Download Dynastic Politics and the British Reformations 15581630 Michael Questier Books

By Sisca R. Bakara on Sunday, June 9, 2019

Download Dynastic Politics and the British Reformations 15581630 Michael Questier Books





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  • Hardcover 528 pages
  • Publisher Oxford University Press (March 31, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0198826338




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Read Sigmar Polke Eine Winterreise Sigmar Polke Vicente Todoli Katharina Schmidt Books

By Sisca R. Bakara

Read Sigmar Polke Eine Winterreise Sigmar Polke Vicente Todoli Katharina Schmidt Books





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  • Hardcover 160 pages
  • Publisher David Zwirner Books (January 21, 2020)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1941701531




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Read The Legend of Safed Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Anthropology edition by Eli Yassif Haim Watzman Religion Spirituality eBooks

By Sisca R. Bakara

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Download PDF The Legend of Safed Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Anthropology  edition by Eli Yassif Haim Watzman Religion Spirituality eBooks

In 1908, Solomon Schechter—discoverer of the Cairo Geniza and one of the founders of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America—published his groundbreaking essay on the city of Safed (Tzfat) during the sixteenth century. In the essay, Schechter pointed out the exceptional cultural achievements (religious law, moral teaching, hermeneutics, poetry, geography) of this small city in the upper Galilee but did not yet see the importance of including the foundation on which all of these fields began—the legends that were developed, told, and spread in Safed during this period. In The Legend of Safed Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah, author Eli Yassif utilizes "new historicism" methodology in order to use the non-canonical materials—legends and myths, visions, dreams, rumors, everyday dialogues—to present these legends in their historical and cultural context and use them to better understand the culture of Safed. This approach considers the literary text not as a reflection of reality, but a part of reality itself—taking sides in the debates and decisions of humans and serving as a major tool for understanding society and human mentality.

Divided into seven chapters, The Legend of Safed begins with an explanation of how the myth of Safed was founded on the general belief that during this "golden age" (1570–1620), Safed was an idyllic location in which complete peace and understanding existed between the diverse groups of people who migrated to the city. Yassif goes on to analyze thematic characteristics of the legends, including spatial elements, the function of dreams, mysticism, sexual sins, and omniscience. The book concludes with a discussion of the tension between fantasy (Safed is a sacred city built on morality, religious thought, and well-being for all) and reality (every person is full of weaknesses and flaws) and how that is the basis for understanding the vitality of Safed myth and its immense impact on the future of Jewish life and culture.

The Legend of Safed is intended for students, scholars, and general readers of medieval and early modern Jewish studies, Hebrew literature, and folklore.

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  • File Size 4626 KB
  • Print Length 303 pages
  • Publisher Wayne State University Press (May 20, 2019)
  • Publication Date May 20, 2019
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B07H5FG759

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The Legend of Safed Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Anthropology edition by Eli Yassif Haim Watzman Religion Spirituality eBooks Reviews :


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PDF The Cold War A World History Odd Arne Westad Books

By Sisca R. Bakara on Saturday, June 8, 2019

PDF The Cold War A World History Odd Arne Westad Books





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  • Paperback 720 pages
  • Publisher Basic Books; Reprint edition (October 15, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 154167409X




The Cold War A World History Odd Arne Westad Books Reviews


  • This is an ambitious but somewhat disappointing book. Odd Arne Westad is the author of an outstanding book, The Global Cold War, on the Cold War, as well as other work on this important topic. This book is a very ambitious attempt to produce a one volume overview of the Cold War and contains a good deal of fine narrative and analysis but suffers from some structural defects. It is neither a survey nor an introductory book. The structure is a series of loosely chronological chapters on important aspects of the Cold War. If you're not familiar with the overall narrative history, either from prior reading or (as with many individuals of my generation) by living through many of the events, a good deal of the discussion will be opaque. In addition, Westad makes no effort to fractionate different phases of the Cold War, which seems possible, and some kind of periodization would be useful in trying to understand the different aspects of the Cold War.

    Westad does have an overall theme, which is the Cold War as an ideological conflict between global capitalism and a form of socialism that emerged from late 19th century industrialization. Many of the individual chapters are quite good. A strength of the book, reflecting his prior scholarship on the Cold War in the developing world, is the truly global perspective. While the critical American-Soviet relationship runs throughout the book, there are excellent chapters on other aspects of the Cold War such as the role of India, thoughtful analyses of the behavior of Mao's China, decolonialization, the behavior of the US in South America, and the often complex politics within Europe, both in Western Europe and Soviet dominated Eastern Europe. He is also very good on important aspects of the Soviet-American rivalry, including an even-handed assessment of Nixon's policies and highlighting the importance of Leonid Brezhnev. His description of the end of the Cold War and brief but cogent analysis of its consequences is good and highly relevant to our present situation.

    Perhaps because of the broad canvas, I found some sections superficial. This includes, somewhat surprisingly, sections dealing with the background of the Cold War. The description of early 20th century socialism is a bit of a caricature and actually misleading. I don't think he sufficiently stresses that the American leadership of the 1940s and 1950s was bent on avoiding the errors of disengagement that followed WWI. I suspect that the sections on Korea and our early involvement in Southeast Asia don't give enough attention to economic factors, particularly our perception that these regions would be important for the Japanese economy. Again, not surprising in a book this ambitious, there are some factual errors. Its not correct, for example, that the British Mandate in Palestine was a negative for the emerging Zionist state, or that we achieved intelligence superiority over the Soviets in the 1960s. In the latter case, the Soviets benefited enormously from the fact that much valuable information about the US was in the public domain. His description of the outbreak of the Six Day - June War is superficial. He also doesn't discuss one of the most ironic features of the end of the Cold War. The collapse of Marxism resulted in a neoliberal world economic system that goes a long way towards restoring Marx's reputation as an analyst of capitalism.

    Finally, there are significant production defects. The bibliography is scanty, there are no maps, and a modest amount of numerical data, such as economic outputs, in tabular or chart form, would have enhanced the discussions.
  • I enjoyed reading the book and its conclusion about the post Cold War errors in U.S. policy due to the distorting Cold War lens is original and worth debating. On the whole, the ideological position is perhaps too critical of the role of the U.S. in the Cold War, and it reminds me a bit of the theory of equivalency my middle school and Lyceum teachers were so proud to present “Communism and Capitalism are two ideology equivalent in their overall average between the Good and the Evil delivered to the citizen”. The author seem to forget the order of magnitude difference between the number of human lives cut short by the catastrophic Marxist Leninist ideology in the Soviet Union, China, Cambodia, Eastern Europe, Vietnam and Cuba and the evil perpetrated by the “anti-communist”. Another interesting omission is any discussion of the historically curious and potentially fatal Chinese repudiation of the communist party even more than 20 years of joining the list of capitalist economies.

    Overall, I do recommend this wonderful book, both as a reasonable detailed account of the Cold War and an essential springboard for those who wish to start a study in depth of the second half of the twentieth century.
  • I was disappointed. In my opinion, the organization is poor and the writing very ordinary. Nor was there anything very new here, especially for anyone who read the newspapers during the last half of the 20th century. Coverage is superficial and focuses mostly on the evils of the US.
  • This is a definitive history of the period we call the Cold War. Westall sets the background of countries, events and key political personalities up in a way which explains how the tensions between the old Soviet Union and the US and Europe evolved and affected separate parts of the world. I highly recommend this for any one who wants to improve their knowledge about this 50+ period of world history.
  • This book describes in some detail the period from 1945 to the fall of Soviet regime. The international struggle between the first and second world.
  • Remarkable analysis of Post WWII history. Points in the direction that we are moving into a new into a new era.
  • Mr. Westad does an outstanding job of showing both the global reach of The Cold War. How essentially what started out as a bipolar conflict between the US and USSR over control and domination of Europe spread to Asia, Latin America and Africa. He also shows its limitation while both the US and USSR saw everything in that prism. In most parts of the world that global conflict took a back seat to the end of colonization, the vast gaps between rich and poor in many parts of the world. The result was that both US and Soviet policy makers made decisions that severely negatively impacted those countries that became battlegrounds between the two competing ideologies. Some may not care for the layout of this book how Mr. Westad goes from country to country or region to region. It is not specifically a chronological order of The Cold War, though it does have that component. I found it interesting to see the Global reach of the Cold war and its limitations .
  • In what concearns Latino America, its a beacon that puts light in how we came to be what we are. Great book
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Ebook Women Who Dared 52 Stories of Fearless Daredevils Adventurers and Rebels Linda Skeers Livi Gosling 9781492653271 Books

By Sisca R. Bakara

Ebook Women Who Dared 52 Stories of Fearless Daredevils Adventurers and Rebels Linda Skeers Livi Gosling 9781492653271 Books





Product details

  • Age Range 8 - 14 years
  • Grade Level 3 - 8
  • Lexile Measure 950L (What's this?)
  • Hardcover 128 pages
  • Publisher Sourcebooks Explore (September 5, 2017)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1492653276




Women Who Dared 52 Stories of Fearless Daredevils Adventurers and Rebels Linda Skeers Livi Gosling 9781492653271 Books Reviews


  • Love it! I was looking for a gift for a toddler girl and wanted to find something that could be empowering and inspiring. I’m always on a quest for gifts with an anti-princess sentiment and this was perfect.
  • I love this book. Originally I got it for my little cousin, who is 5, but I thought that it was too advanced for her. I thought about keeping it for myself, because I love how they have women from all different countries and all different time periods. I ended up giving it to a different cousin who is 11 and it felt like it was an appropriate level for her.
  • I got this as a gift for my friends daughters birthday and it was a hit.In the middle of the party after it was opened her Mom pointed to the book stating "See, it's not all princesses and rainbows!" towards the father of her daughter. I was later told the dad wanted to make sure she was well rounded and it was the perfect gift for them!
  • I bought this book as a Christmas present for a young female family member (she's 10). She quickly started reading up on some of the women. The book came in great condition and is absolutely beautiful. It is filled with wonderful illustrations and easy to read synapses of the women depicted.

    My only concern is the subject matter may not be the right choice for some families, considering this book is about adventurous and daredevil women in history, so if you or your family does not want to encourage "reckless" behavior (as some of my family members put it), I would recommend another book. However, I thought it has great examples of strong women!
  • I gave this to my 9 year old niece for Christmas and she loved it! She is a very strong reader, who also loves to learn new things when she reads, and she was very excited about the book. She told me she is reading about one person a day, and has learned a lot of things - plus she was excited to see it was all about daring women! She said she was telling her classmates about the women as well - that she thought they were very brave! I also enjoyed skimming some of the selections when I first obtained it. I highly recommend it!
  • Great book for various ages. My daughter used it for a Girl Scout troop meeting (middle school level) about successful women and it was a huge hit. Many moms asked about the book and where to buy it.
  • My daughter had Rebel Girls and I decided to switch for this one. She is 6 and love it. She is reading for weeks the same story then changed.
  • Awesome young person's book. It's short and in really short, might take 5-10 minutes to read about a daring woman. It would be a perfect book for grandparents, aunts, uncles, etc. to have on hand to read to both girls and boys. Teachers, either in the home setting or public school could read a daring woman's story and since the chapters don't tell all there is to know, but gives you a desire to go look them up and find out more it could lead to further research and stories written by the student about that daring woman.
    Another of my favorite things about this book is Linda Skeers doesn't just have a certain age, type or daring woman but she has stories from the 18th century to the 21st century. There are young women and Senior Citizen women, married women, single women, single mom women. Performers, daredevils, flyers, astronauts, scientists, explorers in this book. They are from all over this great earth.
    My favorite section was about Rebels.
    Will be buying several more for friends with boys.
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Read EagleSage LonTobyn Chronicle David B Coe Pete Cross Books

By Sisca R. Bakara

Read EagleSage LonTobyn Chronicle David B Coe Pete Cross Books



Download As PDF : EagleSage LonTobyn Chronicle David B Coe Pete Cross Books

Download PDF EagleSage LonTobyn Chronicle David B Coe Pete Cross Books

Seven years have passed since Orris, a mage of Tobyn-Ser’s Order, returned from the violent chaos of Bragor-Nal. The threat of attack from Lon-Ser has been eliminated, but the establishment of trade between Tobyn-Ser and its western neighbor has brought new and disturbing changes to the land. Large tracts of woodland have been logged and sold off in exchange for more of Lon-Ser’s “advanced goods.” The Order and the League continue their struggle for supremacy, and a new force, a “People’s Movement,” has allied itself with so-called independent mages who claim no ties to either body.

In Lon-Ser, Melyor, the beautiful Gildriite who made herself Bragor-Nal’s Sovereign, is nearly killed in an assassination attempt. Her ally, Shivohn, matriarch of Oerella-Nal, is herself killed by a similar attack. Treachery and betrayal lie at the heart of a plot that endangers not only Lon-Ser but also Tobyn-Ser and its Mage-Craft.

When Jaryd, who has been unbound for months, finally binds to an eagle, he fears the worst, for, throughout the history of Tobyn-Ser, the binding of a mage to an eagle has always been a harbinger of war. When Cailin, a League mage, binds to a second eagle, Jaryd fears that his land teeters on the brink of Civil War. Crisis grips both lands. Can Melyor overcome an unseen enemy and a thousand years of prejudice to save Lon-Ser? Can Jaryd and Cailin bring peace to the mages of Tobyn-Ser in time to stop an old and emboldened enemy from destroying everything they hold dear?

Read EagleSage LonTobyn Chronicle David B Coe Pete Cross Books


"Rereading this book was amazing. I had forgotten how much more elaborate the plot was in this book versus the others. I highly recommend it."

Product details

  • Age Range 12 and up
  • Grade Level 7 - 9
  • Series LonTobyn Chronicle (Book 3)
  • Audio CD
  • Publisher Dreamscape Media; Unabridged edition (May 28, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1974946886

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EagleSage LonTobyn Chronicle David B Coe Pete Cross Books Reviews :


EagleSage LonTobyn Chronicle David B Coe Pete Cross Books Reviews


  • Rereading this book was amazing. I had forgotten how much more elaborate the plot was in this book versus the others. I highly recommend it.
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Read Online Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt edition by Arthur C Brooks Politics Social Sciences eBooks

By Sisca R. Bakara on Friday, June 7, 2019

Read Online Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt edition by Arthur C Brooks Politics Social Sciences eBooks



Download As PDF : Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt edition by Arthur C Brooks Politics Social Sciences eBooks

Download PDF Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt  edition by Arthur C Brooks Politics Social Sciences eBooks

Now a National Bestseller.

To get ahead today, you have to be a jerk, right?

Divisive politicians. Screaming heads on television. Angry campus activists. Twitter trolls. Today in America, there is an “outrage industrial complex” that prospers by setting American against American.

Meanwhile, one in six Americans have stopped talking to close friends and family members over politics. Millions are organizing their social lives and curating their news and information to avoid hearing viewpoints differing from their own. Ideological polarization is at higher levels than at any time since the Civil War.

America has developed a “culture of contempt”—a habit of seeing people who disagree with us not as merely incorrect or misguided, but as worthless. Maybe you dislike it—more than nine out of ten Americans say they are tired of how divided we have become as a country. But hey, either you play along, or you’ll be left behind, right?

Wrong.

In Love Your Enemies, New York Times bestselling author and social scientist Arthur C. Brooks shows that treating others with contempt and out-outraging the other side is not a formula for lasting success. Blending cutting-edge behavioral research, ancient wisdom, and a decade of experience leading one of America’s top policy think tanks, Love Your Enemies offers a new way to lead based not on attacking others, but on bridging national divides and mending personal relationships.

Brooks’ prescriptions are unconventional. To bring America together, he argues, we shouldn’t try to agree more. There is no need for mushy moderation, because disagreement is the secret to excellence. Civility and tolerance shouldn’t be our goals, because they are hopelessly low standards. And our feelings toward our foes are irrelevant; what matters is how we choose to act.

Love Your Enemies is not just a guide to being a better person. It offers a clear strategy for victory for a new generation of leaders. It is a rallying cry for people hoping for a new era of American progress. And most of all, it is a roadmap to arrive at the happiness that comes when we choose to love one another, despite our differences.

 


Read Online Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt edition by Arthur C Brooks Politics Social Sciences eBooks


"It has been my conviction for a while now that social media and the daily phony outrages they help spur are rewiring our brains as we speak and make us more stupid. (Ever been on Twitter? Yeah.) Moreover, reading the drivel passing for political insight on our feeds makes us desperate to avoid the latest spat involving President Trump when we talk to these Facebook philosophers at an uncle’s birthday party. Better to change the topic to, say, the Patriots’ ‘Deflate Gate’. It’s bound to get some voices raised, but at the end of the day that feels better than having to battle accusations of secretly cherishing Nazi sympathies.

If you, like me, are more than fed up with the sad reality pictured above, Arthur C. Brooks’ new book, "Love Your Enemies: How Decent People Can Save America From the Culture of Contempt," must have received a warm welcome in your mailbox. The outgoing president of the American Enterprise Institute and a devout Catholic, Brooks should have a thing or two to say about our present culture of contempt, its roots, and its consequences.

The author makes the case that yours truly wasn’t imagining things when nervously resorting to Deflate Gate. In fact, “Political differences are ripping our country apart,” he writes. “Political scientists find that our nation is more polarized than it has been at any time since the Civil War.” Just one unfortunate result of this is that “one in six Americans … stopped talking to a family member or close friend because of the 2016 election.” In addition, we are now collectively sorting our “social life along ideological lines”, by avoiding places and media where we might find people who disagree with us and “seeking out the spaces … where [we] find the most ideological compatriots.”

At the heart of our problem, Brooks argues, lies not hatred or anger, but contempt (defined as “anger mixed with disgust”): “Across the political spectrum, people in positions of power and influence are setting us against one another. They tell us our neighbors who disagree with us politically are ruining our country. That ideological differences aren’t a matter of differing opinions but reflect moral turpitude. That our side must utterly vanquish the other, even if it leaves our neighbors without a voice.” In fact, humans show literal signs of addiction to this sort of contempt, Brooks writes, like we would to alcohol or cigarettes, and the outrage industry in our media and broader culture takes advantage of this.

Psychological research demonstrates that contempt makes us unhappy as well as unhealthy. Those subjected to it “have poorer sleep quality, and their immune systems don’t function as well,” while those practicing it produce “two stress hormones, cortisol and adrenaline”, which have been linked to increased odds of premature death. Sounds lovely, if not exactly a recipe for individual, let alone societal, health.

As a diagnosis of our present perils Love Your Enemies is solid enough. Where it is lacking, however, is in 1) establishing the causes of our collective contempt and political bifurcation, and; 2) realistic steps to make a meaningful change: What to do about all this? To start off with the latter, Brooks found his inspiration in chatting with his friend the Dalai Lama: “‘Your Holiness,’ I asked him, ‘what do I do when I feel contempt?'” Responded His Holiness: “Practice warm-heartedness.” After pondering this little dose of Gelug wisdom, Brooks concluded: “He was not advocating surrender to the views of those with whom we disagree. If I believe I am right, I have a duty to stick to my views. But my duty is also to be kind, fair, and friendly to all, even those with whom I have great differences.”

He sets forth some basic rules for our conduct with the other side that should be common sense to anyone with a decent bone in their body. Be kind in the face of contempt: “Treat others with love and respect.” “Don’t attack or insult. Don’t even try to win.” Never field an argumentum ad hominem in your political discussions. “Stand up to people on your own side who trash people on the other side.” “Escape the bubble.” You get the picture. The one buzzword dominating this book is “love”. Brooks quotes Christ in the Gospel of Luke: “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? For even sinners love those who love them. … But love your enemies. … Then your reward will be great.” If these tactics won’t win over your hostile interlocutor, they will at least make you feel better.

What is needed in America today at the political level, Brooks proceeds to explain, is a new style of “authoritative” leadership: “What we truly require is a new vision from authoritative leaders for the purpose of our economy and public policy. By articulating a clear aim of restoring human dignity and expanding opportunity, authoritative leaders can create space for Americans to think about old problems in new ways.”

If the above sounds noble and sympathetic, it’s also vague and, given the present state of our society, utter pie in the sky. What we have on our hand here is a classic prisoner’s dilemma. Kindness in the face of contempt can be perceived as weakness. Why should your side be the first to change its behavior? This is a serious problem, and it makes one pessimistic about the odds of this project of loving your enemies ever succeeding. Our national moral consensus has eroded, and the philosophical differences resulting from this are real. Liberals wish to reinterpret the Constitution to suit their political agenda and altogether banish religion to behind our front doors. And conservatives wish to stem this liberal tide by any legal means possible — which post-2016 means “Donald Trump”.

This brings us to the other reason "Love Your Enemies" falls short: It has surprisingly little to say about the causes of the bifurcation of our society it details. And the few things it does say leave the reader wanting for more.

Brooks is an economist, and this background transpires when he takes a shot at explaining the trigger event which seems to have all but sealed our national divorce: the ascendancy to the presidency of Donald Trump. “For decades,” the author relates,

“conventional conservatives had emphasized issues such as entitlement reform, which is important for the solvency of the country but feels cold and remote to voters worried about losing their job and benefits. Meanwhile, the conventional political left focused on the “income gap” separating rich and poor. They contended that income inequality would ignite a new class struggle, causing unprecedented political turmoil. This was half right. There was indeed a gap in this country, but the relevant gap wasn’t income. It was dignity. … As the future fills with whiz-bang technologies, from artificial intelligence to driverless cars, one part of the population sees ingenuity, mobility, and progress. Another part hears, “We don’t need you anymore.” This is the dignity gap. … Even with strong economic growth, the United States has bifurcated into a nation of socioeconomic winners and losers, and this stratification is poisoning American culture.”

Who are these losers? You guessed it: “Lots of people of all races and classes, but to an especially large extent, it is working-class men.” Echoing J.D. Vance’s "Hillbilly Elegy", Brooks relays how the mortality rate among members of this group has been on the rise since 1999. “The main reasons? Cirrhosis of the liver (up 50 percent since 1999 among this group), suicide (up 78 percent), and drug overdoses, primarily of opiates (up 323 percent).” It’s the by now familiar heart-wrenching tune lamenting the sad plight of our nation’s working classes, and it needs no further explanation that these are the people who voted for Trump.

That said, while I wouldn’t ignore the economic pains our working classes endure, I’d like to make the case that the battle is waged primarily over our culture, not economics. The problem is not just that these people feel like they’re no longer needed in our advanced economy, but that the cultural and political elites in our country disparage them as a sweaty bunch of gap-toothed, god-fearing and gun-toting yokels who are too dim-witted to acknowledge that, in order to save humanity from a climate change catastrophe, they’ll need to say bye-bye to their job on the oil rig in Texas or the coal mine in West Virginia. Another familiar theme is that politicians from Left to Right are consciously hurting the economic plight of the people they’re purporting to help by allowing hundreds of thousands of workers to enter the United States every year to work here, legally or not so legally.

In post-truth America, the media can get away with actively undermining a democratically-elected president in a concerted effort to undo an election the outcome of which wasn’t to their liking. Colin Kaepernick could, without much criticism from those same media, bring his political fight over an otherwise legitimate cause to a supposedly non-political arena — the NFL — which collects the majority of its revenues from the very working classes Kaepernick would disparage as a gang of racists exercising their ‘white privilege’. And when Brett Kavanaugh was nominated to fill Anthony Kennedy’s Supreme Court seat, the Left unleashed a barrage of dirty tricks and hysteria that was unprecedented even by its own abominable standards. Did the Right pull similar stunts with Sotomayor and Kagan?

Brooks is correct that contempt begets contempt, of course. It’s a vicious cycle, which explains why The Donald is our president today. The reason why the nastiness reached new lows during and after the 2016 campaign is because, unlike John McCain, Mitt Romney and all the others, Trump fought back and offered his base a sense of self-value; the prospect that, no, you are not obsolete, because we’re going to turn this thing around for you. And no, despite the well-nigh Orwellian claims to the contrary, Mexicans do not have a moral right to stampede our borders without consequences, and it’s not self-evident that ICE should be “abolished”.

Looking at it from a different angle, these establishment attitudes on our culture didn’t emerge grass-roots in a cultural vacuum. They are the end result of ideas that originated on college campuses a long time ago. America isn’t torn apart by contempt. It’s torn apart by identity politics, which has pitted a thousand and one identity groups against white men as well as each other and so has unleashed a cold civil war that could usher in the end of the United States as we know it. But, since identity politics is the love child of Marxism and postmodernism (in other words, a product of the Left), Brooks is hesitant to broach this subject for fear of alienating half of his audience. So he resorts to boring generalities and offers up negative examples from both sides of the political spectrum in order to stay ‘balanced’.

Consequently, as an exercise in establishing the root causes of our societal stratification, Love Your Enemies falls remarkably flat. Brooks is so busy tiptoeing around the easily offended to both his left and his right, so obsessed with his on-the-one-hand-but-on-the-other-hand illustrations supporting the argument he’s attempting to make, that it leaves the reader scratching his head in wonder if anything was deliberately left out beyond the author’s platitudes about Luke 6:32-35. It is obvious to any neutral observer, however, that the present cultural conflict is not symmetrical, but the result of an intellectual assault by the academic Left on institutions and ideas it deemed inhibitive of our individualism and rationality. We’re seeing liberalism coming to full fruition.

In conclusion, "Love Your Enemies" is as inane as it is disappointing. It’s disappointing because the problem the book purports to deal with is real and deserving of our attention. But the problem is real not because of social media and our collective contempt (though these don’t help), but because of other intellectual and political forces upon which Brooks barely even touches. It turns out that, for all his personal faults, The Donald is a keener observer of our beloved America than Arthur Brooks. Imagine that."

Product details

  • File Size 1746 KB
  • Print Length 256 pages
  • Publisher Broadside e-books (March 12, 2019)
  • Publication Date March 12, 2019
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B07C663R28

Read Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt  edition by Arthur C Brooks Politics Social Sciences eBooks

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Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt edition by Arthur C Brooks Politics Social Sciences eBooks Reviews :


Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt edition by Arthur C Brooks Politics Social Sciences eBooks Reviews


  • Deplorables. The forty-seven percent. The fact that Americans have become increasingly divided is hardly breaking news. But Arthur Brooks is somewhat unique in finding the cause in an ethical/spiritual crisis as opposed to blaming one side or the other.

    Brooks believes that each side is animated by a spirit of contempt. Dismissiveness, arrogance and close-mindedness have replaced love of neighbor. To return to a more temperate politics we do not need new leaders or new parties as much as a recommitment to commonly shared values and humanity.

    Armed with impressive social scientific data, Brooks argues that such a transformation would be good not only for the country but for us as well. He also marshals the world’s philosophic and religious traditions to create arguments against tribalism, identity politics and shunning of the other side.

    Most readers will fully support Brooks’ project but will probably wonder whether a real movement can be started across ideological lines. Recent social movements have started, however, around messages with similarly inspirational content (see Lean In). Like most readers I would welcome a return of a sense of national community and wouldn’t want to prognosticate that Brooks cannot launch such a cause.

    But this same hope makes explicit one of the major assumptions of the book. Brooks assumes that the hard right and hard left have similar commitments to core enlightenment and humanistic values. We need only to be reminded of our better angels.

    He does not take seriously the idea that those on the hard right who want to stop all Latino immigration or those on the hard left who think Enlightenment reasoning is a tool of oppression really envision mutually incompatible Americas. That at the root of the increasingly strong partisan divide is different understandings of what America is all about and not just a lack of humanistic virtue.

    For my part, I hope Brooks’ more optimistic vision of mutually shared values is correct. But I cannot help but notice that the opposite notion is not so much debated as ignored.

    Given that the core of the book is a personal message to transform ideological contempt into love this may be understandable. But, if the book is mostly an effort aimed not at making an argument but at achieving personal transformation, then ultimately its success is to be judged not on the relevance of its social scientific data, nor on its handling of the wisdom of the ages, nor even on its sales but on whether it achieves some success in changing the tone of political rhetoric. It certainly will be interesting to see whether it helps push Democrats and Republicans to unite around the good of the body politic once again.
  • It has been my conviction for a while now that social media and the daily phony outrages they help spur are rewiring our brains as we speak and make us more stupid. (Ever been on Twitter? Yeah.) Moreover, reading the drivel passing for political insight on our feeds makes us desperate to avoid the latest spat involving President Trump when we talk to these Facebook philosophers at an uncle’s birthday party. Better to change the topic to, say, the Patriots’ ‘Deflate Gate’. It’s bound to get some voices raised, but at the end of the day that feels better than having to battle accusations of secretly cherishing Nazi sympathies.

    If you, like me, are more than fed up with the sad reality pictured above, Arthur C. Brooks’ new book, "Love Your Enemies How Decent People Can Save America From the Culture of Contempt," must have received a warm welcome in your mailbox. The outgoing president of the American Enterprise Institute and a devout Catholic, Brooks should have a thing or two to say about our present culture of contempt, its roots, and its consequences.

    The author makes the case that yours truly wasn’t imagining things when nervously resorting to Deflate Gate. In fact, “Political differences are ripping our country apart,” he writes. “Political scientists find that our nation is more polarized than it has been at any time since the Civil War.” Just one unfortunate result of this is that “one in six Americans … stopped talking to a family member or close friend because of the 2016 election.” In addition, we are now collectively sorting our “social life along ideological lines”, by avoiding places and media where we might find people who disagree with us and “seeking out the spaces … where [we] find the most ideological compatriots.”

    At the heart of our problem, Brooks argues, lies not hatred or anger, but contempt (defined as “anger mixed with disgust”) “Across the political spectrum, people in positions of power and influence are setting us against one another. They tell us our neighbors who disagree with us politically are ruining our country. That ideological differences aren’t a matter of differing opinions but reflect moral turpitude. That our side must utterly vanquish the other, even if it leaves our neighbors without a voice.” In fact, humans show literal signs of addiction to this sort of contempt, Brooks writes, like we would to alcohol or cigarettes, and the outrage industry in our media and broader culture takes advantage of this.

    Psychological research demonstrates that contempt makes us unhappy as well as unhealthy. Those subjected to it “have poorer sleep quality, and their immune systems don’t function as well,” while those practicing it produce “two stress hormones, cortisol and adrenaline”, which have been linked to increased odds of premature death. Sounds lovely, if not exactly a recipe for individual, let alone societal, health.

    As a diagnosis of our present perils Love Your Enemies is solid enough. Where it is lacking, however, is in 1) establishing the causes of our collective contempt and political bifurcation, and; 2) realistic steps to make a meaningful change What to do about all this? To start off with the latter, Brooks found his inspiration in chatting with his friend the Dalai Lama “‘Your Holiness,’ I asked him, ‘what do I do when I feel contempt?'” Responded His Holiness “Practice warm-heartedness.” After pondering this little dose of Gelug wisdom, Brooks concluded “He was not advocating surrender to the views of those with whom we disagree. If I believe I am right, I have a duty to stick to my views. But my duty is also to be kind, fair, and friendly to all, even those with whom I have great differences.”

    He sets forth some basic rules for our conduct with the other side that should be common sense to anyone with a decent bone in their body. Be kind in the face of contempt “Treat others with love and respect.” “Don’t attack or insult. Don’t even try to win.” Never field an argumentum ad hominem in your political discussions. “Stand up to people on your own side who trash people on the other side.” “Escape the bubble.” You get the picture. The one buzzword dominating this book is “love”. Brooks quotes Christ in the Gospel of Luke “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? For even sinners love those who love them. … But love your enemies. … Then your reward will be great.” If these tactics won’t win over your hostile interlocutor, they will at least make you feel better.

    What is needed in America today at the political level, Brooks proceeds to explain, is a new style of “authoritative” leadership “What we truly require is a new vision from authoritative leaders for the purpose of our economy and public policy. By articulating a clear aim of restoring human dignity and expanding opportunity, authoritative leaders can create space for Americans to think about old problems in new ways.”

    If the above sounds noble and sympathetic, it’s also vague and, given the present state of our society, utter pie in the sky. What we have on our hand here is a classic prisoner’s dilemma. Kindness in the face of contempt can be perceived as weakness. Why should your side be the first to change its behavior? This is a serious problem, and it makes one pessimistic about the odds of this project of loving your enemies ever succeeding. Our national moral consensus has eroded, and the philosophical differences resulting from this are real. Liberals wish to reinterpret the Constitution to suit their political agenda and altogether banish religion to behind our front doors. And conservatives wish to stem this liberal tide by any legal means possible — which post-2016 means “Donald Trump”.

    This brings us to the other reason "Love Your Enemies" falls short It has surprisingly little to say about the causes of the bifurcation of our society it details. And the few things it does say leave the reader wanting for more.

    Brooks is an economist, and this background transpires when he takes a shot at explaining the trigger event which seems to have all but sealed our national divorce the ascendancy to the presidency of Donald Trump. “For decades,” the author relates,

    “conventional conservatives had emphasized issues such as entitlement reform, which is important for the solvency of the country but feels cold and remote to voters worried about losing their job and benefits. Meanwhile, the conventional political left focused on the “income gap” separating rich and poor. They contended that income inequality would ignite a new class struggle, causing unprecedented political turmoil. This was half right. There was indeed a gap in this country, but the relevant gap wasn’t income. It was dignity. … As the future fills with whiz-bang technologies, from artificial intelligence to driverless cars, one part of the population sees ingenuity, mobility, and progress. Another part hears, “We don’t need you anymore.” This is the dignity gap. … Even with strong economic growth, the United States has bifurcated into a nation of socioeconomic winners and losers, and this stratification is poisoning American culture.”

    Who are these losers? You guessed it “Lots of people of all races and classes, but to an especially large extent, it is working-class men.” Echoing J.D. Vance’s "Hillbilly Elegy", Brooks relays how the mortality rate among members of this group has been on the rise since 1999. “The main reasons? Cirrhosis of the liver (up 50 percent since 1999 among this group), suicide (up 78 percent), and drug overdoses, primarily of opiates (up 323 percent).” It’s the by now familiar heart-wrenching tune lamenting the sad plight of our nation’s working classes, and it needs no further explanation that these are the people who voted for Trump.

    That said, while I wouldn’t ignore the economic pains our working classes endure, I’d like to make the case that the battle is waged primarily over our culture, not economics. The problem is not just that these people feel like they’re no longer needed in our advanced economy, but that the cultural and political elites in our country disparage them as a sweaty bunch of gap-toothed, god-fearing and gun-toting yokels who are too dim-witted to acknowledge that, in order to save humanity from a climate change catastrophe, they’ll need to say bye-bye to their job on the oil rig in Texas or the coal mine in West Virginia. Another familiar theme is that politicians from Left to Right are consciously hurting the economic plight of the people they’re purporting to help by allowing hundreds of thousands of workers to enter the United States every year to work here, legally or not so legally.

    In post-truth America, the media can get away with actively undermining a democratically-elected president in a concerted effort to undo an election the outcome of which wasn’t to their liking. Colin Kaepernick could, without much criticism from those same media, bring his political fight over an otherwise legitimate cause to a supposedly non-political arena — the NFL — which collects the majority of its revenues from the very working classes Kaepernick would disparage as a gang of racists exercising their ‘white privilege’. And when Brett Kavanaugh was nominated to fill Anthony Kennedy’s Supreme Court seat, the Left unleashed a barrage of dirty tricks and hysteria that was unprecedented even by its own abominable standards. Did the Right pull similar stunts with Sotomayor and Kagan?

    Brooks is correct that contempt begets contempt, of course. It’s a vicious cycle, which explains why The Donald is our president today. The reason why the nastiness reached new lows during and after the 2016 campaign is because, unlike John McCain, Mitt Romney and all the others, Trump fought back and offered his base a sense of self-value; the prospect that, no, you are not obsolete, because we’re going to turn this thing around for you. And no, despite the well-nigh Orwellian claims to the contrary, Mexicans do not have a moral right to stampede our borders without consequences, and it’s not self-evident that ICE should be “abolished”.

    Looking at it from a different angle, these establishment attitudes on our culture didn’t emerge grass-roots in a cultural vacuum. They are the end result of ideas that originated on college campuses a long time ago. America isn’t torn apart by contempt. It’s torn apart by identity politics, which has pitted a thousand and one identity groups against white men as well as each other and so has unleashed a cold civil war that could usher in the end of the United States as we know it. But, since identity politics is the love child of Marxism and postmodernism (in other words, a product of the Left), Brooks is hesitant to broach this subject for fear of alienating half of his audience. So he resorts to boring generalities and offers up negative examples from both sides of the political spectrum in order to stay ‘balanced’.

    Consequently, as an exercise in establishing the root causes of our societal stratification, Love Your Enemies falls remarkably flat. Brooks is so busy tiptoeing around the easily offended to both his left and his right, so obsessed with his on-the-one-hand-but-on-the-other-hand illustrations supporting the argument he’s attempting to make, that it leaves the reader scratching his head in wonder if anything was deliberately left out beyond the author’s platitudes about Luke 632-35. It is obvious to any neutral observer, however, that the present cultural conflict is not symmetrical, but the result of an intellectual assault by the academic Left on institutions and ideas it deemed inhibitive of our individualism and rationality. We’re seeing liberalism coming to full fruition.

    In conclusion, "Love Your Enemies" is as inane as it is disappointing. It’s disappointing because the problem the book purports to deal with is real and deserving of our attention. But the problem is real not because of social media and our collective contempt (though these don’t help), but because of other intellectual and political forces upon which Brooks barely even touches. It turns out that, for all his personal faults, The Donald is a keener observer of our beloved America than Arthur Brooks. Imagine that.
  • This book's ideas are really no different from commercials put on TV by corporations trying to convince you that everyone who is in the corporation is part of a happy family, filled with love, and not a conniving outfit which the government needs to regulate. Let's stipulate that loving your neighbor in general is a great idea. But Arthur Brooks' whole long-standing approach, now on display for years, is all about telling people that somehow we shouldn't look all that carefully into the actual operations of business in the country, and instead concentrate on problems that are harder to pin down in society. Keep busy with that folks, while the business goes on and on unimpeded, no matter what they want to do. His writing shows a deadly shrewd sense of how to appear just-so in terms just enough sops to notions like welfare and human rights, yet all along basically creating a false sense of current society by averting eyes from the essentially coercive takeover of an authentic culture by big business. Asserting religious notions has long been a way keep people away from what one really wants to do, by people who really want to do it, and make money. Love it ain't. Further, the notions of toleration in this country never were based on vaunted religious notions, even when the country was more religious overall that it was today. It was, since the start of the Republic, based on Enlightenment notions that made more clear that civility was a better course than enmity. In fact, an argument can well be made that it is precisely because religious notions have been substituted in current society, that the actual civility of the Founders' vision has been jettisoned. Arthur Brooks' approach is thus part of what is leading people away from that Founding vision.
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Read Online Il piano delle cicale Mondifuturi Vol 1 Italian Edition edition by Tadako Okada Salvatore Mulliri Marco Pagot Children eBooks

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Anna Malva ha undici anni e vive nell’Istituto Gloriosa Alba da quando ne aveva cinque.
Anna è brava nel nuoto, ama leggere vecchi romanzi e guardare film antichi, è intelligente e curiosa, ma ha difficoltà a socializzare. Non brilla negli studi, in particolare nel corso di Simulazioni e Scenari di Maestro Roku.
Da qualche settimana si sveglia nel cuore della notte e rimane in piedi fino all’alba. Si sente sola da quando il suo migliore amico, Elias, è scomparso.
Su consiglio di Maestra Ichi, la sua insegnante dal primo anno all’Istituto, inizia a scrivere un diario. Presto però scopre che l’improvvisa sparizione di Elias non è l'unico mistero.
Dove vanno i ragazzi dopo l’Ottavo anno? Qual è la vera missione dei Maestri?
Per svelare i segreti dell’Istituto, Anna ricorre all’aiuto di due nuovi amici Pier e Sara. Si unisce al gruppo un enigmatico personaggio che sembra conoscere meglio di chiunque la storia dell’Istituto e il progetto per ripopolare il pianeta dopo l’apocalisse che ha spazzato via l'umanità e tutti i mammiferi ben quattro secoli prima.

Il Piano delle Cicale è una storia di intrigo, mistero e amicizia per ragazzi di tutte le età. Tempo di lettura 8-9 ore

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This audiobook is about finding meaning and adventure in your everyday life and discovering the road you were always meant to walk by best-selling author Leon Logothetis from the Netflix series The Kindness Diaries.

In the beginning, Leon's life was plotted out for him He was to do well in school, go to university, get a job in finance, and spend the next 50 years of his life sitting behind a slab of wood, watching the rain-slicked streets of London from 30 floors above. For a long time, he followed that script until he realized he was living someone else's life - a good one, but not one of his own choosing.

So he walked out of that life and discovered the one that took him around the world, literally. Since then, Leon has driven a broken-down English taxicab across America offering people free rides; ridden a vintage motorbike around the world; and followed a fellow traveler through India without ever knowing where he was going. He has visited more than 90 countries on every continent. Along the way, he learned something about the human spirit and about the heart of this world, including that he needed to shed his old ideas about who he was supposed to be in order to feel his soul rise to the surface and become the person he always longed to be.

Weaving together Leon's hilarious and heartwarming stories of his misadventures on the road will show you how to live fully and without regrets. And by opening yourself up to new adventures, by recognizing that you have the freedom to choose your own road, you'll find something else that has been hiding in plain sight You'll find the life of which you have always dreamed...and the curiosity and courage it takes to make that life happen.


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"If you want to gain inspiration for your retirement or life in general, this book is for you!"

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  • Audible Audiobook
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  • Version Unabridged
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Live Love Explore Discover the Way of the Traveler A Roadmap to the Life You Were Meant to Live Audible Audio Edition Leon Logothetis Ellery Truesdell Inc Bettie Youngs Book Publishers Books Reviews :


Live Love Explore Discover the Way of the Traveler A Roadmap to the Life You Were Meant to Live Audible Audio Edition Leon Logothetis Ellery Truesdell Inc Bettie Youngs Book Publishers Books Reviews


  • I really enjoyed this book. The great quotes, the excellent experiences as well as the anecdotes shared by the writer, guided me through a path of self-growth and enlightenment. There are many books similar to this, but differently from others it aims to a more focused and specific purpose. It can be used as an inspirational guide, but it can only simply be a leisure reading.
  • Leon has a casual and fun loving style in his writing. I’ve seen the entire Kindness Diaries series and loved every episode. I felt like this book was him actually speaking to me through the chapters. He wanders a bit in terms of the organization of the book, but it doesn’t deter from his point or message. I liked the questions and writing activities as I think it helps the reader really dig into themselves while reading, which for me is the whole point of a book like this. I loved the little quotes interjected as well, and how he presents them in the introduction as some we will like and others we won’t but that we should take time to ponder them and write down some that resonate with us. Leon seems like a guy you could have a beer with and talk to for hours, his book is a helpful guide to finding your next step in life. And as a Christian, I found it very similar to the path of Jesus and his teachings of love God (personal journey) and love your neighbor (share your love with others). We are all connected to a path in life, it’s finding the right one for us and finding someone who uses the right words to connect the dots for us—Leon has the words to reach a large audience and help them on their journey of self discovery.
  • I have been waiting and waiting for this book to come in the mail since I ordered it. I had no idea what to expect as I had never seen any of Leon’s books before.
    I got it today and it was such a great surprise! I love that the messages are clear, it is an engaging, self directed adventure for all ages which spurs people to move out of their comfort zones to connect with others.
    I bought two of these books and will likely be buying more to share. I discovered ‘The Kindness Diaries’ on Netflix about a week or so ago and was so excited about the message that I have also purchased Leon’s other books ‘Live, Love, Explore” and “The Kindness Diaries”.i can’t wait to dive into them!
    I am excited to share this book with friends colleagues and yes... maybe even the odd stranger!
  • Read an short chapter in Readers Digest and had to read the book. Everyone should give it a read. Excellent and highly engaging, read it in about 2 hours and then passed it along to a friend.
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  • Good book for anyone just thinking about starting to travel more. Some motivating lines about how travel changes a person and how it's good to get out of your comfort zone. Easy read.
  • Love this book! The author, Leon Logithetis, is insightful and inspirational and has helped me explore my life and how I can be the best version of myself. Thank you!
  • This is a fantastic book!
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Ebook La vie secrète de Bee Territoires French Edition edition by Sara WOLF Noémie SAINTGAL Children eBooks

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Pour garder sa bourse d'études, Bee doit espionner son pire ennemi...

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Read Online Mehr Follower auf Instagram mehr YouTube Abonnenten mehr Reichweite auf Facebook Bekannter werden Influencer werden und Geld damit verdienen für Unternehmen German Edition Thomas Crown Books

By Sisca R. Bakara

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Download Just Mercy A Story of Justice and Redemption Audible Audio Edition Bryan Stevenson Random House Audio Books

By Sisca R. Bakara on Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Download Just Mercy A Story of Justice and Redemption Audible Audio Edition Bryan Stevenson Random House Audio Books



Download As PDF : Just Mercy A Story of Justice and Redemption Audible Audio Edition Bryan Stevenson Random House Audio Books

Download PDF Just Mercy A Story of Justice and Redemption Audible Audio Edition Bryan Stevenson Random House Audio Books

Number-one New York Times best seller

A powerful true story about the potential for mercy to redeem us, and a clarion call to fix our broken system of justice - from one of the most brilliant and influential lawyers of our time

Soon to be a major motion picture starring Michael B. Jordan and Jamie Foxx

Named one of the Best Books of the Year by The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Seattle Times, Esquire, and Time 

Bryan Stevenson was a young lawyer when he founded the Equal Justice Initiative, a legal practice dedicated to defending those most desperate and in need the poor, the wrongly condemned, and women and children trapped in the farthest reaches of our criminal justice system. One of his first cases was that of Walter McMillian, a young man who was sentenced to die for a notorious murder he insisted he didn't commit. The case drew Bryan into a tangle of conspiracy, political machination, and legal brinksmanship - and transformed his understanding of mercy and justice forever. 

Just Mercy is at once an unforgettable account of an idealistic, gifted young lawyer's coming of age, a moving window into the lives of those he has defended, and an inspiring argument for compassion in the pursuit of true justice.

Winner of the Carnegie Medal for Nonfiction

Winner of the NAACP Image Award for Nonfiction

Winner of a Books for a Better Life Award

Finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize

Finalist for the Kirkus Reviews Prize

An American Library Association Notable Book

"Every bit as moving as To Kill a Mockingbird, and in some ways more so...a searing indictment of American criminal justice and a stirring testament to the salvation that fighting for the vulnerable sometimes yields." (David Cole, The New York Review of Books) 

"Searing, moving... Bryan Stevenson may, indeed, be America's Mandela." (Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times)

"You don't have to read too long to start cheering for this man.... The message of this book...is that evil can be overcome, a difference can be made. Just Mercy will make you upset and it will make you hopeful." (Ted Conover, The New York Times Book Review)

"Inspiring... a work of style, substance and clarity... Stevenson is not only a great lawyer, he's also a gifted writer and storyteller." (The Washington Post)

"As deeply moving, poignant and powerful a book as has been, and maybe ever can be, written about the death penalty." (The Financial Times)

"Brilliant." (The Philadelphia Inquirer)


Download Just Mercy A Story of Justice and Redemption Audible Audio Edition Bryan Stevenson Random House Audio Books


"When I first started reading this book I really had no idea what to expect or why I should even take the time to read it. My tendency is to put things into "liberal" and "conservative" buckets and this one seemingly fit into the liberal bucket and I am a professed conservative. I still am but I have to say that I was moved by this story beyond my expectations. There is indeed so much injustice in this world and there is plenty of opportunity for mercy; even mercy extended in unexpected places. The plight of the poor and downtrodden is overwhelming to consider and this book provided a reason to view people's circumstances before providing condemnation. I would wholeheartedly recommend reading it."

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 11 hours and 5 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Random House Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date October 21, 2014
  • Whispersync for Voice Ready
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B00O4D38GW

Read Just Mercy A Story of Justice and Redemption Audible Audio Edition Bryan Stevenson Random House Audio Books

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Just Mercy A Story of Justice and Redemption Audible Audio Edition Bryan Stevenson Random House Audio Books Reviews :


Just Mercy A Story of Justice and Redemption Audible Audio Edition Bryan Stevenson Random House Audio Books Reviews


  • When I first started reading this book I really had no idea what to expect or why I should even take the time to read it. My tendency is to put things into "liberal" and "conservative" buckets and this one seemingly fit into the liberal bucket and I am a professed conservative. I still am but I have to say that I was moved by this story beyond my expectations. There is indeed so much injustice in this world and there is plenty of opportunity for mercy; even mercy extended in unexpected places. The plight of the poor and downtrodden is overwhelming to consider and this book provided a reason to view people's circumstances before providing condemnation. I would wholeheartedly recommend reading it.
  • This book is a sad book. It had horrible stories about people that were done wrong by the people of that time. They were people of color, mentally ill people, and the system failed them. We all need to be aware of this and that it happens to ALL people. It doesn't just happen to black people. It happens to all people. What my rating means is that to bring this out to the forefront and to bring what has happened to the attention of many - doesn't mean you need to bash white people or make out the police to be the bad people. I am tired of this being the only way authors seem to be able to get a point across. Try another way and you will get the information to more people that aren't turned off to the rest of the message.
  • At its core, Bryan Stevenson's JUST MERCY is about the inherent inhumanity of the American justice system. As Stevenson puts it, "Presumptions of guilt, poverty, racial bias, and a host of other social, structural, and political dynamics have created a system that is defined by error, a system in which thousands of innocent people now suffer in prison." This is a system that condemns children to life imprisonment without parole, that makes petty theft a crime as serious as murder, and that has declared war on hundreds of thousands of people with substance abuse problems by imprisoning them and denying them help. Stevenson is an attorney with the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama, an organization that offers free legal services to the poor and disenfranchised. His book is a sobering look at criminal justice from the perspective of those least likely to be treated fairly.

    JUST MERCY explores a number of devastating cases, including children as young as fourteen facing life imprisonment, and scores of people on death row - mostly poor, and mostly black - who have been unfairly convicted. But the central focus is on Walter McMillan, a black man sentenced to death for the murder of a prominent young white woman. McMillan claimed he did not commit this crime, and he had a score of alibi witnesses, but he was quickly railroaded into both a conviction and a death sentence. Stevenson spent years working to get McMillan a new trial, and the two men remained connected throughout the remainder of McMillan's life. It's a fascinating case, one that involves perjury, police corruption, a racist judge, and prosecutors more intent on protecting their political positions than finding justice.

    Stevenson's thesis is that justice itself is denied for the millions of Americans who are poor, non-white, mentally ill, or otherwise disenfranchised. Ours is no longer a country that sees compassion as a virtue; instead, we write harsher and harsher laws that demand longer and longer sentences for those we consider undesirables. "The true measure of our character," Stevenson writes, "is how we treat the poor, the disfavored, the accused, the incarcerated, and the condemned." And by the final page of JUST MERCY, it is quite clear that we, as Americans, have fallen short.

    It's rare these days to meet someone who truly dedicates himself to those least able to help themselves, especially someone who isn't after media attention or self-promotion. Stevenson's tireless efforts to give solace to the many men and women on death row are both inspirational and affirming. He isn't successful in freeing all of his clients - more than a few are executed in spite of his pleas - but what he offers them is more than just legal support. He listens to them, takes them seriously, investigates in ways the police failed to do, and gives them a voice they had otherwise been denied. In the end, Stevenson writes, "we have to reform a system of criminal justice that continues to treat people better if they are rich and guilty than if they are poor and innocent." That's a tough lesson for a world too often motivated by money, power, and political position. The people Bryan Stevenson works for have no money, no power, and no political position, but they are human beings deserving of compassion and mercy. "Each of us is more than the worst thing we've ever done," Stevenson writes, adding, "the opposite of poverty is not wealth; the opposite of poverty is justice." As Americans, we can't be proud of our justice system until it offers justice to all of our people, and not only those with money and influence. It's a hard sell in today's mercenary, "me first" environment. But Stevenson's voice is one we all need to hear. JUST MERCY is a powerful and eye-opening book. I recommend it highly.
  • Everyone in America should read this book--what an eye opener! I had no idea that this type of justice was going on in America. Children as young as 13 years old being sent to prison for life without the possibility of parole--and for non-homicidal crimes! Women sent to prison for life for crib death babies when there is no proof that the mother was involved in the death. People on death row who were completely innocent of the crimes they were found guilty of committing. Prosecutors and other officials railroading innocent people to convictions and then giving them death penalties. Judges overruling juries who gave the convicted person life behind bars and instead putting them on death row. Bryan Stevenson has provided an outstanding view of some of the justice being handed out in parts of our country. Most of the people convicted are either extremely poor, of color, or both. Mr. Stevenson, you are an amazing human being for devoting your career to this cause.
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Read Online Skunk Works A Personal Memoir of My Years of Lockheed Audible Audio Edition Ben R Rich Leo Janos Pete Larkin Hachette Audio Books

By Sisca R. Bakara

Read Online Skunk Works A Personal Memoir of My Years of Lockheed Audible Audio Edition Ben R Rich Leo Janos Pete Larkin Hachette Audio Books





Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 12 hours and 8 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Hachette Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date July 14, 2015
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B011M8DBI6




Skunk Works A Personal Memoir of My Years of Lockheed Audible Audio Edition Ben R Rich Leo Janos Pete Larkin Hachette Audio Books Reviews


  • A fabulous accounting of, not only the development of the F-117 Stealth fighter, but also the extensive history and details surrounding the U-2 high Altitude photo recon flyer, as well as the SR-71 Blackbird. Lots of anecdotes, as well as personal observations by actual pilots and high government officials, regarding the efficacy and impact of these revolutionary aircraft. If you have any interest in the behind-the-scenes development of bleeding-edge technology, this book is a gem. I read it when it first came out, and finally realized I could no longer locate my original copy, so, I purchased this replacement. It was everything I remembered. Contains some good black and white photos, as well as enough numbers to be impressive. (SR-71 on it's final Record-setting flight, covered the entire the continental US with a single, continuous, sonic boom).
    Primarily focusing on the F-117 Stealth, it has sizable portions devoted to the U-2, and the SR-71 Mach 3 Spy Planes. Truly incredible developments in the World of Aviation.
    A great read.
  • Mr. Rich gives a unique perspective on the legendary Lockheed Martin Skunkworks and it's equally legendary manager. From the narrative you get a really good feel for the culture of the place and why it was so successful. My goal in reading this book was to get practical tips for building successful teams and I think I got some ideas
    (1) Eliminate bureaucracy
    (2) Prefer having a small with high average talent to a larger less talented team
    (3) Make sure different functions are physically next to each and communicate incessantly
    (4) Shield the team from external pressure
    (5) Challenge the team with "impossible" problems that get talented people excited.

    These are all things that can help a small talented team far outperform a larger team with a much bigger budget.
  • The author of the book,Ben Rich led the Skunk Works design team after Clarence Kelly Johnson retired in 1975. Ben talks about the development of Have Blue which would later become the F-117 Nighthawk or the Stealth Fighter. The book also talks about the U-2 spy plane and its being shot down over the Soviet Union. It also tells how Clarence Kelly Johnson gave Francis Gary Powers, the pilot shot down in the U-2 incident, a job at Lockheed working on the U-2, which Powers accepted. The next plane that is talked about in length is the famous SR-71 Blackbird and its development. To date, the SR-71 is the only air breathing jet plane to have flown at Mach 3 speeds. Sure,the X-15 was faster but the X-15 used rocket propulsion instead of jet power The D-21 drone is also talked about briefly. The D-21 was a drone built by Lockheed to be launched from a modified A-12 but this was scrapped after one of the drones collided with the mothership M-21 at launch, causing the loss of the drone, aircraft, and one of the two crew. The project was later revived and the D-21 would be launched from B-52 bombers but it was cancelled again because of lack of success as no drones were recovered with their photographs. The book talks briefly about the Sea Shadow. The Sea Shadow was a ship built by Lockheed to determine how to develop stealth for a ship. The book has events in Ben's life like the passing of Kelly Johnson as well as the passing of Ben's wife Faye. Ben Rich died in 1995 of cancer but the Skunk Works still lives on today. This book is a great read and I highly recommend it to anyone who is curious about the Skunk Works, its people and the aircraft it created
  • SO. GOOD. As an engineer, I found this book to be fascinating. It's basically a narrative about several skunk works projects like the U-2 and F117 interspersed with tons of insane and interesting side stories by people involved (mostly test pilots).

    Here's one example. One engineer was formulating a new fuel for the U-2 that would work in the high altitude engine. The fuel was called LF something or other, and there was a running joke that that stood for "Lighter Fluid" due to it's awful smell. Chemically it was actually more similar to one of the main ingredients in the bug spray "Flit", which was popular at the time. The year they put the (still very top-secret) U2 into service, there was an unexplained nationwide shortage of bug-spray.
  • "Skunk Works" is the popular moniker of Lockheed Martin's top, top secret aircraft aircraft program for the US government. This book is written by the second director of this program, Ben Rich. The book's primary focus is the U-2, F-117A, and last but not least the SR-71. A ship for the Navy, and a drone program are briefly covered also. Ben Rich is credited for developing and building "stealth" into military assets. Primarily aircraft. After Francis Gary Powers was shot down piloting a U-2 over Soviet Russia, it quickly became apparent that a faster, higher flying and stealthy aircraft was needed. Hence the SR-71. It can travel in the atmosphere at a height of nearly 90,000 feet. It can cruise at well over Mach 3, and has a Radar profile of about a ball-bearing (thus "Stealthy"). This book is fascinating and gives you a first-person account of these extraordinary aircraft. The F-117 flew over the center of Baghdad, without fighter escorts; and dropped 2,000 lb. bombs during the Iraq war. The U-2 is the only one out of the three that is still flying missions. As a matter of fact, a U-2 just recently crashed in California.
More aboutRead Online Skunk Works A Personal Memoir of My Years of Lockheed Audible Audio Edition Ben R Rich Leo Janos Pete Larkin Hachette Audio Books