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Architecture of Ecology - Architectural Design Profiles 125 (Architectural Design)
Academy
Manufacturer: Academy Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 1854902601 |
Book Description
This profile focuses on numerous aspects of green architecture today, that set the stage for the new politics and philosophies that have, and still are, influencing ecological design.
Book Description
With hundreds of illustrations, this comprehensive, thoroughly researched, and compulsively readable record of baseball's greatest moments and seasonal events is sure to stimulate the memories and fantasies of much of American-and serve as an invaluable reference and argument-settler. Baseball has never been chronicled they way this timeline works. It covers every great moment in baseball, along with the colorful people, events, quotations, turning points, scandals, comic moments, and nostalgia of the national sport. Unlike any other baseball book, The Baseball Timeline is a day-by-day, year-by-year account of what happened throughout the baseball world. Every significant event is chronicled with just the level of detail fans want. In addition to individual feats, entries include landmark pennant races, important trades, disputes (on and off the field), famous firsts and lasts, franchise shifts, the openings of new ball parks, and even details of the last game played at stadiums scheduled for demolition. Keep The Baseball Timeline by the TV; let it stand as a home reference that provides nostalgic memories, "the last word" in disputes, or the one place to ensure that you know what really happened. It is a baseball fan's paradise for sidelights, trivia, nostalgia, color, and "I never knew that!" information. Lively text invites readers in for an exciting tour of the past beginning with its possible origins as an Native American game and continuing on through the first season of the new millennium.
Customer Reviews:
Great for next generation of baseball fans.......2005-09-13
This book is great for young baseball fans, like myself, who want breakdowns of the classic games that our parents and grandparents told us about. Its' one drawback is that it doesn't go too much into detail about every little event that happened during each season (if it did, the book would probably be multiple volumes thick), but rather summarizes important events and highlights. It's a great resource to jump around to different infamous or classic seasons, like 1955, 1919, Jackie Robinson's first season, etc. If my interest is sparked on a particular season or event, I'll do further research on the net.
A Baseball Almanac Source.......2003-06-03
This is the single best collection of baseball related events set to a timeframe. Baseball Almanac... uses this exact source to settle many disputes, help many visitors, and has proudly referred it as a source worth buying more than 150 times. A must have for the serious and not so serious fan of our national pastime.
The baseball timeline.......2002-04-15
...The baseball timeline is a lavishly illustrated history of baseball that is edited in such a way that it can be read as any book from cover to cover or browsed over like a encyclopedia.A must for any baseball fan
Concise, fact-filled, illustrated.......2001-11-09
I've waited a long time for this ! This is one of the best baseball history books I've ever read. This book is filled with information, statistics and other history related headlines of the past and present centuries. The illustrations are fantastic images of the yesteryear and today.
I recommend this book to all generations, especially today's, if they want to learn about baseball history, this book is the best way to get started.
Congratulations to Mr. Solomon for his super book !
Good tales, needs proofreading.......2001-08-21
This book delivers what you'd expect--a People magazine look at baseball history. There are some fine stories about colorful players, but on every other page, something missed by the editors will jump out at you and scream "didn't anyone proofread this thing!"
If you don't mind reading an unpolished book, it may not bother you. But knowing that fans of baseball books are by and large sticklers for detail and statistics, this book could have been much, much better with only a little more cleaning.
Once you get past that, and the fact that you won't find any statistics to speak of, it's a fun read. Get it for the bathroom.
Customer Reviews:
Every baseball fan should have this book!.......2000-05-26
This book is wonderful! To non-fans, (like my wife), this book is completley trivial and worthless, But this is wonderful. True it is skimpy on the 19th century but what there is is great! It goes year by year discussing major events, and some minor ones in baseball history for that year. It attempts to trace the beginnings of baseball, all the way back to 1776, this book claims. For Baseball Historians this is a priceless work, although it would have been helpful to footnote all of the sources, and the other reviewer is correct the author should have used the Official Encyclopedia, as well as others. It's kind of like he ignored the source.
Great book! Day-to-day account makes me feel I was there!.......1999-09-21
This is the best historical baseball book for the value that I have ever read. It does a great job of going through the key happenings from one day to the next, both on-the-field and off-the-field. The evolution of baseball is seen clearly, especially in the 1900's when rule changes were continuously happening. You can see the effects the changes had on the overall statistics. The amount of work that went into putting this book together must have been unbelievable.
The book can be approached in many ways. You can: a) look for a particular day in history to see what happened, b) read through a year of particular interest, c) look at the league leaders in major statistics as well as awards given each year, and d) use the index to read about a particular person, event, etc. Lastly, you can read it cover-to-cover, which is what I did the first time.
There are a few errors here and there (very small amount compared to the total amount of information in the book), but I am sure they will be corrected in the next edition, which I will surely buy!
Excellent - but not outstanding.......1998-06-30
The Baseball Timeline is an excellent book. It is packed with lots of interesting information about the history of baseball listed by calendar day for each year. However, it has two major flaws. One is that it uses the inaccurate Baseball Encyclopedia instead of the much, much more accurate (and OFFICIAL) encyclopedia, Total Baseball. The other flaw is that Solomon's book is very skimpy in details for the 19th. century. In all honesty, I would recommend that readers who REALLY want a day-by-day type outline of baseball history should get The Baseball Chronology (by Charlton) instead.
Book Description
A fun, easy-to-use, and totally unique visual presentation of the history of America's favorite pastime. The lavishly illustrated fourteen-foot foldout features a panel for each decade beginning in the 1860s, detailing all aspects of the game, including the rise of the Major and Negro Leagues, rule and equipment changes over time, the evolution of playing styles, the development of Little League, and the growth of the sport outside of the U.S. The Timeline History of Baseball also features panels on the World Series, the All-Star Game, the playing field, how uniforms changed, major league ballparks, Hall of Fame players, collectibles and memorabilia, and an chapter entitled "Baseball Babylon" that chronicles some of the weirder moments in the game's history. An absolute must-have for anyone who loves baseball!
Customer Reviews:
Excellent book of baseball's history!.......2006-03-19
Great book for people of all ages who love baseball!! Got it for my husband, and he enjoyed it greatly!!
Book Description
American Sign Language (ASL) is something we've all seen Deaf people use in restaurants, hospitals, airports, and throughout the marketplace. The communication is fascinating to watch; to see people sharing ideas by using handshapes and body language is remarkable in a world so defined by sound.
Signing For Dummies gives you a general understanding of the properties of Sign, as well as an understanding of Deaf culture. Designed to act as an introduction or a refresher, the book focuses solely on ASL. Although certainly not the only form of Sign Language, ASL is the most popular in the Deaf community within the United States.
Categorized by subject, this illustrated guide covers grammar and sentence structure, along with the tools to get you going in basic conversation by knowing how to
- Introduce and greet people
- Ask questions and make small talk
- Order food and chat with salespeople
- Handle medical emergencies
- Talk on the phone
- Get around town for fun or business
Although "speaking" American Sign Language (ASL) is mostly a matter of using your fingers, hands, and arms, facial expression and body language are important and sometimes crucial for understanding Signs and their meaning. Signing For Dummies gets the whole body into the action as the fun-to-read resource explores
- Signs that look like what they mean
- Expression of emotions and feelings
- Signing sports and weather
- Compass points conversations: Getting or giving directions
- Descriptions of where it hurts
- Deaf community customs, norms, and culture
Each chapter throughout the book invites you to practice specific Signs in a "Fun & Games" section. Translation guides complement the video CD-ROM, which features demonstrations by ASL Signers and actual conversations in progress – all designed to have you moving your hands, body, and face to convey meaning that reaches way beyond linguistic barriers.
Customer Reviews:
Fair to middling.......2005-03-14
I don't particularly reccommend this for a complete neophyte to signing, as I was when I got this book. As other reviewers have suggested, a thorough video, or book-video combination might be best. There is a CD that comes with the book, however, it is too simple and has minimalist videos, making it by and large useless for a beginner.
The saving grace of Signing for Dummies is clear and simple sign diagramming, imbuing the book with at least one redeeming quality.
Would recommend learning from a video first.......2004-07-15
I nearly didn't buy the book, based on the poor reviews it got. Luckily, I spotted it in the bookstore and flipped through. It's actually quite good. I wouldn't pick it as your first book on sign language though, as some things tend to get a bit confusing if you don't already know some sign.
For example, I noticed one of the illustrations was of one version of a sign, and the description was another. Both were valid signs that meant the same thing, but it would have been better to have just one.
I also loved the CD in the back of the book. It is a wonderful idea for a book to show the language in motion.
Ok... but not great........2004-05-02
I have been teaching myself sign over the last couple of years. I found certain area's of this book helpful. Such as the "Cheat Sheet" that comes with it that has the alphabet and numbers on it. On the back are some begginer sayings such as "please" and "thank you".
I have found many other books much more useful (as I already well know the alphabet ;) ).
I does have some interesting/helpful hints and games to play that do allow you to practice. And also a quiz at the end of each chapter.
Pick up the "ASL Dictionary" before you open this book and you'll be better off. In my opinion.
I give this book a 3 but I was close to giving it a 2. :D
Signing for dummies.......2004-04-06
Angela Taylor is my american sign language teacher. If she can teach me... she can teach anyone. She is a remarkable woman and an outstanding teacher. Her zest and enthusiasm is surpassed only by her love for "communication". I will enjoy and benefit from this publication for years to come. Thanx,Robin
Where's my review?.......2004-01-29
I submitted a review a couple weeks ago. Worked on it hard. Gave many examples. It conforms to your "review guidelines" Where is it?
Average customer rating:
- Baby signing for dummies
- Wish I had this book with my first child!
- Great Resource especially for beginner Baby Signers
- Very Helpful Book
|
Baby Signing For Dummies (For Dummies (Language & Literature))
Jennifer Watson
Manufacturer: For Dummies
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Similar Items:
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Signing for Dummies
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Your Baby's First Year For Dummies (For Dummies (Lifestyles Paperback))
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The Complete Idiot's Guide to Baby Sign Language (Complete Idiot's Guide to)
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Sign Babies ASL Flash Cards, Set One: First Words
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Baby Einstein - My First Signs
ASIN: 0471773867 |
Book Description
Have you thought about signing with your baby or toddler? Parents and caregivers are discovering the benefits of using American Sign Language (ASL) to communicate with children long before they can speak. Some studies show that signing babies talk sooner, have larger vocabularies, and have fewer tantrums!
Baby Signing For Dummies gives you the skills to connect in a meaningful way with your hearing baby or toddler. Packed with more than 150 illustrated signs, this friendly, easy-to-follow guide shows you how to use simple hand gestures and baby-specific signing techniques to start interacting with your baby. Every sign is accompanied by step-by-step directions and an illustration—from meeting and greeting, people, and mealtime signs to clothes, animals, outdoor signs, and, of course, bath time and bedtime. You’ll discover how to:
- Introduce signs to your baby
- Incorporate signing into daily life
- Make everyday events easier with signs
- Overcome stumbling blocks
- Decrease fussing and crying through signing
- Help your baby sign combinations of words
- Keep your baby safe with signing
- Get the whole family involved
- Find outside help (Web sites, videos, and signing schools and courses)
Complete with illustrations of the entire ASL alphabet, signing dos and don’ts, and ten songs to sign along with, Baby Signing For Dummies is the key to enhancing communication with your child and increasing his/her intelligence in a simple, fun, and rewarding way!
Customer Reviews:
Baby signing for dummies.......2007-05-13
Great book, this has been very helpful communicating with our young grandchildren!!!
Wish I had this book with my first child!.......2007-02-05
This book is a great way to learn sign language and teach your babies/kids. My now 20 month old is able to tell me what she needs and there is much less frustration in the house than I had with my first child at this age. My 4 1/2 year old and my 20 month old can communicate with each other as well through signs. I love this book and it has started me on a path of learning/teaching more signs. You can't go wrong with it - even if you only use one sign from it (you don't have to remember them all to have your life easier by using signs).
Great Resource especially for beginner Baby Signers.......2007-01-10
If you've heard any of the buzz about teaching your baby to sign, but don't know or understand the importance...this book will tell you. It's informative and easy to read. You'll learn some basic and everyday useful signs to share with your baby. Signing is advantageous for all ages to learn. My almost 7 year old and 3 1/2 year old really enjoy learning new signs (now that I have a book) past the couple I taught them eons back and help with the 20 month old in her learning. Signing makes communicating so much easier too. Neither one of us is frustrated in knowing when she's done eating or wanting more. I can communicate across a noisy room without yelling. And to find out that it's only helping their brain power by learning to sign...what parent or caregiver wouldn't want that. This book helps make that possible in easy steps.
Very Helpful Book.......2007-01-10
This book is wonderful in learning how to sign with your baby. It is very easy to read and understand. I highly recommend this book to anyone learning to sign with their baby.
Average customer rating:
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Baby Signing for Dummies (For Dummies)
Manufacturer: John Wiley & Sons Inc
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Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0470224037 |
Customer Reviews:
Too many life changing epiphanies for a book reluctant to reveal much about the author's life.......2006-05-06
There were parts of this memoir I enjoyed very much---mainly as a travelogue of a trip through China in the 1980s---I liked hearing about the struggles to get train or plane tickets, the cruise on the Ganges, the various relatives of the author and what their homes and meals and lives were like. However, that alone doesn't make a book. This book suffered from being both too much and too little. The too much part was the author's MANY, MANY epiphanies about herself as she traveled with her mother through China. It sometimes seemed like every paragraph ended with Chao realizing another thing about herself, her roots, her feelings about family, her feelings about China....everything she saw or did seemed to trigger a new realization. There was also too much for my particular taste about tennis and music---passions of the author, but not that interesting to read about for those who don't share the passion. The too little part was the background information that would make the visit to China and the relative's visits to the US more meaningful for a reader. I sensed the author didn't want to give away too much about her life or family---which is fine, but not really what makes a good memoir. For example, she mentions a sister, but tells absolutely nothing about her life, which made me wonder why it was the author who was singled out as so important to her grandfather that he left some of his most precious possessions to her and not her sister, or her brother. Her parent's bizarre marriage was visited on, but not really explained, and it was mentioned that the author did not have children, but why this was the case was not revealed---again, an author's right, but in a book about family and its ties, such information would add a lot to making this a meaningful book, and making the author's many realizations mean a little more.
A subtly moving and honest memoir.......2005-08-28
On one level this book is a travelogue. The author is one
of many thousands of American tourists visiting China in the late
1980's. She is taken to see the beautiful lakes of Hangzhou,
rides on a boat through the Yangtze's three famous gorges, and
is shown the wonderful troops of clay warriors in the tombs of
Xian, besides visits to the Forbidden City and Tian An Men Square. However, the author's fellow traveller is her mother, who has many
relatives and friends in China. During a good part of their
5 week journey, they are guided by ordinary Chinese citizens
and eat with or stay with them in their homes. As a result, the
author sees the lives of these citizens as few truly foreign tourists
would. Her descriptions of old men with back sores who pull
pedicabs for a living, or the indignities endured by four families
sharing a communal kitchen doubling as a communal toilet, or
of the distant cousin who, having come on a 5-hour train ride,
had to leave on the return trip after only half an hour's visit for
fear of missing the next day's work, serve as a valuable
cultural study of daily life in China in that period.
On another level, this book is the author's exploration of
that part of her identity which is Chinese even though she was
born and bred in the USA. Inextricably interwined with this
exploration is the author's attempt to understand and resolve her uneasy
relationship with her own mother. While they journey together
through Shanghai, Hangzhou, Xian and ChongQing towards Beijing,
where lies her grandfather's house, "Yeh Yeh's House", these
other explorations occur in parallel. We see the author begin to
perceive and appreciate her mother in new ways as her mother reveals
herself more fully in surroundings where she feels truly at home.
Through the connections the author makes with her relatives and their
unconditional acceptance of her in the family, the author
also appears to achieve a better acceptance of her role in her
family's Chinese lineage.
The author is able to capture many poignant episodes with
understatement that is all the more affecting. When she offers
her uncle visiting her in Minnesota spending money, his face
"reflected a clash of spontaneous myriad thoughts", trying to
assess what was proper in their relationship as "uncle and niece,
foreigner and American, poor and rich, man and woman, guest and
hostess." When her female cousin links arms with her in an
off-handed way during a shopping trip, the author writes that she
sees "in her warm brown eyes only simple attention, uncomplicated
by judgment or expectation. In the firm support of her arm
I felt a closeness I had not felt anywhere else, a simple
unspoken intimacy...". In these and other episodes the author
manages to describe the intricacies underlying human relationships
with as much skill and delicacy as in the finest playing
of any Bach sonata.
Bravo!
Will's Thoughts on Yeh Yeh's House.......2005-03-08
I have just finished this book and it was an absolutely wonderful read, getting me very excited for my own upcoming trip to China and everything that it might hold. Of course for me it will be a completely different experience, I'm a white boy from Canada, however it is a truly wonderful journey she takes us on.
Evelina slowly brings you in to the world of her family and all that encapsulates being a Chinese-American never having visited Yeh Yeh's house in China. Over the journey, she helps you to try and understand the relationships of everyone involved and how being in China transforms her own understanding of her herself. She is such a beautiful writer that you the reader go through this transformation with her, coming out at the end of the book with a new understanding of what it means to connect with your own heritage.
I cannot recommend it enough to anyone, and will treasure it forever on my bookshelf
An extraordinary family portrait in modern Communist China.......2005-02-11
Ms Chao, a St Paul, Minn artist and first generation Chinese American, writes a personal travelog about seeking her roots. She portrays a saga with extraordinary sensitivity and cultural transparency. Common with the demands of establishing her professional and family life, she indeterminably delays the plaintive urging of her paternal grandfather (Yeh Yeh) to come and visit him in Beijing before it is too late (p6, 22). Her wryly, humorous writing style makes this an enjoyable read and for Sinophiles there are many topics in each chapter to chuckle and reflect on cultural differences.
She writes about a sojourn of 15 years ago, a 5-week visit with her mother. As with most Americans, she must rely on her to explain and interpret what they see, do and meet. As an added layer of complexity and intrigue, as youngest daughter of three children (p3, 72) she discusses the increasing dichotomy between her and her immigrant thinking parents. During the trip, plans and actions by her mother slowly reveal a newfound awe in her brilliance, cleverness and resourcefulness.
As a then 38 year old, her trip to China (p110) was set in the late 80s, when Deng Xiaoping's Reform and Opening program is in full swing, but before the Tiananmen Square incident in 89 or completion of the Three Gorges Dam. Her book has 26 chapters divided into 2 sections. Her China journey starts on Part II, Chap 10, p103 with a flight to Shanghai. Her book is illustrated with one portrait of her grandfather and a map of the China journey, but no diagram of the family tree, references or index. There is little discussion on the writing of this book, so the artful craft is ultimately up to the reader to judge the intimate thoughts, innate Chinese mannerisms, and veracity of the passages.
Because of her trip's timing to China, the author portrays the hardship and indelible imprint of Mao's China had on her aunts and uncles, cousins and extended family. While personal and intimate, Chao does not mince words in describing the birth of Communist China and how the various epics of the Cultural Revolution, Great Leap Forward and Reform left their lasting imprint and what it meant to survive. She also clearly and succinctly describes the life and environment of the common people, both their pleasures and their warts.
Part I is a prelude to the actual trip. Sung Lien, her Chinese name given by her grandfather, has been calling for her several times since the 70s. Her grandfather was a famous theologian at Yenching U, Beijing, one of the first Christian missionary schools in China and who was educated at Vanderbilt U in the States. Her grandfather was Dean of Yenching's School of Religion and a top China leader for the World Council of Churches. During the Cultural Revolution, the Red Guard singled out Chao Tzu-ch'en for reform of intellectuals and religion. Reform meant forced public recantation of beliefs, burning of his works, being publically denounced, interrogated, imprisonment and menial labor in service to the new regime. Later the Communist regime takes over Yenching to form the elite Peking University.
Interestingly Chao describes the several visits from the extended family to the US. For example in Chap 3, her paternal aunt visited, just after Yeh Yeh committed suicide during to the Red Guard purge of pro-Western ideology (p77). The visit is a distant, highbrow one as her mother describes her paternal aunt, who is cut in the same cloth of her grandfather. Then her other Beijing paternal uncle and his wife visited her family in the US (Chap 5-7), whom she bonded with and immensely enjoyed. They reinforced that it is in her destiny to visit her grandfather house in China, portending that this trip alone, she will experience profound events that will affect her life immeasurably. Chao always demurs that she has no time and must learn Mandarin first.
The previous nine chapters in Part I set the stage for the trip, in a autobiographical portrait of the author during childhood, school, young adult, and professional life as a musician for a major city orchestra. The author clearly and sensitively portrays the common issues between immigrant and later generations. There is much misunderstanding and resentment that mother and daughter distance themselves as a matter of self-preservation (p100).
Chao finally decides to go to China with her mother in 1984 (p84) just after her Beijing Uncle's visit. Three years later and with three months of Mandarin lessons, they depart in June 1987.
Part II, over the next 180 pgs or 2/3rds of the book, is a personal travelog to visit relatives and mother's friends in Shanghai, Xi'an, Chongqing, Yangtze River trip through the 3 Gorges to Wuhan, Changsha, and finally Beijing. This travelog is unique that it shows how to travel as the natives do and how to circumvent travel issues that come up due to the overburdened transportation systems that existed in this slice in time. It also shows the family life and thought patterns of modern Chinese as they weathered the birth and maturation of the new China State.
It also shows the bewilderment and culture shock that any new visitor to China would experience. Chao's innate sensitivity to her environment, facilitiates her writing to include the thrills and pleasures as well as doubts and misgivings in well crafted elocution. In Shanghai and environs, she visits her maternal aunt and family (Chap11-14); flying to Xi'an, she visits her mother's former classmate, friends and Terra-Cotta warriors (Chap 15-18); flying to Chongqing, she visits with a Director of an actor's troupe and family (Chap 17); set sail thru the famed 3 Gorges (Chap 18); in Wuhan, she visits with former classmate, who gets them train tickets to Changsha; where she visits with her mother's sister and brother and families (Chap 19-20); finally she gets the elusive plane tickets to Beijing to visit her paternal and maternal aunts, uncles and friends, the Great Wall and Forbidden City (Chap 21-25); and finally train tickets back to their Shanghai POE.
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