Book Description
This useful, interactive, and practical book takes other breastfeeding books a step further by offering the first and only Nursing Diary, an easy-to-use tracking system for monitoring early breastfeeding progress. This unique all-in-one breastfeeding organizer takes the mystery out of the nursing experience by providing new parents with accurate, up-to-date information, reassurance, and the actual tools they need to get breastfeeding off to a good start. It offers practical step-by-step guidance and includes a complete Nutrition and Weight Loss Guide and a New Mother's Journal. This beautifully designed journal type book is written in a supportive mother-to-mother style with inspirational quotations and lighthearted illustrations throughout. This four-part, tab-divided book includes:
PART I - THE PRACTICAL BREASTFEEDING MANUAL guides you through the early weeks of nursing your newborn and explains every aspect of breastfeeding basics. It tells you how to prepare for the breastfeeding experience, what to do when your baby arrives, and how to monitor your nursing baby's progress. It helps you identify and appropriately manage early breastfeeding difficulties and common newborn problems. PART II - THE NURSING MOTHER'S NUTRITION AND WEIGHT LOSS GUIDE shows you how to plan a sensible, well-balanced diet to ensure a plentiful milk supply, give you the energy you need to take care of your new baby, and allow you to safely and naturally return to you prepregnancy weight! It shows you how to determine your daily calorie requirement and food group servings to meet your own individual nutritional needs. PART III - THE SIX-WEEK NURSING DIARY WITH THE NURSE-N-TRACK SYSTEM(tm) is a two-part nursing diary for easy monitoring of early breastfeeding progress. It features the Nursing Mother's Daily Nutrition Diary, which allows you to easily follow a sensible eating plan by using check-off boxes to monitor your own nutritional intake; and the Nursing Baby's Daily Diary, which consists of the Nursing Wheel and Diaper Wheel for recording your baby's feeding, sleeping, and elimination patterns--simply by filling in time bars. PART IV - THE NEW MOTHER'S JOURNAL is a place to record precious memories of your first days of motherhood with specific questions, idea starters, and inspirational quotations to inspire creative journal writing.
Also included are a "BREASTFEEDING BABY IN TRAINING--PLEASE, NO BOTTLES OR PACIFIERS" sign for the hospital, an extensive Resource Guide, and an attached dual-colored pencil for making diary entries. The Nursing Diary is a dependable reference for your baby's doctor and lactation specialist, and will allow fathers to participate by making diary entries. Full of words of encouragement and support, you will gladly welcome this breastfeeding survival kit into your repertoire of parenting guides--and it will eventually become a treasured keepsake in the years ahead.
Customer Reviews:
BABY SHOWER PRESENT.......2002-02-01
I HAVE GIVEN THIS BOOK TO NEW MOTHERS AT SEVERAL BABY SHOWERS. EVERY ONE OF THE NEW MOTHERS LOVED THE BOOK, AND FOUND IT VERY HELPFUL.
Excellent book for both new and experienced moms.......2001-10-27
I bought this book mainly because the "Six Week Nursing Diary with the Nurse and Track System" seemed like a simple way to keep track of my newborn's feeding habits. Having successfully nursed my first child, I wasn't looking for another "how to" book on breastfeeding. However I found the info in this book was presented very clearly and concisely and wished I had bought it before the birth of my 1st child. It covers all the breastfeeding basics thus making it a good "refresher guide" for experienced moms and a good "getting started guide" for new moms. Plus the nursing diary is wonderful! I recommend buying this book for your basic breastfeeding needs and buying a more complete reference book for info pertaining to specific problems that may arise.
An ideal gift and "must" reading for prospective mothers........2000-05-09
In Bon Appetit, Baby!, Elaine Moran has provided the new mother with a complete, reader friendly, breast feeding instruction guide in the form of a four-part book. Part 1 is "The Practical Breastfeeding Manual" which explains every aspect of breast feeding basics and helps new parents identify and appropriately manage early breast feeding difficulties and common newborn problems. Part 2 is "The Complete Nutrition and Weight Loss Guide" showing the nursing mother how to maintain her own good health and provide her baby with an optimal milk supply, while safely and naturally returning to her prepregnancy weight. Part 3 is "The Six-Week Nursing Diary with the Nurse-N-Track System", a two-part diary for easy monitoring of breast feeding progress during the first six weeks postpartum. Part 4 is "The New Mother's Journal" offering a place to record precious memories of the first days of motherhood with specific questions, ideas starters and inspirational quotations to inspire creative journal writing. Bon Appetit, Baby! is an ideal gift and "must" reading for anyone contemplating breast feeding their baby.
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Special Delivery, published by Association of Labor Assistants & Childbirth Educators on September 22, 2000. The length of the article is 640 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Bon Appetit, Baby! The Breastfeeding Kit.(Review) (book review)
Author: Annmarie G. Klyzub Kalmar
Publication:
Special Delivery (Newsletter)
Date: September 22, 2000
Publisher: Association of Labor Assistants & Childbirth Educators
Volume: 23
Issue: 3
Page: 25
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Special Delivery, published by Association of Labor Assistants & Childbirth Educators on December 22, 2000. The length of the article is 3419 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Book excerpt: Bon Appetit, Baby! The Breastfeeding Kit. (Media Reviews).
Publication:
Special Delivery (Newsletter)
Date: December 22, 2000
Publisher: Association of Labor Assistants & Childbirth Educators
Volume: 23
Issue: 4
Page: 16(4)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
Peter Hathaway Capstick died in 1996. At the time of his death, the world-renowned adventure writer was putting the finishing touches on this, a stirring and vivid biography of Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen, a man with whom he felt he had much in common. Edited and prepared for publication by his widow, Fiona Capstick, this riveting book is Capstick's farewell to his fans and the final addition to the bestselling Peter Capstick Library.Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen was one of those rare men whom fate always seems to cast in the dramas that shape history. As a young officer, he served in India and Africa during the glory days of the British Empire, defending the crown's dominions and exploring its darkest reaches. His exploits in the bloody colonial wars of turn-of-the-century East Africa earned him a reputation as one of the most fierce and ruthless soldiers in the Empire, yet it was during those years spent roaming the silent places of the Serengeti, hunting its game and learning its secrets, that Meinertzhagen developed a fascination with Africa that would last a lifetime.But there were other adventures to come, and Capstick narrates them all with his trademark skill and wit: daring commando raids against German forces in Africa and the Mideast during World War I, covert missions to the USSR and Nazi Germany between the wars, work as an OSS agent during World War II, and Meinertzhagen's ceaseless support of Israeli nationhood are all woven together into an epic adventure, a powerful chronicle that follows the tracks of a twentieth-century legend.
Customer Reviews:
Warrior: The Legend of Col Richard Meinertzhagen.......2007-02-06
A very disappointing book - it should be subtitled "a mini biography of Peter H Capstick." Capstick is arrogant enough to think that the reader will be just as interested in him as the they are in Meinertzhagen! It is not well written as Capstick rambles off on tangents (usually about himself) at very regular intervals. He professes to be an expert where he clearly is not eg he disputes the well known fact that anti-malarial drugs can mask the symptoms of the disease.
A great pity that a potentially interesting book has been spoilt by a self interested author!
Good but popular.......2006-12-14
Col. Meinertzhagen was one of the greatest warriors of his day, a Richard Burton, Lord Stanley and Lawrence of Arabia all wrapped into one. He was also a fascinating individual who was a big game hunter and at the same time a man who collected one of the greatest bird collections for museum use at the time. An expert therefore on birds and a jungle fighter against Leetow-Vorbecks Germans in German East Africa(Tanzania). He led Africans in many fights of the First World War and was most well known for leading secret British septerfuge missions against the Turks in Palestine, leading to the capture of Beersheba. In the 1930s he was an admirer of fascism but hated the Nazis for their racist policies. In the 1920s he was also a great admirer of ZIonism and claimed to be an essential element in the founding of Israel, a fact overlooked today. He was a great warrior and this book tells his story full of bravado. The book concentrates also on his big game hunting exploits, but it is afanciful account.
Seth J. Frantzman
Enjoyable for the Anectdotes.......2006-06-18
This is a very bloody book, but so was Africa in the 1890-1920 timeframe - A Post-Bellum backwater - and one wonders why the British or the Germans were there.
The best passsages cover Meinhertzhagen as a leader of men - his boldness and his careful calculations, as an intelligence operative and officer - his gaining entry to a Russian fort is hilarious, and his observations of Post-Bellum Africa - where the slave trade has collapsed and the Boer War is over with.
In the end, all things written and done by Meinertzhagen must be judged against his role as a British Intelligence Officer - his diary entries, his "ornithology", and his whereabouts and actions. The one true constant is his devotion and loyalty to the Empire and his empathy for the downtrodden and unjustly treated.
The dispatch of men with "amateur" interests is an old, old ruse that reaches as far back as Aristotle's trip to Thessaly if not further.
Full of Adventure.....True or Not ?.......2005-12-01
Not your typical Capstick book, this focuses more on the military wars and campaigns in Africa from a British poit of view.
Still very interesting.
As expected from Capstick.......2005-11-30
I only bought one book by Capstick and knew I was never going to buy any more of his books.
Book Description
This study gathers skeletal evidence on seven basic indicators of health to assess chronic conditions that affected individuals who lived in the Western Hemisphere from 5000 B.C. to the late nineteenth century. Signs of biological stress in childhood and of degeneration in joints and in teeth increased in the several millenia before the arrival of Columbus as populations moved into less healthy ecological environments.
Customer Reviews:
Interred Within Their Bones.......2006-07-17
Buried deep within human history, voices speak to us through the bones of our ancestors. Femurs, incisors and other skeletal remains tell us stories of how well these ancients made their livings, multiplied, dodged disease, got sick, were maimed, and died.
In their grand undertaking, THE BACKBONE OF HISTORY, Professors Richard H. Steckel and Jerome C. Rose, both economic historians and anthropologists, bring together 52 scholars from the disciplines of anatomy, anthropology, demography, economic history, the health sciences, and paleontology, who act as translators of the dialects interred within our bones, and the stories they tell about the evolution of our societies and economies. An important stimulus for this extraordinary scholarship was the work of Cohen and Armelagos and their colleagues (Paleopathology at the Origins of Agriculture, Academic Press, 1984) that provided evidence through examination of skeletal remains for the decline of human health and longevity in the transition from hunter-gatherer to agricultural economies. During this period, in the cradle of agriculture, malnourishment was chiefly responsible for a decline in Eastern Mediterranean male heights from 5'10" to 5'6".
In BACKBONE, which focuses on societies of the Western Hemisphere, perhaps the most significant advances on the seminal work of Cohen and Armelagos are the system of common data recording for the many sources from antiquity through the 19th century, and the development of a health index derived from these sources that allowed more valid and reliable cross-sample comparisons. The effect is to provide an elaborate view, by analysis of population trends in a variety of physiological/ecologic responses [skeletal tissue, tooth enamel (linear enamel hypoplasias), anemia that can be read from bones (porotic hyperostosis), infectious disease prevalence (elevation of the fibrous outer periosteal layer of the bone), trauma, osteoarthritis, degenerative joint disease, tooth loss and caries], of economic circumstances that would otherwise be unavailable. Additional advances, in comparison with earlier work, are that BACKBONE significantly increases sampling size and diversity across regions and time periods, and incorporates multidisciplinary perspectives.
The nine parts of this complex and "big" book of 636 pages include sections focused on methodology, comparisons between Euro-Americans and African-Americans, Native Americans in Central America, Native Americans in North America and patterns of health in the Western Hemisphere. Specific chapters within these sections focus on the poor in the mid-nineteenth century Northeastern United States, health and nutrition in pre-Hispanic Mesoamerica, cultural longevity and biological stress in the American Southwest and much, much more. Always, the stories of these people are told from the bones they left behind.
Steckel and Rose's extraordinary contribution, THE BACKBONE OF HISTORY, will be read by virtually every researcher into the nexus between physical anthropology and economic history. It also provides a treasure trove to those more broadly interested in the social sciences, health sciences and human adaptation. These readers may also find of interest Robert William Fogel's THE ESCAPE FROM HUNGER AND PREMATURE DEATH, 1700-2100 (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2004), A. R. Cellura's THE GENOMIC ENVIRONMENT AND NICHE-EXPERIENCE (Cedar Springs Press, 2006) and John Komlos' STATURE, LIVING STANDARDS, AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (Univ. of Chicago Press, 1994).
Well Worth the Effort.......2002-10-30
This is an excellent guide to the issues of health and modern civilizations.
Book Description
This digital document is an article from American Antiquity, published by Society for American Archaeology on January 1, 2005. The length of the article is 808 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: The Backbone of History: Health and Nutrition in the Western Hemisphere.(Book Review)
Author: Joel D. Irish
Publication:
American Antiquity (Refereed)
Date: January 1, 2005
Publisher: Society for American Archaeology
Volume: 70
Issue: 1
Page: 198(2)
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Amazon.com
Why do we do science? Beyond altruistic and self-aggrandizing motivations, many of our best scientists work long hours seeking the electric thrill that comes only from learning something that nobody knew before. The Pleasure of Finding Things Out, a collection of previously unpublished or difficult-to-find short works by maverick physicist Richard Feynman, takes its title from his own answer. From TV interview transcripts to his acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize, we see his quick, sharp wit, his devotion to his work, and his unwillingness to bow to social pressure or convention. It's no wonder he was only grudgingly admired by the establishment during his lifetime--read his "Minority Report to the Space Shuttle Challenger Inquiry" to see him blowing off political considerations as impediments to finding the truth.
Feynman had a fantastic sense of humor, and his memoirs of his Manhattan Project days roil with fun despite his later misgivings about nuclear weapons. Though one or two pieces are a bit hard to follow for the nontechnical reader, for the most part the book is easygoing and engaging on a personal rather than a scientific level. Freeman Dyson's foreword and editor Jeffrey Robbins's introductions to each essay set the stage well and are respectful without being worshipful. Though Feynman has been gone now for many years, his work lives on in quantum physics, computer design, and nanotechnology; like any great scientist, he asked more questions than he answered, to give future generations the pleasure of finding things out. --Rob Lightner
Book Description
The national best seller--an unparalleled collection of timeless writings by one of the most beloved and original thinkers of the twentieth century.
The Pleasure of Finding Things Out is a magnificent treasury of the best short works of Richard Feynman, from interviews and speeches to lectures and printed articles. A sweeping, wide-ranging collection, it presents an intimate and fascinating view of a life in science-a life like no other.
From Feynman's ruminations on science in our culture to his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, this book will fascinate anyone interested in the world of ideas. Newcomers to Feynman will be moved by his wit and his deep understanding of the natural world and of the human experience; longtime admirers will discover many treasures available nowhere else.
Customer Reviews:
Great enjoyment in audio version.......2007-08-26
This is not the place to start with Feynman. I have read many of his works, such as "Surely You're Joking" and the "Genius" bio about him. Yes, I suppose I am a partial victim of Feyman's self-promotion and colorful life that lends itself to so much entertaining material. I don't care. What he says speaks to me in many ways, even when he steps into religion and other areas in which he is no formal expert.
Because of my familiarity with Feynman, I often knew more or less what was coming on some of the topics. However, I wanted to try the audio book because much of the content is Feynman telling stories or giving a lecture meant more to be heard than read. Here I believe the production really scores. Feynman's conversational style, even for complicated topics, is very effective. The narrator even vaguely sounded a bit as Feynman would (at least as I recall), minus the NY accent.
A counter-example may be the report on the Challenger disaster, with Feynman's famous keen analysis that is better read than heard. There is a bit more repetition than I would have preferred. Perhaps that was unavoidable while still retaining the integrity of the chapters. It's a little difficult to skim a tape.
The audio book accomplished what I wanted: it refreshed my recollection of Feynman and his work, it entertained in the parts where it meant to entertain, it educated when he wanted to educate, and it prompted much contemplation while on the road, which is ultimately what Feynman the teacher wanted from his audiences.
A great piece of work..........2007-08-15
This is the first book I have ready by Feynman, and I must admit, I am yearning to read more of his work.
While the book is a compilation of his speeches over the years, the topics covered are as relevant today as the time when the speeches were delivered. Many of the things Feynman spoke about in the 50's and 60's have come true today -especially the miniature devices that he mentions in his talks.
The breadth of topics is excellent as well - he touches on Religion and Science, Teaching of Science, The Room at the Bottom (miniaturization), and offers very simple, yet profound views on what is, and what can be.
It takes guts to admit that such an accomplished man may have blind spots and bodies of knowledge he knows nothing about; Feynman is not afraid to make such statements. This is not only the sign of a genius, but also of one who has intellectual honesty, and the willingness to face things for what they are. I wish more teachers, professors, engineers, doctors, and scientists would be that forthcoming.
Intelligence without ambition is a bird without wings.......2007-07-16
Feynman reminds me that the basis for an interesting human being is that person's pursuit of curiosity.
As Salvador Dali said, "Intelligence without ambition is a bird without wings", this aphorism applies so very well to Feynman.
The chapters in the book I enjoyed the most were "The Pleasure of Finding Things Out", "What is Science?" "Cargo Cult Science: Some Remarks on Science, Pseudoscience, and Learning How to Not Fool Yourself" and "The Relation of Science and Religion".
It is always wonderful to read intelligent people express their ideas and thoughts so that one can learn from them and check one's own!
These short works gave me a glimpse of someone wonderfully human. Feynman is capable of great introspection and expressions of truth as he sees them. He jokes about his ignorance and then proceeds to "rush in where fools fear to tread". That is his strength and weakness. Here is a certified genius that sees the world around him in ways we are aware of but usually keep to ourselves since we do not have his chutzpah.
On page 245, Richard P. Feynman discusses the relation of Science to Religion where he writes "In this age of specialization, men who thoroughly know one field are often incompetent to discuss another." I heartily agree with him but wonder why he does not apply this dictum to himself.
First of all I will not dispute his genius status. I do not know him well enough, but will accept Freeman J. Dyson's opinion of Feynman "half genius and half buffoon". Freeman J. Dyson's forward to the book "This Side Idolatry" was the best chapter in the book.
Feynman's originality and greatness are in his physics and mathematics; his other pursuits have authority because of his Nobel Prize.
In this "short works" Richard P. Feynman's proletarian background and weakness in the humanities rear their unruly head from time to time.
Let me give you just one example: on pages 172-173 he writes, "What is science? Of course you all must know, if you teach it. That's common sense. What can I say? If you don't know, every teacher's edition of every textbook gives a complete discussion of the subject. There is some kind of distorted distillation and watered-down and mixed-up words of Francis Beacon from centuries ago, words which then were supposed to be the deep philosophy of science. But one of the greatest experimental scientists of the time who was really doing something, William Harvey (1578-1657, discovered the body's circulatory system), said that what Bacon said science was, was the science that a lord chancellor would do. He spoke of making observations, but omitted the vital factor of judgment about what to observe and what to pay attention to.".
I do not see why Feynman has this animus towards Francis Bacon. He is well respected by historians of science and they see Bacon in a positive light.
W.P.D. Wightman in his book, "The Growth of Scientific Ideas", Yale University Press, New Haven CT, 1953, page 61 had this to say about Francis Bacon* "but his comparisons are applicable to all the problems of nature. The gist of the message is that we must seek out the common natures of the things we are comparing, and thus, remembering that "all true and fruitful natural philosophy hath a double scale or ladder, ascendant and descendent, ascending from experiments to the invention of causes, and descending from causes to the invention of new experiments', we may knit all nature together into one coherent assemblage of events.".
*Francis Bacon (1561-1626)
"Advancement of Learning"
"Novum Organum"
"New Atlantis"
According to the "The Works of Marx K. & Engels F", Kyiv, 1955, Volume 2, page 135, Karl Marx had this opinion of Francis Bacon "the real progenitor of English materialism and current experimental science".
Quote from Feynman "William Harvey (1578-1657, discovered the body's circulatory system), said that what Bacon said science was, was the science that a lord chancellor would do.".
The "lord chancellor's view" in my opinion is indispensable in the development of abstract ideas and general principles.
Compare the science of ancient China, Egypt and Greece and you will see the foolishness of ignoring the "lord chancellor's view".
It was the ancient Greeks (6thh century B.C.) who for the first time in human history abstracted the concept of straight line, circle, radius, and angle and so on from the practical surveying geometry of the Egyptians. Fortunately for science the Greeks had a distain for physical labor, only slaves did that! This does not mean that applied science is any way less important. We need both, as Francis Bacon in his book "Advancement of Learning" propose.
The diversity of intellects, outlooks and experiences of billions of human beings over the years have enabled us to stumble onto the scientific method. I applaud all honest efforts to advance our limited knowledge by people such as Richard P. Feynman and Francis Bacon.
great book.......2007-01-03
This is THE best book I have read all year. Excellent insight into science, government, and religion. The arguments within the book are great ammunition for discussions in any of these areas.
interesting and entertaining.......2006-10-03
Although the forward by Dyson did seem a little too worshipful, I can't blame him for writing kind things about his friend and mentor.
This was the first of Feynman's works I've read (actually I listened to it, as an audiobook). I enjoyed his descriptions of his pranks and work at Los Alamos. I also very much enjoyed hearing his thoughts on the value of science and what science is. The talk at the Galileo symposium was great.
On a human level, it was interesting learning about how he interacted with other people, especially other physcists. I went to Caltech as an undergrad, but unfortunately that was after Feynman passed away. Reading this now, I appreciate how well he fit with the culture there. He didn't beleive in worshiping other people or accepting the opinions of anyone as dogma.
As a scientist, I know why the great physicists at Los Alamos appreciated this quality in the young Feynman. We need to be challenged, to hear criticism of our work. (Of course not everyone would have been able to meaningfully challenge Bohr's or Bethe's ideas about physics. I know I wouldn't have been able to. But Feynman could, and he didn't just sit quietly out of reverence like many other physicists who were there with them.)
His musing on nonscientific questions were interesting, even though I do not agree with all of them. In his own spirit of inquiry, his ideas pose interesting questions precisely when you don't take them as dogma. I particularly like his humility about addressing nonscientific topics.
Average customer rating:
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The Dubious Pleasure of Yet More Feynman.(Review): An article from: American Scientist
Robert Root-Bernstein
Manufacturer: Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society
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ASIN: B00099OOG8
Release Date: 2005-07-28 |
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