighty of the firm's designs, from Pierre Lorillard's The Breakers in Newport, Rhode Island, to William Forbes's cottage on Cape Cod, James Ford Rhodes's Ravenscleft in Maine, and Charles William Eliot's Sunshine in Northeast Harbor, Maine. While the bulk of the firm's commissions were located in New England, notable works in the Middle Atlantic states and in the South and the West are also covered. Containing over two hundred illustrations, archival photographs, plans, and drawings, Peabody & Stearns tells the little-known story of the two men who formed a lasting architectural partnership, and displays the impressive collection of the homes across the country on which they left their imprint. 250 b/w & 25 color illustrations

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Counterfeiting in Colonial America Review

Counterfeiting in Colonial America
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This coverage of an aspect of early American history and culture will delight readers researching this era. Kenneth Scott's Counterfeiting In Colonial America reviews the law enforcement system of the times, liberal attitudes toward counterfeiters, and the prevalence of counterfeiting during the times. From individuals who made a high art of the practice to how counterfeiting transcended social and political boundaries, this provides an intriguing coverage.

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"It is not surprising that counterfeiting flourished. The combination of a generally inefficient law enforcement system, the gradual proliferation of colonial issues to copy, and the reliance on private citizens to prosecute criminals made it difficult to capture, prosecute, or punish counterfeiters. Indeed, counterfeiting in American entered a kind of golden age beginning in the early eighteenth century, an age that would last for roughly a hundred and fifty years." —from the ForewordIn the thriving commercial centers of colonial America, merchants could be paid in Spanish doubloons, British pounds, or any of the currencies each colony produced. Such a diversity of monetary forms encouraged some citizens to try their hands at counterfeiting. But the penalties for counterfeiting were harsh. Each colonial government saw it as a serious crime and meted out a variety of punishments, from cropping of ears to the gallows.Scott examines the prevalence of counterfeiting in colonial America and the difficulties the authorities had in tracking down the offenders. He brings to life the many colorful figures who indulged in this nefarious practice, including organized gangs from Massachusetts to South Carolina, such as the members of the Dover Money Club and numerous women practitioners, including Freelove Lippincott and Mary Peck Butterworth. One of the book's most important themes is that counterfeiting was ubiquitous, transcending socioeconomic, ethnic, and gender lines. Counterfeiters had innumerable ways to practice the art, as Scott shows in illustrative detail. In a final chapter, Scott assesses counterfeiting during the Revolution, when the British government found it an effective means for undermining the fledgling national economy. The book reveals ways to determine whether notes or coins are fake. First published in 1957, Scott's research on early counterfeiting has yet to be superceded.As much a social history of colonial America as it is a richly peopled narrative of one of the world's oldest crimes, Counterfeiting in America is sure to appeal to scholars, numismatists, and general readers alike.


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Virginia Gold Review

Virginia Gold
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"Virginia Gold" is historical fiction. It follows the life of it's main character (and the author's ancestor) John Thomas as he pursues his dreams of becoming a gentleman farmer in the new world. There's a little something for everyone in this read; adventure, romance, telling the history of the personal and physical sacrifices required of the early settlers of Virginia, and the role religious faith might have played in helping them overcome those challenges. I liked it. I think you will too.

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Singing Out: An Oral History of America's Folk Music Revivals (Oxford Oral History Series) Review

Singing Out: An Oral History of America's Folk Music Revivals (Oxford Oral History Series)
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David King Dunaway has immersed himself in "Folk Music" for more than 30 years He has written at least two biographies of "folk music" legend, Pete Seeger. Along the way he made MANY recorded interviews with those involved in "folk music" and these recordings and the transcriptions are now deposited at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress.
In this easy-to-read book, Dunaway and co-author Molly Beer have culled great quotes from nearly 150 of the interviews to try to present an over view of what "folk music" is and why it saw a "revival" at least three times in the 20th Century. Many of the interviewees have passed on - either because of age (Charles Seeger, who was Dunaway's first interviewee in 1979) or untimely death (Phil Ochs, Mike Seeger) - and this is part of their legacy.
The book is divided into general subjects - the first being "What is Folk Music?", a section that tells us where each of the interviewees is coming from on the subject. Later sections discus the "folk revival of the 1950s", the second revival (Greenwich Village) in the late 1960s and the current singer-songwriter craze.
All the interviewees have something interesting or insightful to say. But, because it was an editorial judgment on Dunaway's and Beer's part to decide what portions to include - and in what order - these interviews may sometimes be taken out of context and should probably not be used as fact, unless the full interview is heard or the transcript read.
Still, as someone who has been a "folk music" fan since the late 1950s (I guess "Tom Dooley" started it off for me), I found the book fun to read and it brought back a lot of memories for me.
Steve Ramm
"Anything Phonographic"

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Fodor's Oregon, 4th Edition (Fodor's Gold Guides) Review

Fodor's Oregon, 4th Edition (Fodor's Gold Guides)
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FODOR'S OREGON is a great book about Oregon. Whether you want to learn about the big-city pleasures of the Portland area, with its colleges and universities, major shopping malls and various other unique stores, smaller cities such as Eugene (home to the University of Oregon), Salem, and Corvallis (location of Oregon State University), or the highly rural eastern part of the state, which features great natural beauty and plenty of hiking areas to get in shape for your significant other and/or your favorite celebrity. This book is a wonderful addition to any travel library.

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Lose yourself on uncrowded beaches, in a snow-silvered mountain wilderness, or in a monolith-studded desert —Oregon offers all this and more.From Portland to the dense forest, our resident writers have found the best hotels, restaurants, attractions and activities to make your trip worthwhile and memorable. Before you leave, be sure to pack your Fodor's guide to ensure you don't miss a thing!The San Francisco Chronicle sums it up best "Fodor's guides are saturated with information."- Two-color interior design makes it easier to find the information you need- Fodor's Choice Ratings flag must-see sights and hidden treasures - Hotel and restaurant reviews that cover all budgets- Plus multi-day itineraries to help travelers build the right trip for them

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Winning Wealth Strategies: Secrets to Successful Investing in Any Market Review

Winning Wealth Strategies: Secrets to Successful Investing in Any Market
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This book is a very simple read, but it shares with you a lot of powerful techniques to make money in any market. Most importantly, it teaches you how to limit your losses to a minimum.
Did you know you can set your stock losses to 10% with a simple, free technique available to anyone. But only a handful of people use it? If I read this book sooner, it could have saved me $50,000 or more easy.
Chuck teaches you how any investor with any amount of money can start building a sizable income to retire on.
I highly recommend everyone read this book...especially before you invest any money in the stock market...even your 401k or 403b.

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Architecture and Town Planning in Colonial North America (3 Vol. Set) Review

Architecture and Town Planning in Colonial North America (3 Vol. Set)
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Wow. Where do I start?
If you are an art or architectural historian, and you consider yourself a member of the so-called "colonial mafia" (you know who you are), this work is indispensable. Its swath of interest includes all colonial settlements in North America (excluding Mexico) - Spanish, French, British, Russian, Dutch, Swedish, German, and African. The quality of research is world class. The text is rich with detail, but not so esoteric as to put off a serious general reader. Spread over three beautifully bound volumes, these books present the architectural history of colonial settlements in North America as both an extension of the home country in a pure, rustic form that evolved and refined over time as the colonial elite used architectural expression to distinguish itself, but also as those cultures assimilated new forms appropriate to the physical conditions of the "New World." The results were something new. It's an awesome presentation both in width and depth of study, and it appreciates architecture as a culturally central art form.
Sure, there are some small holes, as another reviewer has noted, but the magnificent scope of this project makes it impossible for the author to cover every possible town, city, style and period. And while there's a nice chunk for British North America (as is expected), don't think the author made his studies of the other colonial societies filler or framing material for the English. In fact, one of the best things about these books is that they treat the colonial experiments of many other European countries with fine detail and profound insight. The author does go out on a limb sometimes with an opinion or two that can leave you scratching your head. For example, his post-dating Middleburg Plantation in South Carolina from 1699 to the "late 18th century" comes across as a bit of a hunch rather than being supported by solid evidence. Examples such as this are rare.
Another nice feature is that Kornwolf finds value in structures that other scholars and various landmark societies have largely ignored. This is particularly true in his treatment of Virginia. There's more there than Wilson and Loth have told you about.
This is no casual book for placing on your living room furniture, but an important and canonical work in its genre that deserves reserved space in your library. It's worth every cent.
I should note that these books are not an architectural catalog, per se. Don't expect AIA-style building entries. The entire work is narrative, supported by a huge collection of 3,000 monochrome illustrations, most from other sources, including photographs, plans, maps and other graphics. The entire book considers perhaps 2,000 structures in the United States and Canada.
Another point to remember, particularly for plantation lovers: While not neglecting important rural sites, these books are about the urban development of the continent, and focus heavily on town architecture. The discussion is not limited to domestic architecture either, but includes comprehensive studies of important public buildings.

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An extraordinary work, unparalleled in its breadth and depth of detail, this three-volume set offers the first comprehensive history of architecture and town planning throughout colonial North America, from Russian Alaska to French Quebec, to Spanish Florida and California, to British, Dutch, and other settlements on the East Coast. Across this vast terrain, James Kornwolf conjures the outlines of the constructed environment as it emerged in settlements and communities, in structures and sites, and in the flourishes and idiosyncrasies of the families and individuals who erected and inhabited colonial buildings and towns. Here as never before readers can observe the impulses and principles of colonial design and planning as they are implemented in the buildings and streets, harbors and squares, gardens and landscapes of the New World.Incorporating more than 3,000 illustrations, Kornwolf's massive work conveys the full range of the colonial encounter with the continent's geography, from the high forms of architecture through formal landscape design and town planning. From these pages emerge the fine arts of environmental design, an understanding of the political and economic events that helped to determine settlement in North America, an appreciation of the various architectural and landscape forms that the settlers created, and an awareness of the diversity of the continent's geography and its peoples. Considering the humblest buildings along with the mansions of the wealthy and powerful, public buildings, forts, and churches, Kornwolf captures the true dynamism and diversity of colonial communities -- their rivalries and frictions, their outlooks and attitudes -- as they extended their hold on the land. His work conveys for the first time the full scale, from intimate to grand, of their enduring transformation of the natural landscape of North America.

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Biblical Characters and the Enneagram: Images of Transformation Review

Biblical Characters and the Enneagram: Images of Transformation
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When I first started studying the enneagram Tom Condon's great book, The Enneagram Movie and Video Guide, really help me understand the personality types better and put a face to them. Reading Biblical Characters and the Enneagram helped me deeply understand them on a profound level. The book is well written and researched, above and beyond any religous predjudice so can be enjoyed by any student of religion or the enneagram. I loved this book! It was expensive because I also had to buy an out-of-print edition, but worth every penny and more. I highly recommend this entertaining and enlightening book to anyone interested in the enneagram, the bible, and life.

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In what has been described as a 'breakthrough book,' three Vancouver Island authors have produced a volume that will be keenly read by students of both personality and religion.Biblical Characters and the Enneagram: Images of Transformation explores the personalities of a whole range of Biblical figures through the lens of the Enneagram, an ancient system for understanding personality. The result is an exploration in self-awareness and a fresh look at the many compelling and insightful stories and people found in the Bible.In the book, 18 biblical 'characters' are presented as models of transformation, personal growth and spiritual development, showing how the habitual masks we have all unconsciously learned to wear can be revealed as pale and unsatisfactory imitations of our original inner beauty. The book shows how these stories of transformation can lead us to embrace our real selves and discard the sham substitutes of our fabricated personalities.

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