Publication date: 2008-03-27 Dewey code: 580.922 RRP: £16.99 Price: £8.99
Review Flower Hunters / OUP Oxford:
Publication date: 2003-12-22 Dewey code: 920 RRP: £8.99 Price: £3.15
Review Jack: Straight from the Gut / Headline:It's hard to think of a CEO that commands as much respect as Jack Welch. In Jack: What I've Learned Leading a Great Company and Great People, Welch, with the help of Business Week journalist John Byrne, recounts his career and the style of management that helped to make GE one of the most successful companies of the last century. Under his leadership, General Electric reinvented itself several times over by integrating new and innovative practices into its many lines of business. Beginning with Welch's childhood in Salem Massachusetts, the book quickly progresses from his first job in GE's plastics division to his ambitious rise up the GE corporate ladder, which culminated in 1981. What comes across most in this autobiography is Welch's passion for business as well as his remarkable directness and intolerance of what he calls "superficial congeniality"-a dislike that would help earn him the nickname "Neutron Jack. " In spite of its 496 pages, Jack: Straight from the Gut is a quick read that any student or manager would do well to consider. -Harry C Edwards It's hard to think of a CEO that commands as much respect as Jack Welch. Under his leadership, General Electric reinvented itself several times over by integrating new and innovative practices into its many lines of business. In Jack: Straight from the Gut, Welch, with the help of Business Week journalist John Byrne, recounts his career and the style of management that helped to make GE one of the most successful companies of the last century. Beginning with Welch's childhood in Salem, Massachusetts, the book quickly progresses from his first job in GE's plastics division to his ambitious rise up the GE corporate ladder, which culminated in 1981. [+]
What comes across most in this autobiography is Welch's passion for business as well as his remarkable directness and intolerance of what he calls "superficial congeniality"-a dislike that would help earn him the nickname "Neutron Jack". In spite of its 496 pages, Jack: Straight from the Gut is a quick read that any student or manager would do well to peruse. -Harry C. Edwards.
Edition: New edition Publication date: 2000-09-07 Dewey code: 509 RRP: £8.99 Price: £0.01
Review Galileo's Daughter: A Drama of Science, Faith and Love / Fourth Estate Ltd:Galileo Galilei is famous for many things: for his science (Einstein called him the "father of modern physics"); for his flamboyant style (he wrote in Italian not Latin, enlivened texts with rough humour, argued loudly in staged debates) and for his harsh treatment by the Catholic Church. What's less well known are the details of his private life-a life that, as Dava Sobel points out in Galileo's Daughter, was just as complex as the scientist's public life. Galileo had three illegitimate children; the book's title refers to the oldest, Virginia, later Suor Maria Celeste (she took the name in acknowledgement of her father's fascination with the stars). Unable to marry because of her illegitimate status, Virginia entered a convent at 13 and maintained a lifelong correspondence with her father. Sobel has translated Virginia's surviving letters for the first time and, combining those letters, commentary, and gorgeous illustrations, she sets out in Galileo's Daughter to illuminate a different side of Galileo, the father deeply committed to his daughter and to her faith. Virginia's letters are tender, witty and intelligent. They are crammed with details of day-to-day life in Florence: "The broad beans are set out to dry and their stalks fed for breakfast to the little mule, who has become so haughty that she refuses to carry anyone. " Sobel's commentaries brilliantly help to put the letters into context. "Most of Suor Maria Celeste's letters travelled in the pocket of a messenger or in a basket laden with laundry, sweetmeats or herbal medicines. " But life in the convent was not idyllic. [+]
Virginia was surrounded by women in various states of mental collapse and her letters describing those collapses are vivid and at times terrifying. The bubonic plague, too, affected the nuns just as it did the outside world. But what emerges most strikingly from these letters is the degree to which Virginia supported her father. Suor Maria Celeste may never have left the convent but in her letters she accompanies her father through physical and intellectual trials. We see her planning her brother's wedding (which she can't attend) and copying out her father's manuscripts. The relationship between father and daughter "is not a tale of abuse or rejection or intentional stifling of abilities", writes Sobel. "Rather, it is a love story, a tragedy and a mystery. " -Simon Ings Galileo Galilei is famous for many things: for his science (Einstein called him the "father of modern physics"); for his flamboyant style (he wrote in Italian not Latin, enlivened texts with rough humour, argued loudly in staged debates) and for his harsh treatment by the Catholic Church. What's less well known are the details of his private life-a life that, as Dava Sobel points out in Galileo's Daughter, was just as complex as the scientist's public life. Galileo had three illegitimate children; the book's title refers to the oldest, Virginia, later Suor Maria Celeste (she took the name in acknowledgement of her father's fascination with the stars). Unable to marry because of her illegitimate status, Virginia entered a convent at 13 and maintained a lifelong correspondence with her father. Sobel has translated Virginia's surviving letters for the first time and, combining those letters, commentary, and gorgeous illustrations, she sets out in Galileo's Daughter to illuminate a different side of Galileo, the father deeply committed to his daughter and to her faith. Virginia's letters are tender, witty and intelligent. They are crammed with details of day-to-day life in Florence: "The broad beans are set out to dry and their stalks fed for breakfast to the little mule, who has become so haughty that she refuses to carry anyone. " Sobel's commentaries brilliantly help to put into contextual the letters. "Most of Suor Maria Celeste's letters travelled in the pocket of a messenger or in a basket laden with laundry, sweetmeats or herbal medicines. " But life in the convent was not idyllic. Virginia was surrounded by women in various states of mental collapse and her letters describing those collapses are vivid and at times terrifying. The bubonic plague, too, affected the nuns just as it did the outside world. But what emerges most strikingly from these letters is the degree to which Virginia supported her father. Suor Maria Celeste may never have left the convent but in her letters she accompanies her father through physical and intellectual trials. We see her planning her brother's wedding (which she can't attend) and copying out her father's manuscripts. The relationship between father and daughter "is not a tale of abuse or rejection or intentional stifling of abilities", writes Sobel. "Rather, it is a love story, a tragedy and a mystery. " -Simon Ings.
Creator: Thomas Philbrick Edition: New edition Publication date: 1999-10-28 Dewey code: 910.45 RRP: £9.99 Price: £12.31
Review Sailing Alone Around the World (Penguin Classics) / Penguin Classics:
Authors
- William L. Simon
- Jeffrey S. Young
Publication date: 2005-05-20 Dewey code: 338.76100416092 RRP: £15.99 Price: £8.99
Review Icon Steve Jobs: The Greatest Second Act in the History of Business / John Wiley & Sons:
Edition: New Ed Publication date: 1997-08-01 Dewey code: 915.04 RRP: £3.99 Price: £0.52
Review The Travels of Marco Polo (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) / Wordsworth Editions Ltd:Modern scholars have questioned the veracity of Marco Polo's account, but there's no doubt that his description of his travels through the Mongol Empire of the Middle Ages-with its spices, exotic animals, rare jewels and dancing girls-is enchanting. -Kathleen Keefe.
Edition: New edition Publication date: 2002-08-23 Dewey code: 920 RRP: £8.99 Price: £3.97
Review Uncle Tungsten / Picador:Oliver Sacks's luminous memoir Uncle Tungsten charts the growth of a mind. Born in 1933 into a family of formidably intelligent London Jews, he discovered the wonders of the physical sciences early from his parents and their flock of brilliant siblings, most notably "Uncle Tungsten" (real name, Dave), who "manufactured lightbulbs with filaments of fine tungsten wire". Metals were the substances that first attracted young Oliver, and his descriptions of their colours, textures and properties are as sensuous and romantic as an art lover's rhapsodies over an Old Master. Seamlessly interwoven with his personal recollections is a masterful survey of scientific history, with emphasis on the great chemists like Robert Boyle, Antoine Lavoisier and Humphry Davy (Sacks's personal hero). Yet this is not a dry intellectual autobiography; his parents in particular, both doctors, are vividly sketched. His sociable father loved house calls and "was drawn to medicine because its practice was central in human society", while his shy mother "had an intense feeling for structure. for her [medicine] was part of natural history and biology". For young Oliver, unhappy at the brutal boarding school he was sent to during the war, and afraid that he would become mentally ill like his older brother, chemistry was a refuge in an uncertain world. [+]
He would outgrow his passion for metals and become a neurologist, but as readers of Awakenings and The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat know, he would never leave behind his conviction that science is a profoundly human endeavour. -Wendy Smith.
Edition: Reprint Publication date: 2001-02-08 Dewey code: 530.092 RRP: £9.85 Price: £4.47
Review What Do You Care What Other People Think?: Further Adventures of a Curious Character / W. W. Norton & Co.:
Edition: New edition Publication date: 1997-11-28 RRP: £12.00 Price: £7.31
Review Joseph Banks / The Harvill Press:Devotees of Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey/Maturin novels will know already the author's total immersion into the social, political, scientific and naval worlds of the 18th and early 19th centuries. The life of Sir Joseph Banks (1743-1820), naturalist, botanist and explorer who sailed with Captain Cook to the South Seas, has long been one of O'Brian's primary resources; so it is only fitting that he should also be Banks's biographer. Any other writer might have produced a worthy study of the scientist; O'Brian provides an affectionate account of the man, as well as illuminating with seemingly effortless erudition Banks's discoveries and those of his contemporaries. Encompassing as it does all of O'Brian's polymath fascinations, the only remarkable thing about this book is that he did not write it sooner. The novelist's eye for detail, familiar from the naval stories, is evident here (when Banks sails for Newfoundland in 1766 we learn, as a matter of course, that on April 22 the wind from Plymouth was east-north-east) as is his absorbing and witty prose style. Drawing extensively on Banks's letters and journals, the author also has to hand any number of illuminating references, from Admiralty records and proceedings of the Royal Society to the diaries of Fanny Burney and Mrs Thrale. From all these sources, as well as from his own empathy for the subject, O'Brian is able to paint a vivid portrait of an extraordinary man and his equally extraordinary discoveries. -Mark Walker.
Publication date: 2006-01-27 RRP: £9.99 Price: £4.29
Review Suburban Shaman: Tales from Medicine's Front Line / Hammersmith Press Limited:
Edition: 1st Anchor Books Ed Publication date: 1993-01-01 Dewey code: 510.092 RRP: £10.99 Price: £5.28
Review Prisoner's Dilemma: John Von Neumann, Game Theory and the Puzzle of the Bomb / Anchor Books,U.S.:
Authors
- Alexander Shulgin
- Ann Shulgin
Publication date: 1995-05-22 Dewey code: 362 RRP: £14.99 Price: £9.68
Review Pihkal: A Chemical Love Story / Transform Press,U.S.:
Edition: New Ed Publication date: 1999-06-03 Dewey code: 920 RRP: £8.99 Price: £4.22
Review The Man Who Loved Only Numbers: Story of Paul Erdos and the Search for Mathematical Truth / Fourth Estate:
Edition: New Ed Publication date: 1998-10-01 Dewey code: 940 RRP: £10.95 Price: £5.25
Review Spitfire: A Test Pilot's Story / Crecy Publishing:
Publication date: 2006-05-17 Dewey code: 920 RRP: £5.00 Price: £3.67
Review My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla / Filiquarian Publishing:
Publication date: 2003-02-26 Dewey code: 629.22750973022 RRP: £12.99 Price: £8.74
Review Harley-Davidson Family Album: 100 Years of the World's Greatest Motorcycle in Rare Photos / Voyageur Press Inc.,U.S.:
Edition: New edition Publication date: 2000-10-26 Dewey code: 920 RRP: £8.99 Price: £4.36
Review The Real James Herriot: The Authorized Biography / Penguin:
Publication date: 2008-10-23 RRP: £9.99 Price: £4.48
Review Avoid Boring People: and Other Lessons from a Life in Science: And Other Lessons from a Life in Science / OUP Oxford:
Creator: Jonathan Raban Edition: New Ed Publication date: 2003-06 Dewey code: 797 RRP: £9.99 Price: £5.41
Review The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst (Sailor's Classics) / McGraw-Hill Contemporary:
Publication date: 2008-03-25 Dewey code: 133.9092 RRP: £12.20 Price: £37.64
Review Life Among the Dead / Simon Spotlight Entertainment:
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Models & Brands: Flower Hunters, Jack: Straight from the Gut, Galileo's Daughter: A Drama of Science, Faith and Love, Sailing Alone Around the World (Penguin Classics), Icon Steve Jobs: The Greatest Second Act in the History of Business, The Travels of Marco Polo (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature), Uncle Tungsten, What Do You Care What Other People Think?: Further Adventures of a Curious Character, Joseph Banks, Suburban Shaman: Tales from Medicine's Front Line, Prisoner's Dilemma: John Von Neumann, Game Theory and the Puzzle of the Bomb, Pihkal: A Chemical Love Story, The Man Who Loved Only Numbers: Story of Paul Erdos and the Search for Mathematical Truth, Spitfire: A Test Pilot's Story, My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla, Harley-Davidson Family Album: 100 Years of the World's Greatest Motorcycle in Rare Photos, The Real James Herriot: The Authorized Biography, Avoid Boring People: and Other Lessons from a Life in Science: And Other Lessons from a Life in Science, The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst (Sailor's Classics), Life Among the Dead |