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Showing posts with label american. Show all posts
Showing posts with label american. Show all posts

Monday, October 15, 2012

Eclipse Interpretation Manual (Rose Lineman)


Eclipse Interpretation Manual
Rose Lineman

Blurb: A valuable book for the serious astrologer, the Eclipse Interpretation manual explains it all. The eclipse is viewed as part of a sequence. Its initial influence is described along with the meanings of the solar and lunar eclipses in the signs and houses and their aspects to the planets. The author covers the meaning of the Moon's Nodes and the importance of the eclipses when falling on any of the four angles. Her delineation techniques are clearly explained. This is a welcome companion book to her already popular Eclipses: Astrological Guideposts.

ISBN: 08669030118 (Paperback)
Year: 1986
Publisher: American Federation of Astrologers 
Pages: 147 (Non-Fiction)

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Tuesday, July 17, 2012

The Red Badge of Courage (Stephen Crane)


The Red Badge of Courage
Stephen Crane

Blurb: He felt that in this crisis his laws of life were useless. Whatever he had learned of himself was here of no avail. He was an unknown quantity.

Following one soldier's journey from naive recruit to hardened survivor, The Red Badge of Courage is a vivid and powerfully psychological take on the American Civil War. Fighting for the Union army, Henry Fleming is thrown into a bloody war where the harsh realities and horrors of battle quickly become evident. Fearful, occasionally vain, but always viewing the war with honest eyes, Henry eventually comes to thrive as a soldier in combat and it is with a new conscience and outlook that he matures into manhood. 

ISBN: 9780007902200 (Paperback)
Year: 1895
Publisher: Collins Classics
Pages: 188 (Fiction)

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Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The American Civil War - A Military History (John Keegan)

The American Civil War - A Military History
John Keegan

Blurb: This magisterial history of the first modern war is on the scale of John Keegan's classics, A History of Warfare and The First World War. In his sweeping, unputdownable narrative he highlights the geography, leadership and strategic logic at the heart of the conflict.

John Keegan writes: 'The geography of the battlefield is to me a living reality. I know the appearance of the battlefields, I know the distances between them, I know the cemeteries in which the dead were buried. What constantly puzzles me, however, is to relate the landmarks of the war to its events, chronology, strategy and logic. That war went on for so long and over such an enormous space - the Confederacy covered an area as large as Europe west of Russia - and involved so many battles (260 is the common reckoning) and so many people, that its events conform to no patterns at all.

'How to make sense of the war is the question. In recent years, this became the primary concern of historians, after nearly a century of writing concerned either with arguing the rights and wrongs or simply retelling the story chronologically.

'The story of America is, in one of its dimensions, that of man and wilderness. The story can be told as one in which man tames and dominates; it can equally be told as one in which nature is never really subdued, always bides its time, often asserts its power to remind men of their pygmy status. The Civil War is certainly a story of the struggle of man against man; it is equally a story of the struggle of man against geography, in which those who had a feel for the country eventually succeeded because they knew how to work with the landscape instead of ignoring or defying it.'


ISBN: 9780091794835 (Hardback)
Year: 2009
Publisher: Hutchinson
Pages: 394 (Non-Fiction)

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

General George Washington: A Military Life (Edward G. Lengel)

General George Washington: A Military Life
Edward G. Lengel

Blurb: Much has been written in the past two centuries about George Washington the statesman and 'father of his country.' Less often discussed is Washington's military career, including his exploits as a young officer and his performance as the Revolutionary War commander in chief. Now, in a revealing work of historical biography, Edward G. Lengel has written the definitive account of George Washington the soldier.

Based largely on Washington's personal papers, this engrossing book paints a vivd, factual portrait of a man to whom lore and legend so tenaciously cling. To Lengel, Washington was the imperfect commander. Washington possessed no great tactical ingenuity, and his acknowledged 'brilliance in retreat' only demonstrates the role luck plays in the fortunes of all great men. He was not an enlisted man's leader; he made a point of never mingling with his troops. He was not an especially creative military thinker; he fought largely by the book. By no means a professional, he was a citizen soldier who, at a time when warfare demanded that armies manoeuvre efficiently in precise formation, had little practical training handling men in combat.

Yet despite his flaws, Washington was a remarkable figure, a true man of the moment, a leader who possessed a clear strategic, national, and continental vision and who inspired complete loyalty in his fellow revolutionaries, officers, and enlisted men. America could never have won freedom without him.

Washington, a trained surveyor, mastered topography and used his superior knowledge of battlegrounds to maximum effect. He appreciated the importance of strong allies in times of crisis, and understood well the benefits of coordinating ground and naval forces. Like the American nation itself, he was a whole that was greater than the sum of its parts - a remarkable everyman whose acts determined the course of history. Lengel argues that Washington's excellence was in his completeness, in how he united the military, political. and personal skills necessary to lead a nation in war and peace.

At once informative and engaging, and filled with some eye-opening revelations about Washington, the war for American independence, and the very nature of military command, General George Washington is a book that reintroduces readers to a figure many think they already know.

ISBN: 1400060818 (Hardback)
Year: 2005
Publisher: Random House
Pages: 450 (Non-Fiction)

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

American Psycho (Bret Easton Ellis)

American Psycho
Bret Easton Ellis

Blurb: Patrick Bateman is handsome, well-educated, intelligent. He works by day on Wall Street, earning a fortune to complement the one he was born with. His nights he spends in ways we cannot begin to fathom. He is twenty-six years old and living his own American Dream.

ISBN: 0307278638 (Paperback)
Year: 1991
Publisher: Vintage
Pages: 399 (Fiction)

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Tuesday, July 26, 2011

The Widow of the South (Robert Hicks)

The Widow of the South
Robert Hicks

Blurb: If God was watching that Indian summer afternoon of 30 November 1864, some say he would have been looking at the continent of America, in the central part of a state called Tennessee, at a little town called Franklin - where a terrible battle was about to begin.

Within a few short hours nearly ten thousand men would be dead, and the lives of many others changed utterly; none more so than that of Carrie McGavock, who would find her home taken over by the Confederate Army and turned into a field hospital. On the field of battle, a seasoned Southern soldier, Zachariah Cashwell, would drop his gun and charge forward into Yankee territory holding only the flag of his company's colours.

In the pain-filled days and weeks that followed, both would find a form of mutual healing that neither thought possible.

In an extraordinary debut novel, based on a true story, Robert Hicks paints an unforgettable portrait of a woman who, through love and loss, found a cause. Known throughout the century as the Widow of the South, Carrie McGavock gave her heart first to a stranger, then to a piece of hallowed ground, becoming in the process a symbol of a nation's soul.

ISBN: 059305590 (Paperback)
Year: 2005
Publisher: Bantam Press
Pages: 432 (Fiction)

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Sunday, July 10, 2011

The American / A Very Private Gentleman (Martin Booth)

The American (A Very Private Gentleman)
Martin Booth

Blurb: The locals in the Italian village where he lives call him Signor Farfalla - Mr Butterfly. He is a discreet gentleman who spends his time studying rare butterflies.

But Farafalla's real profession is deadly. He considers himself an artisan, not for the butterflies he paints but for the guns he creates for assassins.

Farafalla has resolved to make his next job his last. Then, perhaps, he can settle down comfortably in the Italian village he has grown to love and enjoy the remainder of his life without constantly looking over his shoulder.

But a treacherous circle is closing in on him...

ISBN: 9780553825725 (Paperback)
Year: 2004
Publisher: Bantam Books
Pages: 384 (Fiction)

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Monday, June 20, 2011

The Declaration of Independence and Other Great Documents of American History, 1775-1865 (John Grafton)

The Declaration of Independence and Other Great Documents of American History, 1775-186
Edited by John Grafton

Blurb: The great documents in this important collection helped form the foundation of American democratic government. Compelling, influential, and often inspirational, they range from Patrick Henry's dramatic 'Give me liberty or give me death' speech at the start of the American Revolution to Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address, issued in the closing weeks of the Civil War. Also included are the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson's classic rationale for rejecting allegiance to the government of King George III; the Monroe Doctrine, the cornerstone of American foreign policy and these other landmark statements;
-The Constitution of the United States
- James Madison: The Federalist, No. 10
- George Washington: First Inaugural Address
- George Washington: Farewell Address
- Thomas Jefferson: First Inaugural Address
- William Lloyd Garrison: Prospectus for the Liberator
- Andrew Jackson: Veto of the Bank Bill
- Abraham Lincoln: First Inaugural Address
- Abraham Lincoln: Emancipation Proclamation
- Abraham Lincoln: Gettysburg Address

An introductory note precedes the text of each historic document, providing fascinating background history and information about the author. An indispensable reference for students, this handy compendium will also serve as an invaluable introduction for general readers to American political writing.

ISBN: 9780486411248 (Paperback)
Year: 2000
Publisher: Dover Publications
Pages: 96 (Non-Fiction)

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