วันเสาร์ที่ 22 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: The Tipping Point



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

"It is safe to say that word of mouth is still the most important form of human communication."

-The Tipping Point

For those of us who make our living with our words, communication seems to be changing constantly. Athletic departments and teams are rushing to put up Facebook pages and create Twitter accounts to stay up-to-date. But it turns out that our (verbal) word still trumps all forms of social media...or so Malcolm Gladwell says in his book, The Tipping Point.

The rundown: The Tipping Point is about how epidemics start. He talks about regular old epidemics of sickness, but his major focus is on social epidemics. Like how certain books, cartoons, or clothes become popular. In our youTube world, I suppose we'd say "viral" now to mean social epidemic. For coaches interested in making an idea go viral on their team, this book could be helpful.

He identified three different types of people who are required for ideas to go viral: Connectors, Mavens, and Salesmen.

Connectors are people who operate in many different social circles and have a gift for bringing those folks together in a way that's not awkward. Mavens accumulate and share knowledge...they're information brokers. Salesmen are the folks who persuade us when we are unconvinced of what we're hearing.

Recommended for: Coaches who are interested in how teams work. To me, Connectors, Mavens, and Salesmen are almost like personality types. If we've got what we think is a great idea or we're planning on changing some things around on our team, identifying these key people on our teams will help us get buy in from the rest of the team. Using this information could prove vital in team management.

Not recommended for: Folks who don't want to have to stretch for coaching connections. This isn't a book about coaching or about sports. It's about how to make ideas go viral. If you're looking for quotations to put up in your locker room, then this isn't the book for you.

I enjoyed The Tipping Point, it made me think about my communication with my recruits, my current team, my alumni...everyone. Gladwell is a researcher with a gift of making tedious information more interesting. This isn't my favorite book of his, Outliers was a game changer for me, but I highly recommend this one as we think about how to get our ideas across to others.

Dawn Redd is the Head Volleyball Coach at Beloit College. Come visit Coach Dawn's community of coaching nerds and team leaders over at her blog, http://www.coachdawnwrites.com/, where she teaches how to become an excellent coach, motivate individuals, and build successful teams.

Her book, Coach Dawn's Guide To Motivating Female Athletes, is available for purchase on her website.

Follow Coach Dawn on Twitter: @CoachDawnWrites




วันศุกร์ที่ 7 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Review of "Saving Sea Turtles"



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Saving Sea Turtles: Extraordinary Stories from the Battle Against Extinction [Hardcover]
by James R. Spotila
240 pages, $24.95
ISBN-13: 978-0801899072
Nonfiction

In 2003, Disney released Finding Nemo, a forlorn tale which chronicles the haphazard journey of a Clownfish named Marlin as he navigates the Great Barrier Reef to locate his missing son, Nemo. In the opening scenes of that movie, Nemo excitedly asks his dad if he has ever met a shark with an important follow-on question: "How old are sea turtles?" Marlin, perhaps a little too annoyed while contemplating his son's first day of school replies, "Well, if I ever meet a sea turtle I'll ask him, right after I'm done talking to the shark." Fortunately, this said tale has a happy ending-Marlin is reunited with his son and informs him that some sea turtles live to be 150 years old.

Such is the mythos of animated cartoons where sea creatures are presented as talkative, happy, and engaging. While sea turtles can live to be quite old, the reality is that their numbers are dwindling every year. In his Saving Sea Turtles: Extraordinary Stories from the Battle against Extinction, James Spotila illustrates the issues that directly threaten these amazing aquatic animals.

Dr. James Spotila, a tenured biology professor for Drexel University, has penned a moving work which illustrates the tragedy of many varieties of sea turtles. While he does have a penchant for dropping names and places where his graduate students have studied, the book does not read like a lifeless doctoral dissertation. Quite the contrary, I found his thesis to be stimulating and provocative-throughout I kept asking myself: Is there anything I can do about this? In this collection of stories, the reader learns some amazing truths about the ongoing effort to preserve sea turtles for future generations.

I will never forget a turtle encounter I had while walking along the coastline in North Carolina. Early one morning, my wife and I were enjoying a leisurely stroll when we were flagged down by a determined beach visitor. He showed us the patterns in the sand that were indicative of a sea turtle coming ashore to place her eggs safely in a nest at the head of the beach. Together we called the local conservation society who dispatched a group of volunteers within minutes to cordon off the nest with appropriate notification.

Turtle conservation is necessary to pass along the appreciation of these amazing animals to our children. This book will anger you when you read of the lengths to which some will go to destroy nature. Everyone can play a part in sea turtles conservation-if you enjoy aquatic life, you will love this book.

Review by Steven King, MBA, MEd




วันอาทิตย์ที่ 25 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: World's Strangest Aircraft



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Summary

A large format book with lots of large pictures and less than 100 pages, this is a quick read. This is what some would call a coffee table book.

Organized into five chapters, each one tackles a broad category of aircraft. For example, chapter three is titled "The Desperate Struggle" and it covers military experimental aircraft from World War II. Chapter four is mostly about tailless designs. The last chapter is a general catch-all chapter covering general oddball aircraft, including helicopters.

An introduction to each chapter sets the stage for the aircraft covered. Then, one paragraph is devoted to each specimen.

The Good

There are a lot of airplanes in this book that I don't remember seeing anywhere else. Specially the first two chapters on early aviation pioneers before World War II, which are filled with wonderfully interesting airplanes. There are many fascinating Russian aircraft throughout the book, but specially in these early chapters.

Generally speaking, the pictures chosen for the book nail their subjects. They are great. Many in full color, all contain lots of details that really bring their subjects to life.

This book is a very easy read. The writing is solid, tying together all the aircraft discussed very nicely.

The Bad

I did not find any typos, but there is a picture caption that is missing its picture. That did not look so good.

Most pictures do not contain enough detail to even begin designing a scale model. That really was not a surprise. There is only one picture per aircraft, and many are side profile ground shots. In other words, there is no information provided on the shape of the wing.

I was already familiar with maybe a third of the aircraft in the book. Even in these cases, the text proved interesting and the pictures were great, bringing these aircraft to life in new ways I had not experienced before.

The Ugly

There are almost no specifications included for the aircraft. Oddly, just about the only specification that one can count on finding for each subject is the horsepower for its engines. Airplane dimensions are almost never given. It seems that the horsepower ratings are used as a stand-in for more detailed aircraft specs. Any other numbers that are provided strictly depends on whether the author found them interesting.

There are no pictures included for many of the aircraft discussed. This was a major disappointment. A paragraph of text without a picture is just not enough to get much of value out of it. I would have preferred it if the author had left out these aircraft entirely and either expanded the text for the other airplanes or included a second picture from a different angle.

Conclusion

This book does a great job of what it set out to do. It is filled with great pictures of lots of very interesting aircraft. The text is a good complement to the pictures and adds interesting details to these aircraft. Just do not expect it to be a great resource for a scale modeler.

Used copies of this book are very inexpensive. I only paid a couple of bucks for mine and it was in great shape. I definitely do not regret making the purchase.

http://www.rcadvisor.com/ founder - Home of the best model airplane calculator. Free!

Author of RCadvisor's Model Airplane Design Made Easy and other books.

Host of Ask the RCadvisor in the free weekly The Crash Cast podcasts.

AMA Scientific Leader and Contest Director #4601.




วันอาทิตย์ที่ 11 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2555

Just Like A Taxi Marks An Awesome Debut



IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

Despite its tongue-in-cheek title, "Artful Dodger" Bill Cantrall learned the hard way that driving an ambulance serving the frontlines during WWII was far different from driving a taxi. Try navigating the roads of your local city in the dark, or curvy mountainous roads in the fog or in the dark, or both, double clutching and laboriously shifting gears, or in the driving rain without windshield wipers, with someone walking ahead, lighting the route you're taking with the end of his smoldering cigarette. And, try doing this with seriously wounded people in the back of your van, at the same time, worried that the necessary slowness of your pace and the inevitable jarring they will face as you navigate under very difficult circumstances might result in the death of your passengers before you can get them the medical help they so desperately require. If you can imagine doing this, and maintaining some semblance of your sense of humor, while also sometimes coming under enemy fire, you might get some inkling of an idea about what life was like for Bill Cantrall driving for the AFS (American Field Service) as a civilian volunteer during WWII.

His fascinating memoir, Just Like A Taxi's first chapter, "FUBAR! Thoroughly Bad Show," opens with a scene of Bill in Italy, being asked-nay, ordered-by a British Indian Army officer to go on a "special assignment." He was told to drive by himself up a road until he comes to "a farmhouse with two Sherman tanks." Supposedly, there would be nobody there, and "they'll bring the wounded to you." Little did Cantrall know at the time that by driving to where the officer ordered him to go, he would be placing himself "on the 35-yard line for the biggest attack of the Italian Campaign." With the Allied forces shooting from one direction and the Germans from the other, he didn't have much choice but to ride out the battle, from the relative safety of underneath the ambulance.

While driving an ambulance for the AFS, Bill had many unique experiences and he learned a lot about not only the culture and language of Italy, but the cultures and languages of many countries, all of which had servicemen there. Bill not only transported wounded for the United States, but for seven different armies that were in Italy at the time. New Zealand, India, England, and Poland were among the countries who ambulances of the AFS served. I know that later on in his life, Bill became a Professor of Linguistics, and I don't doubt that he was probably influenced in his career choice by his being around so many people from other countries, as well as his eidetic memory and ability to pick up languages relatively quickly.

There are several harrowing moments that Bill recounts in Just Like A Taxi, like when he is narrowly missed by German bullets on more than one occasion, or when he had to contend with extreme cold, pouring rain, driving in darkness, and dealing with monstrous potholes created by mortar fire. But, for me, the best parts of the memoir, the ones that shine the most, are those when he spends time getting to know the people from the various cultures and lands who have congregated in Italy. Also, Bill's love of Florence, art, literature, and Dante (not necessarily in that order-oh, and wine, women, and song, too), his sense of humor, and his ability to think outside the box and figure out ways to get things done that he wanted done made this memoir come alive for me, and almost feel that I was there with him.

What am I talking about when I say "get things done"? For example, before he got accepted by the AFS and embarked on a ship to Italy, he attended the University of Illinois, and as he writes:

Having combed the student catalog for loopholes, I enter the University of Illinois that fall as a chemical engineer, a pre-med student, and an English major, as needed, in order to skip boring first-year classes. Young ladies in department offices seem pleased to sign for their absent chairmen, whom I have (carefully) just missed. To speed things up, I have students on the Boardwalk sign as my freshman advisor (G. Washington) and approve a no-charge overload for the dean (A. Lincoln). Amazingly, I can earn a year's free credit the first week passing proficiency exams. Also, the textbooks cost nothing if returned in five days.

Another example I enjoyed reading about and found quite humorous (though I doubt if Bill did at the time) he relates in chapter 11, "Way of the Warrior: Tenth Indian Infantry Brigade" and in chapter 12, "Ask Me No Questions and I'll Tell You No Lies." Bill got along well with the Indians and loved playing volleyball with them (yes, volleyball in the middle of a war), but he didn't much care for their food, vegetarian fare, with a hot sauce that didn't agree with his digestion. His solution to get some meat into his diet? Drive to Florence and trade a bottle of Gordon's Gin for a large tin of Spam, large enough to last for several weeks, even sharing it with his friends. Sometimes his ingenuity made the difference between merely getting by and making life more tolerable. As he writes: "This may be stretching the term a bit, but without 'scrounging' useful bits of this and that without leaving one's name behind, the AFS could not have achieved what we did. That probably goes for the whole army."

Just Like A Taxi by Bill Cantrall is one of the best memoirs I've ever read about how it was like to serve America during WWII. It's actually one of the best memoirs, of any type, I've ever read, and I highly recommend it to anyone who loves to read memoirs, was in WWII himself or had relatives in it, and to anyone who would like to know what it was like to be an ambulance driver for the AFS during WWII. Get it today!

Reviewed by Douglas R. Cobb for http://www.bestsellersworld.com/




วันอาทิตย์ที่ 28 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Moonwalking With Einstein



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Have you ever wondered who the world's smartest person is? In a world that celebrates the antics of the world's strongest people very little time is given to those who excel in mental pursuits. Such antipathy for mental prowess put Joshua Foer on a quest to find out who might fit the bill of world's smartest person. When he began his quest, he did not discover who the smartest person was in the world...rather he was introduced to the world of the mental athletes.

Foer's path crossed with the like of memory champions Ben Pridemore, who could memorize gargantuan amounts of numerical digits and the layout of five decks of cards in just a few minutes. Such mental prowess piqued Foer's curiosity and set the journalist within ablaze to discover all he could about their techniques. His quest propelled him along a path which would ultimately culminate in his competition in the U.S. Memory Championship.

This trek placed him in the pathway of interesting individuals-such as Britain's Tony Buzan, an educational consultant who is credited with developing the "mind mapping" technique of taking notes. After meeting with Buzan, Foer enlisted the help of a youthful United Kingdom memory competitor, Ed Cooke, to coach him and prepare him for the U.S. Memory Championship. At Ed's behest, Foer dove into available literature-finding references to mnemonic techniques from around the fifth century BC. Not wanting to leave any stone unturned, Foer also tracks down Kim Peek, the inspiration for the character in Dustin Hoffman's Rain Main, to determine if there were any memory techniques he could glean from an obvious savant..

Foer unearthed techniques many refer to as building a memory palace which allowed him to "store" information spatially along routes of which he was familiar. Want to learn a list of 75 words? No problem. Imagine walking through your house and assigning these words in bizarre contexts (include the most sensory stimulation you can) along the pathway. Suppose the first item is an aardvark...you might place the inconspicuous fellow outside your mailbox juggling the second word you need to remember. Then, when called upon to regurgitate the list you would simply walk through these pre-constructed locations and recall the mental images. Foer used this very technique to place in key events and ultimately win the 2006 National Memory Championship. Not only did he win, he set a new U.S. record by memorizing a deck of playing cards in a minute and 40 seconds.

Although the title seems a little bizarre, it is not until you are reading his blow-by-blow account of the championship that you realize that one of his "mental images," was Foer moonwalking with Einstein to help remember a playing card. After the championship, Foer settled back into journalism and is not sure that his overall memory was changed very much.

This book is commended as a good read of an interesting memory challenge.

But wait, where did I put my car keys?




วันอังคารที่ 16 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Mustang Designer



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

The Good

Labeled a design biography by its author, Ray Wagner, the book reads like a non-fictional historical novel. The story is told from the point of view of the P-51 Mustang's designer, Edgar Schmued. Ray Wagner had access to the designer's personal papers, and it shows. In fact, it was the designer's widow that suggested to Mr. Wagner that he write the book. Being a retired history teacher, Mr. Wagner wrote a wonderful narrative history of this most famous fighter.

This book is a far cry from the typical fighter love fest that I find in bookstores. Text in those other books looks like an afterthought. The focus there is clearly on the pictures. Mr. Wagner, on the other hand, makes it very clear that the star in the book is the story of the fighter.

The scope of the book is large. In about 250 notebook-sized pages, the author tells the story of the events that led to the Mustang being created and looking the way that it does. Later chapters cover postwar variations on the Mustang and even jet-powered designs that evolved from the wartime lessons learned. A fitting subtitle for the book might have been "The history of the P-51 Mustang in its historical context".

The book is filled with first person quotes, which made the book a lot more interesting to read. I really got the feeling I was there with the designer (Edgar Schmued) as he overcame all the challenges he faced.

There's lots of photos of airplanes (mostly Mustangs) and of the people that played a role in its history. The focus on the captions is on technical accuracy. You won't find any captions of the "Pretty Mustang in flight" type. As best as possible, the captions tell you exactly which airplane you are looking at in the picture. If you like technical accuracy, you'll love this book.

The Bad

All of the pictures in the book are in black and white. Given their historical nature, my guess is that color was missing from the original pictures, too.

I was also hoping to find more technical details that would help me create a scale model. A couple of three-view drawings of the P51D variant are included, but almost all of the pictures of the Mustangs are side views or three-quarter views.

The Ugly

The biggest issue I have with the book is the reproduction quality of the pictures. They are similar in quality to what you find in a newspaper. I was frustrated that I couldn't see more details in the airplanes.

Conclusion

This is a unique book on an extremely popular scale model airplane subject. It works wonderfully well as a way of understanding the mindset and wartime constraints that led to the design of the fighter. If you are an aviation history buff, I can think of no better book to read. If you are a fan of the P-51, as I am, bring this book along on your next vacation. You won't regret it.

http://www.rcadvisor.com/ founder - Home of the best model airplane calculator. Free!

Author of RCadvisor's Model Airplane Design Made Easy and other books.

Host of Ask the RCadvisor in the free weekly http://www.thecrashcast.com/ podcasts.

AMA Scientific Leader and Contest Director #4601.




วันเสาร์ที่ 6 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

A Manifesto for Growing Leaders on Your Campus By Tim Elmore



IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

Judging by the title you know this is a book aimed at helping prune leaders through schools, colleges etc. but I challenge that and say it could be used in just about any environment. Mr. Elmore talks not only about traditional ideas of leadership but also what it can and does mean to so many more people. How many people would never call themselves a leader and yet when given the responsibility of a task or project they are passionate about, take it by the proverbial horns, get some great help and run with it successfully?

They are doubtless leading and yet maybe not in the one dimensional sense of the word. Personally I have two daughters who both show remarkable leadership skills but in very different ways and one of them definitely not in the way one would assume would be considered 'leadership'. They also don't necessarily want the task of leadership and yet each time there is a group project or decisions to be made they are right there making sure the others know their opinions. I love it - I fall under the category of 'natural ability' and want everyone to appreciate my ideas and therefore follow. I know that it unrealistic but I am also an optimist.

Mr. Elmore takes on the question of why we need to help grow leaders, how to spot different leaders and what the development process looks like. He also attacks the status quo of how teaching is mainly done in a very 'left brained' way to students, the majority of whom are 'right brained'. We were audio learners, then visual and now have many kinesthetic learners and education isn't necessarily keeping up. My oldest who is an art student at university cited a statistic that many children by the time they are in second grade have gone from loving art and drawing to saying they 'can't' to anyone who asks them to create for them.

We are teaching kids how to pass tests and not necessarily learn with inspiration and motivation. This is not mud-slinging at teachers as I believe they have their hands tied as well with unruly classrooms and no power to control them - that's another story. Who is identifying the kids who will begin to lead and especially the kids who fall below the top 10%? There are so many stories of extremely successful people throughout the world who didn't do terribly well in the organized classroom setting. My hope is that this book and others that the same author has written will begin to be taken seriously in the world of academia. What can be more important than the next generation?

You can find more of my book and movie reviews at: http://ukchica.com/




วันเสาร์ที่ 22 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: Behind the Iron Curtain: Tears in the Perfect Hockey "GULAG"



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Non-fiction/Memoir
Behind the Iron Curtain: Tears in the Perfect Hockey 'GULAG'
Maxim Starchenko
2011
RoseDog Books
144 pages

Maxim Starchenko was an eight-year-old living in Kharkiv, Ukraine when he was recruited by hockey coach, Ivan Pravilov. His memoir, "Behind the Iron Curtain: Tears in the Perfect Hockey 'GULAG,' recounts the horrible physical and psychological abuse he and the other members of his team endured while playing for Pravilov. This is a difficult book with vivid descriptions of the abuse that occurred throughout Starchenko's ten years with the team. The author courageously shares his story to unburden himself and to encourage his former teammates to speak out about the abuse they suffered at Pravilov's hand.

The Hockey team Starchenko joined as a second grader in 1986 was called Druzhba-78. "Druzhba" means friendship and "78" refers to the year the boys were born. Throughout the book, the author makes note of the "unfriendly" atmosphere that Pravilov created among the teammates as he used violence and brainwashing techniques to pit the boys against each other. The author compares Pravilov to Stalin. Starchenko further compares the GUGLAG (Soviet concentration camps) system of slave labor that thrived on a culture of informants and spies to Pravilov's coaching style which pitted the players against each other. No one wanted to be Pravilov's "focus" and each child would do anything to avoid the abuse.

Starchenko describes several episodes of abuse committed against him by Coach Pravilov including being struck on the back of the knees and on the buttocks with a hockey stick. One particularly disturbing episode the author describes involved Pravilov repeatedly hitting him in the head with a hockey stick. There is also a story in the book that suggests Pravilov sodomized another player with a hockey stick. The hockey stick was often Pravilov's weapon of choice. The violence and humiliation escalated during the teams international travels in the nineties. According to Starchenko, Pravilov frequently demanded that the boys fight each other during these trips. Eventually, the "punishments" took on a sexual tone.

Even though there were laws against child abuse in the Soviet Union during Starchenko's time on the team, Pravilov was rarely confronted by adults who observed the children's injuries. Starchenko's own parents believed remaining on the hockey team was important for their son's future. While Starchenko does not hold back when recounting his parents' behavior during his time playing under Pravilov, he states that he bears no hard feeling towards them. Starchenko's his own loyalty to the coach resulted in Pravilov making him his recruiting assistant after Starchenko's team dissolved.

On February 10, 2012, Ivan Pravilov was found dead while in custody in Philadelphia on charges of child-molestation. Suicide is the suspected cause of death. This new development adds credibility to the accusations Starchenko makes in his book. It also assures that no other child will ever endure the abuse Starchenko and his teammates lived through.

"Behind the Iron Curtain" is not simply another story of childhood abuse. It is a clarion call to parents, educators, coaches and others involved in organized sports to make it their duty to become aware of abuse and to speak out against it.

Melissa Brown Levine for Independent Professional Book Reviewers

Melissa Brown Levine is the author of "I Need to Make Promises: A Novella and Stories"

http://www.melissabrownlevine.com/




วันเสาร์ที่ 8 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2555

Captivated by the King and His Kingdom Is an Insightful and Practical Elucidation On a Famous Sermon



IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

Prepare yourself for a philosophical and theological deep-dive into the most famous sermon ever given with Captivated by the King and His Kingdom: A Personal Encounter with the Sermon on the Mount, by Linden Wolfe.

If you've spent any time at all in Church, you've heard messages on The Sermon on the Mount, the celebrated words of Christ from the book of Matthew, chapters five, six, and seven. But you've not heard or read one like this. There are several things that sets Linden Wolfe's work apart from others you may have read on this subject.

First, this isn't a book that preaches at you; the words of Christ speak for themselves. Mr. Wolfe simply writes what he has learned from living a life of faith, mistakes he's made, and what he's been shown spiritually during his walk with God. Mr. Wolfe is very transparent, and uses memorable and personal stories to drive his points.

Next, Mr. Wolfe offers not just a deep understanding of each passage from the famed sermon, but practical ways to apply the teachings to our lives today. He doesn't gloss over at the surface level the renowned words of Christ. He instead dives into the core meanings behind not just passages but individual phrases. Each section covers one of the crux concepts Christ was conveying to us. Then, after breaking it down and expounding, we're given an "Apply It" section so we can actually use the knowledge we're given. Challenging us with further Scripture reading and memorizing, we're given tools from all over Scripture to work with in conjunction with the teachings of Christ.

Thirdly, what I really appreciated about this work was that it brings together the Bible as a whole. God's Word is an amazing thing--more than sixty books written by forty authors over different centuries and under several different tyrannies and oppressions. And yet it all tells the same story. What Linden Wolfe does, quite skillfully, is relate the words of Jesus to passages all throughout Scripture, from the beginning of the Old Testament to the end of the New. This book will help you to see how, in so many ways, Christ actually summed up everything God wanted man to know and understand about Him and his Son.

A few years ago I was in Israel and stood on the spot overlooking the Sea of Galilee where it is believed Christ may have given His renowned sermon. I wish I had read Captivated by the King and His Kingdom: A Personal Encounter with the Sermon on the Mount before then. It would have given me a deeper understanding and appreciation of what Christ was saying to the privileged people that day who heard it live.

Kelly Libatique is a professional speaker, trainer and author. He holds a Master's in Education and a Bachelor's in Psychology and resides in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife Anne and two sons.

Visit http://www.libatique.com/ or Contact Kelly at: Kelly.Libatique@gmail.com




วันเสาร์ที่ 25 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Outliers Book Review - Stories of Success



IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

Malcolm Gladwell's ability to take the somewhat obscure patterns of everyday life and bring attention to them in easy to understand language is his true strength as a writer and really as a researcher.

The book Tipping Point (Time Warner Book Group, 2000, 2002), Gladwell explains how ideas, trends or social activities become phenomena's with just an unseen force that he called the tipping point. In Blink (Time Warner Book Group, 2005), he explores how and why decisions are made in the blink of an eye.

With his new book, Outliers The Story of Success (Little Brown and Company, 2008), Gladwell has developed a theory for why some people are more successful than others. In his research, he found patterns of family history, birthdates, birthplace, and culture contribute to a person's success.

While in his first two books he took relatively simple concepts and gave them shape, form and force, in Outliers, the book starts out very strong but in the end not all of the research seems to support his theories.

Social Class Makes a Difference in Success

The name of the book is defined in the very first paragraph. Gladwell wrote that an outlier is,"1: something that is situated away from or classified differently from a main or related body 2: a statistical observation that is markedly different in value from others in the sample".

He uses the remainder of the book to detail how patterns can be found when comparing individuals in certain groups. Some of the patterns included:

Most successful hockey players are born in the month of January.

After researching athletes, musicians and others, research shows it takes 10,000 hours of practice to become an expert.

Successful technology giants like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and Paul Allen, were born between the years of 1953 and 1955.

The "honor culture" experienced throughout the southern states, especially in the Appalachians, was born out of the 'Scotch-Irish' decedents who settled in those areas.

Children who were raised in upper and upper middle classes were more successful in their adult lives than those raised in lower and lower middle class families because of a sense of entitlement.

The Chinese culture can understand math faster and better than other cultures because of working long hours 360 days a year with rice paddies. And, Chinese children learn to count earlier in life because Chinese number words are shorter and easier to repeat than English number words.

A Pattern of Success for Gladwell

While the premise of this book is not as substantiated by the research (I'm still not sure how rice paddies relate to being better at math) as Gladwell's previous books, some of the research such as the 10,000 to master a skill makes perfect sense.

Gladwell's storytelling is what makes Outliers worth the read.

Writing reviews about high-technology industry Marco Gustafsson covers topics about digital libraries, electronic books, e-inks, etc. Visit Digital Book Readers and find out more about mobile reading movement.




วันพุธที่ 15 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Understanding Flight



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Summary

Aimed at an adult audience, Understanding Flight is an ambitious book. It aims to explain complex aerodynamic principles and technologies that make airplanes possible by using simple diagrams in about 300 pages.

The Good

The technical facts in the book were very well researched. I have to say, I was impressed. Some of the concepts covered are very hard to understand, much less explain clearly in a non-technical fashion. There are lots of technical explanations in the book, and they are all competently written.

Most pages have inset boxes with interesting bits of aviation trivia. A lot of the trivia was new to me, which was a surprise. That's hard to do with an aviation buff like me.

The Bad

The writing and editing is competent but not the best. I caught an occasional typo. Some of the sentences were poorly worded. There were a couple of sentences that I reread several times because I couldn't understand what the author was trying to tell me. In the end I always had to give up.

Some might argue that this is the type of material that one can find for free on Wikipedia. That may be true for a lot of it, but the quality of the illustrations, the consistency in the writing style, and the convenience of a well-organized printed book are hard to beat.

I found the lack of a bibliography a bit bizarre. Given that this is an introductory book to a complex subject, it is very natural to feel a need to look for more in-depth information elsewhere.

The Ugly

The book is humorless. The writing style is somewhat conversational, but it is pretty dry. The boxes with the trivia struck me as an attempt to lighten up the book. Unfortunately, for me the trivia was just a distraction. It rarely had anything to do with the text surrounding it. Rather than enhance the text, most of the time the trivia just made me lose my train of thought.

The author did a great job of researching his facts, but sometimes he fails to connect the dots. For example, he first explains that the larger the diameter of a propeller, the more efficient it can be at producing a given amount of thrust. Then he goes on to talk about multibladed propellers. When he explains why they are less efficient than two-bladed propellers, he fails to make what I thought was an obvious connection. With more blades, the diameter of the propeller has to be less, which leads to lower overall propeller efficiency. I agree with the explanation that he provided, but it struck me as incomplete.

Conclusion

This is a good book. Very well researched, the facts about airplanes are presented clearly. There is lots and lots of good information here. I actually learned a thing or two about airplanes from reading this book. Given how much time I have spent doing my own research, that is hard to do.

I own the second edition of the book. From the description of the changes since the first edition in the book's introduction, it seems to me that grabbing a used copy of the first edition would be a good bargain purchase. In other words, most people would be perfectly happy with the first edition. There are many copies of this earlier edition available for $5 or less. They would make an excellent buy.

http://www.rcadvisor.com/ founder - Home of the best model airplane calculator. Free!

Author of RCadvisor's Model Airplane Design Made Easy and other books.

Host of Ask the RCadvisor in the free weekly http://www.thecrashcast.com/ podcasts.

AMA Scientific Leader and Contest Director #4601.




วันพุธที่ 1 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: A Broken Childhood: A True Story of Abuse



IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

Non-fiction/Memoir
A Broken Childhood: A True Story of Abuse
Lydia Ola Taiwo
2011
Book Guild Publishing
Pages: 94

A Broken Childhood: A True Story of Abuse is author Lydia Ola Taiwo's account of the physical, mental, and emotional abuse she suffered at the hands of her parents from five to twelve-years-old. As a young girl, Lydia is loved and cared for by other caregivers during her childhood, but the abuse by her parents, mainly her mother, overshadows most of what was positive in the girl's life. Like many survivors of abuse, Lydia still struggles to understand the reasons why her parents hurt her.

Born in Camberwell, London to parents of Nigerian descent, Lydia was sent to live in a foster home as an infant. This was a common practice among the Nigerian community at the time, allowing young parents to work and attend school without having to provide and pay for childcare. Lydia discovered later in her childhood that she has a younger sister who was also placed in a foster care home.

At the age of five, Lydia's parents abruptly removed her from her loving foster home to live with them in a small, one-room apartment where she slept on the couch. The abuse began immediately. Lydia was left alone in the apartment often and when her parents were home very little was said to her that did not involve a command or a verbal lashing. The author writes extensively about the chores she was required to complete from a very young age including caring for her younger sister and brother, household chores, and meal preparation. Lydia is explicit in her descriptions of the injuries she acquired as a result of the physical abuse she endured: major head injuries, broken teeth, and scars all over her body from being lashed with an electrical cable that are still visible today.

Lydia's accounts of her childhood are horrific and inspire anger in the reader. Even though the author expresses her on rage towards her parents, she also writes about the long journey to forgiveness: "There was a struggle going on inside me for many years, a struggle of revenge and hatred towards my mother and father-but one day I took a decision to forgive them for all they had done to me (88)." It is with a tone imbued with forgiveness that Lydia has written this book. The author's story is an example of how a person who has been harmed can make a decision to release the anger so that her life can be defined by more than the abuse she survived.

A Broken Childhood is a tale of bravery by a survivor of child abuse that will speak to victims, caregivers, and child advocates alike. It is also a story of self preservation and forgiveness that any reader will be able to relate to.

Melissa Brown Levine for Independent Professional Book Reviewers
http://www.bookreviewers.org/
http://www.melissabrownlevine.com/




วันเสาร์ที่ 21 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

The Girls Who Went Away



IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

I just finished reading Ann Fessler's The Girls Who Went Away. Her book is about women who placed children for adoption post-WW II up until the passage of Roe v. Wade in 1973. She traveled the country interviewing, meeting and recording their stories. For many, that interview marked the first time they had ever revealed their adoption experience.

As a counselor and birthmother, I have spoken both publicly and privately on this topic for the past 10 years. It never ceases to amaze me that when you throw out the word "adoption" in a room, you can just see the ripples. While dealing with the aftereffects of my own adoption in 1987, I had no idea how bad it had been for so many women. The stories Ms. Fessler included were astonishing.

Out of all the stories and research, I think the thing that struck me the most was the shame of it all. My parents claimed they loved me, yet when it came to such a pivotal time in my life and my development and my health, they rejected me. For so long the line "this is what's best for you" made me question if it wasn't the best thing for them.

It was the same for the women in the book. They were just sent away to deliver, then expected to resume life as normal, as if nothing ever happened.

Though decades later, that was my experience. When I came home, my family moved across the country, bought a business and got on with life. And while I understand that 'getting on with life' means getting up every day and putting one foot in front of the other, I was given no room to grieve, no place to deal with my loss and allowed no words to try and tell what was going on inside of me. I was not allowed to talk about it. And it wasn't until five years later that I finally did.

But when I did finally start talking about my experience and all the thoughts and feelings surrounding it, I couldn't stop. The only way I've been able to get through the loss and grief and all of it is through talking and sharing and writing and speaking. To be silenced by the shame must be awful!

I think my mom would be more comfortable if I would stop talking, to be honest. I love her and we have spent many years building our relationship, but this is a subject we just don't talk about. It's kind of awkward for me since this is what I speak about, write about and can't shut up about.

I applaud Ms. Fessler's efforts in making the effort to tell so many women's stories. Her time and listening ear have relieved those women of carrying that burden alone like they have done for decades.

Birthmother and family therapist Terri Gake's book, Heart of a Birthmom, was released earlier this year. She has been speaking on her own unplanned pregnancy and adoption experience for 10 years. She holds a bachelor's degree in psychology and a master's degree in marriage and family therapy. Ms. Gake's experience includes both staff and volunteer positions at two local pregnancy resource centers as well as her home church. Her past positions include live-in houseparent, development staff, client advocate, board member, Bridges team member and Director of Client Care.

Her professional experience also includes in-home therapy with children and families, crisis counseling, counseling with families involved with social services and an internship in drug and alcohol counseling.

Connect with Terri on Facebook, BirthMom Buds or http://TerriGake.com/.




วันจันทร์ที่ 9 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: Merchants of Doubt, by Naomi Oreskes and Erik M Conway



IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

The irony about the science of global warming is that there is a broad consensus of opinion amongst scientists that it is happening, that it is an empirically proven fact. Yet the population at large thinks that controversy still rages in the scientific community as to whether the climate is changing as a direct result of humans pumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Merchants of Doubt, by science historians Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway, seeks to explain how the science on major issues like acid rain, tobacco smoke, holes in the ozone and the dangers of DTT, has been distorted once it leaves the science academies and is regurgitated in mainstream media.

The most instructive aspect of Merchants of Doubt is the long historical perspective the book gives, demonstrating a pattern of information distortion and manipulation by a small group of the ideologically driven. In the scientific controversies that Oreskes and Conway cover, such as the deleterious effects of second hand cigarette smoke on human health and the holes in the ozone caused by the use of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), the authors show how complex and highly nuanced science can be picked apart and virtually re-written to sow major doubts in the public's mind.

How Science is Rigorously Tested by Peer Review

Importantly, Merchants of Doubt offers a crash course in the scientific process. Oreskes and Conway show that science is very much a collaborative effort, with a lot doubts and caveats built into the process. The information and conclusions drawn from scientific reports and papers generally lean to the conservative side. Rigorous checks and balances are built into the system of peer review. Any scientist wanting to submit their work for publication to an established journal must have their paper reviewed by a panel of scientists, disciplined in the area of study. During this peer review process errors are picked up, comments are made, ideas and theories are challenged. Science is therefore not opinion, but proven by critical testing.

All of the scientific 'controversies' that are described in Merchants of Doubt were subjected to this rigorous process. Yet all of the science we now take for granted, like the links between cigarette smoke and cancer, were hotly contested even after they had been established by a process of peer review. How did this happen, when the science on things like global warming and acid rain had a clear scientific consensus?

Cold War Warriors Confuse the Science

Now here's the bit that will confuse even further. A small group of scientists worked against the peer reviewed science to try and sow doubt and confusion in the public's mind. Why would a scientist do that? For the most part, this group of wrecker scientists were physicists who'd done most of their work during the cold war era, being heavily involved in the development of nuclear war technology. They saw the lean towards any sort of environmentalism as a slippery slope to Socialism and Communism.

In a larger sense, the argument between these cold war physicists and the peer reviewed science on such environmental problems as global warming and acid rain, was one about money and power. They saw the environment as a cash cow that could be exploited ad infinitum, with no deleterious effects. At a nationalistic level, they wanted this large slice of the environmental pie for America, to maintain economic power. The peer reviewed science, however, showed that by pumping so many pollutants into the environment, that damage was being done. This put the American economic model under question.

The cold war physicists were dishonest in trying to cloud over the truth of the peer reviewed science, and the world is much the worse for it. If the peer reviewed science, through the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, has settled the question of climate change, then any delay in taking action is madness. If the IPCC claims that on balance, the science is 90 per cent certain that global warming is under way, then surely taking action constitutes a prudent insurance policy against disaster that is highly likely.

With its long historical perspective and stunning detail, Merchants of Doubt demonstrates in clear and accessible language for the lay reader how mass confusion and obfuscation has been created by a small group of determined cold war ideologues. For those seeking clarity over the scientific debates of the past fifty years or so, then Merchants of Doubt is the book to clear away the confusion that today's debates create.

Merchants of Doubt, by Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway. Published by Bloomsbury Press. ISBN: 978-1-596-91-610-4

Chris Saliba is a book reviewer from Melbourne, Australia.

His other book reviews can be read at: http://chrissalibabookreviews.blogspot.com/




วันพุธที่ 27 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review - Decision Points, By George W Bush



IP is over the quota
IP is over the quota

I have been very much looking forward to writing this review. To be honest, I did not vote for President Bush in either election (I am neither democrat nor republican). During his presidency, I fell victim to what many Americans fall victim to: believing the media. I have since learned my lesson and no longer pay any attention to it as they have a terrible habit of omission.

This book contains the presidential memoirs of George W. Bush. It is different than normal memoirs as he breaks it down into major events and situations in his presidency and how he arrived at the decisions that he did. It begins with a bit of history about himself, his time growing up, etc. He reveals some very personal things that I had no idea about, like his little sister dying of cancer when she was young and a DUI that he got when he lived in Texas. He describes his call to faith and the process that it took, which eventually led him to quit drinking altogether.

The majority of the book is in regards to his actual presidency. He covers the decisions that he made in regards to both elections, and the difficulties and challenges. He gets into major events such as 9/11, Hurricane Katrina, and the financial meltdown. It was great to read his point of view on what happened. Despite what people have said about him, he is an educated and intelligent person, who studied a substantial amount of history so that he would have the necessary means to at least try to avoid past mistakes.

Admittedly, I am embarrassed about some of the things I used to say about President Bush. Reading his own experiences, and how various government officials (especially congress) got in the way of him making the decisions that he wanted to when he wanted to (and then everyone subsequently blamed him) was very eye opening. There were many aspects of his presidency on which my opinion shifted, especially after I checked some things out. There were others that, though I appreciate his view, I still did not agree with but no one is going to agree with everyone 100%. President Bush even admits to mistakes and failures that he blames himself for (some of them were not really his fault, but he beats himself up over them anyway as many of us would probably do).

The book is well written, almost as though you are sitting across from the president and having a chat at a diner. Included are some full color pictures with descriptions in his words. It is actually a good read and is the first presidential memoir I've read. I'll be sure to read more of them. The lesson that I take from this, and everyone should, is to understand that the president is not responsible for all of the country's woes. President Bush wasn't, and nor is President Obama. There are a lot of powerful people and a lot of bureaucrats that have far more influence. As I have indicated, if you are not a Bush fan, not everything in here will convince you but in the interest of viewing both sides for an actual educated opinion, definitely check this out and be open minded.

Mike Saxton
Award Winning Author
http://www.7scorpions.com/




วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 14 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2555

The Prince and Pauper by Agu, Jaachynma N E - The Passport to a Greater Life



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

To take those limitations off your life and be the real you, this book titled 'The prince and the Pauper,' authored by Mrs. Agu Jaachynma N.E., is the creative tool you need. It is loaded with the logos and rhema that will help you function in the unction of greater glory. This masterpiece is more than a companion if you truly desire a positive change in your life. It is the Midas touch that you need to live a better and higher life. An unselfish person is one who discovers something of great value and shares same with others enthusiastically, that is why I share this with you. Reading this great book blessed my life greatly and I highly recommend it for you to read and be blessed. This enchiridion written by a virtuous woman, teaches us why we should not settle for less but go for the best which is our birthright in Christ Jesus.

In this book, this godly princess shares with us God's words that positively transformed her life and this word can change you and the world positively. This is the book that you need for a positive mental re-engineering and for the renewal of your mind. Many authors of Christian books make their writing boring and tasteless but Jaachynma's book is interesting, inspiring and exciting. This beautifully written book teaches that the pauper is the man or woman that has no knowledge of God's plan and purpose for his or her life. He/she is not in good relationship with God. A prince is a person that is in good relationship with God. This book is enshrined with the knowledge that empowers your personality. After reading this masterpiece, you will be a person of note whose noteworthy legacy is worthy of emulation.

Agu Jaachynma N.E., the daughter of Zion who authored this book is a woman of substance, whose substance of sapience is blessing all and sundry. She is a pastor, educator, mother, wife, sister and a good encourager whose sagacity is ruling cities worldwide. This gifted and talented doyen is a graduate of Languages and Linguistics Department of the University of Jos, Plateau State, Nigeria. She has held several leadership positions in her church and various organizations; she presently works as an administrative officer in the Ministry of Agriculture, Nigeria. Jaachynma is a poet, linguist and a seasoned writer. A woman of dignity and a genius whose geniality is top-notch. Agu, Jaachynma N.E. is married to Dr. Agu Ahamefula, a respected man of God, a gynecologist and an obstetrician. Her marriage is blessed with two powerful boys.

The Prince and the Pauper is a 162-page perfect-bound paperback book, printed and published by Enaz Publications in New York, USA. This ten-chapter book has a dedication, foreword, acknowledgement, introduction, conclusion and bibliography. This power packed book has the ISBN number: 1-59232-199-2. The Prince and the Pauper is a life-changing book that was written under God's inspiration and it is loaded with God's life-transforming power that will take you to greater heights now and forever more. I endorse and recommend this life-enrichment book for all. Read and live a higher life.

?IFEANYI ENOCH ONUOHA




วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 31 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review of "Death in The West: Fatal Stories From America's Last Frontiers" by Chris Becker



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Death in The West: Fatal Stories from America's Last Frontiers. [Soft Cover]

by Chris Becker

224 pages, $16.95

ISBN-13: 978-0873588935

Nonfiction

Review by Steven King, MBA, MEd

Diving into underwater caverns, scaling insurmountable mountains, or defying natural consequences of exploration, Americans are attracted to anything that produces a thrill. The adrenaline rush causes our hearts to beat faster and our spirits to soar. Adrenaline junkies are seldom satisfied unless they are defying death.

Whatever your vice for an adrenaline rush-do not strap yourself into a lawn chair and tie 45 helium-filled balloons to it. Your intention might be to rise to the top of the trees but you might find yourself spotted by airliners at 16,000 feet instead. Larry Walters, or Lawnchair Larry, as his neighbors in San Pedro came to know him, did just that in 1982. Unless, of course, you desire to be arrested - just like Larry was when he landed.

Becker writes of stories such as this in a powerful way to show where the odds catch up to thrill seekers. For every success, a handful of people die. It is unfortunate to be caught in the wrong place at the wrong time, but it can also have deadly consequences.

Sometimes, the Grim Reaper arrives as the result of really bad choices. If lightning strikes, the best refuge is not in a rock crevice where electricity can jump across side to side and destroy what is between. It is never advisable to hike into unfamiliar territory, without a compass, map, or extra clothing, and not tell someone your anticipated route. Becker's testimony rings clear: take precautions and provisions, or your next trek might be your last.

In spite of our best efforts, however, we are totally at the mercy of Planet Earth. Natural calamities abound and chances are, if you are in the wrong place at the wrong time, you might not return. Avalanches bury people, mudslides wipe out entire towns, and destructive fires burn across the landscape with apparent vengeance.

Sharks can mistake humans for natural food sources and grizzly bears can attack with little or no provocation. Mountain lions might stalk a hiker down a pathway and then attack for a late night snack. Perhaps our quest for adventure takes humanity too far into the natural habitat of the animal denizens of the planet.

A compelling read as Becker usually demonstrates how calamities could have been avoided. Reading these stories will certainly make the reader think twice before the next thrill seeking adventure.