Average customer rating:
- Not for Napoleon Fans...
- Greatly detailed depiction of a smashing Napoleonic victory
- What Napoleonic history ought to be!
- A great addition to the history of the Napoleonic wars
- COMPLETE AND THOROUGH, BUT DULL
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1805: Austerlitz: Napoleon and the Destruction of the Third Coalition
Robert Goetz , and
Robert P. Goetz
Manufacturer: Greenhill Books
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Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 1853676446 |
Book Description
Revealing new study of Napoleon's greatest victory. Dispels many of the myths surrounding the famous battle of the three emperors. Brought to life with numerous eyewitness accounts. A Main Selection for the History Book Club. The Battle of Austerlitz is almost universally regarded as the most impressive of Napoleon's many victories. The magnitude of the French achievement against a significantly larger army was unprecedented. In this insightful new study the author analyses the planning of the opposing forces and details the course of the battle hour by hour, describing the fierce see-saw battle around Sokolnitz, the epic struggle for the Pratzen Heights, the dramatic engagement between the legendary Lannes and Bagration in the north, and the widely misunderstood clash of Napoleon's Imperial Guard and Alexander's Imperial Leib-Guard. The author has produced a detailed and balanced assessment of the battle that for the first time places familiar French accounts in their proper perspective and exposes many myths regarding the battle that have been perpetuated and even embellished in recent books. With 1805: Austerlitz, the reader is left with a new appreciation of Napoleon and his Grande Army of 1805, an army that decisively defeated not a hapless relic of the ancien regime but rather a formidable professional army that had fought the French armies on equal terms five years earlier. Robert Goetz has been studying the Russian Army of the Napoleonic Wars for the past seven years, an area of specialization that emerged from his longstanding interest in the French Revolution and Napoleonic era. He is the author of several award-winning articles concerning the Russian Army and its campaigns.
Customer Reviews:
Not for Napoleon Fans..........2007-09-05
This is a book about how the Allies lost at Austerlitz, not about how Napoleon and the French won. Mr. Goetz does state in his intro that this will be construed as the "Allied version" of events and he wasn't kidding. We get blunder after blunder and the incompetency of command of the Allies in great detail, and the Allied details are great if you're into that sort of thing, but the French accounts are sparse. I wanted to learn how a great battle was won, not lost. I will be buying a different book on Austerlitz to get the taste of defeat which comes with this one out of my mouth.
Greatly detailed depiction of a smashing Napoleonic victory.......2007-01-22
Austerlitz can legitimately be described as one of the greatest of Napoleon Bonaparte's victories. The battle destroyed the coalition among Austrians, Prussians, and Russians. The Holy Roman Empire was finally (and mercifully) terminated. This volume looks at the actual nitty gritty details of the Austerlitz campaign. The author notes that (page 13): "The story of the 1805 Campaign and the stunning victory of Austerlitz is the story of the beginning of the Napoleon of history and the Grande Armee of legend."
Good features of this book: plenty of maps to lay out the progression of events, the order of battle, an estimate of the armies' strengths, an assessment of casualties in both armies. This book is also distinguished by providing great amounts of information from the allies' perspective, rather than just from the French and Napoleonic viewpoint.
The story begins with the start of hostilities between France and her adversaries after the Treaty of Amiens in 1802, which temporarily brought peace to Europe. The volume starts off with an assessment of the strength of the various allied armies as well as the French forces and the early maneuvering of the various forces. The destruction of the incompetently led Austrain forces at Ulm are described well. The Austrian General, Mack, completely failed against Napoleon.
After that defeat, the allies began gathering their troops together to continue the struggle against the French. Russian armies began the march from the motherland. Austrian forces begin to gather. Even Prussia was willing to enter on the side of the allies, although its forces would be unable to participate at Austerlitz.
Once the allies began to gather their horde, the movement of the French and allies began to lead to battle. Both forces ended up gathering near the village of Austerlitz. Napoleon began to develop alternative strategies, contingent upon what the allies did. The prime mover of the allied strategic choices, Weyrother, conceived an attack on the French right, without assuming that Napoleon might not just sit around waiting to be attacked. Indeed, Napoleon had already thought through what he would do if such an attack took place. The logistics of the allied forces moving to the offensive were strained; communication between Austrians and Russians (calling for translation) went awry.
Napoleon launched an attack on the crucial Pratzen Heights. While the fighting was at times fierce, he had hit the Russians when they were unprepared, as they moved to attack Napoleon's right. Once he had control of the Heights, his army had cut the allied forces in two. There begin the attack on the flank and rear of the allies attacking the French right. Things fell apart rapidly. While the Russians fought well, the game was pretty much up. Some allies, such as Bagration, fought well. Others appeared to be stupefied by what was happening. One nice aspect of the concluding discussion is the rating of the various major figures on both sides. Some, like Bagration, come off very well. Others, like Buxhowden, come off badly. Overall, the French leaders appear to have done a better job. As others note, it would have been helpful if there were a bit more information on the leaders as human beings.
In the end, perhaps Napoleon's greatest triumph. This led to a peace agreement that ended to "third coalition" of allies against France.
The book is written in excruciating detail. Keeping units and leaders straight is not easy. On the other hand, the detail provides as clear a sense of this critical battle as anyone could hope for.
What Napoleonic history ought to be!.......2007-01-03
1805: Austerlitz: Napoleon and the Destruction of the Third Coalition
By Robert Goetz
Greenhill Books 2005
368 pages, 20 maps, 40 illustrations, 8 tables, 4 appendices
ISBN 1-85367-644-6
The Battle of Austerlitz was perhaps the greatest of all Napoleon's victories, and seems to have been the battle he was most proud of. Compared, though, with the mountain of books about Waterloo and Trafalgar, it has been rather poorly served. There was a history by Christopher Duffy, which was good, but was rather small, and is somewhat dated now. There was also an Osprey by Ian Castle, which faces the usual limitations of the Osprey format, and a larger but flawed volume by Scott Bowden. Robert Goetz has now stepped forward to provide another account of this dramatic affair.
He begins where every good historian should begin; in the beginning, with the collapse of the Peace of Amiens, and gives good coverage of the formation of the Third Coalition. He gives descriptions of the leaders on both sides, and of the armies that they led, and then moves up through the Capitulation of Ulm. This takes up the first chapter of the book. Two more chapters are dedicated to the development of the campaign prior to the great battle, including short descriptions of several of the minor actions, and the fall of Vienna. Three chapters cover the battle, and a fourth the Austro-Russian withdrawal from the field. Finally, a chapter follows the aftermath of the battle and the submission of the Holy Roman Emperor to the new Emperor of France.
I've met Mr. Goetz on the internet, and I've been impressed by the depth of his knowledge and his evenhandedness towards the various sides in the early Napoleonic wars, so I was eagerly looking forward to this book. I was not disappointed! It is extensively researched and well written. The descriptions of the various movements and combats are clear, and (while the sources are not as transparently revealed in the text as Muir's recent Salamanca) the author usually shows us why he thinks certain things about the battle, and not others. The maps are a real help (unlike so many books these days!) especially the tactical maps, which are about the best maps I've seen.
Above and beyond all this, the outstanding quality of this book is the author's willingness to see both good and the bad of both sides. He understands the deficiencies of the Allied armies, but doesn't make them out to be cowards or buffoons. Likewise, he sees the excellent qualities of the French army and its leaders, but without idolatry; they make mistakes and have problems too, and Mr. Goetz shows the bad with the good.
The only defect worth mentioning is that the strategic maps are not quite as good as the tactical maps. My goalpost is that all places mentioned in the text will be on the maps, somewhere, and there are a few places not so mentioned; however, they are still well above the average of maps in history books these days.
I was very pleased with this book and I unreservedly recommend it. It's intelligent, well researched, and well written. It's probably one of the two best Napoleonic history books published so far in this decade.
Now, to get Mr. Goetz to write a book just as good on the 1807 Polish campaign!
Yours,
James D. Gray
A great addition to the history of the Napoleonic wars.......2006-12-14
This book is a good overview of the diplomatic and military defeats of the Third Coalition by Napoleon. It outlines the troubles between Austria and Prussia and how the Russians failed to react in time to Napoleons drive. Napoleon's generals were simply able to outperform all of the participants involved. The prose is directed and easy to read. You do not really need any prior knowledge of Napoleon to read this book and for those who are knowledgeable in Napoleon this book may drag on a little at times. Overall though it provides good information and is a worthwhile addition to any Napoleonic library.
COMPLETE AND THOROUGH, BUT DULL.......2006-07-04
As a number of other reviewers have stated, this is a very complete and thorough examination of the Austerlitz campaign and battle, giving more focus to the the Russian Army than some previous studies, but this is definitely warranted. However, my primary complaint is the exceedingly dry and tedious writing style of the author. I will not present myself as an expert on the Napoleonic Wars, but I have read well over 100 books on the subject, and this book is a struggle to complete each page. There is very little sense of the tremendously varied interesting, compelling, and dynamic leaders of this age. These were some real characters, men of flesh and blood, and more than a few wrinkles, but compelling figures then, and now, but one fails to comprehend that in this book. Good history is not a mere recitation of facts; it should make at least some attempt to transport you back in time. I believe this book fails on that level.
Average customer rating:
- I learned Myself through the Book!
- The periphery of two worlds
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Familiar Strangers: A History of Muslims in Northwest China (Studies on Ethnic Groups in China)
Jonathan N. Lipman
Manufacturer: University of Washington Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0295976446 |
Customer Reviews:
I learned Myself through the Book!.......2003-05-29
The first time I got the book from a Chinese Muslim scholar, I began to search what i am Intersted and i got it. I t is about a Islamic sect Xidaodang in which I am one member.Mr. Lipman has been in Xidaotang once and did some research on the group.His book shows his description and study are not only successful, but objective as well.He has his own unique view on Chinese Muslim...
The periphery of two worlds.......2001-11-05
Most Americans don't know squat about Islam itself, let alone Islam in China. Yet today there are about 15 million Muslims in China, centered mostly in the northwest (Xinjiang province), along the margins of the old Silk Road. And they aren't just an insignificant minority: in the Middle Ages, for instance, Chinese Muslims played a central role in bridging the gulf between China, the Middle East, and Europe, bringing goods and knowledge both ways. (...)
Jonathan Lipman's "Familiar Strangers" explores some aspects of Islam in northwestern China from the first arrival of Muslims there in the 8th century up through the 20th. Like most similar histories, it revolves around two major dilemmas that have constantly faced Chinese Muslims (as opposed to non-Chinese Muslims living in China): first, is Islam compatible with Chinese culture? and second, can Chinese Muslims themselves properly be considered Chinese? China's "host" culture has always tended to absorb alien peoples and faiths -- whether they're Mongols and Turks (the so-called "barbarians"), Buddhists from India, or whoever. There were always strangers lurking at the gates of China, drooling with envy or burning with ambition, but almost every one of them who managed to break through eventually assimilated and became, in effect, Chinese: in fact, many sought to do so in the first place. But Muslims were an exception. Their Islamic faith forbade them to have the same kind of relationship with traditional Chinese culture as other groups: for instance, ancestor worship and reverencing the emperor were antipathetic to Islam. Consequently, Chinese Muslims were, while not complete strangers, "familiar strangers", ethnically Chinese, foreign by affiliation.
Lipman's history isn't a comprehensive account of Muslim culture on the northwestern Chinese frontier. Instead, it examines how Chinese Muslims reacted to the complexity of belonging to two cultures at once. Lipman explores, for instance, Muslim reaction to acculturation policies under the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and Muslims' role as "strangers in bad times" during the Ming-Qing cataclysm in the 1640s. Chapter 3, "Connections: Muslims in the Early Qing, 1644-1781", analyses the introduction of Naqshabandiya Sufism into China in the early 17th century and the struggle between two rival forms of it -- the orthodox Khafiya and the radical Jahriya -- in the 18th century, the latter a branch of revivalist Wahhabism, the earliest modern version of so-called Islamic "fundamentalism". Chapter 4, "Strategies of Resistance," explores the period between 1784 and 1895, looking at three large-scale Muslim rebellions against the Qing state. Chapter 5 examines Muslim "Strategies of Integration" during the Nationalist period and under the People's Republic. Finally, Lipman sums his findings in chapter 6.
The book is a scholarly read and not always easy going. If you don't have much previous knowledge of Chinese history, start elsewhere. But if you've got the background, it's a great read.
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- Start here, start NOW!
- A MUST READ for people in their teens and twenties!
- An excellent piece of information.
- A personal library must! Says a Cincinnati Investor.
- This is a fabulous introduction to investing.
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The Real Life Investing Guide: How to Buy Whatever You Want, Save for Retirement, and Take the Vacation of Your Dreams While You're Still Young
Kenan Pollack , and
Eric Heighberger
Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill
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ASIN: 0070503192 |
Book Description
Packed with important stuff you need to know, and spiced with real-life stories of "entry-level" investors, cool facts (like the fact that between your 18th and 30th birthdays, you will likely hold an average of 7.5 jobs), and references to rock and pop songs, this hip, "tell-it-like-it-is" guide focuses on the basics of investing, stocks and bonds, mutual funds, short term saving and long term investing. Emphasizing that a person is never too young to think about investing, it includes definitions of important terms and concepts such as return, liquidity, risk, dividend, yield, and the stock market indexes; information on how to research a company, purchase stock, and select a mutual fund; and detailed explanations of 401(k) plans and IRAs.
Customer Reviews:
Start here, start NOW!.......2003-08-28
Ever traded baseball cards or comicbooks? You?ve taken your first step in investing!
This book succeeds where many others fail: It does an excellent job of breaking into layman's terms the most complex investing and financial concepts, while at the same time making the whole thing completely relatable for someone who knows *nothing* about investing. That is a talent many wish they had. This is no mean feat when you consider all the jargon you have to learn. Now, imagine having fun while doing it! Wow! Eric Tyson, eat your heart out!
Sure, it?s been a while since this book first came out, so you know it needs a little updating...get over it! I still give the book five well-deserved stars. I appreciate the authors for writing such an awesome little book, as reading a book is a big investment of time, and reading this book was definitely worth it.
Share it with a teen or twenty-something you love, and give them the gift of setting them on the path to becoming investors.
A MUST READ for people in their teens and twenties!.......2000-07-27
Before I bought this book, I was probably like a lot of young people out there... ya get paid from work and you go blow it on the weekend with your friends at the mall. You just manage to get your bills paid off, and wonder why you can never seem to get a decent amount put away in your savings account? People, wake up! This is the time you should be saving for your future, or you'll regret that you didn't when you get older! I bought this book with determination not to spend every dollar I make and how to put my money towards my future. The book gives excellent explainations on the stock market and how it works, and even explains all those Wall Street symbols in a way that it's actually fun to read! It explains everything from savings accounts, to stocks and bonds, to IRAs! When I was finished reading the book, I was so glad I had read it when I did, because the later you wait, the more you're wasting time! I recommend this book to all! Read it and you'll be glad that you did!
An excellent piece of information........1999-07-04
This is an excellent book. It makes so easy to understand - all those complicated stock terms, author makes use of beautiful examples from time to time. It is a must have for every person who wants to invest money in stocks etc. (may be, except the ones, whose primary carrier is stocks or stock trading). I myself bought and sold stock over the last few years but never understood the terminology completely. It is nice to have it in my library - Thanks to the authors.
A personal library must! Says a Cincinnati Investor........1999-03-30
There is absolutely no better tool in the market today. It's a great handbook for those sophisticated Generation X'ers, and an even a better tool for that worldly, younger new generation who are blazing trails right behind the X'ers.
Hey Boomers, your children, the N'Gens, are going to take the world by storm. With your ideas and their cohesive, cooperative energetic spirit, there isn't anything that they won't accomplish.... But without the financial skills so wonderfully illustrated in this book, your child will be left behind the pack. He or She will fail to live up to their unbelievable potential.
As an owner of this book, I can honestly attest to its value. I think it should be part of every high school senior's core curriculum! It is the only book that can make sure your child is ready to assist his/her peers in shaping the future of America and the World.
If your school board has not yet adopted this text, then please makes sure before your son or daughter goes off to college this fall that they have this guidebook to the world of life. America and for that matter the World will be grateful.
A Financial Analyst and Real Estate Investor (Cincinnati, Ohio)
This is a fabulous introduction to investing........1999-03-21
If you're a twenty- or thirty-something looking for an accessible, useful guide to investing, look no further. This is a great how-to guide to the markets, written in an inviting yet not condescending style. Buy it. Read it. Tell your friends.
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How to Take a Chance
Darrell Huff , and
Irving Geis
Manufacturer: W W Norton & Co Inc
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Binding: Paperback
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How To Take A Chance
HUFF
Manufacturer: W.W. Norton
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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How To Lie With Statistics
ASIN: B000E14F2Y |
Product Description
The author of How to Lie with Statistics helps us here how to understand probability. 173 pp. 6 x 8.5 inches.
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How To Take A Chance
Darrell Huff
Manufacturer: Victor Gollancz
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
ASIN: B0000CKKE3 |
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How to Take a Chance
Darrell; Geis, Irving, Geis, Irving (illustrator) Huff
Manufacturer: New York, NY, U.S.A.: W. W. Norton & Company, Incorporated
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Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000LGH2GS |
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How to Take a Chance [by the author & ilustrator of How to Lie with Statistics]
Darrell Huff
Manufacturer: W. W. Norton
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Binding: Paperback
ASIN: B000H5K6X4 |
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THE LUCK FACTOR HOW TO TAKE THE CHANCE OUT OF BECOMING A SUCCESS
BRIAN TRACY
Manufacturer: NIGHTINGALE CONANT CORPORATION
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Audio Cassette
ASIN: B000IWMRHE |
Product Description
CONTAINS 6 AUDIO CASSETTES, IN A PLASTIC CASE
Average customer rating:
- Never Consider the Possibility of Failure
- Selfishness as a Worldview
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Risking: How to take chances and win
David S Viscott
Manufacturer: Simon and Schuster
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
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ASIN: B0006CTGQQ |
Customer Reviews:
Never Consider the Possibility of Failure.......2000-03-21
Although "Risking" by David Viscott is flawed inrepects to gender equality and sensitivity, it is a worthwhile booknonetheless. Business speaker Dennis Kimbro writes in his online-work "21 keys to success" the following: #5--Never Consider the possibility of Failure--Dare to go forward. The fear of failure is the major reason for failure in adult life. Self-millionaires are not gamblers but they're always willing to take the calculated risk. Ask yourself this question as you proceed: "What is the worst possible thing that could happen if I go ahead? In what areas of your personal or business life could a fear of failur be holding you back?"
Viscott lists the key components of risk and goes through them in his work. The Table Contents give notice to the various types of risk to consider.
Taking chances Patterns of Risking The Moment of Risk Evaluating Your Risk Emotional Risks Risks of Growth Risks of Autonomy Risks of Change Risks of Sharing and Closeness Risks of Love Risks of Control Risks of Esteem The Do's and Dont's of Risking
I would suggest finding the book at all costs. (I still don't know why the book was on the shelves when I bought it seeing that it is out of print.) It should be brought back into publication because it is timely and necessary
By the way, the author does dedicate the book thusly, "For Teddy and Judy Kaplan" Therefore, how can the previous reviewer state that a person is selfish even though they dedicate the book to two people and have the following quote, among many, is beyond me.
p.212--Do give other people credit for helping you--You'll make allies out of people who want to help you. You need all the friends you can get when you risk, and the best friends are those who have already given. Return the gift with thanks. Friends who feel slighted can do you more damage than enemies."
A book worth its weight in Platinun, 1000 times over. It got 4 stars only because of the lack of gender sensitivity in some parts Mind you the paper back copy is copyrighted for 1979. Other wise it is an extremely useful work. Among my personal top 10 books read.
END
Selfishness as a Worldview.......2000-02-21
David Viscott's Risking includes an excellent analysis of why people do not take risks. Behind every risk, Viscott says, there is a fear of loss. Most people will not take a risk because they fear one of three kinds of loss in life -- love, control, or esteem.(33) Risks concerning love could lead to a loss of love or the belief that one is unlovable. Risks concerning control, usually taken in a business context, might lead to a loss of power, influence, or strength. Risks concerning esteem could result in loss of face or the high regard of others.(50) Most people will not engage in a risky behavior because they perceive that what they could lose in love, control, or esteem is not worth the risk. Viscott's contention is that by not risking, a person will inevitably lose more than the failure of the risk itself. Unfortunately, Risking does not contain a compelling argument to support his claim. Risk is inevitable, Viscott says, and a person must know himself thoroughly in order to understand how to manage it. This thorough self-knowledge, as Viscott describes it, is profoundly self-centered. This selfish, narcissistic worldview permeates Risking. Viscott provides no methodology to determine if a risk is worthwhile except that it feels right: "you are the way you feel". (31) "Some people maybe object to this view," he says, "calling it narrow-minded and selfish, but if you don't take care of yourself, why should anyone else?" (25) In taking care of himself, and using his own desires as a measure, Viscott focuses almost exclusively on the rightness of risking and does not discuss the potential deterrents, including other people's feelings. For example, Viscott believes that risk has a "point of no return," when retreat is not possible. Using an extended metaphor of cars passing on a two-lane road, the point of no return is when the driver has "no choice but to accelerate, sound your horn and create a safe place for yourself."(67) That safe place was created by other drivers scattering to get out of his way. Other people must handle his emotional baggage: "if someone hurts you, it is your emotional obligation to express your hurt in a direct way, to make the other person aware of your feelings . . . Once you tell the other person how you feel, stand back and observe how he deals with the truth you have presented." (93) Viscott has no mechanism for determining if he really knows the truth or how he is going to incorporate information he might receive from the other person. His is a completely closed information loop; he does not allow other people to challenge his decisions. Viscott's self-centeredness was quite popular in the late 1970's and 80's. It would be wrong to blame him for all the excesses of the 80's "Me Generation" but it is difficult to read sentences like "A person who wastes his life denying himself out of a mistaken sense of duty is only diminishing himself and hurting others in the process . . . He sees himself as a person with responsibilities toward others first and uses that overblown obligation to excuse his failure to fulfill his own potential and to avoid taking risks." (25) Looking out for number one led many men to leave their wives and children to fulfill their own potential and stop wasting their lives with duty and responsibility. Nowhere in Risking does Viscott acknowledge that taking a risk that puts other people in jeopardy is not acceptable and that putting others before oneself is the definition of a mature, adult person. Viscott's use of language reveals another sort of self-centeredness and, perhaps, misogyny. Risking was written in 1977, which is too early to expect the use of mixed gendered pronouns and, in fact, Viscott uses "he" throughout. His examples of typical behavior, however, indicate that he is truly writing for a male audience and has a strange view of child development. For example, an adolescent "learns to accept some parts of himself as good that he formerly may have rejected - like the artistic interest he once considered 'sissy.'" (29) Since girls generally do not consider art "sissy," this adolescent is a boy. However, parents of infants, especially neglectful ones, are female: "If a child is cared for by a parent who is inconsistent in her nurturing or who is emotionally absent, unaffectionate or passive when she does give, that infant will be come an adult who cannot trust or who will constantly see the love he lacked in all the wrong places and the wrong way." (35) In Risking, women serve only as negative role models. Viscott sums up his theory in a checklist in the back of the book that includes the do's and don'ts of risking. Don't, for example, give up too soon and do give other people credit for helping you. Predictably, Risking does not contain any author's acknowledgements.
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How successful people stay successful: take chances, and look for the opportunities wherever they may arise.(Power Selling): An article from: Printed Circuit Design & Manufacture
Dan Beaulieu
Manufacturer: UP Media Group, Inc.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Digital
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ASIN: B0008GFKB0
Release Date: 2005-07-31 |
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Printed Circuit Design & Manufacture, published by UP Media Group, Inc. on January 1, 2004. The length of the article is 836 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: How successful people stay successful: take chances, and look for the opportunities wherever they may arise.(Power Selling)
Author: Dan Beaulieu
Publication:
Printed Circuit Design & Manufacture (Magazine/Journal)
Date: January 1, 2004
Publisher: UP Media Group, Inc.
Volume: 21
Issue: 1
Page: 14(1)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
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Chances: And how to take them
Zappa
Manufacturer: Art-Craft]
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
General
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ASIN: B0007HP39E |
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Northwest Montana's Environmental Debates (Mellen Studies in Journalism, V. 7)
Carol Corbin
Manufacturer: Edwin Mellen Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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General
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Montana
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West
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ASIN: 0773464441 |
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Northwest Montana's Environmental Debates.
Carol Corbin
Manufacturer: Edwin Mellen Pr.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000N65TUW |
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