Medical Books
Review:Great book highly recommend. It shows you how to approach the game of baseball and how to prepare yourself for a game , but the information not only applies to baseball but to other things as well. Great book. Read more
Review:A beautiful story! 2 priests come to Santa Fe and encounter challenges but from the native people and the environment. They both learn how to become part of New Mexico in their own way, in the end both leaving a mark on the people and the landscape Read more
Review:An important book for everyone to read, especially parents of daughters. Thank you Peggy Orenstein for not being afraid to delve into this topic and cover it so explicitly. The stories and statistics provide a better understanding of what is happening in the minds of adolescent females and what we can do to help them navigate this new world. We are parenting in a very complex and complicated time and we ourselves are trying to figure out how to behave sexually (thanks to the internet) let alone ... Read more
Review:Why was this NOT basic to my medical education- and to the education of every massage therapist, physical therapist, chiropractor, naturopath and osteopath? Knowing this is knowing how to DO NO HARM! We started learning anatomy by learning the bones! That was backwards! We should have learned about fascia and the function of connective tissue first, then muscles and THEN bones. Fascia gives birth to bones and is the beginning of the structure we have credited the bones for all along! This body o... Read more
No reviews yet
Review:Very well done book on the minds, thinking, patterns and scary sequelae of psychopaths living among us. Very scary and very true. Enough said. You want to know what these monsters are like, look no further than this book.
JH Read more
Review:The concept of the book actually states on its cover -- Discipline.
Learn everything about discipline and you are good to go. What irritates me is that this book lacks the fundamental psychological analysis (e.g.: psychoanalysis), offends the most valuable business principle (i.e.: concise/KISS) and also misses the personal touch (lack of examples, stories). So it is hard to categorize it as anything but a twaddle.
Save your money and read something that demonstrate the discipline,... Read more
Review:"Blind Eye" haunted me for quite awhile after I read it. The book portrays a classic example of evil being assisted by bureaucratic ineptitude. Stewart makes his case that Dr. Michael Swango may be the most prolific serial killer in U.S. history. His case is a compelling page turner that reads like fiction. Even scarier is that Swango is due to be released THIS YEAR. One caution, do not read this book if you are planning to be in the hospital any time soon. You will not find it comforti... Read more
Review:Please mention whether the item has deckled edges or not. No matter how good the condition of the book is, deckled edged books can be very disputable. Some people might love it while some people might loathe it. Unfortunately, I'm the latter, and I despise wrongfully made "should be factory rejects but the publisher was too cheap" kind of products, especially in this age of industrialism. I do like to see some quirky books time to time, especially with the antique ones, but not in a modern copy ... Read more
Review:A must read for everyone in the customer service world. Fred Lee has so many inspirational ideas and down-home stories that as I was reading I making notes to share with my staff. There is no reason any business cannot be exceptional after employing his suggestions. Way to go, Mr. Lee! Read more