Rabu, 30 Juni 2010

The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

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The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George



The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

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Monsieur Perdu can prescribe the perfect book for a broken heart. But can he fix his own?   Monsieur Perdu calls himself a literary apothecary. From his floating bookstore in a barge on the Seine, he prescribes novels for the hardships of life. Using his intuitive feel for the exact book a reader needs, Perdu mends broken hearts and souls. The only person he can't seem to heal through literature is himself; he's still haunted by heartbreak after his great love disappeared. She left him with only a letter, which he has never opened. After Perdu is finally tempted to read the letter, he hauls anchor and departs on a mission to the south of France, hoping to make peace with his loss and discover the end of the story. Joined by a bestselling but blocked author and a lovelorn Italian chef, Perdu travels along the country’s rivers, dispensing his wisdom and his books, showing that the literary world can take the human soul on a journey to heal itself. Internationally bestselling and filled with warmth and adventure, The Little Paris Bookshop is a love letter to books, meant for anyone who believes in the power of stories to shape people's lives.

The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13496 in Books
  • Brand: Crown
  • Published on: 2015-06-23
  • Released on: 2015-06-23
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.50" h x 1.20" w x 5.80" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 400 pages
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  • The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel;
The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

Review New York Times BestsellerA LibraryReads Favorite of the Favorites An Indie Bestseller of 2015"If you're looking to be charmed right out of your own life for a few hours, sit down with this wise and winsome novel...Everything happens just as you want it to... from poignant moments to crystalline insights in exactly the right measure."—Oprah.com“The settings are ideal for a summer-romance read…Who can resist floating on a barge through France surrounded by books, wine, love, and great conversation?”—Christian Science Monitor“[A] bona fide international hit.”—New York Times Book Review"A story that reflects all the romance and sweetness of Paris itself.” —San Francisco Book Review"George’s exquisite, multilayered love story enchanted Europe for more than a year, and the U.S. publication of this flawless translation will allow gob-smacked book lovers here to struggle with the age-old  dilemma: to race through each page to see what happens next or savor each deliciously enticing phrase. Do both; if ever a book was meant to be read over and over, this gem is it.”—Library Journal (starred review)"Warmhearted...A charming novel that believes in the healing properties of fiction, romance, and a summer in the south of France."—Kirkus"A beautiful story of grief, companionship, forgiveness and building a life worth living. A vulnerable, relatable tale of great love and loss, missed opportunities and moving on, The Little Paris Bookshop is, like the books its main characters recommends, medicine for the wounded soul.”—Bookpage"Engaging... [George's] sumptuous descriptions of both food and literature will leave readers unsure whether to run to the nearest library or the nearest bistro."—Publishers Weekly"There's a special category of books that appeal most strongly to people who just plain love to read. Not thrillers, or mysteries, or traditional romances, they are instead love letters to books themselves and to the power and delight of the written word and of stories…Now joining the ranks of those books you just have to give to the bibliophiles in your life is The Little Paris Bookshop by Nina George…The Little Paris Bookshop is the kind of book that readers might not know they needed or wanted until they picked it up -- meaning that George herself is doing exactly the same kind of work as Jean Perdu on his floating literary apothecary.”—Bookreporter.com"Nina George's enchanting The Little Paris Bookshop deals with the nature of grief and the power of friendship, love and truth…George is a lyrical writer whose beautiful, sensory language and imagery enhance this adventurous, moving narrative.”—Shelf Awareness"Uplifting... An international best seller, this one will make you happy."—The Independent"The Little Paris Bookshop is an enchantment. Set in a floating barge along the Seine, this love letter to books - and to the complicated, sometimes broken people who are healed by them - is the next best thing to booking a trip to France."—Sarah Pekkanen, author of Catching Air“Simultaneously heartbreaking and heartwarming, Nina George’s impressionistic prose takes the reader on a journey not just through the glories of France and the wonders of books, but through the encyclopedic panoply of human emotions. The Little Paris Bookshop is a book whose palette, textures, and aromas will draw you in and cradle you in the redemptive power of love.”—Charlie Lovett, author of The Bookman’s Tale"Nina George tells us clever things about love, about reading that 'puts a bounce in your step,' about tango in Provence, and about truly good food. . . . One of those books that gets you thinking about whom you need to give it to as a gift even while you're still reading it, because it makes you happy and should be part of any well-stocked apothecary." —Hamburger Morgenpost (Germany)   “Enchanting and moving ... Rarely have I read such a beautiful book!”—Tina magazine (Germany) 

About the Author NINA GEORGE works as a journalist, writer, and storytelling teacher. She is the award winning author of 26 books, and also writes feature articles, short stories, and columns. The Little Paris Bookshop spent over a year on bestseller lists in Germany, and was a bestseller in Italy, Poland, and the Netherlands. George is married to the writer Jens J. Kramer and lives in Berlin and in Brittany, France.www.nina-george.com@nina_george • @jean_perdu

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1How on earth could I have let them talk me into it?The two generals of number 27 Rue Montagnard—Madame Bernard, the owner, and Madame Rosalette, the concierge—had caught Monsieur in a pincer movement between their ground-floor flats.“That Le P. has treated his wife shamelessly.”“Scandalously. Like a moth treats a wedding veil.”“You can hardly blame some people when you look at their wives. Fridges in Chanel. But men? Monsters, all of them.”“Ladies, I don’t quite know what . . .”“Not you of course, Monsieur Perdu. You are cashmere compared with the normal yarn from which men are spun.”“Anyway, we’re getting a new tenant. On the fourth floor. Yours, Monsieur.”“But Madame has nothing left. Absolutely nothing, only shattered illusions. She needs just about everything.”“And that’s where you come in, Monsieur. Give whatever you can. All donations welcome.”“Of course. Maybe a good book . . .”“Actually, we were thinking of something more practical. A table, perhaps. You know, Madame has—”“Nothing. I got that.”The bookseller could not imagine what might be more practical than a book, but he promised to give the new tenant a table. He still had one.Monsieur Perdu pushed his tie between the top buttons of his white, vigorously ironed shirt and carefully rolled up his sleeves. Inward, one fold at a time, up to the elbow. He stared at the bookcase in the corridor. Behind the shelves lay a room he hadn’t entered for almost twenty-one years.Twenty-one years and summers and New Year’s mornings.But in that room was the table.He exhaled, groped indiscriminately for a book and pulled Orwell’s 1984 out of the bookcase. It didn’t fall apart. Nor did it bite his hand like an affronted cat.He took out the next novel, then two more. Now he reached into the shelf with both hands, grabbed whole parcels of books out of it and piled them up beside him.The stacks grew into trees. Towers. Magic mountains. He looked at the last book in his hand. When the Clock Struck Thirteen. A tale of time travel.If he’d believed in omens, this would have been a sign.He banged the bottom of the shelves with his fists to loosen them from their fastenings. Then he stepped back.There. Layer by layer, it appeared. Behind the wall of words. The door to the room where . . . I could simply buy a table.Monsieur Perdu ran his hand over his mouth. Yes. Dust down the books, put them away again, forget about the door. Buy a table and carry on as he had for the last two decades. In twenty years’ time he’d be seventy, and from there he’d make it through the rest. Maybe he’d die prematurely.Coward.He tightened his trembling fist on the door handle.Slowly the tall man opened the door. He pushed it softly inward, screwed up his eyes and . . . Nothing but moonlight and dry air. He breathed it in through his nose, analyzing it, but found nothing.——’s smell has gone.Over the course of twenty-one summers, Monsieur Perdu had become as adept at avoiding thinking of —— as he was at stepping around open manholes.He mainly thought of her as ——. As a pause amid the hum of his thoughts, as a blank in the pictures of the past, as a dark spot amid his feelings. He was capable of conjuring all kinds of gaps.Monsieur Perdu looked around. How quiet the room seemed. And pale despite the lavender-blue wallpaper. The passing of the years behind the closed door had squeezed the color from the walls.The light from the corridor met little that could cast a shadow. A bistro chair. The kitchen table. A vase with the lavender stolen two decades earlier from the Valensole plateau. And a fifty-year-old man who now sat down on the chair and wrapped his arms around himself.There had once been curtains, and over there, pictures, flowers and books, a cat called Castor that slept on the sofa. There were candlesticks and whispering, full wineglasses and music. Dancing shadows on the wall, one of them tall, the other strikingly beautiful. There had been love in this room.Now there’s only me.He clenched his fists and pressed them against his burning eyes.Monsieur Perdu swallowed and swallowed again to fight back the tears. His throat was too tight to breathe and his back seemed to glow with heat and pain.When he could once more swallow without it hurting, Monsieur Perdu stood up and opened the casement window. Aromas came swirling in from the back courtyard.The herbs from the Goldenbergs’ little garden. Rosemary and thyme mixed with the massage oils used by Che, the blind chiropodist and “foot whisperer.” Added to that, the smell of pancakes intermingled with Kofi’s spicy and meaty African barbecued dishes. Over it all drifted the perfume of Paris in June, the fragrance of lime blossom and expectation.But Monsieur Perdu wouldn’t let these scents affect him. He resisted their charms. He’d become extremely good at ignoring anything that might in any way arouse feelings of yearning. Aromas. Melodies. The beauty of things.He fetched soap and water from the storeroom next to the bare kitchen and began to clean the wooden table.He fought off the blurry picture of himself sitting at this table, not alone but with ——.He washed and scrubbed and ignored the piercing question of what he was meant to do now that he had opened the door to the room in which all his love, his dreams and his past had been buried.Memories are like wolves. You can’t lock them away and hope they leave you alone.Monsieur Perdu carried the narrow table to the door and heaved it through the bookcase, past the magic mountains of paper onto the landing and over to the apartment across the hall.As he was about to knock, a sad sound reached his ears.Stifled sobbing, as if through a cushion.Someone was crying behind the green door.A woman. And she was crying as though she wanted nobody, absolutely nobody, to hear.2“She was married to You-Know-Who, Monsieur Le P.”He didn’t know. Perdu didn’t read the Paris gossip pages.Madame Catherine Le P.-You-Know-Who had come home late one Thursday evening from her husband’s art agency, where she took care of his PR. Her key no longer fit into the lock, and there was a suitcase on the stairs with divorce papers on top of it. Her husband had moved to an unknown address and taken the old furniture and a new woman with him.Catherine, soon-to-be-ex-wife-of-Le-Dirty-Swine, possessed nothing but the clothes she had brought into their marriage—and the realization that it had been naïve of her to think that their erstwhile love would guarantee decent treatment after their separation, and to assume that she knew her husband so well that he could no longer surprise her.“A common mistake,” Madame Bernard, the lady of the house, had pontificated in between puffing out smoke signals from her pipe. “You only really get to know your husband when he walks out on you.”Monsieur Perdu had not yet seen the woman who’d been so coldheartedly ejected from her own life.Now he listened to the lonely sobs she was desperately trying to muffle, perhaps with her hands or a tea towel. Should he announce his presence and embarrass her? He decided to fetch the vase and the chair first.He tiptoed back and forth between his flat and hers. He knew how treacherous this proud old house could be, which floorboards squeaked, which walls were more recent and thinner additions and which concealed ducts that acted like megaphones.When he pored over his eighteen-thousand-piece map of the world jigsaw in the otherwise empty living room, the sounds of the other residents’ lives were transmitted to him through the fabric of the house.The Goldenbergs’ arguments (Him: “Can’t you just for once . . . ? Why are you . . . ? Haven’t I . . . ?” Her: “You always have to . . . You never do . . . I want you to . . .”) He’d known the two of them as newlyweds. They’d laughed together a lot back then. Then came the children, and the parents drifted apart like continents.He heard Clara Violette’s electric wheelchair rolling over carpet edges, wooden floors and doorsills. He remembered the young pianist back when she was able to dance.He heard Che and young Kofi cooking. Che was stirring the pots. The man had been blind since birth, but he said that he could see the world through the fragrant trails and traces that people’s feelings and thoughts had left behind. Che could sense whether a room had been loved or lived or argued in.Perdu also listened every Sunday to how Madame Bomme and the widows’ club giggled like girls at the dirty books he slipped them behind their stuffy relatives’ backs.The snatches of life that could be overheard in the house at number 27 Rue Montagnard were like a sea lapping the shores of Perdu’s silent isle.He had been listening for more than twenty years. He knew his neighbors so well that he was sometimes amazed by how little they knew about him (not that he minded). They had no idea that he owned next to no furniture apart from a bed, a chair and a clothes rail—no knickknacks, no music, no pictures or photo albums or three-piece suite or crockery (other than for himself)—or that he had chosen such simplicity of his own free will. The two rooms he still occupied were so empty that they echoed when he coughed. The only thing in the living room was the giant jigsaw puzzle on the floor. His bedroom was furnished with a bed, the ironing board, a reading light and a garment rail on wheels containing three identical sets of clothing: gray trousers, white shirt, brown V-neck sweater. In the kitchen were a stove-top coffee pot, a tin of coffee and a shelf stacked with food. Arranged in alphabetical order. Maybe it was just as well that no one saw this.And yet he harbored a strange affection for 27 Rue Montagnard’s residents. He felt inexplicably better when he knew that they were well—and in his unassuming way he tried to make a contribution. Books were a means of helping. Otherwise he stayed in the background, a small figure in a painting, while life was played out in the foreground.However, the new tenant on the third floor, Maximilian Jordan, wouldn’t leave Monsieur Perdu in peace. Jordan wore specially made earplugs with earmuffs over them, plus a woolly hat on cold days. Ever since the young author’s debut novel had made him famous amid great fanfare, he’d been on the run from fans who would have given their right arms to move in with him. Meanwhile, Jordan had developed a peculiar interest in Monsieur Perdu.While Perdu was on the landing arranging the chair beside the kitchen table, and the vase on top, the crying stopped.In its place he heard the squeak of a floorboard that someone was trying to walk across without making it creak.He peered through the pane of frosted glass in the green door. Then he knocked twice, very gently.A face moved closer. A blurred, bright oval.“Yes?” the oval whispered.“I’ve got a chair and a table for you.”The oval said nothing.I have to speak softly to her. She’s cried so much she’s probably all dried out and she’ll crumble if I’m too loud.“And a vase. For flowers. Red flowers, for instance. They’d look really pretty on the white table.”He had his cheek almost pressed up against the glass.He whispered, “But I can give you a book as well.”The light in the staircase went out.“What kind of book?” the oval whispered.“The consoling kind.”“I need to cry some more. I’ll drown if I don’t. Can you understand that?”“Of course. Sometimes you’re swimming in unwept tears and you’ll go under if you store them up inside.” And I’m at the bottom of a sea of tears. “I’ll bring you a book for crying then.”“When?”“Tomorrow. Promise me you’ll have something to eat and drink before you carry on crying.”He didn’t know why he was taking such liberties. It must be something to do with the door between them.The glass misted up with her breath.“Yes,” she said. “Yes.”When the hall light flared on again, the oval shrank back.Monsieur Perdu laid his hand briefly on the glass where her face had been a second before.And if she needs anything else, a chest of drawers or a potato peeler, I’ll buy it and claim I had it already.He went into his empty flat and pushed the bolt across. The door leading into the room behind the bookcase was still open. The longer Monsieur Perdu looked in there, the more it seemed as though the summer of 1992 were rising up out of the floor. The cat jumped down from the sofa on soft, velvet paws and stretched. The sunlight caressed a bare back, the back turned and became ——. She smiled at Monsieur Perdu, rose from her reading position and walked toward him naked, with a book in her hand.“Are you finally ready? asked ——.Monsieur Perdu slammed the door.No.3“No,” Monsieur Perdu said again the following morning. “I’d rather not sell you this book.”Gently he pried Night from the lady’s hand. Of the many novels on his book barge—the vessel moored on the Seine that he had named Literary Apothecary—she had inexplicably chosen the notorious bestseller by Maximilian “Max” Jordan, the earmuff wearer from the third floor in Rue Montagnard.The customer looked at the bookseller, taken aback.“Why not?”“Max Jordan doesn’t suit you.”“Max Jordan doesn’t suit me?”“That’s right. He’s not your type.”“My type. Okay. Excuse me, but maybe I should point out to you that I’ve come to your book barge for a book. Not a husband, mon cher Monsieur.”“With all due respect, what you read is more important in the long term than the man you marry, ma chère Madame.”She looked at him through eyes like slits.“Give me the book, take my money, and we can both pretend it’s a nice day.”“It is a nice day, and tomorrow is the start of summer, but you’re not going to get this book. Not from me. May I suggest a few others?”“Right, and flog me some old classic you’re too lazy to throw overboard where it can poison the fish?” She spoke softly to begin with, but her volume kept increasing.“Books aren’t eggs, you know. Simply because a book has aged a bit doesn’t mean it’s gone bad.” There was now an edge to Monsieur Perdu’s voice too. “What is wrong with old? Age isn’t a disease. We all grow old, even books. But are you, is anyone, worth less, or less important, because they’ve been around for longer?”“It’s absurd how you’re twisting everything, all because you don’t want me to have that stupid Night book.”The customer—or rather noncustomer—tossed her purse into her luxury shoulder bag and tugged at the zip, which got stuck.  Perdu felt something welling up inside him, a wild feeling, anger, tension—only it had nothing to do with this woman. He couldn’t hold his tongue, though. He hurried after her as she strode angrily through the belly of the book barge and called out to her in the half-light between the long bookshelves: “It’s your choice, Madame! You can leave and spit on me. Or you can spare yourself thousands of hours of torture starting right now.”“Thanks, that’s exactly what I’m doing.”“Surrender to the treasures of books instead of entering into pointless relationships with men, who neglect you anyway, or going on crazy diets because you’re not thin enough for one man and not stupid enough for the next.” “It’s absurd how you’re twisting everything, all because you don’t want me to have that stupid Night book.”The customer—or rather noncustomer—tossed her purse into her luxury shoulder bag and tugged at the zip, which got stuck.Perdu felt something welling up inside him, a wild feeling, anger, tension—only it had nothing to do with this woman. He couldn’t hold his tongue, though. He hurried after her as she strode angrily through the belly of the book barge and called out to her in the half-light between the long bookshelves: “It’s your choice, Madame! You can leave and spit on me. Or you can spare yourself thousands of hours of torture starting right now.”“Thanks, that’s exactly what I’m doing.”“Surrender to the treasures of books instead of entering into pointless relationships with men, who neglect you anyway, or going on crazy diets because you’re not thin enough for one man and not stupid enough for the next.”She stood stock-still by the large bay window that looked out over the Seine, and glared at Perdu. “How dare you!”“Books keep stupidity at bay. And vain hopes. And vain men. They undress you with love, strength and knowledge. It’s love from within. Make your choice: book or . . .”Before he could finish his sentence, a Parisian pleasure boat plowed past with a group of Chinese women standing by the railing under umbrellas. They began clicking away with their cameras when they caught sight of Paris’s famous floating Literary Apothecary. The pleasure boat drove brown-green dunes of water against the bank, and the book barge reeled.The customer teetered on her smart high heels, but instead of offering her his hand, Perdu handed her The Elegance of the Hedgehog.She made an instinctive grab for the novel and clung to it.Perdu held on to the book as he spoke to the stranger in a soothing, tender and calm voice.“You need your own room. Not too bright, with a kitten to keep you company. And this book, which you will please read slowly, so you can take the occasional break. You’ll do a lot of thinking and probably a bit of crying. For yourself. For the years. But you’ll feel better afterward. You’ll know that now you don’t have to die, even if that’s how it feels because the guy didn’t treat you well. And you will like yourself again and won’t find yourself ugly or naïve.”Only after delivering these instructions did he let go.


The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

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Most helpful customer reviews

241 of 252 people found the following review helpful. Afloat on the Seine! By Rita Mayberry Just finished "The Little Paris Bookshop..." about an hour ago, and I am still thinking about it. What reader doesn't love a bookstore? And a book about a bookshop on a converted barge on the Seine in the heart of Paris was too appealing to not give this book a try. And, to make it even more intriguing is the notion of a bookseller who finds books to heal the reader. Monsieur Perdu doesn't push the latest bestseller, but seeks the right title for the right reader, and his uncanny ability to mend broken hearts through books is a lovely device that Nina George applies deftly to the narrative. Poor Perdu is mending every broken heart but his own it seems until the plot thickens and he begins to sort through Perdu's deep sorrow and the harm it has done him. Circumstances and a found letter take Perdu on a quest for lost love, and a trip on the Seine with an unusual cast of characters who seek elusive love, in its myriad guises, throughout the French countryside wherever the river takes them. Along the way, surprising revelations about profound joy and sorrow. It is an amazing journey. There are so many insightful quotes in this book, that it is dogeared already on my shelf and has drawn me into its pages twice. The most insightful is a summary in a sentence of what the online world has become. So perceptive! After the past is sorted out, will Perdu move into the future with grace and hope? Read the book,sail away, and perhaps discover a bit about yourself along the way. I certainly did.

130 of 135 people found the following review helpful. A book for book lovers By Neal Reynolds This is a beautifully written book, as one critic said a love letter to books. The thoughtful reader well versed in literature will love it. There are great references to many books, some well known and some not (along with a very few fictional titles). The main character, Monsieur Perdu, acts as a therapist prescribing certain books for different patrons. A letter from a lost love which he has deliberately not opened for twenty years sends him on an odyssey accompanied by Max, a current writer.The book is rich in literary allusions and in probing of human emotions. It's not fast reading, but indeed it is captivating for knowledgeable readers who know books.After a quite satisfying read, you'll find a few French recipes and then a list of books which the fictional main character considers especially therapeutic. (My main disappointment in that list is that nothing by Ray Bradbury is included)If you're a book lover, you'll certainly love this one.

89 of 93 people found the following review helpful. A gentle and profound read that will remind us of why books are such a grand passion By D. Matlack The little Paris Bookshop is a remarkably profound read for as light as it is. The bare skeleton of this book might be Monsieur Perdu's bookshop and his finally coming to terms with his own past, but there is a remarkable amount of psychology packed in every other page.As a reader it is always more enjoyable to read an author who loves books and is well read themselves. Nina George does not disappoint on this account, in fact as I read the book - and having worked in book stores and libraries myself, a novel about the healing and reconciling properties of books is in my opinion, a true romance. We all know how satisfying it is to find a book that will suspend or griefs, realities, change our perceptions, lives or simply entertain us on a level we were until that moment unaware even existed. The little Paris Bookshop is an ode to those books and those moments and really overshadows a bit, Monsieur Perdu's own predicament.It is easier to have insight into the lives of others than it is to realize our own. My own father told me when I was young that a person can learn more about another in 5 minutes of conversation and Ms. George echos that theory with Perdu's inherent intuition on what would be a good read that would help others. Of course the same man sealed away an entire room in his house for 20 years just to avoid reading a letter and the reader will pick up immediately on his own acute resistance to self-diagnosis. Naturally he will be propelled forward when his philanthropy to an neighbor creates an accidental intervention of sorts that forces him to address his past disappointments and heartbreaks to heal himself.That is the natural and perhaps not so innovative storyline, but really it is the books and the love of books and the life-altering consequences of books that make this story an enjoyable read and a soothing balm unto itself. And I loved her seemingly random yet deeply passionate reading list. This novel reminded me of so many moments and books in my past that were amazing moments all unto themselves.

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The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George
The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George

Selasa, 29 Juni 2010

Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world,

Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

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Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer



Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

Best Ebook PDF Online Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

One prayer can change everything, says bestselling author Tricia Goyer in Prayers That Changed History.

Martin Luther. Sojourner Truth. Helen Keller. St. Patrick. We read their stories, and of other people like them, in history books and hear about the amazing things they did to change the world. But one part of the story is often left out: Each one of them wouldn’t have accomplished what they did without prayer.

In Prayers That Changed History, the stories of twenty-five notable people are presented along with how prayer changed their lives and changed history. Following each historical example is a biblical story that ties to that person’s life and actions, as well as ways you can use the power of prayer in your life as well. Because God isn’t done changing the world yet, and he would love to use you to make history.

Includes images of each historical figure.

Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #83244 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-30
  • Released on: 2015-06-30
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.99" h x .63" w x 5.24" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 240 pages
Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

Review It might be hard to make the power of prayer accessible to young readers, but it’s even harder to make it entertaining. Goyer succeeds on both fronts in her anthology of 24 Christian individuals (plus the British people of WWII) who, she contends, changed the course of history through prayer. Arranged chronologically, the profiles feature such famous figures as Sojourner Truth, Helen Keller, and Mother Teresa as well as such lesser-known but equally important figures as John Newton, who found God’s mercy during a near-death experience aboard a ship and began to see the evils of the slave trade. Each profile begins with a short fictionalized narrative that describes a difficult situation and how prayer helped the individual overcome the adversity. Although thought-provoking, the author doesn’t indicate that she is reimaging scenes from history. She follows with questions that connect the reader to the narrative, direct quotes, biblical connections on the same theme, and inspirational guided prayer topics. While geared for Christian readers, history buffs will also enjoy the unique angle. --- Angela Leeper (Booklist)

About the Author

USA Today bestselling author Tricia Goyer is the author of more than 40 books, including the novelization for Moms’ Night Out. She has written over 500 articles for national publications and blogs for high traffic sites like TheBetterMom.com and MomLifeToday.com. Tricia and her husband, John, live in Little Rock, Arkansas, where Tricia coordinates a Teen MOPS (Mothers of Preschoolers) group. They have six children.


Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. A must read! By Kindle Customer This is a terrific book to add to the family bookshelf; both parents and children will enjoy and benefit from it. My family learned some bits of history we hadn't known before. We were also moved by many stories in the book; some will certainly stick with us. I also loved the discussion questions, which really made my kids think.NOTE: Parents should be aware that "the red light district" and suicide (Hitler's) are mentioned. Also, the author says that we will not hear God's voice with our ears. While this is often true, the Bible itself tells us that sometimes people do hear God with their ears.Kristina Seleshanko, Christian Children's Book Review

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Prayers that Changed History By Lollipops PRAYERS THAT CHANGED HISTORY is about famous people who became famous because of a simple prayer. People like Christopher Columbus and Helen Keller achieved what they wanted to because they asked God to help them. I really liked this book and read it through in two days. It is very well-written and held my interest. I really like that they included the prayers and quotes in the exact words they said it in the book.Other features include a brief biography, something to think about, in his own words, its in the Bible, and How he changed history.Highly recommended for everyone. Even my older brother is enthralled by this book. He says it is astounding

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Cool stuff! By fredamans I pray. Mostly everyone prays, at least at one time or another. No prayer is too big or too small. God hears them all.What I like about this book is as it walks us throughout history, we learn about certain famous people. These people were part of something huge that forever changed history.The author shows us the prayer connection to the life-changing event. All based on facts and resources, that she lists in the back of the book for others to look up if they want to.That's the coolest thing, if you ask me. Deep prayer and faith, as well as persistence, contributed to these drastic changes in history. How the author gets you to connect them together is what I find cool.This book is geared for a younger audience, but adults will enjoy the tidbits of history too. No one is too young or too old to learn about the power of prayer.

See all 46 customer reviews... Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer


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Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer
Prayers That Changed History: From Christopher Columbus to Helen Keller, how God used 25 people to change the world, by Tricia Goyer

Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates

Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates

Exactly how a concept can be obtained? By looking at the celebrities? By visiting the sea and also taking a look at the sea weaves? Or by checking out a publication Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), By Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates Everybody will have particular characteristic to acquire the inspiration. For you who are dying of books and consistently get the motivations from publications, it is actually fantastic to be below. We will certainly show you hundreds compilations of guide Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), By Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates to check out. If you like this Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), By Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates, you could likewise take it as your own.

Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates

Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates



Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates

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You’re human. Weak. Despised. There is only one way to earn respect: to fight and win… a Human Empire. Five centuries ago, Earth sold a million children into slavery. This is their descendants’ story of the fight for humanity everywhere. 2569 A.D. Battered but not beaten, the Human Legion follows the trail set for them by the mysterious Night Hummers in their quest for allies and assets. But first the Legion has changed and must ask itself anew: What is the Legion for? Who shall be its leader? In the fourth of the bestselling six-book series, journey to distant planets, experience holy war, hatred, and distorted love as the Human Legion attempts to carve out its own empire amidst the chaos of civil war. You will not journey alone: alien eyes are watching… Join the Legion! With over 60,000 copies sold so far, the Legion still needs YOU to join the fight for freedom. Enlist today!

Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #36435 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-10-08
  • Released on: 2015-10-08
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates


Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Why wait? Read it now! By Patrick So, I borrowed this title from the Kindle library a few days ago, when it was released. Having already read the first three in this series, I thought I knew what to expect. I was right, and I was wrong.My only real complaint on this book was that there wasn't enough. I need more. If you liked the first three, you'll love the fourth installment. I won't give away any plot points, but I will say this is worth the read. I'm hoping we will see some more of a certain new species that was touched on, and can't wait to read what comes next after the last communication.I'm not a professional critic, so I'll leave it at this. If you like space marine fiction, space battles, even sci-fi in general, read this series. It keeps getting better with each book. I, for one, can't wait til January for the next book.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. A DEFINITE MUST BUY! By ME An outstanding addition to the Human Legion universe! I was hesitant at first when Tim Taylor brought on Ian Whates as a co-author, afraid it would change what made the series great. Luckily, try as I might, I could find no trace of differing voices in the narrative and the story was as great as ever!! I agree, it could've been longer, book five could come out tomorrow or we could find out that Hollywood came to their senses and was turning it into a movie, but.... otherwise it was fantastic. Overall, I whole heartedly give it five stars!!!

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Holy Mud Slingers and Fish People By Amazon Customer We have our first two allies for the Human Legion. Fish People and Mud Suckers (or what I affectionately refer to as Slingers). Think I have visions of furry little beavers sitting on top of mud piles scanning the surroundings for hostiles getting ready to sling mud balls with their tails. Wonder if Arun fishes?We have talking water, ship eating bacteria, coffins(cold freeze units) in space, new technology and weapons. We have the purple haired warrior, hummers, goddesses and more. Stealth and space battles play a large role in this installment and we learn more about the history of the Human Legion. We have Springer and Furn and a hard decision coming for Arun.Overall a great read. Editing was excellent. Congrats to those who spent time on going through the material to insure few problems with editing.Recommend the book to all. Author includes a section in the back of the book catching up the reader with the story line. Recommend you read the first three books.

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Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates

Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates
Human Empire (The Human Legion Book 4), by Tim C. Taylor, Ian Whates

Jumat, 25 Juni 2010

Trouble with Robots, by Sirena Ross

Trouble with Robots, by Sirena Ross

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Trouble with Robots, by Sirena Ross

Trouble with Robots, by Sirena Ross



Trouble with Robots, by Sirena Ross

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Street-wise Olive is a bad ass tech with the customer service skills of a rabid pole cat. Her partner Britney is charming, sweet and ready for anything, especially car chases. Together, these ladies make up the tech team that has renegade robots on the run. Fast, fun and futuristic, Trouble with Robots is a Sci-Fi novella, Pulp Fiction in the finest sense.

Trouble with Robots, by Sirena Ross

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2276607 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-10-14
  • Released on: 2015-10-14
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Trouble with Robots, by Sirena Ross


Trouble with Robots, by Sirena Ross

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. READ AND ENJOY THIS BOOK ! By Robert W. Proctor "Trouble with Robots" is really well done--concept, graphics, language, characterization and most significantly . . . message. For me, it's: "I'll be hard pressed to reflect on human and bot natures the same way ever again." The author's presentation of the interactions of bots with humans is so realistic--and natural--one feels almost, but . . . not quite comfortable; there's something frightening going on. No mean achievement. I join others, I'm sure, in looking forward to reading more of the author's very special world of bots and people. She guides us to ourselves in there."

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Fun, Quirky Story and Characters By Amazon Customer Fun quirky story and characters. Welcome the the world with robots and it's not what you expected. I was disappointed when the book was done and found out it wasn't part of a series. I think this world and relationship could easily give us more good reading.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. a good humorous read By ShimonZ This is a delightful little book; a social commentary presented with good humor. I thoroughly recommend it. There doesn't seem much point in describing it any more than has already been written.

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Kamis, 24 Juni 2010

99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died.,

99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern

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99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern

99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern



99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern

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99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of the most Unusual Deaths, Funny Deaths, Weird Deaths, Disturbing Deaths, Silly Deaths. 99 Ways to die; Insane Accounts of how people have accidentally died. Warning;Sometimes these Unusual, Weird & Strange Deaths, are a little disturbing. They are all true stories.... Sample; 1. The family of a doctor who died while getting stuck in a chimney said they could not comprehend what she was doing in the chimney. It wasn’t her chimney; it was her boyfriend’s and it appeared she had climbed down into the chimney from the roof after failing to get an answer at her boyfriend’s front door. Her boyfriend did not return that night and spent the night ‘elsewhere,’ so Dr Kotoarc was not discovered until the next day. Police believe, “She had reached her limits and was determined to get into this man’s house.” “I think she was provoked into something like a passionate frenzy," said one of her sisters. 2. Mr Mason, at 73 years of age, enjoyed a dip in the pool every now and then, but witnesses at the swimming pool in Ohio were surprised to see that on each of the forty three occasions that he tried to leave the pool, his much younger wife would prevent him from doing so by pulling him around the swimming pool by his arms. He eventually died of heart failure after his enthusiastic wife, ‘exercised him to death.’ 3. A wedding in Yemen became a scene of carnage in 2013, when a reveler dancing to ‘Gangnam Style,’ lost control of his AK47 and shot three of the wedding party dead. 4. A naked man was found dead on the back of a killer whale, in July 1999. He was at Florida’s Sea World in Orlando. Police found him early one weekday morning, attached to the back of the whale. Officers stated, “There were no obvious trauma signs; he hadn’t been chewed or dismembered.” He did have scrapes on his body however, which they believed would have been as a result of him being dragged along the bottom of the Whale’s water tank. He appeared to have died by drowning, though his body also displayed signs of hypothermia. He was later positively identified by his driving license, found in clothes near the pool. It appeared that he had recently left a Hari Krishna retreat. Though he had enjoyed his time there, Priest Seaur said that he had found it difficult to adhere to the regulations there, which required a 4am wake up and community tasks, as well as abstinence from alcohol, drugs and sex. He said he was usually found in the chapel, listening to Metal music. When the medical examiner received his body, and his nearby swimming trunks, he was able to determine that Daniel had in fact entered the water tank wearing his swimming trunks, but it seems that the whale had tried to get them off him, evident from the razor sharp incisions to his hips. The whale succeeded in removing the man’s trunks because they were found floating in the water. 99 Ways to die; Insane Accounts of the most Ridiculous Ways to Die. Unusual Deaths, Funny Deaths, Weird Deaths, Disturbing Deaths. Also by James Pattern; MYSTERIOUS, STRANGE, & UNEXPLAINED DEATHS.: Unexplained mysteries, Unexplained phenomenon, Curiosities and Wonders (Mysterious, Strange & Unexplained Deaths. ... mysteries, unexplained phenomenon.) UNEXPLAINED DEATHS OF THE SINISTER KIND. MYSTERIOUS DEATHS; TRUE STORIES.: Strange, Mysterious & Unexplained Deaths. Unexplained Mysteries, Curiosities ... & Wonders. Unexplained Phenomenon. Book 2) The Book of BIZARRE CRIMES. (True crime murder & mayhem) The Book of Bizarre MURDERS. (True crime murder & mayhem) (Bizarre & Unexplained Phenomenon, Curiosities & Wonders HAUNTED ASYLUMS, HAUNTED CEMETERIES. (Unexplained Mysteries & hauntings): haunted asylums, haunted cemeteries.. ... Haunted Morgues, Reference Fun Trivia Fun Facts, True Crime, Fun Trivia Fun Facts, White Collar Crime, Serial Killers, True Stories, Mysteries of the Unexplained, Unexplained Mysteries.

99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #153019 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-06-15
  • Released on: 2015-06-15
  • Format: Kindle eBook
99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern


99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Interesting And Entertaining By Michael P. McParland A number of interesting stories and cases are presented within the book and some even amusing. I had heard of and read over a good handful of these cases in other places even multiple times. That's in no way a knock since that comes down to the read preference of people and how much you would have read in some genres. There are a number of grammatical and spelling errors which threw me off a few times. On the whole if I could rate by half stars I would most likely give this a 3.5. Definitely worth giving a 4 and I would recommend this as interesting reading to the right people.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Quick read By S. Wilson Good quick read. Interesting stories. You forget how stupid people can be...... Sad they lost their lives thou. I liked the story about the guy showing off his office window.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Are you kidding me? By Amazon Customer I knew this was an unresearched piece of garbage the moment I saw the well-documented Ronald Opus story. If you'll buy this, you'll buy anything.

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99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern

99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern

99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern
99 Ways to die; Crazy True Stories of Insane ways to die.: 99 WAYS TO DIE; Insane Accounts of how people accidentally died., by James Pattern

Selasa, 22 Juni 2010

Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring

Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring

Why ought to be this publication Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, By Blue Star Coloring to check out? You will certainly never get the expertise as well as encounter without managing yourself there or attempting on your own to do it. Thus, reviewing this book Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, By Blue Star Coloring is required. You could be fine as well as proper sufficient to obtain how vital is reading this Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, By Blue Star Coloring Also you consistently check out by responsibility, you could assist yourself to have reading e-book routine. It will certainly be so useful as well as enjoyable after that.

Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring

Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring



Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring

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Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #770201 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-20
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 11.00" h x .24" w x 8.50" l, .58 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 104 pages
Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring


Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful. BUYER BEWARE By VALadyLaw I am so disappointed in this book. I is so juvenile that it does not even qualify as an adult coloring book. The pictures are all childish and have no imagination nor challenge to them. I am ever so tempted to return it.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. ... book that's designed for the two of us is great. By Amazon Customer The thought of being able to share relaxing coloring with my daughter in a book that's designed for the two of us is great.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Cute book for beginners By Eileen P. This book is not a typical adult coloring book. It is super cute and my mom loved it. I five this 5 stars because there were some cute mom and daughter pics to color.

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Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring
Mom & Daughter Coloring Book, by Blue Star Coloring

Senin, 21 Juni 2010

THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

Why should be reading THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), By Friedrich Nietzsche Once again, it will depend upon how you feel as well as consider it. It is undoubtedly that of the advantage to take when reading this THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), By Friedrich Nietzsche; you could take much more lessons straight. Even you have actually not undergone it in your life; you can gain the encounter by checking out THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), By Friedrich Nietzsche And currently, we will certainly present you with the on-line publication THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), By Friedrich Nietzsche in this website.

THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA  A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche



THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA  A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

Download Ebook PDF Online THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

• This e-book publication is unique which includes biography and Illustrations. • A new table of contents has been included by the publisher. • This edition has been corrected for spelling and grammatical errors

THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #48575 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-06-11
  • Released on: 2015-06-11
  • Format: Kindle eBook
THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

Review , also translated as Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Treatise by Friedrich Nietzsche, written in four parts and published in German between 1883 and 1885 as Also sprach Zarathustra. The work is incomplete, but it is the first thorough statement of Nietzsche's mature philosophy and the masterpiece of his career. It received little attention during his lifetime but its influence since his death has been considerable, in the arts as well as philosophy. Written in the form of a prose narrative, Thus Spake Zarathustra offers the philosophy of its author through the voice of Zarathustra (based on the Persian prophet Zoroaster) who, after years of meditation, has come down from a mountain to offer his wisdom to the world. It is this work in which Nietzsche made his famous (and much misconstrued) statement that "God is dead" and in which he presented some of the most influential and well-known (and likewise misunderstood) ideas of his philosophy, including those of the Ubermensch ("overman" or "superman") and the "will to power." Though this is essentially a work of philosophy, it is also a masterpiece of literature. The book is a combination of prose and poetry, including epigrams, dithyrambs, and parodies as well as sections of pure poetry. -- The Merriam-Webster Encyclopedia of Literature

Language Notes Text: English, German (translation)

About the Author Nietzsche has been proclaimed the seminal figure of modern philosophy as well as one of the most creative and critically influential geniuses in the history of secular thought.


THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA  A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

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185 of 195 people found the following review helpful. Talk about translations! By A Customer I only want to say one thing here, and I say it primarily because I already love this work. This is the translation to buy. Everyone seems to adore Kaufmann, but the truth is he's much more obtuse and difficult to read (and I don't believe it's necessary, as some may say). Hollingdale gets it right. I'll defend myself with one example from a class I took, where Kaufmann's translation was the required text. I had read both translations (cover-to-cover), and sold my copy of Kaufmann's translation, keeping only my Hollingdale. So, needless to say, I wasn't about to buy Kaufmann again, and went to class with Hollingdale. Slowly, but surely, as the other students read bits of the translation I had, or heard when I spoke pieces aloud, they overwhelmingly agreed with me: Hollingdale is simply more clear, more beautiful, more powerful (less academic, shall we say, which is pure Nietzsche). Ok, over and out, enjoy.

199 of 216 people found the following review helpful. Review for the non-philosopher By Andy Gill There seem to be plenty of reviews debating the philosophical principles of Nietszche and the statements he makes, so, for the non-philosophy students present (i.e. ME) I'll rate it for the layman.`TSZ' is very longwinded, and as the introduction states, filled with `excess', but that does not make it a bad book. Every sentence is imbued with its own iconic poetry, and, philosophy aside, the metaphors and similes alone make this book worth reading. It is clear that Nietszche, or perhaps his translator, had a mind better suited to creative expression than most philosophers, or indeed today's authors, and it is in this that lies the book's real strength. Through its use of imagery it not only makes an interesting, inspirational, conjectural read (apart from a few really boring parts that seemed written only to slow down the pace), it makes its message easy to understand and backs it up with surrealistic examples. Whereas sometimes in philosophy, the use of allegory can confuse the issue (More's `Utopia' - mockery of idealism, framework for perfect society, or rambling tale?), in `Zarathustra' the reader, no matter whether they are new to the field or not, cannot fail to discern the message that Man is not a goal but a bridge, a rope over an abyss. As philosophy, and as literature, it succeeds in conveying its point, setting up a platform for discussion or merely to digest individually. Admittedly, some refuse to read Nietszche because of his view of women (`shallow waters'), and because of how his ideas for the Superman allegedly inspired Hitler's Aryan vision for the world, but such people deprive themselves of an interesting viewpoint that defines the meaning of life in human rather than spiritual terms.One potential problem for the newcomer to philosophy is the storyline. For a man remembered for the statement `God is dead', Nietszche obviously drew inspiration from the Bible, for Zarathustra is strongly reminiscent of Jesus, recruiting disciples and disappearing into the wilderness with a frequency that Bigfoot would be proud of. The problem with an allegorical tale is the reader's propensity for bringing western narrative expectations to it - `Zarathustra' is a text-book, not a story, but sometimes you do find yourself waiting for the climax, the big show-down, the cinematic denouement. So long as you remember that it is philosophy, not a novel, and so long as you appreciate each segment as an expressive point and not part of a conventional plot, there should be no troubles. I'll leave you with a sample of Nietzsche's verbal wizardry:`It is the stillest words which bring the storm. Thoughts that come on doves' feet guide the world.'

81 of 87 people found the following review helpful. Also Sprach Zarathustra - Difficult but Worth the Effort By Jason Bagley To start off with, the Walter Kaufmann translation is by now well known to be probably the authoritative edition of Zarathustra (although the excerpts I've read from the Del Caro Cambridge Texts edition seems to be perhaps a more beautiful style). One of the reasons I originally picked up this edition was because the only translations available over the web were the droning and pedantic Thomas Common versions which are not only dull but muddled. Walter Kaufmann's translation gives a degree of clarity that far surpasses the Common translation, cannot speak to all the differences (however large or small) between it and the Del Caro version.The book isn't particularly long, but Nietzsche fills it with metaphors and parables in addition to simple narrative and merriment. This is one of the challenges of the book: you're forced to figure out what is meaningful from what isn't and on top of that what each metaphor means. Nietzsche has never been in the habit of going into intricate detail or clarifying what he's saying to the same degree as some other thinkers, and although the book is a stylistic masterpiece (with narrative deliberately done in a biblical style and herein lies one of the advantages over the Common translation, namely that Common translated everything to mimic the King James version with an overabundance of "thees" "thous" and "ests") the philosophy is at times difficult to comprehend. Again, it's not difficult in the sense that the Critique of Pure Reason is difficult, or at least not nearly to the same degree, it is difficult because it is at times cryptic.Additionally, I've seen a lot of reviews suggesting reading Nietzsche just for the pithy phrases or the beauty of the work. And while the work is indeed a very beautiful piece in places and is often quotable (and even considering Nietzsche was very big into each individual making his own meaning, creating his own path or values), I'd caution you against that approach. Although the book has a strong "make your own way" line of thought, that doesn't preclude understanding the ways of others.I will admit that this is a contender for one of the more difficult books I've ever read (up there with Kant, though Nietzsche's previous and subsequent books are by far easier to understand). I've noticed that numerous readers recommend reading the book a second time. I'd say that might be useful, but it would take someone with either a lot of free time on their hands or someone with a very great degree of insight to grasp the meaning of each part of this work. What I found useful was having read other works by Nietzsche first. Before reading Zarathustra (which I read for the first time when I was 15 at the urging of a friend who was taking political science and philosophy in college) I had already read On the Genealogy of Morality and Human, All Too Human. My recommendation is to read at least one of Nietzsche's other books, preferably a couple. I'd suggest making Beyond Good and Evil one of your choices. By doing this, you will have already been introduced to Nietzschean philosophy and will be able to more readily grasp the symbolism used.Even if you don't choose that approach, you should get the main lines of thought, specifically the eternal recurrence of the same, the overman, and the glorification of struggle, in the work. Either way, this book is a landmark work in the history of philosophy and deserves to be read.

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THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche
THUS SPAKE ZARATHUSTRA A BOOK FOR ALL AND NONE (ILLUSTRATED), by Friedrich Nietzsche

Jumat, 18 Juni 2010

Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook,

Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long

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Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long

Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long



Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long

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Koine Greek Grammar and its accompanying Workbook and Answer Key & Guide have been in the making for decades. It was first a small manual Kairos Greek Grammar; then it grew into a fully integrated and hyperlinked CD that has been published by Logos Bible Software (2005). Now, this current handbook––KOINE GREEK GRAMMAR: A BEGINNING-INTERMEDIATE EXEGETICAL AND PRAGMATIC HANDBOOK––has been thoroughly expanded to include my more explicit description of marked, emphatic, prominent, and pragmatic features of Greek, ideas that were nascent in KAIROS, but now grounded in a communication theory informed by Relevance Theory (Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson), Prominence Theory with reference to translation (Kathleen Callow), and Discourse Grammar and Pragmatics (Stephen Levinsohn, Stanley Porter, and Steven Runge). Exegetically significant aspects of Greek syntax and the use of the Greek language (i.e., pragmatics) occur strategically throughout KOINE GREEK GRAMMAR and include the following: - conjunctions and their constraints - point/counterpoint sets - polysyndeton, asyndeton, correlative emphasis, and lists - fronted modifiers for emphasis (genitive, demonstrative, quantitative) - vocatives as thematic address - appositional statements - the historic present and the verb tense options in narrative - metacomments as orienting statements - interjections as attention getting devices - quantitative, qualitative, interrogative, negative, and comparative types of emphasis - special uses of the noun cases - participle uses, including periphrastic and genitive absolutes - special uses of the Moods - left-(dis)locations - discourse pragmatic uses of the article - conditional and exception clauses Some of these discussions will have extended Intermediate-level treatments that are placed within greyed boxes. Other significant enhancements are the inclusion of CHECK POINTS that give students a chance to practice what is being learned in each chapter along with (SUGGESTED) ANSWERS that immediately follow. Scattered throughout KOINE GREEK GRAMMAR are images of ancient realia, i.e., remnants of Mediterranean material culture including biblical and non-biblical papyri fragments, vase paintings, coins, bas-reliefs, imperial artifacts, inscriptions, funerary stele, statues, gems, temples, maps, and reconstructed scenes of life in the polis. The language and syntax of the Greek NT is contextually located in these worlds. Still present (but improved) are the CASE IN POINTS at the end of each chapter that briefly describe how particular points of Greek grammar just presented helps us when interpreting the Greek NT. In other words, the CASE IN POINT illustrates how Greek grammar is valuable as a tool for the study of the NT. In addition to having a full APPENDIX, VOCABULARY OF WORDS OCCURRING 20 TIMES OR MORE, and INDICES, KOINE GREEK GRAMMAR has a separate extensive WORKBOOK AND ANSWER KEY & GUIDE. that has been carefully crafted with many exercises drawn directly from biblical expressions and actual verses.

Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #293330 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-22
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 11.00" h x 1.42" w x 8.50" l, 3.18 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 630 pages
Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long


Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Must-Have Greek Grammar Book By Taylor Zimmerman A wonderful textbook to learning and understanding Koine Greek for New Testament study. Long's writing is comprehensive and extremely accessible. This is definitely a textbook I will keep on my shelf to return to during my study.

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Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long
Koine Greek Grammar: A Beginning-Intermediate Exegetical and Pragmatic Handbook, by Fredrick J. Long

Kamis, 10 Juni 2010

Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1),

Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), by H J Perry

It's no any type of mistakes when others with their phone on their hand, and you're too. The distinction could last on the product to open Deviant: Forbidden Love In A Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), By H J Perry When others open up the phone for chatting and chatting all points, you can in some cases open as well as read the soft documents of the Deviant: Forbidden Love In A Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), By H J Perry Obviously, it's unless your phone is readily available. You can additionally make or save it in your laptop computer or computer that alleviates you to read Deviant: Forbidden Love In A Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), By H J Perry.

Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), by H J Perry

Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), by H J Perry



Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), by H J Perry

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Almost all of the world’s men are gone. It took a single catastrophe. The pandemic wiped out most of the population early in the twenty-first century. From the wreckage an asexual, matriarchal society flourished and men live separately from women. Mia conceals a secret. Unlike most women, she burns with a desire for one man, at a time when such feelings are taboo. Rayfe is a smoldering, sexy sweet-talker but is he sincere? He works in the only brothel that caters to heterosexual women, deviants like Mia. Dr. Mia Silwood is a science prodigy, a brilliant thinker at the top of her field. A low birthrate threatens humanity’s future and her discoveries could save us from extinction. But she will have no influence if exposed as a deviant. And there are powerful women with vested interests in Mia’s work Must she choose between her career or her love for a man? All characters in the book are over 18, as the readers should also be. This book contains adult content. A forbidden love romance story in a dystopian matriarchy. 48,000 words. A stand-alone book. Does not end with a cliffhanger.

Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), by H J Perry

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #401280 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-10-04
  • Released on: 2015-10-04
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), by H J Perry


Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), by H J Perry

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. More Than Romance By Marv N This is the first book in a three book series and it’s a really good read. Yes there are romance and sex scenes, however, that isn’t all this book is about. It’s about life in a post-apocalyptic world where men and women live separate lives. What I found interesting and kept me reading was how the author crafted this world and made it not only believable but also interesting. It’s something we haven’t seen before.Some female friends and family joke about how the world would be a better place if woman were in charge. I think they should read this book and than lets talk about it.I really liked both the female main character Mia and the male main character Rayfe. Mia is a scientist and approaches life and the world through those eyes, which makes it fun. The author gives us Science babble that makes the character work, however she doesn’t over do making the character dull. Rayfe on the other hand is a product of the world he lives in, whoever, that doesn’t make him some dumb jock. He’s smart and has a head on his shoulders, which was a plus, given there was potential for the author to make him a pretty boy with a big assets and nothing else.The characters may appear perfect (in physical form) however the world they inhabit isn’t, which for me really makes it work.To be fair I read Book 2 first and came back to this one. Book 2 could work as a stand a lone Book 1 not so much. I’m looking forward to Book 3 especially for the story wrap up.

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Deviant: Forbidden Love in a Post Apocalyptic Dystopian Society (Matriarchy & Corruption Book 1), by H J Perry
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Selasa, 08 Juni 2010

Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren

Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren

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Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren

Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren



Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren

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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERMichael B. Oren’s memoir of his time as Israel’s ambassador to the United States—a period of transformative change for America and a time of violent upheaval throughout the Middle East—provides a frank, fascinating look inside the special relationship between America and its closest ally in the region.   Michael Oren served as the Israeli ambassador to the United States from 2009 to 2013. An American by birth and a historian by training, Oren arrived at his diplomatic post just as Benjamin Netanyahu, Barack Obama, and Hillary Clinton assumed office. During Oren’s tenure in office, Israel and America grappled with the Palestinian peace process, the Arab Spring, and existential threats to Israel posed by international terrorism and the Iranian nuclear program. Forged in the Truman administration, America’s alliance with Israel was subjected to enormous strains, and its future was questioned by commentators in both countries. On more than one occasion, the friendship’s very fabric seemed close to unraveling.   Ally is the story of that enduring alliance—and of its divides—written from the perspective of a man who treasures his American identity while proudly serving the Jewish State he has come to call home. No one could have been better suited to strengthen bridges between the United States and Israel than Michael Oren—a man equally at home jumping out of a plane as an Israeli paratrooper and discussing Middle East history on TV’s Sunday morning political shows. In the pages of this fast-paced book, Oren interweaves the story of his personal journey with behind-the-scenes accounts of fateful meetings between President Obama and Prime Minister Netanyahu, high-stakes summits with the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, and diplomatic crises that intensified the controversy surrounding the world’s most contested strip of land.   A quintessentially American story of a young man who refused to relinquish a dream—irrespective of the obstacles—and an inherently Israeli story about assuming onerous responsibilities, Ally is at once a record, a chronicle, and a confession. And it is a story about love—about someone fortunate enough to love two countries and to represent one to the other. But, above all, this memoir is a testament to an alliance that was and will remain vital for Americans, Israelis, and the world.Praise for Ally  “The smartest and juiciest diplomatic memoir that I’ve read in years, and I’ve read my share. . . . The best contribution yet to a growing literature—from Vali Nasr’s Dispensable Nation to Leon Panetta’s Worthy Fights—describing how foreign policy is made in the Age of Obama.”—Bret Stephens, The Wall Street Journal  “Illuminating . . . [Oren’s] personal odyssey exemplifies the shift from a liberal and secular Zionism to a more belligerent nationalism.”—The New York Times“Provocative . . . Oren’s book offers a view into the deep rifts that have opened not only between Washington and Jerusalem, but also between Israeli and American Jews.”—Newsweek   “[Oren is] one of the most uniquely qualified judges of this ever more crucial special relationship.”—The Washington Times   “The diplomatic equivalent of a ‘kiss-and-tell’ memoir . . . informative and in parts entertaining.”—Financial Times   “The talk of Washington and Jerusalem . . . an ultimate insider’s story.”—New York Post

Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #19074 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-23
  • Released on: 2015-06-23
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.50" h x 1.37" w x 6.42" l, 1.62 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 432 pages
Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren

Review “Michael Oren, Israel’s former ambassador to the United States, has written the smartest and juiciest diplomatic memoir that I’ve read in years, and I’ve read my share. The book, called Ally, has the added virtues of being politically relevant and historically important. This has the Obama administration—which doesn’t come out looking too good in Mr. Oren’s account—in an epic snit. . . . [Oren’s] memoir is the best contribution yet to a growing literature—from Vali Nasr’s Dispensable Nation to Leon Panetta’s Worthy Fights—describing how foreign policy is made in the Age of Obama: lofty in its pronouncements and rich in its self-regard, but incompetent in its execution and dismal in its results. Good for Mr. Oren for providing such comprehensive evidence of the facts as he lived them.”—Bret Stephens, The Wall Street Journal  “Illuminating . . . Oren was by no means Netanyahu’s most truculent adviser, but his personal odyssey exemplifies the shift from a liberal and secular Zionism to a more belligerent nationalism.”—The New York Times“Unlike other diplomatic memoirs, which rarely disclose anything controversial, Oren’s Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide is provocative, as the former ambassador blames President Barack Obama for the sorry state of U.S.-Israel relations and much else that’s wrong in the Middle East today. . . . Oren’s book offers a view into the deep rifts that have opened not only between Washington and Jerusalem, but also between Israeli and American Jews.”—Newsweek   “A book full of penetrating insights . . . [Oren’s] beguiling, surprisingly frank memoir not only gives us the reality of what achieving his dream entailed, but tells us what he went through in order to get there. . . . It is the product not only of Mr. Oren’s challenging ambassadorial tenure in Washington but of a life well lived as an Israeli and as an American, a combination which makes him one of the most uniquely qualified judges of this ever more crucial special relationship.”—The Washington Times   “Oren has written the diplomatic equivalent of a ‘kiss-and-tell’ memoir, chronicling his years as Israel’s ambassador. . . . It is less sensational than the parts cherry-picked before publication. Yet it is informative and in parts entertaining. . . . The book is a useful account, if partial and partisan, of a unique time in US-Israeli relations, in which officials of both are criticizing each other with increasing bluntness.”—Financial Times   “The talk of Washington and Jerusalem . . . I’m not sure that in the annals of diplomatic history there’s ever been anything quite like this astonishing account of Oren’s four years as Israel’s ambassador in Washington. It’s an ultimate insider’s story told while all the players save Oren are still in place.”—New York Post  “Ally is an important read for those seeking to understand the complexities of the American-Israeli alliance. Unlike his previous two books, which were written from the perspective of an historian and became New York Times bestsellers, former Israeli ambassador Michael Oren’s latest book is based on his own personal experiences, perceptions and interactions with President Obama and the administration.”—The Huffington Post“An irreplaceable trove of insight into what will one day be seen as a momentous historical turn . . . an insider’s account of the dramatic change of America’s behind-the-scenes policy toward the Iranian regime . . . Without ever slipping into hyperbole, the book’s measured narrative seems to confirm a lot of what the administration’s critics have been accusing it of: enabling the Iranian regime rather than really trying to stop it, while putting a vice grip on the increasingly alarmed Israelis.”—The Forward   “[A] revealing new memoir . . . a carefully recalled, detailed and riveting first-hand account of how the Washington-Jerusalem ties have unraveled—undone by mistrust, mistakes, and missed opportunities . . . The cumulative effect is profound—a steady drumbeat of behind-the-scenes examples of diplomatic dissonance. . . . Adding to the impact is the fact that Oren is neither polemicist nor political partisan.”—The Jewish Week   “I don’t know that I’ve ever read a book quite as eye-opening as Michael Oren’s Ally, the bestselling historian’s stunning new memoir of his four years as Israel’s ambassador to the United States. For what Oren has written is an account of serving as a diplomat during a Cold War—the Cold War the Obama administration launched against Israel upon coming to office. . . . Ally makes it nerve-jangingly clear just how difficult a job it has been for anyone to serve as a guardian of the special relationship between Israel and the United States.”—Commentary   “Astonishing . . . imbued with a sense of generosity, a sense that an American with an Israeli passport can genuinely love both countries deeply, even when those countries quarrel . . . The book gives us a blow-by-blow of a turbulent relationship between friends, with Oren at the heart of the drama. A big part of the book’s appeal is in its narrative texture—the late-night phone calls, the emergency meetings, the interrupted family trips, the tense summons at the State Department or White House, the strategy sessions at the embassy, and so on. It is Oren’s sharp storytelling mixed with his candid and insightful commentary that makes the book riveting.”—Jewish Journal   “[Oren’s] new memoir—an unprecedented case of a former public servant so quickly writing up sometimes intimate revelations on acutely sensitive core issues—does not describe an alliance. . . . Oren’s style is not excitable or melodramatic. In fact, he writes in a generally understated tone, with the measured sense of perspective you’d expect from a bestselling historian. So when he notes, as he does near the very end of the book, that last summer’s Israel-Hamas war left ‘aspects of the US-Israeli alliance in tatters,’ you take him seriously, and you worry.”—The Times of Israel   “Essential reading for anyone that cares about the Middle East and the special relationship between America and Israel. . . . Oren is a respected scholar. Accuracy is his coin, and he has long been considered a fair and centrist voice in a conversation with few of them. Perhaps that’s why the White House and its supporters are so worried—and why they’ve inadvertently driven the book to the top of the charts.”—NY1   “An amazing read. It is well-written—Oren is a historian—yet the book reads akin to a long-form daily newspaper, mixing politics, diplomacy, and current events. There is tremendous insight into the America-Israel relationship, and this is a must-read for anyone concerned about the State of Israel. . . . It’s a scary—yet seemingly realistic—observation from one of Israel’s highest profile representatives of the past few years.”—The Algemeiner   “Ally effectively assaults the Obama hyperbole that ‘I am the closest thing to a Jew that has ever sat in this office.’ . . . Precisely because the meticulous Oren is fair and understated, his indictment is devastating. That’s why the Obama Administration has reacted defensively and harshly to the book.”—FrontPage Mag   “Deft and pointed . . . The author proves a genuine, ardent advocate for the well-being of his beleaguered homeland and its ongoing alliance with the land of his birth. Even before its publication, Oren’s book has been attacked, based on culls of provocative pieces. Readers would do well to attend to the entire text of this fluent, important political memoir.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

About the Author Michael B. Oren is an American-born Israeli historian and author, and was Israel’s ambassador to the United States from 2009 to 2013. He has written two New York Times bestsellers—Power, Faith, and Fantasy: America in the Middle East, 1776 to the Present and Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of the Modern Middle East, which won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for history and the National Jewish Book Award. Throughout his illustrious career as a Middle East scholar, Dr. Oren has been a distinguished fellow at the Shalem Center in Jerusalem, a contributing editor to The New Republic, and a visiting professor at Harvard, Yale, and Georgetown. The Forward named Oren one of the five most influential American Jews, and The Jerusalem Post listed him as one of the world’s ten most influential Jews. He currently lives with his family in Tel Aviv. He is a member of the Knesset.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Perforated PassportThe Embassy of the United States to the State of Israel should be a majestic structure. After all, it is the hub of America’s most special relationship with any foreign nation. And yet the building—squat and colorless—looks like a bunker. Perhaps the purpose is to discourage the hundreds of Israelis who daily line the sidewalk outside to apply for tourist visas, or to confound any terrorist who managed to skirt the concrete obstacles girding the grounds. Whatever its purpose, the bleak exterior reflected my mood as I entered the compound in early June 2009 and presented my passport.That Yankee-blue document announced that I had been born Michael Bornstein, in Upstate New York and had been a U.S. citizen for more than half a century. With a faded cover and pages tattooed by customs, it had accompanied me on innumerable transoceanic flights. Presenting that passport at Newark’s Liberty International Airport, a twenty-minute drive from where my parents raised my two sisters and me, I beamed each time the inspectors wished me, “Welcome home.”I believed in that passport—in the history it symbolized, the values it proclaimed. Awareness of the nation’s darker legacies, such as slavery, did not make me less sentimental about America. My eyes still misted during the national anthem, brightened at the sight of Manhattan’s skyline, and marveled at the Rockies from thirty-five thousand feet. Once, when reading aloud the inscription on the Lincoln Memorial and already choking at “four score and seven years ago,” my children rolled their eyes and sighed, “There he goes again. . . .”My affection for America sprang naturally. Growing up in the northern New Jersey town of West Orange, I played Little League baseball, attended pep rallies, and danced—in a lamentable banana tux—at my senior prom. My father, who fought in World War II and afterward served in the army reserves, took me to his unit’s reunions and to summer maneuvers to watch the color guards parade. I, too, marched, albeit across halftime gridirons puffing into a baritone horn. At Boys State, the American Legion’s semimilitary seminar, Vietnam vets put me and other selected seventeen-year-olds through a basic training in American democracy. The following year, I starred as Don Quixote in our high school’s production of Man of La Mancha, the musical based on Cervantes’s classic. Arrayed in rusted armor, I tilted at windmills and strained for the high notes while enjoining the audience to “Dream the Impossible Dream.”Yet there were handicaps. Like many in our working-class neighborhood, my parents struggled financially. They could not afford to send me to the pricey Jewish summer camps, and instead packed me off to a rustic YMCA program with mandatory church services and grace before meals. Overweight and so pigeon-toed that I had to wear an excruciating leg brace at night, I was hopeless at sports. And severe learning disabilities consigned me to the “dumb” classes at school, where I failed to grasp elementary math and learn to write legibly.Yet, fervently determined, I managed to overcome these obstacles. At fourteen I went on a draconian diet and slimmed down, forced myself to run long distances while keeping my feet straight, and forged myself into an athlete. Meanwhile, my mother lovingly showed me how to type on an old Fleetwood on which I began to peck out poetry. After publishing my verse in several national magazines, I was transferred into a “smart” class, taught myself grammar and spelling, and ultimately attended Ivy League schools. All the hallmarks of an American success became mine, I acknowledged, thanks in part to uniquely American opportunities.If sentimental about the United States, I also felt indebted. From the time that all four of my grandparents arrived in Ellis Island, through the Great Depression in which they raised my parents, and the farm-bound community in which I grew up, America held out the chance to excel. True, prejudice was prevalent, but so, too, was our ability to fight it. Unreservedly, I referred to Americans as “we.”Now I was about to forfeit that first-person plural. The Marine behind the glass booth at the U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv examined my passport and wordlessly slipped it through the window. The coolness of his reception would soon become routine. Landing at Liberty Airport, I would never again be greeted with “welcome home.”Americans, I would often remind Israelis, are painstakingly nice—until they are not. “Have a nice day” can become “screw you” in an instant. That morning, officials at the U.S. embassy were in courteous mode, expediting the security check, escorting me between the cubicles of the consular section. There passports are extended and new ones issued. Mine would be neither.My knees felt rubbery and my shirt, already dabbled by the humidity outside, stuck to my flanks. Relief came in the teddy-bearish form of Luis Moreno, the deputy chief of mission, an old acquaintance. Luis brought me into the office of U.S. Consul General Andrew Parker, who sat behind his desk surrounded by mementos from his previous postings and fronted by a gold-trimmed Stars and Stripes. We exchanged pleasantries, griped about the khamsin—the gritty desert wind plaguing Tel Aviv—but could not ignore the reason for my visit.Bespectacled, neatly goateed, Parker could be mistaken for a kindly professor if not for his undertaker’s tone. Raising my right hand, he asked me to repeat after him: “I absolutely and entirely renounce my United States nationality together with all rights and privileges and all duties and allegiance and fidelity thereunto pertaining.” I repeated those words while gazing at the flag to which I had pledged allegiance every school day from kindergarten through high school. Then, across his desk, Parker arrayed several copies of an affidavit. This reaffirmed “the extremely serious and irrevocable nature of the act of renunciation,” acknowledging that, henceforth, “I will become an alien with respect to the United States.”I signed each copy, swearing that I knew precisely what I was doing and that I was acting of my own free will. I must have appeared shattered because Luis Moreno leaned over and gave me a hug. But the ordeal was not yet complete, Consul General Parker indicated. Officiously, almost mechanically, the consul general inserted my American passport into an industrial-sized hole puncher and squeezed. The heart of the federal eagle emblazoned on the cover of the document was pierced.Growing Up AmericanHow did I reach this unnerving moment? Back in the sixties, young radicals burned their passports and cursed their fascist country, “Amerika.” But my reverence for the United States had always been deep—deeper than any hole puncher could bore. No, renouncing my American citizenship was not an act of protest. It reflected, rather, a love for another land—not that of my father, but of my forefathers.That love could not be presented in a passport, nor could it be renounced. When did it begin? There was the distant cousin who arrived one day from a far-flung place and gave me, an eight-year-old numismatist, a shiny coin inscribed with letters I recognized from Hebrew school. Somewhere, I intuited, people actually spoke that language. There were the nerve-fraying weeks of May 1967, when the enemies of those people amassed and my parents murmured about witnessing a second Holocaust. Then, the miracle. A mere six days transformed those victims into victors. Draped in belts of .50-caliber bullets instead of prayer shawls, paratroopers danced before the Western Wall in Jerusalem. They were our paratroopers, suddenly, our people.Because Israel was young and righteous and heroic, I fell in love with it. The country appeared to be everything to which I—at age twelve still incapable of learning the multiplication tables or of running around the bases without tripping over my own pigeon-toed feet—aspired. Even then, I had a keen sense of history, an awareness that I was not just a lone Jew living in late 1960s America, but part of a global Jewish collective stretching back millennia. Already I considered myself lucky to be alive at this juncture, when my existence coincided with that of a sovereign Jewish State. I fell in love with Israel because I was grateful, but also because I was angry.The only Jewish kid on the block, I rarely made it off the school bus without being ambushed by Jew-baiting bullies. Those fistfights left my knuckles lined with scars. One morning, my family awoke to find our front door smeared with racist slogans; one night our car’s windshield was smashed. Then, when I was a high school freshman, the phone rang with horrendous news: a bomb had blown up our synagogue. I ran to the scene and saw firemen leaping into the flames to rescue the Torah scrolls. The next day, our rabbi stood with Christian clergymen and led us in singing “We Shall Overcome.” But no display of brotherhood could salve the pain.In the post–World War II, WASP-dominated America in which I grew up, anti-Semitism was a constant. Hardly confined to my blue-collar neighborhood, it festered in the elite universities with their quotas on Jewish admissions, and pervaded the restricted communities and clubs. Superficially, at least, we American Jews ranked among the nation’s most successful minorities. We took pride in the Dodgers’ ace pitcher Sandy Koufax, in folksinger Bob Dylan, and actors Tony Curtis and Kirk Douglas. It tickled us that Jewish humor became, in large measure, America’s humor, and the bagel grew as popular as pizza. Jewish artists wrote five of America’s most beloved Christmas songs and practically invented Hollywood. One could hardly imagine a community more integrated, and yet we remained different. Alone among the hyphenated ethnic identities—Italian-American, African-American—ours placed “American” first. And only ours was based on religion. No one ever referred to Buddhist or Methodist Americans. As Jews and as Americans we were sui generis, as difficult for us to define as for others. A graffito on the wall of my bathroom at school asked, “Are Jews white?” A different hand scrawled beneath it, “Yes, but . . .”Anti-Semitism completed that sentence. Whether being beaten up for my identity or denied certain opportunities because of it, I often encountered hatred. And after each incident, my father took me down to our basement. There, in a cubbyhole behind the stairwell, he secreted a musty album that his brother, another veteran, had brought home from World War II. Inside were yellowing photographs of concentration camps, piles of incinerated corpses, and snickering Nazis. “This is why we must be strong,” my father reminded me. “This is why we need Israel.”Those photographs needed no captioning, as the Holocaust haunted our lives. The ovens of Auschwitz, I often felt in high school, still smoldered. Yet American Jews hesitated to talk openly about the murder of six million of their people, as if it were a source of shame. Then, in my sophomore year, survivor and world-acclaimed author Elie Wiesel visited our community. He spoke of his ordeals in Romania’s Sighet ghetto and the Buchenwald concentration camp. In a voice at once frail and unbroken, he challenged us to face the Final Solution publicly, not only in our basements. We did, but confronting the horrors of Jewish helplessness also forced us to face the harrowing truth that America did nothing to save the Jews. Worse, America sent thousands back to be murdered and closed its doors to millions.That knowledge alone would have sufficed to make me a Zionist. This meant, simply, that I believed in the Jews’ right to independence in our ancient homeland. But there was more. Zionism was not merely a reaction to discrimination, but an affirmation of what I felt from an early age to be my fundamental identity. For deep-rooted reasons, Zionism defined my being.Though I was not raised religious—I read my Bar Mitzvah in transliteration—the Jewish story of the Exodus from Egypt to the exodus from Europe resounded with meaning. Our story was the vehicle for our values: family, universal morality, social justice, and loyalty to our land. Half of humanity believed in the one God we introduced to the world nearly four thousand years ago and refused to relinquish, even under unspeakable tortures. God owed us an explanation for the Holocaust, I insisted. But Zionism offered a way of saying “we’re finished with you, God” and “thank you, God,” simultaneously. It allowed us to assert our self-sufficiency, even independence from formal religion, but in the one place that our forebears cherished as divinely given. Zionism enabled us to return to history as active authors of our own story. And the story I considered the most riveting of all time was that of the Jewish people.I belonged to that people and needed to be part of its narrative. Being Jewish in America, while culturally and materially comfortable, felt to me like living in the margins. The major chapter was being written right now, I thought, and not in New Jersey. History, rather, was happening in a state thriving against all odds, thousands of miles away. How could I miss it?That is why I joined the Zionist youth movement that brought me to Washington in March 1970, when I shook Yitzhak Rabin’s hand. That is why, throughout that year, I mowed lawns and shoveled snow from neighbors’ driveways to raise the airfare. And why I made repeated trips into New York City, alone, to browbeat kibbutz movement representatives into accepting me as a volunteer despite being two years short of the minimum age. The representatives relented and, in the summer of my pivotal fifteenth year, I finally purchased my ticket. I acquired my first U.S. passport and boarded a plane for Israel.Rising to IsraelDescending the ramp, the Israeli heat hit me, hammering-hot. But even more fazing was my encounter with the country I had only imagined: smelling the citrus-scented air, seeing trees alien to New Jersey and all the signs in Hebrew. This was Israel of 1970, before serious talk of peace or the Palestinian issue, when fighting still raged on the Egyptian and Jordanian fronts. The hourly news, announced with a series of beeps, had passersby running ear-first for the nearest radio.Behind the tension, though, lay a raffish élan and self-confidence. Toughened old-timers could still recount how they drained the swamps, battled malaria and British occupation troops, and struggled bitterly for independence against invading Arab armies. Along with its valorous past, Israel’s present was scintillating. The streets thrummed with shoppers, beggars, policemen, workers, stunning young women and men in olive army uniforms, almost all of them, inconceivably to me, Jewish.A few days after my arrival, a wobbly Israeli bus dropped me into the dust of Kibbutz Gan Shmuel. Invented by Zionist pioneers at the turn of the twentieth century, the kibbutz—in the Hebrew plural kibbutzim—was an utterly revolutionary concept. Members of these hardworking agricultural communities shared all their worldly possessions, ate every meal in a common dining room, and raised their children in separate “houses” managed by nursemaids. Ideologically utopian, the kibbutzim fulfilled the practical goal of settling the land and absorbing Jewish immigrants. In wartime, the farms served as fortified redoubts.


Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren

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106 of 124 people found the following review helpful. Powerful, fair, and thought-provoking -- best of all, A GREAT READ By Eric Stapleton This book is powerful: The author's a historian, and it's clear that history is his real love. It's rare to see that perspective--putting current events immediately into the context of history, let alone getting the you-are-there view of someone who actually WAS there. I thought this would take me forever to read, but I stayed up all night to finish it.Going in, I expected him to be much harder on Obama than he is -- he really goes out of his way to be fair. He clearly liked Obama a lot - it's fascinating to get a sense of what it's like to be around these great figures (Obama, Hillary Clinton, Netanyahu, and even George Clooney), and to try to live a (somewhat) normal life during a period of great crisis.What I particularly liked about the book:1) He clearly tries to give everyone a really fair shake.2) His writing is just beautiful. The book is a pleasure to read.3) I now have a much better understanding of how policy decisions are made.4) I had no idea people in Washington are so foul-mouthed.5) I really understand how this administration made a series of bad decisions that have led to the craziness in the Middle East.6) He explains what motivates those decisions -- a specific political ideology that he explains in terms a layperson can really get.It's a rare book that adds light and not heat to political discourse - this is a great example.

65 of 75 people found the following review helpful. The truth laid bare By Alyssa A. Lappen Somehow I was not surprised, as a poet and history buff, to learn in the early pages of Ally that Michael Oren (born in New Jersey, Michael Bornstein), had yanked himself out of the "dumb" classes to which he'd been relegated by severe learning disabilities---by virtue of poetry that he "pecked out" on an old manual Fleetwood typewriter and that ran in several national magazines.This transferred him, at about age 14, into "smart" classes, where his struggle to learn grammar and spelling paid off with his admission to Ivy League schools.Oxford University Press had sent me a readers' copy of Six-Days of War to review before the June 2001 release of the first edition; it was Oren's first successfully published effort, and it is such a well-crafted and researched history volume, it proved a page-turner that I could not put down.In Ally, Michael Oren has accomplished something quite different. He writes for the first time in the first person, and recounts many episodes that we already know make certain parties bristle.Unfortunately for them, he tells the full truth, and nothing but the truth---a luxury not always available to him while he served as Israel's Ambassador to the U.S. He of course had to protect certain state secrets, and more importantly, he had to keep feathers as unruffled as possible on every front, not only at home in Israel.(Not coincidentally, in order to accept that post Oren forever relinquished his citizenship of the U.S., a country he loves, without reserve or question.)For example, in 2009 Deputy Secretary of State Jim Steinberg reiterated to the newly appointed ambassador the administration's insistence that Jews could build nothing in the disputed territories of Judea and Samaria (called the West Bank only since 1967 due to their location on the west bank of the Jordan River), not even in Jerusalem, the capital of Israel. Specifically, the administration complained about Israeli destruction of two illegally constructed Arab stables that the U.S. had claimed were houses. In response, Oren told Steinberg the administration's policy is "non-implementable and prejudicial." (p. 83)This policy would let a Jew build his home only in certain Jerusalem neighborhoods but let an Arab "build anywhere---even illegally---without limit. In America," he said, "that's called discrimination."Indeed, it is the equivalent of telling an African-American, say, that he can build a home in Bedford Stuyvesant but cannot build a home in Harlem. Most Americans understand much better when one explains the issue in such terms.Similarly, during the so-called Arab spring, some observers recognized quite early that the revolutionary process was actually very dangerous, and that once Mubarak fell, the Muslim Brotherhood would fill the vacuum or otherwise seize power, which is more or less what happened, despite the appearance of a "democratic election.""Not since the Napoleonic invasion of Egypt in 1798 or the collapse of the Ottoman Empire near the end of Word War I," Oren writes, "had the region been so irrevocably altered," except that as Prime Minister Netanyahu had remarked at one point, this time "there are no Europeans to oversee the Middle East."So it was with frustration and incredulity that Oren watched talking head and former Newsweek editor Fareed Zakaria posit the splendor of the situation. Zakaria praised Obama for removing Mubarak in one week as compared to the years it took Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, respectively, "to oust Marcos in the Philippines and Suharto from Indonesia." He found himself screaming at the TV, "But those transitions were successful!" And to Thomas Friedman's boast that Syrian protestors chant "silmiya, silmiya---peaceful, peaceful," he reckoned, "Who's he kidding?" (p. 204)Oren also admirably notes the "serial failures of the previous twenty years," (p. 207), vis a vis the so-called peace process. He wondered why Obama thought he could miraculously prove more successful than anyone else.Since the Palestinian Authority was (and remains) unwilling to entertain any offers at all, a refusal not of Israel's making, there was (and remains) nothing to talk about, and the only responsibility for that lies with the PA. "It's time for President Abbas to stand before his people and say 'I will accept a Jewish state'," Netanyahu told Congress in spring 2011, a fact as true today as it was then.As one quite familiar with the history of the Middle East and Islam, very little in this book surprised me. But the volume offers the perspective of an important figure who was for a long while seated directly in a car on the roller-coaster of recent events, many of them quite dangerous for Israel, the U.S. and the entire Western world, but himself with virtually no control over their direction, except through outreach at the ambassador's Washington residence.He even writes about the Shi'ite Islamic precept of taqiyya, in his discussion regarding the pending "deal" with Iran, a subject the mainstream press has avoided like the plague. (Of course the concept, to lie about anything so as to advance Islam, also exists in Sunni Islam, albeit with the name of kitman.)In this book one gets the cogent, reasonable and well-reasoned observations of a skilled statesman loyal both to his adopted country, Israel, and to the U.S. Moreover, it is a perspective virtually never represented in the mainstream media, which in the 48 years since the Six Day War has grown almost monolithically anti-Israel. No one will like everything they read here.Nevertheless, this is an important book for every American to read, especially the representatives and senators elected to Congress, members of the press corps, and everyone in any way associated with national security.(My thanks to the friend who loaned me the book.)--- Alyssa A. Lappen

92 of 109 people found the following review helpful. Why did Michael Oren write Ally? By Mladen Andrijasevic I had been reading Ally, when I came to this paragraph, page 276, and I said to myself – this is it, this is why he wrote the book:“Finally, after many months of attentiveness, I reached my conclusion. In the absence of a high-profile provocation – an attack on a U.S. aircraft carrier, for example – the United States would not use force against Iran. Rather, the administration would remain committed to diplomatically resolving the Iranian nuclear issue, even at the risk of reaching a deal unacceptable to Israel. And If Israel took matters into its own hands, the White House would keep its distance and offer to defend Israel only if it were counterstruck by a hundred thousand Hezbollah missiles.”Oren sensed that he could make a difference and warn of the disastrous consequences of Obama’s appeasement of Iran and that the time to do that is NOW. And he did it. This book and his three Op-Eds in the WSJ, LA Times and Foreign Policy accomplished more than all the effort of all the Israeli columnists and politicians combined, apart from Netanyahu’s speech in front of the joint meeting of Congress. But paradoxically, that was the move Oren opposed and even after reading the book I still do not understand his motives for opposing Netanyahu’s speech. After all, the only way to stop President Barack Obama’s insane Iran deal was to warn Congress.It is interesting that Michael Oren managed to do what Bret Stephens, Martin Sherman, Ari Shavit and other Israeli and American analysts never did – quote Bernard Lewis on MAD and Iran! Why is the world ignoring the opinion on Iran and MAD by a leading western scholar of Islam is still a mystery.The chasm between the US and Israeli analysts, between the Obama administration and the Netanyahu government, between American Jews and Israelis in analyzing the Arab Spring, Palestinian peace negotiations and most importantly of all, Iran, is alarming and is described in detail. It is a frustrating political roller coaster drive.I do not believe that there was ever a book which is more relevant to the political situation of the time and one which has a better potential to make a dent. The only comparison I can think of is Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s Heretic, Matthew Kroenig’s A Time to Attack and the warnings Winston Churchill gave in the Commons in the 1930s during his wilderness years, but they were ignored. Hopefully, Oren’s will not. Will Churchill’s “confirmed unteachability of mankind” remain true?...

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Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide, by Michael B. Oren