Average customer rating:
|
A High, Low, Near, Far, Loud, Quiet Story
Manufacturer: Greenwillow
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Basic Concepts
| Baby-3
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
Opposites
| Basic Concepts
| Baby-3
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Baby-3
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
Nonfiction
| City Life
| Where We Live
| People & Places
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Language Arts
| Reference & Nonfiction
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Words & Language
| Reference
| Subjects
| Books
Usage
| Words & Language
| Reference
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Arts & Photography
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
-
When Will Sarah Come
-
Mothers are Like That
-
Little White Duck
-
Daddy Calls Me Man (Richard Jackson Books (Orchard))
-
Wiggle Waggle
ASIN: 0688167942 |
Book Description
A big dog,a tiny ant. Bumpy tree bark,smooth glass marbles. A cheerful shout,a good-night whisper. From morning to night, a child's day is filled with opposites, and Nina Crews's jubilant full-color photographs of a day in the life of two busy, urban siblings will prove it. A celebration of simple opposites (and of summer in the city!) that will have youngsters looking high and low for,and loudly proclaiming contrasting details in their own world.
Customer Reviews:
A Wonderful Book.......2000-04-27
This isn't just a book of opposites, though that's how the pages are organized, with "large" facing "small, "wet" facing "dry," and the whole book framed by "day" and "night." It's also a story, told through photo-illustrations, about the very usual summer day of two city kids, gathering their toys, walking to the park, playing there with animals and a water fountain, then going home for quieter activities and bed. Preschoolers and even younger children will love how the book correlates activities they recognize with the much harder to understand concept of opposites.
Customer Reviews:
All hail the adorable guinea pig!.......2002-08-04
Kate Duke's charming book "Guinea Pigs Near and Far" puts welcome emphasis on the adorability of guinea pigs! So often in children's books we see mice, hamsters, squirrels, bunnies and all other manner of sweet little fuzzy animals, but the guinea pig has been sorely and notably neglected.
Duke rights that wrong with "Guinea Pigs Near and Far." Simplistic in the extreme--just simple comparisons of words like "near" and "far" and so on--the text isn't the main attraction here. The drawing power of this book is the guinea pigs, of course. They are shown hiking, biking, riding trains, flying kites, sailing boats, and generally being completely and utterly entrancing.
Customer Reviews:
Protestant/Catholic Household.......2006-08-19
This is a great book and I recomend it to both Protestant and Catholic alike.It is a book for the open minded only!!!I am sorry to say that I havent run into to many open minded when it comes to religon.This book gives you a good look at the brainwashing involved in not just Catholics but any religion that requires its people to study church doctorine only and not the Bible itself.Out of each story in this book not one of these men came to know God until they picked up and read a Bible.That is amazing to me!!!!
Priests found love, but not truth, in Fundamentalism.......2006-06-30
Having just read the book's excerpts provided by the links above, I intend to purchase this work. Long a devotee of literature on Protestant conversions to Catholicism, this book will no doubt help balance my personal library. One note I anticipate after reading the excerpts is that the former priests will all share one thing in common: none of them neither knew Christ nor loved Him as a priest prior to their conversion or throughout their studies leading up to the priesthood. I say this from experience as a cradle Catholic-turned-Evangelical-turned-Catholic who is now discerning the priesthood.
You will not find the same in books by Protestant converts to Catholicism. Already mentioned in other reviews, these books were written by devout Reformation-styled Christians -- many of them Protestant ministers themselves or incredibly bible literate laymen and women -- who loved Jesus with all their heart, mind and soul, before following Him straight into Rome.
I suspect that this is not the rule when encountering Catholics -- whether laymen, religious or clergy -- headed towards Protestant communities. They find the love of Christ for the first time in their lives through the witness of Protestant Christians, and are then understandably seduced into thinking that the fault for not having found it before must lie with Rome and not their own sinfulness. This book will no doubt confirm my suspicions.
If anything, it will serve more usefully as a sad commentary on the depressing state of spiritual formation in all to many Catholic seminaries and religious orders.
Good book.......2006-05-31
This book is so interesting, I couldn't put it down. Although I don't agree with Catholic doctrine, I am interested in it because I have many friends who are Catholic. The things these ex-priests struggled with are many of the things they struggled with.
Far From Rome Near to God.......2006-03-24
I ordered this book from Amazon. Even though I live in Canada, I had it within a week. Great service. Keep up the good work.
I am enjoying this book very much. This book provides a condensed version of life stories of former priests. Although I was never a priest, I did find that I could identify with many stories, having personally undergone a similiar spiritual transformation.
I am particularly moved by the courage and risk that these men took after studying for the priesthood for 10+ years, and found no other alternative than to leave all that they had come to know. They didn't know what they would do for a living, but God provided for them.
These men didn't just decide to leave the Roman church, but after honest soul searching were convicted even after growing up in the Roman church. But each and every testimony had this in common- these priests encountered True faith from witnesses who were not afraid to speak the Truth.
Unless One Is Born Again.......2004-11-10
An excellent testimony and revelation of men (actually, ex-catholic priests) being regenerated by the Holy Spirit to see the Truth. And the Truth have set them free. Jesus said in John 3:3, "Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." And Paul in Ephesians 2:8-9 - "For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast." Only two things stands out from this book, believing in salvation by grace (only God converts) or believing in salvation by works (that man has the ability to convert themself). In the words of Jesus Christ, "He who has ears to hear, let him hear!"
Average customer rating:
- Interesting 'social archeology' of Islamic history
- Demonstrates the variety of Muslim cultures
- A very valuable perspective
|
The Archaeology of Islam (Social Archaeology)
Timothy Insoll
Manufacturer: Blackwell Publishing Limited
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Africa
| History
| Subjects
| Books
Early Civilization
| Ancient
| History
| Subjects
| Books
Islamic
| World
| History
| Subjects
| Books
Cultural
| Anthropology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Sociology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Archaeology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Islam
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
The Adventures of Ibn Battuta: A Muslim Traveler of the Fourteenth Century
ASIN: 0631201157 |
Book Description
This book examines the archaeological implications of Islam as a force which can act upon all areas of life. Islam leaves distinctive material culture remains and distinctive categories of evidence which can be detected and described. The subject and the geographical area of Islam is vast. The author provides an assessment of the means and the methods of uncovering Islamic material records in the context of a wide range of times and places. Separate chapters examine the mosque, the domestic environment, the Islamic city, death and burial, art, manufacturing and trade. The author draws evidence from the perceived heartlands of the Islamic world (Arabia, the Near East), and from those regions traditionally regarded as the periphery (Africa and the Far East). Coverage extends from the origins of Islam in the seventh century AD up until the present.
Customer Reviews:
Interesting 'social archeology' of Islamic history.......2005-03-10
Archeology of Islam
Timothy Insoll in eight chapters surveys studies of Islamic Archeology to ascertain what potential there is for learning more from existing and future digs and research.
Unlike the "faux Islam" of Orientalists who presume to generalize about an essence from mostly literature, linguistics, and classic studies, he looks at the material evidence of Mosques, domestic Environment, Death and Burial sites, Community Environment and spaces as well as material and spatial lessons about Muslim Life and `Art, Trade, and Ideas' to find variations on common themes, local adaptation, purposeful evolution and development. Space, time, change, local adaptation all have legitimate and important roles that make many generalities, however useful to simplify or sometimes demonize, seem terribly naïve.
There are interesting bits and observations for the student of Islamic history and cultures with observations about such things as how Hui Chinese gravestones in coastal China used both Arabic and Chinese perhaps to be Muslim without denying their Chinese place while in Java Arabic quite sufficed perhaps because Islam felt less threatened by a dominant civilization. The examples can be interesting; the speculations are designed to make one think and open directions for further study.
Examples are from the entire period of Islamic history and may be of interest to many students of Muslim Civilization.
Demonstrates the variety of Muslim cultures.......2000-06-17
Can archeologists draw conclusions about whole societies? The discipline of social archeology says they can, and Insoll proves it in the case of Islam. His goal is not only to demonstrate the richness and variety of the material culture of Muslim societies-he refers to a satisfactorily wide range of times and places in doing so-but also to interpret material culture and connect it convincingly to social characteristics. Islam itself structures his book, each chapter begin-ning with an epigraph from the Qur'an that sets the theme. Thus the obligation of prayer is made archeologically concrete in the structure of the mosque, the importance of privacy shapes the excavatable spaces of domestic structures, and dietary requirements affect the food remains and the building types the archeologist may find.
A very valuable perspective.......1999-11-23
This book is a valuable addition to our understanding of Islam. It highlights the rich tradition of Islam without unneccesary and misleading reference to "Orientalist" literature
Book Description
Richard Delancey is soon called into action once more, as Britain prepares for the threat of a new French assault. Disturbing rumors are circulating about Napoleon's new weapons of war: vessels driven by steam-engines, new explosive devices, and, most troubling of all, a French secret weapon named Nautilus, which can travel underwater and attach explosive devices below the waterline.
Customer Reviews:
Completing the Delancey novels.......2005-04-20
The Delancey novels appear to have been written out of order. Dead Reckoning, the last novel in the series, has a copyright date that indicates it was written two years before the present novel. The present novel fills in details of Delancey's career during and immediately after the Peace of Amiens. It explains his marriage to Fiona, and his promotion to Captain. It is not great literature, but I don't think it merits the one star given by a previous reviewer (there are ratings between one and five - I reserve one star for really awful books).
While I would not recommend the novel as a stand alone novel, it is an essential part of Delancey's career if you are a Delancey fan. The main problem seems to be that the author got carried away showing off his historical knowledge, and included a bit too much detail when you wanted to get on with the action. It does have a plot, largely related to Napoleon's plan to invade England, once Delancey goes back on active duty. It involves action on shore, secret agents, etc.
It does get into the English political system, covers patronage and influence, and raises the interisting question as to whether it would be good or bad if the Prime Minister was killed, i.e., would the war progress better with someone else in charge.
Patrick O'Brien wrote a similar novel, "Post Captain," in the Aubrey series, covering the same time period, but with better writing. Dudley Pope wrote a similar novel, "Ramage & the Guillotine," putting Ramage ashore gaining information about a French invasion fleet. You have to check copyright dates to determine who was borrowing ideas from whom.
Weakest of the Delancey Series.......2003-12-23
_So Near, So Far_ is the weakest of the Delancey novels. None of the series are particularly strong on supporting characters and general characterization, and this one does even less. But where it really breaks down is in the plotting.
The story is made up of several distinct and disjoint episodes, which sometimes works in adventure stories, but usually there is a connecting thread or series of lessons that builds to the finish. Not here -- a chapter ends and that's it, except fot an occasional reference to prior events thrown in for forms sake.
An example: A steam driven ship and its inventor are introduced, built up, and brought back a chapter or so later. At this point -- in the course of a single page -- it is sent on a mission, damaged and sunk. (It had me thinking of the Mark Twain story where, repeatedly, inconvenient characters wander out into the yard, fall down the well, and drown.)
There are also several odd shifts in tense or point of view. It's a bit odd to suddenly find two sentences written as if from looking back over Delancey's entire career slotted into the middle of a page of present tense narration.
One of my favorite parts of books of this type are the supporting characters -- Forester's Brown and Bush, Kent's Herrick and Allday, etc. The only distinctly drawn character here is a spy -- and he is distinguished by being mysterious.
I'm a fool for this kind of story -- have read the Forester/Hornblower (multiple times), Kent/Bolitho, Parkinson/Delancey series in their entirety, all but one of the Maynard/Lamb tales, and have five of the Pope/Ramages.
The Parkinson stories are noticeably weaker than any of the other series, and _So Near, So Far_ (which was very hard to find -- many thanks McBooks for the new edition!) was a major disappointment.
Customer Reviews:
Inappropriate language on adoption.......2007-08-23
As an adoptive mom who has spent the past few years reading 'best practices' books on talking with kids about adoption by both experts and adult adoptees, I had hoped this storybook would be a helpful addition to our library. Unfortunately, I was extremely disappointed in this book. Some of the language the mother in the story uses to talk to her daughter about the circumstances of her daughter's adoption are completely inappropriate for any child. The author offers a clumsy, misguided, and age-inappropriate description of China's one-child policy that I found disturbing ("Your parents couldn't keep you, they already had a child"). Furthermore, many adoption experts point out that it is demeaning (not to mention confusing) to adopted kids to compare adoption of a child to that of an animal. This author chooses to make a very direct connection to taking ownership of an animal from the animal shelter to the child's own adoption. What makes these critical flaws all the more disappointing is that the book contains some truly wonderful descriptions of the connection between the child and her forever mom, as well as lovely illustrations.
For readers looking for a well-written storybook for younger children that helps open discussions about birth families, try Forever Fingerprints: An Amazing Discovery for Adopted Children by Sherrie Eldridge. You won't be disappointed.
Disappointed.......2006-05-05
The book is wonderful.....but not at all relevant for a single mom who adopted from China. There are several references to Daddy. I was disappointed. The book is useless to me. I wish there was a single mom version of this book. At a minimum, I wish the book description would have told me that this was a book with references to a two parent situation (Mommy and Daddy) as I wouldn't have bought it.
Charming! Compassionate!.......2003-09-15
The title of this charming book already tells us that the author includes the birthmother in the family's lives. This adoption story is told by the young child Elizabeth and shows her thought process as she looks at her adoption album and consoles her mother when she didn't have a baby yet, but now she does. The author also charmingly introduces Penny, the dog adopted from an animal shelter and young Elizabeth is happy for Penny to have a family too. It is fun to see the two little Chinese girls talk about their "far mommy and a near mommy" and fantasize talking to their far mommy on the toy telephone. The author cleverly weaves in the adoptive family's love for the two unknown Chinese birthmothers and throughout the pages lets us feel Elizabeth's joy and sorrow when she thinks of her unknown Chinese mommy. Our family has experienced this kind of love for our own birthmother during all the years that we did not know her, but now we have found one another and have a wonderful relationship.
Gisela Gasper Fitzgerald, author of ADOPTION: An Open, Semi-Open or Closed Practice?
Mommy Far, Mommy Near -- Best Bet.......2001-11-09
As an adoptive parent of two daughters, I've read many adoption books and this one is exceptional! Mommy Far introduces themes for readers aged pre-school and up in a gentle and compelling way. Brownell's wonderful illustrations heighten the loveliness of this book. The message that adoption is warm and good and loving is inescapable and very powerful.
What I really loved is the fact that the story is told by a child to other children- the book's readers. 'This is my story,' she seems to be saying,'And this is how I came to understand it.'
With the daughter Elizabeth as narrator, it is the story of a little girl, adopted from China, coming to the realization of what adoption really means for herself, her family, her sister
and both sets of parents. More importantly it is the journey Elizabeth takes to understanding her journey into adoption and the vital role both mothers play in her life.
It contains loving adoption games created by mother and daughter.
Elizabeth's continued child's play using pretend phone calls from Mommy Far illustrates her growing understanding of two mommies. Elizabeth's birthmother is portrayed in very sensitive and undertsnding terms, both in text and illustrations. The young heroine ultimately concludes that both mothers have their time and place and both can fit into her life.
While this would be a wonderful addition to any library, it is especially significant for those touched by international and transracial adoptions.
Sensitive, Touching Adoption Story From Child's Viewpoint.......2001-11-08
In this sensitive, intelligent and witty account of a girl from China being adopted by U.S. parents, the author has successfully related both the emotional and factual elements of the adoption process. I especially liked the fact that the book has been written from the child's point of view. My wife and I adopted a girl from China several years ago, and this book has been a godsend to us. As we read the book to our daughter, Sarah, we realized that the author was saying all those things we had been feeling and wanting to say, yet couldn't find the words for.
I might also add that although the child in this book, Elizabeth, is from China, I feel the story is universal and applies equally well to kids from the United States or other countries.
I can not recommend this book highly enough for parents who have adopted or are considering adopting. You are truly undertaking a journey of love... a journey that is described accurately and poignantly by the author.
Customer Reviews:
No need for words..........2006-01-24
Having seen most of the photoessay/story/travel fly fishing books of the past 10-15 years, I have to say that this one is by far the best. The book is filled with world-class photos from some of the most beautiful fly fishing locations, both freshwater and salwater. When reading this book, you are not longing for any long fishing stories (most of which are published earlier somewhere else anyway) and you don't want to see a list of guides or lodges (you can find them easily from the web). The pictures with short comments are enough. I have seen some books that have five excellent shots from a particular place, but this one has tens for each of the destinations. Unbelievable book. I have to buy a bunch of these as gifts for my friends, for fly fishermen and for non-fly fishermen alike. Then I will pay a visit to my bank manager and hope that he will still loan my some money, because after getting this book, I have already started to pack my rods and reels...
Book Description
This book-on-a-disc is a comprehensive collection of NASA documents and papers on current research into future rocket designs and breakthrough propulsion concepts. NASA's current project to develop a reusable design that could replace the Space Shuttle, the Space Launch Initiative, is covered in detail, along with a wide range of exciting "breakthrough" concepts for futuristic propulsion. Nuclear rockets, hypersonics, space elevators, solar sails, ion electric engines, antimatter engines, tethers, beamed energy and laser propulsion, plasma thrusters, scramjets, interstellar sails, helicon-wave thrusters, and nuclear fusion rockets are included, with proposals for the exploration of Mars, asteroids, the outer planets, and even stars! Let your imagination soar as you read some of these incredible ideas that could take humanity far beyond where chemical rockets can travel.
Our American Spaceflight Encyclopedia CD-ROMs are designed to provide a convenient user-friendly reference work, utilizing the benefits of the Adobe Acrobat PDF format to uniformly present thousands of pages that can be rapidly reviewed or printed. Vast archives of important government information that might otherwise remain inaccessible are available for instant review. This CD-ROM makes an ideal reference work and educational tool, and is indispensable for any space enthusiast!
Average customer rating:
- Mr. Monroe journey continues...........
- Disappointing!
- Superb and fascinating information
- Incomprehensible Gibberish
- Far Journeys Review
|
Far Journeys
Robert A. Monroe
Manufacturer: Doubleday
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Psychology & Counseling
| Health, Mind & Body
| Subjects
| Books
| Adolescent Psychology
| Applied Psychology
| By Topic
| Child Psychology
| Clinical Psychology
| Cognitive
| Counseling
| Creativity & Genius
| Developmental Psychology
| Education & Training
| Ethnopsychology
| Experimental Psychology
| Forensic Psychology
| General
| History
| Hypnosis
| Industrial Psychology
| Logotherapy
| Medicine & Psychology
| Mental Illness
| Movements
| Neuropsychology
| Occupational & Organizational
| Pathologies
| Personality
| Philosophy of Psychology
| Physical Illness & Psychiatry
| Physiological Aspects
| Psychiatry
| Psychoanalysis
| Psychobiology
| Psychopharmacology
| Psychosomatic Medicine
| Psychotherapy, TA & NLP
| Reference
| Research
| Sexuality
| Social Psychology & Interactions
| Statistics
| Suicide
| Testing & Measurement
General
| New Age
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
Parapsychology
| Occult
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
Near-Death Experiences
| Occult
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
-
The Ultimate Journey
-
Journeys Out of the Body
-
Adventures Beyond the Body: How to Experience Out-of-Body Travel
-
Cosmic Journeys: My Out-Of-Body Explorations With Robert A. Monroe
-
The Secret of the Soul : Using Out-of-Body Experiences to Understand Our True Nature
ASIN: 0385231814 |
Customer Reviews:
Mr. Monroe journey continues..................2007-03-25
Mr.Monroe takes the reader through the phyiscal universe and forward to the future 3000 AD.
We are not alone!
You will have to buy the book to discover what he finds........
Disappointing!.......2007-03-04
I read this book because I wanted to know about the mysteries of life, what's out there in the afterlife, in the big picture. In this book we get this bizarre sci-fi-like story that doesn't go much of anywhere. His "insights" into what life is all about are so limited by his white-male worldview. I'm not saying that as some liberal arsty cultural studies type person, I just really can't believe that the big picture is so reflective of that worldview. According to Monroe, life is all about fear and scrambling around for money, and men rule the world. We're all just a bunch of cows gathering "loosh" for no reason that is explained with any depth. It just doesn't make sense to me that people on earth are like batteries, that the cosmos would work in such a mundane-sounding way. I came away from the book feeling like what he experienced is more reflective of his own worldview than what is really going on in the cosmos. I don't need the big picture to be all love and light, but his ideas are just so... pedestrian.
Most frustrating is that he does not ask why enough. He does not ask his guides enough questions. What the heck? It is so frustrating. The book answers so few questions.
Superb and fascinating information.......2006-08-11
This is the best book on the market about Astral Projection and what happens afterwards. I admire Monroe enormously. He has done valuable research for mankind, and even though many of us cannot/or will not have an out-of-body, for fear or other limitations, at least we know step by step how to do it and what to expect. The Bible of AP!
Incomprehensible Gibberish.......2006-07-26
I recently read Robert Monroe's first book, "Journeys Out of Body" and found it to be a disappointment - it was just weird. As I noted in my review of that book, I had hoped that the author would discuss his use of sound, for which he is allegedly noted. As I purchased this book at the same time and had nothing else to read, I thought I'd give it a try.
The book did start out with a brief discussion of some of his "research" and I thought that, perhaps, this book might actually have some real substance. That belief; however, quickly disappeared. By the time I had reached the half-way point in the book, nothing remained but a schizophrenic quagmire of incomprehensible gibberish. How does total garbage like this manage to get printed?!
There are those that claim that Monroe was a highly left-brained individual who delved into the realm of the creative right-brain. If this book is any indication, one can't help but wonder if Monroe was missing his entire left hemisphere! There is nothing logical or, for that matter, even coherent in the babble spewed across the endless pages of this book. It would have been worthwhile if Monroe had actually described his experiments and resulting data in a scientific manner. Instead, he chose to spew his incoherent ramblings about his own, personal, dream experiences: these wander so aimlessly, from paragraph to paragraph, that one can't help but wonder what real point, if any, he was trying to make.
The really sad thing is that I had really hoped to find a genuinely scientific study of his work - I was actually quite interested in the topic. Having now been subjected to two of his useless books, I'm amazed that they're still in print. This is pseudo-science at its absolute worst.
Far Journeys Review.......2006-07-03
I am so passionate about this book. It has answered all the life questions I have ever held. Although many people I have recommended it to have reported that they have not been able to "get into it" - for me, I would say it is the best book I have ever read.
This is about the 5th copy I have purchased because when I lend it out, somehow it is not returned and I want to have a copy to re-read every now and then. (I will not be lending this one again)
Books:
- A Northern Light
- A Season in the Desert: Making Time Holy
- Almanac of World History (National Geographic)
- American Insects: A Handbook of the Insects of America North of Mexico
- An Introduction to the Study of Tropical Plankton
- Aquarium Fish Stained Glass Coloring Book (Stained Glass Colouring Books)
- Bees
- Biophysical Labeling Methods in Molecular Biology
- Bioremediation (Recent Advances in Marine Biotechnology, V. 8)
- Botany for All Ages: Learning About Nature Through Activities Using Plants
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
- Gold Buckle: The Grand Obsession of Rodeo Bull Riders
- Baby Bargains, 7th Edition: Secrets to Saving 20% to 50% on baby furinture, gear, clothes, toys, mat
- Winning Through Intimidation
- Weather wisdom: Being an illustrated practical volume wherein is contained unique compilation and an
- Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin
- Arrowsmith, Elmer Gantry, Dodsworth
- A Hunter's Wanderings in Africa: Being a Narrative of Nine Years Spent Amongst the Game of the Far I
- Shadow Divers: The True Adventure of Two Americans Who Risked Everything to Solve One of the Last My
- Update Edition of College Accounting Student Edition Chapters 1-25 w/ NT & PW
- International Jobs: Where They Are and How to Get Them, Sixth Edition