Austin Reviews


Related Subjects: Abarth
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Book reviews for "Austin" sorted by average review score:

I Know Absolutely Nothing About Tennis: A Tennis Player's Guide to the Sport's History, Equipment, Apparel, Etiquette, Rules, and Language (I Know Absolutely Nothing About Series)
Published in Hardcover by Rutledge Hill Press (June, 1997)
Authors: Tracy Austin and Steve Eubanks
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Average review score:

great seller...i really appreciate it.
great seller...i really appreciate it. fast shipping

A quick, fun way to get a cram course on tennis.
I wasn't looking to buy the book when I went to the bookstore, but was struck by its nifty teal-colored cover that included a raised print of little tennis rackets. Cool! I have played a little tennis and seen and heard Tracy Austin on tennis telecasts, so I went ahead and bought the book. The nice thing about it is that it's not bogged down in a lot of technical jargon about how to hit shots. Instead it covers basics like terminology, the rules, etiquette, what clothes to wear, how to pick out a racquet, where to find the best instruction, and so forth. Also, it's not dry. All the book's info comes out in a fictional story that drives the book, telling of a tennis novice (Stacy, who's not to be confused with Tracy, I assume) who has moved to a new town and decides to take up tennis to make new friends. To get prepared, she goes to a tennis club and gets shuffled from expert to expert, each telling her the ins and outs of a particular aspect of tennis. Stacy's is a cute story and a neat way of getting all this stuff across. I don't know how much of the writing is Austin's and how much is Eubanks's, but it's pretty funny at times and certainly informative. It is also accompanied by notepad doodles and drawings, sort of reminiscent of the O.J. Simpson Legal Pad book that came out two years ago. Some of the drawings are a bit lame, but the book is definitely useful. A glossary in back is especially helpful as a reference tool. This book probably won't teach you how to play tennis like Tracy Austin, but it sure will allow you to understand and enjoy it more.


Ibn Al Arabi: The Bezels of Wisdom
Published in Hardcover by Paulist Press (December, 1988)
Authors: R. W. J. Austin and Ibn
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The Truth behind the Wisdom
This is a book that, at first, shatters all your dogmas about Islam and the search for the Reality (God), and then rebuilds your faith in the most beautiful way. ibn Arabi was the first of the Sufis to write openly about a knowledge closly held by mystics of old. His book Bezels of Wisdom, therefore, broke new ground by revealing to the world the Real truths behind the Wisdom sent to each Prophet.

Ibn' Al Arabi's "The Master of All Sufi Masters" Last Work
One of the greatest saints to bless this earth, the emminent Ibn' Al Arabi, peace be with him, delves into the innermost realm of the human soul. Divulging divine secrets through the lives of the Prophets (Peace be upon all of them), eternal wisdoms are sure to expand your heart.


Illustrated Guide to Taping Techniques
Published in Paperback by Mosby (June, 1994)
Authors: Karin A. Austin, Kathryn A. Gwynn-Brett, and Sarah C. Marshall
Amazon base price: $31.00
Average review score:

Illustrated Guide to Taping Techniques
Since reading Illustrated Guide to Taping Techniques I have learned many different techniques used to tape a wide range of body parts and injuries. The information in this book is far more valuable then the money I payed for it. In addition to being very indepth with the tapings it also has sections that describe on what injuries the taping should be used and how to tell which taping to do before you apply any tape.

Illustrated guide to Taping Techniques gets thumbs up
Illustrated Guide To Taping Techniques is a very thorough and complete sports taping manual. It covers all taping, from the basic preventative taping to the more advanced injury specific taping. What I like about the book is that while it is concise, you do not have to be a physiotherapist to understand it. It gives easy to follow instructions along with labelled pictures of the techniques. This book is a must for anybody working as a sports trainer or remedial therapist and is very reasonably priced. I give this book my thumbs up and it certainly goes into the most used book pile in my collection.


The Improbable Rise of Redneck Rock
Published in Paperback by DaCapo Press (December, 1977)
Authors: Jan Reid and Melinda Wickman
Amazon base price: $9.95
Collectible price: $34.99
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Lost In Austin
An amazing overview of the early years of Austin Texas' ascension as a thriving American music centre that joined rednecks and hippies together into a communal musical mishmash that revitalized country music for the better, and sowed the seeds for today's No Depression alternative-country scene. Joyfully poignant stories on early luminaries like Kenneth Threadgill, the fateful establishment of Armadillo World Headquarters, and Willie Nelson's eternal stamp on Austin as the in-house musical Jesus. Many fascinating profiles on people like Michael Murphey, Kinky Friedman, and other important artists either ignored or forgotten. The story is told with wry wit and a gripping style that paints a loud, colourful, wonderfully dusty picture of Austin's cosmic cowboy scene of 1973-74. A must for archivists and historians, a good read for the curious country fan, and an all-around amazing piece of music journalism that reads more like Hunter Thompson than Ian Tyson.

Account of the 70's "progressive country" scene.
Jan Reid's fascinating account of the rise of the "Outlaw Country" scene of the 1970's will more than hold the interest of folks who were into the Austin scene of the time, as well as those who have only recently discovered some of the singer-songwriters from that period via covers of their work by Lyle Lovett and other artists.

Reid's book explains why Austin has long been an island of culture and tolerance in Texas, and how that atmosphere set the stage for a burgeoning music scene. He chronicles the rise of artists who went on to varying degrees of mainstream success, such as Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Michael Martin Murphey, and Jerry Jeff Walker. He also tells the story of artists who once seemed on the precipice of stardom, only to fade into relative obscurity as the sun set on the era of "redneck rock": Willis Alan Ramsey, Steve Fromholz, Rusty Wier, Bobby Bridger, B.W. Stevenson, and Kinky Friedman (who reached a level of success as a novelist which surpassed that of his music career).

This is a readable, enjoyable book. Well worth a look.


Introduction to Engineering Programming: In C, Matlab and Java
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (01 February, 1999)
Authors: Mark Austin and David Chancogne
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Very Well Written....
This book is very well put together. The material is presented in, at times, a jovial manner(hard to do with an instructional computer text). It's easy to understand and the authors have an incredible grasp on the subject matter.

wow it was so romantic
I loved the part where the little dog got run over by the truck and little billy ran after him


It's About Time: America's Imprisonment Binge
Published in Paperback by Wadsworth Publishing (14 June, 2000)
Authors: James Austin and John Irwin
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Brilliant Research
ITS ABOUT TIME co-authored by Austin and Irwin, based on cutting edge research,
is the single most important book on the problems with American imprisonment. The authors use orginal research
to discuss the imprisonment binge, who goes to prison, imprisonment of children and women, private prisons,
doing time, super max, release, and three strikes and you're out. The book has been widely adopted for
both undergraduate and graduate courses at universities across the country. This is the book every lawmaker should read and consider before they vote to spend another dime of the taxpayers money on new prison construction. The research demonstrates that the dramatic increase in prison population is predicated on the imprisonment of individuals for petty crimes, drug offenses, and technical violations of probation and parole. Meanwhile, the inner-city schools of America are denied adequate funding, the streets are no safer, and millions of children wait for the parents to return home from prison.

I highly recommend this book for the truth about prison.
At last I have found a book which takes a realistic look at the problems of crime and prison. I taught Texas inmates for eight years during the recent prison expansion. People were usually surprised when I told them how much I enjoyed teaching inmates. The longer I worked in prison, the more I became concerned about the misinformation, based on fear instead of fact, which the public had been receiving from the news media and politicians. In order for our society to survive, we must stop reacting emotionally and start thinking rationally about solutions which will make a lasting difference in a positive way. Prison expansion in the United States has cost taxpayers millions of dollars for the buildings alone. But the price in human terms is far greater. This book is essential reading for every citizen who is concerned about how our government is spending tax dollars. Lorna Rios


The Johnny Callison Story
Published in Hardcover by Vantage Press (November, 1991)
Authors: John Wesley Callison, John Austin Sletten, and Johnny Callison
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A trip through the 1960s, a good baseball book
I just purchased the new softback edition today. Great color photo of Johnny on the cover - 1964 style. I read the chapter "Callison for President" twice. It's a complete reliving of the 1964 season, which was my favorite even though we lost. The book takes us through the entire decade of the 60s, which brought back a lot of good memories for me. It's a must read book.

Fantastic - baseball nostalgia!!
Mr. John Sletten's biography of Mr. Callison is not your typical baseball 'fact' or 'stats' book. It is a truly marvelous story of a pre-million dollar contract player and his rise from poverty to MVP. Anyone with an interest in the 'old' baseball and its heros will love it!!

Martin Brandise Fan


The Kill Fee of Cindy Lacoste (The Austin Stoner Files Series)
Published in Paperback by Crossway Books (July, 1997)
Author: Stephen A. Bly
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A rip, roarin' ride!
It takes a near miracle to get this NY editor and her rodeo cowboy to the altar safe and sound, especially when their engagement goes bust two weeks before the wedding because of a surprise that doesn't sit well with the bride-to-be. But the couple teams up when their friend Cindy runs off with no explanation. Five states, three vehicles, two horse trailers, and a one-ton bull later, they locate her. But their troubles are far from over. Love, love these two!

A GREAT FOLLOWUP after the two first...
If you read the two first of the AUSTIN-STONER-Files' books, by Stephen Bly - why are you still wondering if you're going to buy this one? It's entertaining, it's funny, it's good, it's great, it's even more. Have a good laugh.


M. Tulli Ciceronis Pro M. Caelio Oratio
Published in Paperback by Clarendon Pr (June, 1988)
Authors: Marcus Tullius Cicero and R. G. Austin
Amazon base price: $32.00
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hic liber legendus est.
This is a great book! I have been using it all semester in my 300-level Latin course, and I cannot emphasize enough how helpful I have found it. Austin's is considered the preeminent commentary on the Pro Caelio among the faculty at my school, and I would venture to guess that the same applies just about anywhere else. The Pro Caelio is a speech which was delivered by the famed Roman orator, Marcus Tullius Cicero, in defense of Marcus Caelius, a personal friend accused of attempted murder. This text is not a translation and is not intended for reading by those without a grounding in the fundamentals of Latin grammar and syntax. In this edition of the Pro Caelio, the author provides alternate readings of the Latin text in footnotes at the bottom of each page. (Disparities between the medieval codices by which this work was passed down to us are common). He assigns each codex a Greek letter at the beginning of the book which serves to identify, in abbreviated form, the text which the alternate reading is ascribed to. This makes finding alternate readings -- and thus starting arguments over the meaning of a passage -- quite easy. Also provided, in endnotes which follow an unbroken presentation of the Latin text, are Austin's personal commentaries on certain passages. These range from very short to sometimes two pages in length, depending on the passage's importance and perceived difficulty. These notes provide a glimpse into the history behind the dramatic trial. I would recommend this book to any Classics scholar, beginning or advanced. For once, one of my course books will find a permanent home on my bookshelf instead of at the used bookstore after finals week!

Legendus est!
This book is the culmination of years of dedicated Oxford scholarship which has resulted in a masterful commentary on Cicero's Pro Caelio. I just started using this text in my advanced Latin class, and have found it far superior to even the exceptional Ciraolo text I used previously. The print is small, and the glosses and comments are placed in endnotes instead of footnotes, which makes the whole thing rather cumbersome. But oh, what marvelous information is to be found in those notes! Austin cites every major authority (up to 1959) on even the minutest of details and pits conflicting theories against each other, and then adds his own frequently curt pronouncements on the subject -- but always leaves the reader to make up his own mind. He makes certain to note where the various medieval codices diverge, even if there is only a scintilla of difference in the phrasings of a passage. This again shows his dedication to scholarship and letting the reader make up his own mind. This is THE definitive commentary on the Pro Caelio, for this is the place where you will find all the great Classicists of the ages gathered for one great symposium; it is the gateway to all the more specialized scholarship and a great general overview of them all.


The Magic May Return
Published in Paperback by Ace Books (June, 1993)
Authors: Larry Niven and Alicia Austin
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The Possible Return of a Lost Resource
The Magic May Return is a collection of short fantasy stories based on a common theme. Each tale involves the concept that magic, once prevalent on Earth, has now become at best an extreme rarity, having been exhausted through use. However, each story also raises, in its own way, the possibility that the loss of magic may not be permanent (hence the collection's title). The only exception to this is "Not Long Before the End" which is set in the time before the magic was used up.

This is a delightful collection of stories which is sure to entertain.

Niven is brilliant, Alicia Austin's illustrations fabulous
ONCE THERE WAS MAGIC IN THE WORLD....Unlimited magic, enough magic for every wizard's son who ever wished to cast a spell. But the "mana;' the power that makes the magic and fuels the spells, is drying up, a natural resource wasted by centuries of careless and short-sighted magicians. In The Magic Goes Away master fantasist Larry Niven chronicled the end of an age, and the beginning of a new world where steel and muscle rule. In this eagerly awaited sequel, Larry Niven has invited Poul Anderson, Steve Barnes, Mildred Downey Broxon, Dean Ing and Fred Saberhagen into his world to tap the hidden reserves of mana and uncover the forgotten places of power. All is not lost. The magic may return. Illustrated by Hugo winner Alicia Austin.


Related Subjects: Abarth
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