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THE WISDOM COMPASS

A 31 DAY JOURNEY TO WISDOM-FILLED LIVING

A useful contemporary meditation on timeless truths.

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Good advice on marriage, finances and even weight loss is gleaned from the biblical book of Proverbs in this engaging Christian self-helper.

Framed as a parent’s admonishment of a wayward son, the Bible’s pre-eminent wisdom book is a goldmine of pithy instructions on avoiding the snares of sin and folly. Henderson, a sales expert and motivational speaker, adroitly interprets its 31 chapters for a world of easy consumer credit and no-fault divorce. Where Proverbs 5:3-4 warns us that “the lips of an adulteress drip honey…but in the end she is bitter as gall,” Henderson draws a wider lesson on the destructive effects of infidelity. Proverbs 23:32 (“Do not gaze at wine when it is red, when it sparkles in the cup, when it goes down smoothly!”) reminds him that we “really find no escape at all” from our problems in alcohol and drugs. He ties the vague injunction of Proverbs 28:9 (“If anyone turns a deaf ear to the law, even his prayers are detestable”) to the specific idea that wishing away the pounds won’t work without steady dieting and exercise, while Proverbs 28:19 (“He who works his land will have abundant food, but the one who chases fantasies will have his fill of poverty”) sparks a sermon on the pitfalls of credit-card debt. Behind the practical wisdom the author sees deeper spiritual and ethical themes—he reminds readers that hard work is the only path to success, but also warns that wealth doesn’t equate to holiness, that the poor are not failures, that self-sufficiency is impossible and caring for others is the highest duty. Henderson writes in a warm, plain-spoken style that makes gnarly Old Testament aphorisms relevant to modern sensibilities. (He finds in Proverbs’ luminous tribute to the noble wife, for example, a surprisingly up-to-date model of virtue for both women and men.) The result is a readable and often inspiring application of ancient lore to latter-day problems.

A useful contemporary meditation on timeless truths.

Pub Date: Nov. 1, 2010

ISBN: 978-0981475677

Page Count: 294

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: March 29, 2011

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THE PUCCINI COMPANION

Puccini wins the prize for most-maligned great composer. In a fit of depressive self-deprecation, Puccini himself called his own music ``sugary,'' and the persistent popularity of his mature operas at box-offices around the world for nearly a century has too often provoked critical condescension, as if art so well-loved could not possibly be worth much. But that situation, thankfully, is changing, and this much-needed essay collection on Puccini by leading scholars of 19th- and 20th-century Italian opera is worth a good deal more than several new biographies. The volume ranges from a lengthy piece on Puccini's family by his granddaughter (one of the editors) to chapters devoted to Puccini's ``musical world'' and each of his operas by luminaries such as William Weaver, Harvey Sachs, Fedele D'Amico, Verdi heavyweights Mary Jane Phillips-Matz and Julian Budden, and William Ashbrook. A favorite: David Hamilton's expert investigation of the early Tosca recordings, especially the legendary ``Mapelson cylinders'' of live Metropolitan Opera performances from 1902-03, to see what light they shed on Puccini's original interpreters. The editors, perhaps hoping to attract non-musicologist admirers of the Luccan master, issue the disclaimer that ``this is not a work of scholarship'' (even though two of the chapters make a start on an accessible Puccini bibliography). They needn't have worried. Lovers of Puccini and Italian opera at every level of interest and knowledge will want this book. (Photographs—not seen)

Pub Date: Feb. 28, 1994

ISBN: 0-393-02930-1

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Norton

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 1994

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BAMBOOZLED AT THE REVOLUTION

HOW BIG MEDIA LOST BILLIONS IN THE BATTLE FOR THE INTERNET

Proves without a doubt that even masters of the universe sometimes lose their heads, and then their shirts.

Knowing inside account of the major media conglomerates’ efforts to embrace and profit from the ’90s dot.com boom.

As the New York Post’s first computer/Internet columnist, Motavalli had a ringside seat while Disney, Time Warner, News Corp., and others tripped over themselves to get on board the emerging Internet phenomenon. With little certainty about what the successful and manageable applications of the World Wide Web would be, media corporations and their leaders nonetheless rushed to spend hundreds of millions of dollars so as not to get left behind. They helped create the dot.com bubble of inflated salaries and unlimited expectations that burst so mercilessly in 2000–01. Motavalli, who admits being swept up like everyone else in the initial euphoria, narrates with an intimate feel for the year-by-year developments: the promises and glorious optimism of a dawning technological age, the maneuvering moguls and CEOs, the media executives who doubled their income by switching to the dot.com start-ups, and the chilling reality bath that awaited all. AOL’s Steve Case, Time Warner’s Bob Pittman and Gerald Levin, John F. Kennedy Jr. of George, Time magazine’s Walter Isaacson, and iVillage’s Candace Carpenter are among the many prime movers whose trajectories are analyzed here. Some big winners emerge (AOL, Amazon, eBay, Yahoo), but more common is the fate of one Internet-related stock that fell from $150 to just $3 per share. Motavalli sees this not solely as a tale of greed and ambition run wild, but a telling parable of the herd mentality; when it appears the wheel has been reinvented, everyone wants to go along for the ride, even though the ultimate destination is unknown. Well-researched and dense with names, dates, meetings, and numbers, the author’s recollections may provide more information than most will be willing to download, but he convincingly captures the boardroom machinations of this extraordinary era.

Proves without a doubt that even masters of the universe sometimes lose their heads, and then their shirts.

Pub Date: Aug. 5, 2002

ISBN: 0-670-89980-1

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2002

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