Travel Review


The Most Scenic Drives in America: 120 Spectacular Road Trips

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120 Spectacular Road Trips


Tags: american scenic drives trips and journes scenic drives vacation book travel usa road trip planning road trip drive vacation car auto trips and journeys retirement fun things living the good life

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        The Most Scenic Drives in America: 120 Spectacular Road TripsTaking a drive in the country has been popular since horse-and-buggy days. But while the road trip itch is as strong as ever, scenic drives get scarcer year by year. The answer is a collection of the 120 loveliest drives in the U.S., providing maps and tours (with sites along the way itemized and lovingly described), trip length, when to go, nearby attractions, and local information sources. Free time is at a premium these days; rather than waste your leisure time in highway gluts, it’s worth taking directions to some of the most beautiful drives the country still has to offer.

        The Most Scenic Drives in America: 120 Spectacular Road TripsTaking a drive in the country has been popular since horse-and-buggy days. But while the road trip itch is as strong as ever, scenic drives get scarcer year by year. The answer is a collection of the 120 loveliest drives in the U.S., providing maps and tours (with sites along the way itemized and lovingly described), trip length, when to go, nearby attractions, and local information sources. Free time is at a premium these days; rather than waste your leisure time in highway gluts, it’s worth taking directions to some of the most beautiful drives the country still has to offer.A one-of-a-kind trip planner, a superb on-the-road reference, and an album of 400 photographs. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, here are 120 outstanding drives that show the magnificence of America-each with detailed, easy-to-follow maps.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #5564 in Book
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A good guide to some of the US. by Melvin C. Shaffer
This is a good and simple guide to the principle things to see and how to do it. Recommended for family travel

Beautiful photography by C. Snyder
This would be a beautiful coffee table book. It is even more helpful in planning plces to visit and reliving favorite memories from past trips.

Great help for travelling the USA by D. Rutten
This book is a great help to make beautiful trips trough the country! Good descriptions and maps of the drives. You can search tours in all 50 states. Beautiful pictures!

Great pictures,maps and narrative. by Southern Dad
I love to travel and this book will be a welcome reference for your road trips. Beautifully bound with gorgeous pictures, this book will please you for years to come.

The Big Drive by Peter A. Skinner
Looking for a combination of Drives to get the best out of a Touring Holiday in the USA - you need this book! It is easy to link together many of the “120 Spectacular Road Trips” to form a fantastic itinerary to see the best scenery and sights the USA has to offer. It’s better than the more specialised “Route 66″ and “Lincoln Highway” drives for visitors to the USA who are wanting to experience a broader cross section of US history and its stunning geography. Maps are clear, colour photography whets the appetite and cultural and scenic highlights are picked out in the commentary. Combined with the use of a simple Tom Tom style GPS system the book would provide the solution for visitors planning a Touring experience of the USA - from the smallest local scale to an epic journey covering the best of the nation.


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One Man’s Wilderness: An Alaskan Odyssey (Annivers

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An Alaskan Odyssey (Annivers


Tags: frank ed national outdoor book award winner non-fiction writing outdoors ak great escape true life story back to nature decent beautiful twin lakes content nature cabin survival travelogues adventure independence truth alaska

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        One Man’s Wilderness: An Alaskan Odyssey (AnniversTo live in a pristine land . . . roam the wilderness . . . build a home. . . . Thousands have had such dreams, but Richard Proenneke lived them. Here is a tribute to a man who carved his masterpiece out of the beyond.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #7869 in Book
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Alaskan Dream! by Salmoneye
This book is great! As close to the wilderness as you can get. If you find you can never make it to Alaska, read this and you can say how close you were.

The Journey by Anna E. Perry
One Man’s Wilderness; ….. Well written, entertaining , I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys adventure in beautiful Alaskan Wilderness …..

Very inspiring book by Mini Ron
Excellent book to read. I believe everyone will enjoy this and the story of this amazing person. Easy to read diary-like story of Dick Proenneke’s 16-month life alone in a beautiful wilderness of Alaska. Page by page you’ll be thrilled to continue on reading and it even gets better at the end. You’ll probably stand up and clap your hands to this amazing man.

Inspirational Journey by Searching for the Truth
Sometimes you have to do what you need to do solo to get what you want from life. An inspirational journey into ones limits and dreams.

One Man’s Wilderness by Sam Adams
This book is written “by Sam Keith from the journals and photographs of Richard Proenneke” - so although I read it and visualized the events within as if it had all been written by Richard Proenneke, it wasn’t. Sam Keith tells us in the preface: “Using Dick Proenneke’s rough journals as a guide, and knowing him as well as I did, I have tried to get into his mind and reveal the “flavor” of the man. This is my tribute to him, a celebration of his being in tune with his surroundings and what he did alone with simple tools and ingenuity in carving his masterpiece out of the beyond.”

I’ve seen the PBS presentation of “Alone in the Wilderness”, which uses selections from the text of this book along with movie footage of Proenneke building his cabin and living there. Those selections are read by someone other than Proenneke, but the voice is a perfect fit to the text and image. Because the text is not exactly Proenneke’s and the voice of the video isn’t his either, our experience of the man is filtered though these interpreations. Sam Keith hasn’t shown us any unedited examples from the “rough journals” he used to compose the book, so it’s difficult to know how far this beautifully crafted language matches the character and psychology of Richard Proenneke.

It is an extraordinary book and was a great pleasure to read. I recommend it without reservation.


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Italy (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

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Italy (Eyewitness Travel Guides)


Tags: italy overview eyewitness travel guide tuscany viareggio lucca travel florence eyewitness trips and journeys rome travel guide eyewitness travel guides italy

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        Italy (Eyewitness Travel Guides)Italy offers an extraordinary kaleidoscope of regions and experiences for all visitors. Packed with photographs, illustrations and maps the Eyewitness Travel to Italy has mapped out all of the remarkable flavors of Italy. Use this guide to help you decide where to stay, eat, relax, and shop. Every page in the Eyewitness Travel to Italy has pinpointed the highlights of each fascinating region.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #9550 in Book
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DK visits Italy by John O. Treglia
DK travel guides (Eyewitness brand) are known for its unique photograpy and pictures. They are printed full-color and magazine-style and the sublime pictures get supreme treatment. The maps are not ideal, but they do the job for some one new to Italy and answers the question of what to see and where to go with a little history and background tossed in. The maps will get you from Florence’s Pitti Palace across the River Arno and to the Galleria to see Michelangelo’s David, but good luck finding that little bistro in the cobblestone alley. This is a guide for the county of Italy in general and its regions and may lack some depth in terms of detail but for the first and even second time visitor to Italy its great considering its relative small weight and size in your travel case or backpack. Don’t expect this guidebook to have that out-of-the-way gallery, or even the celebrated gelato shop directions. This little book covers the most important sites in any given city or region - with lush pictures that DK is known for and short blurbs to match. It also covers general information to the first time visitor covering money, agencies, other basic travel information which can be of great help to some one not famliar to Italy.

Okay but there are better by Melisa A. Mrazik
I have ordered the Eyewitness Travel books for the past 4 years for trips to Ireland, New Zealand, Russia and Greece and have been really satisfied with the illustrations and information presented. However, I’ve not been as impressed with this volume on Italy. A friend that is traveling with me purchased the Rick Steves’ Italy 2008 book and it has much better information and walking guides. Also, that book is lighter! Although it doesn’t have all of the glossy pictures of the Eyewitness Travel Italy book, the hints that are provided in Steves’ book are much more useful to take with you when you plan to travel across Italy.

Tons of Pictures and Detail by J. Smith
This is a great guide for finding out what you ‘need’ to see in Italy, and what would be ‘nice’ to see. Reason being, this guide leaves little to discovery and includes a picture of just about every major attraction in Italy. It is arranged nicely and includes the major regions. It isn’t big on detail or writing, but that isn’t why you purchase an ‘eyewitness’ guide! Reccomended as your first guide to consult if contemplating an Italy trip. If you need more detail, start looking at the guides specific to the regions that interest you (Frommer’s, Lonely Planet etc.)

Excellent For Armchair Traveling by teri775
The Eyewitenss Travel Guides are great if you want to learn more about another country and its culture.
I read the one on Great Britain and thoroughly enjoyed it. This one on “Italy,” seems to be just as good.
I have not used the Eyewitness Guides to plan a trip so I’m not sure how helpful they are for that.
The book is filled with maps, colorful photos and fascinating tidbits (historical and contemporary) of information.
Makes a good gift for those who love Italy and want to learn more about it.

Everything you need in one book by Sharebear79
A friend of mine recommended this book to me for our upcoming honeymoon to Italy. This book has been so helpful in planning every aspect of our honeymoon, from where to stay, to eat and to see. The street by street maps are going to be very useful when we get to Italy.


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The Scrambled States of America

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The Scrambled States of America

The Scrambled States of America #Image 1


Tags: laurie keller patrickxmas2006 xmas2007lawrence united states justin matott humorous picture book keller us kids maps childrens books comedy educational

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        The Scrambled States of AmericaOne day, Kansas wakes up grumpy. The other 49 states are stretching, yawning, and pouring maple syrup onto each other’s pancakes, but irritable Kansas announces to his kindly neighbor Nebraska that life is dull and changes must be made: “All day long we just sit here in the middle of the country. We never GO anywhere. We never DO anything, and we NEVER meet any NEW states!” Nebraska, sick of hearing North Dakota and South Dakota bicker all the time, agrees to help organize a party for all the states. It’s a hit! Late into the evening, Idaho and Virginia get up onto the stage and suggest that all the states change places. What a state of affairs. Minnesota, who switches places with Florida, gets a sunburn. Kansas, having traded places with Hawaii, gets lonely and sings some soggy blues so sad that a shark sheds a mournful tear offshore. Nevada and Mississippi fall in love. Despite the initial excitement, the new arrangement just doesn’t feel right. The states manage to swim, fly, bike, and hitchhike their way home, and everyone goes to bed in the right place–even Kansas is happy to be home after such an adventure. This wacky, thoroughly engaging tale of mixed-up geography is a good bet for some awards. Perhaps best of all, the large format and riot of detail allow for plenty of amusing asides. Books that claim to “make geography fun” usually have to be taken with a dose of skepticism: so often, the teaching is there and the entertainment isn’t. This delightfully quirky and original book shows how it should be done. (Ages 4 and older) –Richard Farr

        The Scrambled States of AmericaOne day, Kansas wakes up grumpy. The other 49 states are stretching, yawning, and pouring maple syrup onto each other’s pancakes, but irritable Kansas announces to his kindly neighbor Nebraska that life is dull and changes must be made: “All day long we just sit here in the middle of the country. We never GO anywhere. We never DO anything, and we NEVER meet any NEW states!” Nebraska, sick of hearing North Dakota and South Dakota bicker all the time, agrees to help organize a party for all the states. It’s a hit! Late into the evening, Idaho and Virginia get up onto the stage and suggest that all the states change places. What a state of affairs. Minnesota, who switches places with Florida, gets a sunburn. Kansas, having traded places with Hawaii, gets lonely and sings some soggy blues so sad that a shark sheds a mournful tear offshore. Nevada and Mississippi fall in love. Despite the initial excitement, the new arrangement just doesn’t feel right. The states manage to swim, fly, bike, and hitchhike their way home, and everyone goes to bed in the right place–even Kansas is happy to be home after such an adventure. This wacky, thoroughly engaging tale of mixed-up geography is a good bet for some awards. Perhaps best of all, the large format and riot of detail allow for plenty of amusing asides. Books that claim to “make geography fun” usually have to be taken with a dose of skepticism: so often, the teaching is there and the entertainment isn’t. This delightfully quirky and original book shows how it should be done. (Ages 4 and older) –Richard Farr

A wacky cross-country adventure starring the fifty states!

“Well, it was just your basic, ordinary day in the good old U. S. of A. States all over the country were waking up, having their first cups of coffee, reading the morning paper, and enjoying the beautiful sunrise.

All the states, that is, except for Kansas.”

At the first annual “states party,” Virginia and Idaho hatch a plan to swap spots so each can see another part of the country. Before the party is over, all the states decide to switch places. In the beginning, every state is happy in its new location. But soon things start to go wrong. Will the states ever unscramble themselves and return to their proper places?

Packed with madcap humor and whimsical illustrations, this quirky story-starring all fifty states-is chock-full of introductory facts and silly antics that will make learning geography as much fun as taking a vacation.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #11104 in Book
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Scrambled United States by Katharine C. Leader
This is a fun book and is a good way to get familiar with the States. My son enjoys reading it.

I love Laurie Keller’s books by Andrew Martonyi
I love Laurie Keller’s books, especially The Scrambled States of America. She was partially my inspiration when I was writing The Little Man In the Map. The Little Man In the Map: With Clues To Remember All 50 States
Books like these can spark an interest in learning more about this wonderful country and the world.

Great book! by K. Conrardy
My alumnae group read this book to 3rd graders at an inner-city school and the kids loved it! We had a map and games to go with it and the program was a big success. I highly recommend this book for teachers.

Fun and learning… TOGETHER?? by Andy J. Smith
A hilariously told and illustrated story heart about appreciating where you are from and what you have. ‘Scambled is a unique take on being in a state of discontent . Each State has its own (harmlessly and comically stereotyped) characteristics– Wisconsin loves cheese, Texas hollers “YEEEHA!” The illustrations playfully keep your eye moving (the spreads are FULL of tiny side jokes) and the story keeps the pages turning. Lost along the way (and maybe why it’s so successful) is that the reader will have learned some geography along the way. What an entertaining, engaging way to present fact and nonfiction to a child! A perfect companion to kids who are starting to learn about our country.

great learning tool…. by Kristyl N. Adams
My daughter told me that my young grandchildren love this book and the humorous way it was written. I found it through the reviews in here and wholeheartedly agree with the good ones and thank everyone for posting them. I haven’t gotten to read it myself, as they are in another state…but I can assure you, it is a book to include in your little one’s library! :D


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Magic Tree House Boxed Set, Books 13-16: Vacation Under the Volcano, Day of the Dragon King, Viking Ships at Sunrise, and Hour of the Olympics

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Vacation Under the Volcano, Day of the Dragon King, Viking Ships at Sunrise, and Hour of the Olympics


Tags: childrens books book series

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        Magic Tree House Boxed Set, Books 13-16: Vacation Under the Volcano, Day of the Dragon King, Viking Ships at Sunrise, and Hour of the OlympicsMORGAN, THE MAGICAL librarian of Camelot, sends Jack and Annie to find lost stories in the ancient worlds of Roman Pompeii, imperial China, Dark Age Ireland, and classical Greece. Will the books help them in their darkest hours? This boxed set includes four exciting Magic Tree House adventures: #13: Vacation Under the Volcano, #14: Day of the Dragon King, #15: Viking Ships at Sunrise, and #16: Hour of the Olympics, as well as a Magic Tree House poster.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #6775 in Book
  • ABIS_BOOK

Great book for the young reader by E. Kaufman
I bought the Magic Tree House books 1 through 16 for my eight year old daughter. She loves them. She reads a book in two days. She can relate to the stories and has an easy time explaining what she read. This is a great start-reader for children. Mary Pope uses a healthy combination of every-day words and with some more advanced verbiage. Though my daugter doesn’t always understand the big words, she is introduced to them. This challenges her comprehension. I would recommend this series to parents of children ages 7 to 9.

Great for early readers by T. Talebi
Our five year old son is an early reader, and one of the problems we’ve had is finding good books that are challenging enough, yet age appropriate and interesting. A lot of the chapter books we found to be written more for children 7 years or older, and these didn’t hold much interest for him, maybe because the material was too complex. On the other side, if the material was age appropriate they were written in a repetitive style using simple words that he found too boring. These books are just the right mix of interesting, exciting, and age appropriate, and we’re glad to have found them. He was becoming bored with reading anything other than magazines, and these books have re-sparked his interest, which is exactly what we were looking for.

My son LOVES these books by J. Poyer
My 7-year old son read all four the first day we got them. I asked him if he thought they were good and he said “They’re better then good; they’re
AWESOME!” … nuff said! :)

Helped children develop a passion for reading! by Starshine
Actually, I’m buying this series of books for two sets of grandchildren. When I started, it was to excite them about the world of books, rather than TV and video games. This series was recommended by my sister who is a teacher’s assistant in a pre-school.

The endeavor has been successful so far. One of the grandchildren had stated that he never wanted to learn to read! Now he is doing very well reading in school and is developing a passion for books. He carries HIS books everywhere. Another reads the books to his younger brother and they both have improved their skills in school.

These books are great for starting children on a life-long path of reading!

Great learning by Wink
The Magic Tree House Series is a great learning tool for children to pick up on history, science, etc mixed in with some adventure and fantasy.


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Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.)

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Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.)


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        Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.)

To travel the Silk Road, the greatest land route on earth, is to trace the passage not only of trade and armies but also of ideas, religions, and inventions. Making his way by local bus, truck, car, donkey cart, and camel, Colin Thubron covered some seven thousand miles in eight months—out of the heart of China into the mountains of Central Asia, across northern Afghanistan and the plains of Iran into Kurdish Turkey—and explored an ancient world in modern ferment.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #9947 in Book
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Travel and thoughts on a vanishing world by Jaime Axel Ruiz
Colin Thubron’s vivid and very well written descriptions make us think about the complexity of Asia. His book is not just the report of a long journey, but also a valuable contribution for us to understand better the humankind. A perfect combination of realistic reports, history and culture. Thubron meets real people, talks about the past and also about the present, sometimes painful, of their vanishing way of life.

In the Footsteps of Marco Polo by Philip W. Henry
Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.)

Shadow of the Silk Road

“In the Footsteps of Marco Polo”

“For hours I tramped along a mountain road forty miles south of Zhangye, toward the cliff temples of Matisi, before the headlights of a van swung bleakly into view through the falling snow. Its driver shouted that the road ahead was closed: panic over the SARS virus was bringing everything to a standstill. All the same, he said, he would get me through. We clattered unquestioned past a police post. Then, as the snow cleared and weak sun came out, we entered an Alpine beauty of dark, unflowering trees under the Quilian mountains. In the village beneath the temples nothing moved. Someone had built a line of wooden villas, for pilgrims or mountain lovers, but they were deserted. Against one slope a solitary farmer drove a yak at a plow.”

Colin Thubron has a gift for language and a sense of place. In “Shadow of the Silk Road,’ he traces the ancient trade route 7,000 miles from China to the Mediterranean. Traveling by rail, local bus, horse, camel, goat cart and foot, he encounters the people who live in these lands, so distant geographically and spiritually from our own. Since he speaks both Mandarin Chinese and Russian, he is able to talk to these people and extract from their collective memory a history of the place. The Silk Road was more than goods and property: it was also a two-way street for ideas. For the most part, the political and geographic boundaries of these lands are artificial: “So the Tsarists, and the Bolsheviks after them, entered a land without nations, where a state was only the outreach of a ruler… Its frontiers were blurred opinions.” (P. 201)

Enjoyable stories by Baude
Thubron undertakes a spiritual and physical quest along the once commercial highway of the Silk Road from China across Central Asia and Iran to Turkey. Along this three-part journey, he plunges the reader into history, archeology, mythology, religions, and peoples whose genetic and cultural blending do not conform with political boundaries. Through artifacts like beautifully glinting faience or tile, the,often glorious, past is rediscovered through seeking out clues. In this trip of discovery, Thubron determinedly scales sheer cliffs with his fingernails, treads through villages and across rivulets to recover evidence of past civilizations in murals, tiles, minarets, chiseled-out caves, and more. He risks life and limb brushing against the SARS epidemic in China and passing through the territory ruled by thieves and unscrupulous guards in Afghanistan and in the Oxus. His good fortune is bolstered by his experience with local languages and with the region from a trip made twelve years ago during Soviet control and by his historical, political, religious, and mythological knowledge. The reader is given many facts and surprises, such as the longest epic’s being the MANAS rather than the ODYSSEY. As he traverses the road, he tells the reader about the cities then and now and about conversations with their residents. An interesting story is his visit to a Moslem shrine during a crowded holiday. Such a proscribed visit by a non-Moslem requires escaping detection as the crowds press him forward; unexpectedly he is tugged gently along as a guest (pp 264-67, 270-72). Another good story is set in Tehran where he interviews an artsy youth with a film (pp. 284-93). Another is in Maragheh, where the draining of an inflamed abscess is a four-hour doubtful ordeal with dentists who do not speak his languages. Not least is the story of his surpise visit to an English language college in Tabriz where its female students ask questions of him and practice English. Not only does the author bring the Silk Road to light for the reader, a busy network bearing silk, printing, goods and ideas between the Pacific and the Mediterranean, he is also relating life along the Silk Road today, as these places might not receive many tourists. So, this travel memoir is both memorable and necessary.

Un libro hipnotizante by Hector Hugo Parra Riffo
El Sr. Thubron es un viajero de antiguo cuño. No usa máquinas fotográficas. Si es que toma algunos apuntes, me imagino que lo hace sobre una Moleskine. Allí,tal vez, también dibuja. Educado en Eton y Oxford, su prosa es elegante y maravillosa. Hipnotiza al lector. Calla para dejar que los propios personajes hablen. Ha gastado su vida en Asia. Su conocimento llega al grado de la erudición, aunque nunca intimida con ello.
Lo veo en la línea de un Patrick Leigh Fermor o de R. Kapukzinski.
Se lo recomiendo, fervientemente.

Shadow of the Silk Road by Cynthia Brann
Another great travel adventure By Colin Thurbon. I felt transported along with Thurbon as he tranversed the Silk Road. His references to past trips as well as history, provoked a need to research more about this part of this world. An excellent book. A must for those interested in China, Central Asia and World History.


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My Job Went to India: 52 Ways to Save Your Job (Pragmatic Programmers)

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52 Ways to Save Your Job (Pragmatic Programmers)


Tags: the world is flat refactoring skills analysis competitiveness outsourcing arbitrage pragmatic programmer programming professional employment

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        My Job Went to India: 52 Ways to Save Your Job (Pragmatic Programmers)You’ve already lost your job. You may still be drawing a paycheck, but the job you were hired to do no longer exists. Your company has changed, the technology has changed, the economy has changed, and the ways you can add value have changed. Have you adapted to these changes? Or are you at risk?

Architect your career

Economic downturn. Job cuts. Outsourcing. The ever-changing tech landscape. The threats abound. Chad Fowler is here to offer 52 ways to keep your job, despite the vagaries of the market.

  • It’s all about making the right choices. Choosing which technologies to focus on and which business domains to master have at least as much impact on your success as your technical knowledge–don’t let those choices be accidental. Chad shows you all aspects of the decision-making process so you can ensure that you’re investing your time and energy in the right areas.
  • It’s all about skills. You’ll develop a structured plan for keeping your skills up-to-date so that you can compete with both the growing stable of developers in so-called low-cost countries as well as your higher-priced local peers. You’ll learn how to shift your skillset up the value chain, from an offshore-ready commodity to one in high demand.
  • It’s all about marketing. As with any product or service, if nobody knows what you’re selling, nobody will buy. Chad shows you how to create a plan for marketing yourself both inside your company and to the industry in general.

Like it or not, the IT career landscape has changed. This handbook will teach you what you need to do to avoid being left behind.

About the author Chad Fowler has been a software developer and manager for some of the world’s largest corporations. He recently lived and worked in India, setting up and leading an offshore software development center for a large multinational company.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #47055 in Book
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A fresh look on things by Dejan Fajfar
This book has changed the way I look at my business. There is not much to say about this book. It is short enough to read it in one weekend a I would strongly advise you to do so.

Funny name, Serious Book by smcheril
“Pragmatic Bookshelf” has a solid reputation for publishing great books and this book is no exception. This one ranks right up there with books like “The Pragmatic Programmer” and “Code Complete”. With small bite sized chapters with specific and pointed advice, you won’t go wrong buying this book.

In the era of globalization — specifically with regard to software development, the book offers a complete list of techniques and approaches to not just survive but excel in the programming world. Having lived in India for a short while, he has some really astute observations about India including some great tips related to recruiting good programmers. There are a couple of chapters available for free off the publishers website. Read them and also take a look at the table of contents. Just the table of contents is probably worth the price of the book.

It is unfortunate that the title “My job went to India …” was chosen. Apparently, the author’s propensity for cuteness overcame his wisdom. Looking at the cover makes it seem like some kind of a trashy joke book and it’s possible that a lot of folks might have given it the go-by judging the book by its cover. The publishers might be doing the general public a great service by releasing a new edition with some updates and renaming it while not wearing their funny hats — maybe something like “The Relevant Programmer”.

Highly relevant practical advice by Damodar Chetty
Wonderful, easy to read, and well written to boot.

I was impressed with how well he walked the line regarding outsourcing - neither demonizing/denigrating the offshore programmer nor doing a Chicken Little impression of the “sky is falling”. This is by far one of the most balanced treatises on offshoring that I’ve read.

His assessment of the state of the industry, as well as the strengths/weaknesses of the offshore competition for an IT job is generally spot on.

E.g., he notes that an offshore “specialist” is simply someone who has never worked on anything else (say 5 years doing nothing but Java), and does not indicate how well that individual knows the subject matter; and that paradoxically offshoring actually ends up creating a lot more jobs onshore - esp. for a “higher bracket of developers”. He also notes the inability of most offshore developers to say “no” - the dreaded “just one more day” syndrome. Then there’s the small matter of time lost due to communication issues between geographically distributed teams. And, I’ve been asked to sit in as an “English-to-English” translator on numerous occasions.

In short, the phenomena he notes are all ones that I’ve observed in the past few years.

Not that I agree completely with his cultural understanding of India though. Its difficult to see a culture that’s literally thousands of years old and get a grasp of its underlying complexity in 18 months spent working primarily with IT workers. The professionals he works with are a product of a complex culture and its difficult to generalize based on such a specialized sample.

For instance, in the chapter on Mentoring he states that in the West “Everything is competition”. However, in his Introduction he talks about having to hire 25 people out of 30,000 applicants in India. Yes, you read that last number right. I’m not sure how he reconciles these two facts in his own mind - but let me assure you that there’s nothing quite like competing academically/professionally in India. (I’m constantly dismayed by the focus in our public schools here, on fostering a “everybody’s a winner” attitude in schools).

However, to his credit his missteps are rare.

Read as a workbook on how American developers should optimize their interactions with offshore teams, this book deserves 5 stars.

* * * * * * * * * * * *

This book’s other objective - on keeping your toolset sharp and ready does not fare quite so well.

My biggest issue is that there is not much by way of new advice. And unless you’re asleep at your career’s wheel, you’re already doing much of what he suggests. Don’t get me wrong - its not bad advice per se - though I did not agree with all the recommendations.

For e.g., he derides people from calling themselves specialists because they don’t understand how to make a JVM say uncle. But then he recommends that you don’t specialize in a technology stack such as J2EE, because it is not platform neutral. Specifically vis a vis J2EE and .NET, he says “master one and get good at the other”. Spoken like a true “manager”.

If you sit and think about the variety of software that comprises the J2EE pantheon in all its glory - I’d argue that you would find it difficult to be a specialist in every one of its areas, never mind also being “good at” the Microsoft stack. Not if you want to go home at the end of the day and have a life, that is.

I think I am pretty passionate about my career - but it does not define me, and it would be a great loss to me, if it did.

There are a few gems in here - like the Mind Reader chapter which talks about picking up ‘water cooler conversational cues’ from your coworkers about potential improvements and then making them happen in your down time, to seem like a miracle worker.

For the most part, the ideas end up being pretty much recycled from the grand old classic that is the “Pragmatic Programmer” by Andrew Hunt and David Thomas. That book is a must read - even though it is a bit dated in places today. In other words, this book is largely a retelling of that earlier work in a newer context.

This part of the book rated 3 stars.

* * * * * * * * * * * *

The reason I highly recommend it, is that love it, hate it, or /dis/agree with it, you’ll come away the richer for forming your own opinions. These are a practitioner’s thoughts rather than a theoretical dissertation - and that is worth its weight in gold.

Solid Book by Maureen Brennan
As a North American software developer, I definitely got a lot out of this book. I don’t really fear my job being outsourced to India but I wanted to understand what the issues were with outsourcing and can IT shops in India deliver the same value at North American ones.
Outsourcing to India is just a part of this book and the general theme is how to stay more relevant to your organization when technology is constantly changing. There is a lot of useful advice about how to make yourself more valuable to your organization (and deliver more value to your organization).
[...]

Unimpressive, general career advice. by bongo
This book has a bunch of generic advice along the lines of keep up with things and don’t put all your eggs in one basket. Not exactly a revelation here.
If you read the relevant blogs, web sites and talk to people in the industry you don’t need this book.


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A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail (Official Guides to the Appalachian Trail)

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Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail (Official Guides to the Appalachian Trail)


Tags: interesting gift dad comicfanboy historical adventure must read hikes national scenic trail intj favorites bryson 1998 american midwest humor american humor essays travel writing poor writting favorite author yes travel books pennsylvania national forest long distance hiking

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        A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail (Official Guides to the Appalachian Trail)Bill Bryson has made a living out of traveling and then writing about it. In The Lost Continent he re-created the road trips of his childhood; in Neither Here nor There he retraced the route he followed as a young backpacker traversing Europe. When this American transplant to Britain decided to return home, he made a farewell walking tour of the British countryside and produced Notes from a Small Island. Once back on American soil and safely settled in New Hampshire, Bryson once again hears the siren call of the open road–only this time it’s a trail. The Appalachian Trail, to be exact. In A Walk in the Woods Bill Bryson tackles what is, for him, an entirely new subject: the American wilderness. Accompanied only by his old college buddy Stephen Katz, Bryson starts out one March morning in north Georgia, intending to walk the entire 2,100 miles to trail’s end atop Maine’s Mount Katahdin.

If nothing else, A Walk in the Woods is proof positive that the journey is the destination. As Bryson and Katz haul their out-of-shape, middle-aged butts over hill and dale, the reader is treated to both a very funny personal memoir and a delightful chronicle of the trail, the people who created it, and the places it passes through. Whether you plan to make a trip like this one yourself one day or only care to read about it, A Walk in the Woods is a great way to spend an afternoon. –Alix Wilber

        A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail (Official Guides to the Appalachian Trail)Bill Bryson has made a living out of traveling and then writing about it. In The Lost Continent he re-created the road trips of his childhood; in Neither Here nor There he retraced the route he followed as a young backpacker traversing Europe. When this American transplant to Britain decided to return home, he made a farewell walking tour of the British countryside and produced Notes from a Small Island. Once back on American soil and safely settled in New Hampshire, Bryson once again hears the siren call of the open road–only this time it’s a trail. The Appalachian Trail, to be exact. In A Walk in the Woods Bill Bryson tackles what is, for him, an entirely new subject: the American wilderness. Accompanied only by his old college buddy Stephen Katz, Bryson starts out one March morning in north Georgia, intending to walk the entire 2,100 miles to trail’s end atop Maine’s Mount Katahdin.

If nothing else, A Walk in the Woods is proof positive that the journey is the destination. As Bryson and Katz haul their out-of-shape, middle-aged butts over hill and dale, the reader is treated to both a very funny personal memoir and a delightful chronicle of the trail, the people who created it, and the places it passes through. Whether you plan to make a trip like this one yourself one day or only care to read about it, A Walk in the Woods is a great way to spend an afternoon. –Alix WilberBack in America after twenty years in Britain, Bill Bryson decided to reacquaint himself with his native country by walking the 2,100-mile Appalachian Trail, which stretches from Georgia to Maine. The AT offers an astonishing landscape of silent forests and sparkling lakes–and to a writer with the comic genius of Bill Bryson, it also provides endless opportunities to witness the majestic silliness of his fellow human beings.

For a start there’s the gloriously out-of-shape Stephen Katz, a buddy from Iowa along for the walk. Despite Katz’s overwhelming desire to find cozy restaurants, he and Bryson eventually settle into their stride, and while on the trail they meet a bizarre assortment of hilarious characters. But A Walk in the Woods is more than just a laugh-out-loud hike. Bryson’s acute eye is a wise witness to this beautiful but fragile trail, and as he tells its fascinating history, he makes a moving plea for the conservation of America’s last great wilderness. An adventure, a comedy, and a celebration, A Walk in the Woods is destined to become a modern classic of travel literature.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #5544 in Book
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Compare this book with Scout’s Honor by Ray Depew
This is actually a review of two books, one old and one new. Both are nonfiction, and both are intended for grown-ups. There’s nothing in them that kids will find objectionable, but they may find them boring. I found them to be funny, poignant at times, and thought-provoking.

The first is called A Walk in the Woods, by Bill Bryson, published in 1997. The second is called Scout’s Honor, by Peter Applebome, published in 2003. Bryson is a writer and journalist who decided to walk the Appalachian Trail at around age 50, and Walk is the story of his adventures on the AT. Applebome is a writer and a journalist who decided to become a Boy Scout dad at around age 50, and Honor is the story of his adventures with his son’s Boy Scout troop and with Scouting in general.

I read Walk several years ago, and just discovered Honor last week. Reading Honor reminded me of Walk, so much so that I couldn’t review the former without talking about the latter.

Bryson and a friend decided, almost on a lark, to hike the AT which they had heard so much about, but Bryson was so inexperienced a hiker that he couldn’t tell a Nalgene from a North Face. In fact, his introduction to backpacking and hiking occurred in a sporting goods store. He and his friend started at the southern end of the AT, in Georgia, on a snowy autumn day, and ended, with a few breaks, at the northern end in Maine several years later.

Bryson’s writing is self-deprecating and intentionally funny. He plays for laughs, and he gets them. By poking fun at himself, he gives himself license to give all the other characters on the trail the same treatment he gives himself in his writing. The book is funny throughout. But just as Mark Twain and Will Rogers gave us lots of food for thought in the middle of their humor, so Bryson writes a series of thoughtful essays between the lines of his funny stories: lessons about people’s character and behavior, about greed and status, about environmental awareness and social responsibility, and about what Thoreau called “the need for wilderness” or something like that. (Yes, Thoreau talked about it before John Muir did.)

When you finish Bryson’s book, you will be as satisfied with the conclusion as he was with the end of the hike. You may also come away with a renewed appreciation for wild places and with an awareness of the personality flaws that make you similar to the characters Bryson writes about. It’s definitely a book I would read again.

Applebome, like Bryson, knew nothing about hiking, camping and backpacking, until he moved his family from Atlanta to Chappaqua, New York, and his son wanted to join the Boy Scouts. He was reluctant to get into the hiking and the canoeing, the knot-tying and the sleeping outside on the hard ground surrounded by rain, snow, wind and critters. He had hoped that his son would express an interest in Little League baseball instead, but, wishing to score some Good Dad points with his son, he went along with him to the Boy Scout meetings and outings.

Even before he started, Applebome had anti-Boy-Scout leanings — but as he became more involved with his son’s troop, that changed. Interweaved with the funny and poignant story of his own adventures with his son’s troop, Applebome tells a balanced, thoughtful, well-researched and honest story about the history of Scouting and its founders, its awkward attempts to adapt to social change, and the recent controversies surrounding it. The book isn’t all narrative — it includes a lot of reporting, exposition and editorializing — but it’s definitely worth reading.

Applebome comes the end of his book grateful for having been able to share the experience with his son, the troop leaders, and the other Scouts and their dads. He himself grows considerably through his experiences, and he faces a huge crisis of conscience when the Boy Scouts win the Supreme Court judgement in their favor with respect to gays in Scouting. The crisis of conscience occurs because he feels that the corporate organization that is the Boy Scouts of America is dead wrong on at least one of the “three G” issues (gays, God, and girls) and not faithful to the wishes of Scouting’s founders, and yet he sees that the local organizations of Scouting, the councils and troops, are a powerful force for good in their communities and are getting a raw deal by both BSA headquarters and the left-wing liberals who get all over Scouting’s case because of the three Gs.

Being a reporter and a problem-solver at heart, he takes a long, hard look at what Scouting could be (and should be), compares it to what it is, and makes several really good recommendations for fixing Scouting. One of the most interesting things he says is that the Scout Oath and the Scout Law, the moral foundations for Scouting (in the U.S.A.), are rock-solid and it woud be a very good thing if all boys (and men!) lived by those tenets. He also says (either himself, or quoting someone) that the Boy Scout Handbook, any edition, is just the kind of “advice to boys” that people have been longing to give to boys today.

Unfortunately, Scouting is increasingly irrelevant in a society which competes so heavily (and so much more effectively) for boys’ attention with sports, video games, and so on. Applebome laments this turn of events, and yet he asserts, with his primary evidence being the members of his own son, that Scouting appeals to a certain group of boys who really don’t care if other people think it’s uncool, and that Scouting (practiced the way it should be) really is a Good Thing in the boys’ lives and is a major influence in turning them into the kind of men this world needs. (Those are my words, not his. He said it differently.)

Scout’s Honor is written to and for three groups of people: former Boy Scouts who are now adults; current and former Boy Scouts; and current and former Boy Scout leaders. It’s high-energy food for thought for all three groups.

A Walk in the Woods is written for everyone, and will be especially enjoyed by those who love or hate hiking, backpacking, camping, wilderness and the fools they find there. Although it contains more mental junk food than food for thought, it will open your mind and is definitely worth reading.

Ho ho ho Ha ha ha! by ItsOnlyMe
Simply put - what a delightful read! I laughed so hard at times I needed to go “potty”. What a great light-hearted book! This goes on my “keeper” pile for a future re-read for sure!

ridiculous, but it inspired me by Bill Walker
I had a long history as a streetwalker. Yes, a streetwalker. But, I never had even spent the night outdoors. However, when I read Bill Bryson’s book I immediately decided I wanted to thru-hike the entire 2,175 mile trail.

There is a lot of criticism on the AT about Bryson’s book, but one thing is undeniable. With his mass following and inimitable humor, he inspired legions of previous hiking virgins to attempt the AT. And that can only be good, as this mountainous wilderness trail holds wonders that your average American can only dream about. I definitely rate it as one of the top experiences in my life.

Better yet, it inspired me to write a book myself, called Skywalker. There is only one Bill Bryson when it comes to writing. However, it was easy to dissect his success. He wrote a book that appealed to the non-hiker, as much as the hiker. Further, he avoided the plague of so many trail narratives that get trapped in the day-to-day diary format, written by experts, for other experts, in a narrow “hikerese.” Rather, he told a tale that is at once earthy, serious, lighthearted, but informative.

It may not be a classic, but it has increased the population of hikers on the AT, and in this day and age of anxiety and hyper-materialism that can only be to the good.

Skywalker ‘05 author Skywalker–Close Encounters on the Appalachian Trail billwalker52@hotmail.com

Oh So Funny by Teresa A. Shuff
This book is hilarious!

Bryson’s sense of humor and his sense of adventure is very funny. Even a couch potato would love this book.

My husband and I plan to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail in 2010, and I bought this book as research for our hike. I couldn’t put the book down!

5 Stars for Part 1 & 3 1/2 Stars for Part 2 by Kristian Pulz
There are 2 parts to this book. Part 1 is awesome! It is a great story of 2 men hiking part of the Appalachian Trail and the ups and downs they had doing it. It’s funny, witty and well written. Part 2 however lags a bit. The author drives part of the trail and walk parts of it in day trips, not nearly as exciting as part 1. The only thing in my opinion that save part 2 is the history and facts the author talks about. Especially about Pennsylvania and the Delaware Water Gap. Overall I gave it 4 stars. It could have been so much better if he hiked the whole thing, but overall was still a very good read.


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Dark Day in the Deep Sea (A Stepping Stone Book(TM))

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Dark Day in the Deep Sea (A Stepping Stone Book(TM))


Tags: childrens books fiction children magic tree house mary pope osborne

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        Dark Day in the Deep Sea (A Stepping Stone Book(TM))Jack and Annie continue their quest for the secrets of happiness–secrets they need if they’re going to save Merlin. But when the magic tree house leads them to a tiny deserted island in the middle of the ocean, they’re not sure who needs help more–Merlin or themselves! The brother and sister team are soon rescued by a ship of explorers and scientists. But the crew isn’t looking for the secrets of happiness. The crew is looking for . . . a sea monster!

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #6046 in Book
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Great kids’ adventure series by R. Bronsink
OK, I’m not reviewing this for myself, although I do enjoy the concept and the stories, but for my (nearly) six year old grandson. He simply adores this series by Mary Pope Osborne…except…at the start of each adventure, when the tree house moves and then stops…when it says…”then everything was still…absolutely still”…anyone remember Abbott and Costello’s “slowly I turn, step by step…”?
He just plain squeals when anyone either reads him that part or just starts the quotation (he loves it, though!)
The series shows great imagination (if you can “get over” the part where “magic” is involved. Sometimes I think we lose sight of the fact that magic is simply a storyteller’s device to see a different angle of the story or to introduce elements that are more imaginary. If you believe it exists, it does…if you don’t, it doesn’t) and helps kids to come to grips with cooperation and a bit of self sacrifice, as well as helpfulness. (I don’t know about you, but I struggle with that myself, and for our current generation of kids, they need all the help they can get!)
And, quite frankly, I bought it for the grandson because of the Octopus on the cover. He is enamored of this particular sea creature, and the story did not disappoint. (although we have read over 20 of the rest of the series as well, and he only found fault with one that I can remember, and I can’t recall which title that was…)
As soon as his mom had read him this one (it was a birthday present), he wanted it read to him again, and that to me says that it hit the right note with him.
The “Magic Tree House” series is a grand adventure for all concerned. It enthralls the younger readers (or being read to), and is a joy for the parents to read to their children or grandchildren. Covering all sorts of adventure and relationship topics, as well as great brother-sister dialogue, it’s just plain fun!

One of better stories from Merlin Series by N.E.H.
We have the complete series of MTH books, both the simpler paperback ones and the Merlin Series hardcovers. Currently my (almost) 8 year old son is ensconced in the books, but my 11 year old read this book as well just because she wanted to say she’s read them all (granted, it took her less than an hour to finish the whole thing, but she is reading at the 7th grade level so no surprise). Both really enjoyed the story, said it is one of the better story lines in the Merlin Series, interesting, creative, etc. Highly recommend.

An even more exciting expedition by Midwest Book Review
Mary Pope Osborne’s 39th addition to her ‘Magic Tree House’ series, DARK DAY IN THE DEEP SEA tells of Jack and Annie, who have to find one of the four secrets of happiness to help save Merlin the magician. But when they find themselves on a misty island, they wonder how they can find anything - and when a pirate ship turns out to be the world’s first floating science lab, an even more exciting expedition results.

Stories for Children Magazine 5 Star Review by V. S. Grenier
REVIEWED BY: Wayne S. Walker
The latest “Magic Tree House” book (#39) is now out. This time Jack and Annie are whisked back to the 1870s in the South Pacific to join the crew of the HMS Challenger on their scientific exploration of the dark depths of the ocean. They get to meet some real historical characters, such as scientist Henry Moseley and Professor Charles Wyville Thomson. From 1872 to 1876, the Challenger sailed nearly 70,000 miles around the world and found more than 4,000 new species of sea life. However, will Jack and Annie survive a raging storm at sea and the tentacles of a giant octopus to get back to Frog Creek, PA, with their new secret of happiness for Merlin?

We have been reading the Magic Tree House books since they first came out, and both of our boys have enjoyed them. What I like about them is that a lot of history and a good deal of geography, along with a little bit of traditional myth and legend, are included in a fictional story that appeals to children. So the books are educational, but they are also fun! While some of Jack and Annie’s dialogue is a little stilted, for the most part these books do not talk down to children but challenge both their thinking and their vocabulary.

dark day in the deep sea by

My grandchildren can’t wait for the new books of this series. They wer so thrilled when I brought it over and it’s read in one to two days. They already told me how much they liked it and wish the new one was on it’s way. I told them it’s on order for when it’s released.


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City at the End of Time

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City at the End of Time


Tags: hugo award winner sci-fi future library nebula winner fantasy science fiction greg bear

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        City at the End of TimeMultiple Hugo and Nebula award-winning author, Greg Bear is one of science fiction’s most accomplished writers. Bold scientific speculation, riveting plots, and a fierce humanism reflected in characters who dare to dream of better worlds distinguish his work. Now Bear has written a mind-bendingly epic novel that may well be his masterpiece.

Do you dream of a city at the end of time?

In a time like the present, in a world that may or may not be our own, three young people–Ginny, Jack, and Daniel–dream of a doomed, decadent city of the distant future: the Kalpa. Ginny’s and Jack’s dreams overtake them without warning, leaving their bodies behind while carrying their consciousnesses forward, into the minds of two inhabitants of the Kalpa–a would-be warrior, Jebrassy, and an inquisitive explorer, Tiadba–who have been genetically retro-engineered to possess qualities of ancient humanity. As for Daniel: He dreams of an empty darkness–all that his future holds.

But more than dreams link Ginny, Jack, and Daniel. They are fate-shifters, born with the ability to skip like stones across the surface of the fifth dimension, inhabiting alternate versions of themselves. And each guards an object whose origin and purpose are unknown: gnarled, stony artifacts called sum-runners that persist unchanged through all versions of time.

Hunted by others with similar powers who seek the sum-runners on behalf of a terrifying, goddess-like entity known as the Chalk Princess, Ginny, Jack, and Daniel are drawn, despite themselves, into an all but hopeless mission to rescue the future–and complete the greatest achievement in human history.

  • amazon.com Sales Rank: #8364 in Book
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A lot more fantasy than expected by io loki
Interesting book and ideas, but too much on the fantasy side. If you like hard sci fi, this is not exactly what you’re looking for, especially since this book is on the longer side and a little pricey. However, still a very interesting book. I give it 3 stars because there is too much fantasy for my taste. For someone that DOES like fantasy, this would be a 4.

The End of Everything by Patrick Shepherd
In some ways, this book harks back to some works like Olaf Stapledon’s Star Maker, dealing as it does with an incredibly vast sweep of time and across the bounds of the entire cosmos (and beyond). At the same time, embedded within it are some of the latest thoughts and theories about just what makes universe be what it is, from quantum entanglement, the many universes concept, to observer based determination of what the world is and will be.

It starts in the incredibly far future, and the described situation at this starting point is intriguing as we see what’s left of humanity (or human-like beings) confined to a small area and fighting a losing battle with Chaos. This early section may be the best part of this book, as everything is weird and new, and hints at the history and genesis of the current situation are dropped into the descriptions of this very odd environ, making for an absorbing interaction between reader and words.

Interspersed with this far-future world is the second major thread of this novel, as we return to the world of today and follow three very unique individuals as they try to figure out just where they fit in the world, why they are being hunted (and by what), what they can do with their special abilities, and just what the connection is between these people and those of the far future.

Up to this point, all very good. But as we proceed deeper into this work, problems appear. First is the language used to describe the Chaos. In the hands of someone like Delany or Zelazny, this could have been a treat, but Bear’s descriptions have two deadly faults: a lack of definition, a haziness, no scintillating concrete images that you can wrap your mind around; and constant use of the same words and language to describe this non-image - everything is dry, cracked, melted, crushed, twisted, crazed, dim, and dark. As this type of material occupies a large portion of the second half of the novel, it becomes a definite slog to continue reading these same non-descriptions of hazy somethings again and again.

The problem of lack of definition also applies to the major characters, as I found little to make these people stand out as living, breathing things, or why I should care about their ultimate fate. Part of this due to the fact that all of them are manipulated by various `higher powers’ to fix the paths and decisions they will make, and the basic motivations of these higher powers are themselves not well delineated till very near the end of the book.

Then there is the final resolution of the two major threads of this work. I found it to be totally predictable both in terms of the decisions of the major characters and the ultimate conclusion of the entire story arc, not good for a work whose major premise deals with choice, unpredictability, and the infinite possibilities of all possible universe world-lines.

This work needed some severe pruning of most of the descriptive sections, and deeper, more fleshed out looks at the internals of its characters. As it is, I found it hard to finish this work, and was left with quite a feeling of disappointment.

—Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd (hyperpat)

Several hundred pages too long. by J. Canaan
I try to read every book written by Greg Bear and have been a fan for some time. However, this book just did not do it for me. It felt like I wasted several days waiting for something to happen that never does. It is about 250 pages too long. It will not stop me from continuing to read books by Mr. Bear, but I will not have the same expectations that I have had in the past.

AWESOME BOOK!!! But Not For Everyone by Frank Segler
I just finished reading Greg Bear’s “City At The End Of Time.” It was a real page turner for me. I can understand why others would see him dipping into fantasy and all these things, but I just don’t agree. Since no one really knows what happened BEFORE the universe came into being, any interpretation is as good as any other.

This book is for people who love sci-fi, and like it stuffed full of theoretical physics. I didn’t read a single thing which would fall outside of the realm of the theoretical possible (though extreme.)

Carries the concept of observer based reality to its extreme (or observer dependent realty.) I personally believe this to be a dead end in theoretical nuclear and astrophysics, because the conclusions it forces us to draw are so absurd and do not mesh with the intuitive. However it is fascinating to read a book written with this type of physics at its very core.

Thought experiments (the very creation of observer based physics), are a great tool for trying to understand astrophysics, but they are simple one of many tools. Just like mathematics is not a true representation of the world in reality, so too are thought experiments not a true representation of reality. They are merely echoes of the real, sometimes leading to new truths, sometimes misleading to absurd paths, like the many worlds theory, where every persons decision spins off a new universe ad infinitum. Sorry, just don’t buy it.

That is a basic premise of the book, one of temporal entropy. As you get deeper into the book, as time in the book moves forward so too the disentropic effects of time. Causality rum amok. That is where it becomes fantasy-like, but never leaves the grounds of todays current thinking about the far future and the heat death of the universe, when matter itself ceases to exist. It is of course a sci-fi writers wild extrapolation and interpretation of what that world might be like.

Some further thoughts:

Entangled matter, presumably once separated by vast distances now collapsed and as entanglement brought them together, they dance as if an aurora borealis in groups.

Chaography - A newly minted word, which seems to mean different things to different people judging my google results seems to mean something totally different here. Chaos theory seems to be a purely baryonic playground, therefore one must presume that its a concatenation of chaos (not chaos theory), and topography, in other words, as time winds down and decays, as the end state of a cold universe approaches, Chaography, as Greg uses it in his book, I THINK means a general description of the chaotic state and effects of a dead, or near dead, universe. But thats speculation - others may have their own opinions.

I personally believe (yes its a belief), that at some point during the end times decay, before, near, or at the point of absolute heat death, we will hit a ‘phase transition’, which will drop our entire universe into a lower energy density state, thereby creating another violent big bang whereever that phase transition is first realized.

His descriptions of a null-entropic landscape are fascinating to say the least. Kafkaesque in prime radiance :)

Greg borrows key words from Sanskrit, like the sleeping Brahma, Kalpa, and several others. I suppose it makes sense as the Indians have had the longest sense of ‘time’ as any other culture. Oh lots of Greek in there too, like Astyanax, Eidolon, Typhon,

Sections of the book jump back and forth between chapters titled 10 zeroes, and 14 zeroes. Isn’t that a fascinating comparison? That today our universe is of an age of 10 zeroes. But that beyond the heat death and presumably the end of the universe is just 14 zeroes. I really liked that perspective.

In short, I think this is Greg Bear’s best work. I hope others find it as unique and interesting as I have.

F. Segler

A Bit Zelazny-ish by David A. Lessnau
Greg Bear’s “City at the End of Time” is an interesting book (perhaps “weird” (in a good way) might be a better word). The way Bear writes in this novel and his cosmological (almost theistic) theme reminds me somewhat of Roger Zelazny’s old work. The only quibble I have with the book is that there’s a bit too much “slogging through the wilderness” type of activity in it. Of course, Bear needs that slogging time to finish up the linkage between his two groups of people in the present and the future. Overall, I rate this book at a Very Good four stars out of five.


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