The Promise: God's Purpose and Plan for When Life Hurts Review

The Promise: God's Purpose and Plan for When Life Hurts
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`Why does God allow suffering?' - a painful question that is addressed in a compassionate, and even refreshing, way in this special book. I like to describe it as sitting down with a friend over a cup of coffee - `The Promise' is uplifting, encouraging and resonating with hope. Although this book may be directed at those going through a crisis or a difficult life experience, I think this would be an excellent read for anyone, at any stage of life, for those who consider faith important and those who do not.
I feel this book succeeds on three levels - Father Morris does an effective job in discussing both faith and reason as it relates to loss, suffering and why there is evil in the world. He also draws upon his experiences in counseling people and visiting various global `hot spots' as a journalist, which makes this book contemporary and intriguing from that perspective. I especially liked 'Letters from My In-Box' which are sprinkled throughout the book -- actual e-mails from readers of his column. Finally, Father Morris offers practical ideas and suggestions meant to enable you to better handle whatever life throws your way; he does this both in answering the heart-felt e-mails which he shares, but also in a special chapter at the end of the book.
I highly recommend this energetic and intelligent book; those who read it will definitely be blessed and will probably find that their faith has grown as well. It is clear through this book that this young priest has a heart for God and for others; I hope there will be more books from him.


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Generation WTF: From What the #$%& to a Wise, Tenacious, and Fearless You: Advice on How to Get There from Experts and WTFers Just Like You Review

Generation WTF: From What the #$%and to a Wise, Tenacious, and Fearless You: Advice on How to Get There from Experts and WTFers Just Like You
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I am a college student, and I believe that Whelan has done a great job with this book. I received a copy of Generation WTF before it came out, and I have been using the book for about two months now. As a college student, I can tell you before I read this book I had no idea who Dale Carnegie or David Bach was, and I would have never known their ideas if I didn't read this book. In a world where we are being told to operate at 100mph and do so many things at once, this book slows it all down for us. Setting the goals, preparing, and figuring yourself out are all things that need to be done to be successful and are all overlooked these days. One part that I really found meaningful was creating a "personal mission statement". This last year I have been trying to figure out where I want to go and what I want to do after college, and I have been all over the place. When I figure out what my core values are and my sense of purpose, I believe figuring out what direction to take will be very simple. I am so happy and thankful that there is finally a book that gives advice directed at my generation. Generation WTF is not like other self help books, it compiles great advice I would have not otherwise known about, and makes it relevant and useful to me and my generation today.

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We all know what "WTF" usually stands for: it's an exclamation of frustration and anger, and it's an understandable reaction to the tough new economic realities that have hit young adults harder than any other group. WTF happened to promises of a bright future? What happened to the jobs? And what do we do now that the rules have changed?

Recent college grads were raised in a time of affluence and entitlement, lulled into thinking that a golden future would just happen. With few role models to teach values like thrift, perseverance, and self-control, young adults are ill-equipped to cope with sacrifice and failure, and their dismal employment prospects are merely the most visible symptom of greater challenges.

Fortunately, it's not too late to change course. This optimistic, introspective, and technologically savvy generation already possesses many of the tools they need to thrive—if only they learn to harness the necessary skills for success.

In Generation WTF, Christine Whelan does just that. Dr. Whelan, one of the foremost authorities on the history of the self-help genre, worked with more than one hundred young people to test and tweak the very best old-school advice and personalize it for the modern twenty-something. After a decade of researching the industry—and years advising "WTFers" as they struggle to make their way in the "real world"—Dr. Whelan knows firsthand what advice works and what Generation WTF has to offer.

Rather than focusing on the frustration that "WTF" usually stands for, Dr. Whelan leads the charge to reclaim the acronym as a battle cry for a positive future: Generation WTF will be a wise, tenacious, and fearless generation, strengthened by purpose and hope. This practical new guide will show these WTFers the way to success and instill lasting habits that will serve them well in both good times and bad.




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RTI from All Sides: What Every Teacher Needs to Know Review

RTI from All Sides: What Every Teacher Needs to Know
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Mary cautions against using scripted programs that sound good and take many things into consideration...... EXCEPT the individual needs of the children. I love the quote, "If the time and energy used to promote scripts were spent on training reading teachers, I have no doubt we would make remarkable gains."
We have way too many children being referred for special ed. The book not only describes the three tiers of RTI as a way of reducing that number, but it also gives tips and support for implementing expert teaching in each tier. RTI and Mary Howard's book can help us stem the tide!

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To listen to Mary Howard's podcast "Principles for Success with RTI" click here.


This book is desperately needed in districts and state departments everywhere. It is loaded with interventions that are right for kids and right for the educators who serve them. It profiles RTI as a framework for increasing intentional instruction...keeping the emphasis on knowledgeable educators rather than "programs." If this book could become a prerequisite to implementation, I fully believe that the goals of RTI may well be realized.

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Lord, Save Us From Your Followers: Why is the Gospel of Love Dividing America? Review

Lord, Save Us From Your Followers: Why is the Gospel of Love Dividing America
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Lord, Save Us From Your Followers will challenge your comfortable Christianity. Dan Merchant and Jeff Martin spent months traveling and interviewing a variety of people from all walks of life to get a picture of what the American culture thinks of Christians and of Jesus. What they found will likely offend many Christian readers...not because its untrue or offensive but because it is painful to see what the secular world's image of us really is.
In one of the most powerful chapters of the book Dan takes a page out of Don Miller's (author of Blue Like Jazz) playbook and sets up a confessional booth at Pride NorthWest...not to hear the confessions of the people there but to confess to them his sins and the sins of the church universal as it pertains to our treatment of the homosexual community. Reading that reminded me how much power honest confession and seeking forgiveness has to heal.
This is something that the church has forgotten. We claim we believe 1 John 1:9 and James 5:16 but we don't live as if we do. We hide behind our stained glass walls and we pretend to the world we have it all together. Its no surprise that one of the most commonly occurring answers to the question Dan poised, "Name something Christians are known for?" was "Hypocrisy."
The book is written as a series of collected experiences, much like an anthology of short stories, I liked that I could jump around and read what caught my attention and not lose the thread of the story. I can't wait to see the full version of the documentary. I hope Dan succeeds in sparking the conversations he hopes to...the Church needs to have them and this book is a great starting point.

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Why is the Gospel of Love dividing America?Fed up with the angry, strident language filling the airwaves that has come to represent the Christian faith, author, director, and follower Dan Merchant set out to explore the collision of faith and culture in America. What is all this fighting really about?The book and upcoming documentary represent a two-year effort to "join the battlefield in hopes of getting a conversation started."The result is a book full of offbeat observations, fun anecdotes, comedic bits and in-depth interviews. From Dan's hilarious bumper-sticker interviews with folks on the street to his unique "Confession Booth" event inspired by his meeting with Tony, the Beat Poet, from Blue Like Jazz, he delves into all the hot button issues with candor, humor and balance.
Includes exclusive interviews with Al Franken, Rick Santorum, Tony Campolo, conservative radio host Michael Reagan, USA Today columnist Tom Krattenmaker, Pastor Rick Warren, and even Sister Mary Timothy of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence as well as many more.

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The Message That Comes From Everywhere: Exploring the Common Core of the World's Religions and Modern Science Review

The Message That Comes From Everywhere: Exploring the Common Core of the World's Religions and Modern Science
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Gary Beckwith noticed that, although there were a lot of books that dealt with the underlying thematic unity of the world's religions, there weren't any really good _introductory_ books on the subject. So he wrote one.
He did a nice job. His presentation is clear without being oversimplified, and he gets the point across without overstating it.
The central theme of the book is that God is One in a deep theological sense -- that, ultimately, reality itself consists of One Mind, omnipresent, all-pervading, describable as both "love" and "light," and present in some special manner in the human soul. This message Beckwith finds not only in all the world's religions but also in modern science.
Beckwith himself was raised Jewish and picked up on this theme when he heard the Shema in synagogue one day ("Shema Yisrael, Adonai Eloheinu Adonai Echad," or "Hear, Israel, Adonai our God, Adonai is one"). Somewhat alienated from his childhood faith, he'd been practicing meditation under the instruction of Lawrence LeShan's 1974 book _How to Meditate_ (an excellent book, by the way) -- and upon hearing the Shema in a new way, he began to wonder whether "God is One" referred to the "oneness" reached via meditation.
So he started checking around. And what he found was that, not only did Judaism teach this very "oneness," but so did all the other religions he could find.
Perhaps surprisingly, he learned (mostly, it seems, through Fritjof Capra's _The Tao of Physics_) that modern science taught something remarkably similar. So there's a chapter here on science as well. The discoveries of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi library seem to shed some light on the nature of Near Eastern religion during the period when Judaism and Christianity split (and thereby demonstrate that this common message was once less deeply buried than it now is), so he devotes a chapter to these texts as well. A pair of closing chapters suggest that this common teaching can also be found in our everyday lives and that it tells us something about why we're here.
The whole presentation is well handled and filled with examples of "parallel" sayings from the various religions and wisdom traditions. And it will probably provide a helpful jolt to the reader who hasn't previously encountered the "message that comes from everywhere."
And to his great credit, Beckwith doesn't try to insist that all religions are identical in every respect. First of all, it's only too obvious that they're not; Beckwith limits the commonality to a set of "core" teachings, not to every single aspect of every single religion. Moreover, he's careful to describe the parallels as similarities rather than identities -- and strictly speaking, every similarity that falls short of identity is also a difference. So in Beckwith's hands, the world's religions don't all ooze together into some sort of undifferentiated grey goo; each retains its own character and identity, ringing its own particular changes on the underlying message of unity.
That means it can be read by an adherent of any faith or none. And _that_ means it's well suited to Beckwith's overarching purpose: promoting peace by emphasizing the common message of religion and science. His hope is that, rather than insisting that one religion is right and all the others therefore just fancy ways of going to hell, we may be able to recognize with respect that there is a truth common to all religions.
This book is best read, I think, by someone to whom this common-core-of-religions stuff is fairly new (and of course that's Beckwith's purpose in writing it). Beckwith also includes a helpful bibliography full of suggestions for further reading. But as Beckwith himself will tell you, there won't be much new here for the reader who has already covered this ground. His primary aim is to spread the word, not to cement our understanding of it.
My own recommendations, for whatever they're worth: depending on your interests, you could follow up with Larry Dossey's _Recovering the Soul_, Huston Smith's _Forgotten Truth_, John Hick's _An Interpretation of Religion_, Aldous Huxley's _The Perennial Philosophy_, Alan Watts' _The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are_, Douglas Harding's _On Having No Head_, any of Stephen Mitchell's translations of the world's spiritual literature, or (for children) Etan Boritzer's _What Is God?_. (I've reviewed several of these.)
There are lots of others, of course, and many of them are more specific to certain religious traditions than the handful I suggested (for example, Rabbi David Aaron's _Seeing God_). But if you're new to this literature, you can feel safe starting with Beckwith's book; it's very well done.

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For centuries, the world's religions have squabbled over their differences. At times it escalates and there are wars or even terrorist acts like we've recently seen. Some say there will never be peace because of the disparity between the religions and their teachings.But if we choose to focus on the similarities between the religions, we find they outweigh the differences. In fact, there seems to be an underlying message that all the world's religions share.In his timely new book, author Gary Beckwith does just that - based on ten years of research he explores the similarities rather than the differences. Included in the discussion are the scientific discoveries of our time that seem to validate the message of the religions.News reports and commentaries today often mention that Islam, Judaism, and Christianity are connected and share similar teachings, but what are the specifics? The book uses plain language and specific examples of how all the religions agree, including Eastern religions like Hinduism, Buddhism, and Taoism.Many have commented that what the world needs now is peace between the religions. The first step is learning about the similarities, and this book (published a mere 10 days before the tragic terrorist events in New York and Washington) can certainly play a role in that effort. Reading it will give you a new perspective on religion, and a renewed hope for world peace.

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Simplify, Simplify and Other Quotations from Henry David Thoreau Review

Simplify, Simplify and Other Quotations from Henry David Thoreau
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While this is a helpful collection of Thoreau's thoughts, it should be pointed out that the claim by Midwest Book Reviews is a little off base. The book, Thoughts of Thoreau, by Edwin Way Teale was published and then re-issued several years ago. It is the single best collection of Thoreau quotes to date. They are arranged by a long list of categories that the reader finds most user friendly. Not to take away from the book in question, this is only submitted to set the record straight.Tom Potter

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The Upside of Fear: How One Man Broke the Cycle of Prison, Poverty, and Addiction Review

The Upside of Fear: How One Man Broke the Cycle of Prison, Poverty, and Addiction
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The Upside of Fear: How One Man Broke the Cycle of Prison, Poverty, and Addiction by Weldon Long is one of those books that looked interesting for review purposes, but I initially said no due to my horrible backlog piles of books to be read. But after about four different emails from unrelated sources on the book, I thought that perhaps someone was trying to tell me something. I received my copy and started reading it one night as I was suffering from a bit of insomnia (nothing new there!) I quickly found that I couldn't put it down, both for Long's story, and for the lessons contained within it. The book touched me on a number of levels.
In short, Long was a life-long "loser" who drank himself into over a decade of time spent behind bars. After dropping out of school in the 9th grade, he quickly became an alcoholic who was not willing to work hard at anything in life. He was always after that next get-rich-quick scheme, while drinking away most of the money that his girlfriend/wife earned at her job. This constant need for money without effort finally led him to pick up a hitchhiker and plan an armed robbery to get a quick score. That wasn't the start of his downhill slide (he was already sinking), but it *was* the accelerator that pushed him to even lower depths.
He was quickly apprehended for that crime, and was sentenced to ten years. As with most sentences, he was able to get out early while swearing to himself he was going to change for the better, in order to be a better father to his baby boy. But the patterns were already ingrained, and he went back to robbery to get his next cash infusion. He was pulled over while planning another heist, and the police found him in possession of a firearm along with tools that could be used (and would have been) for his next crime. This parole violation sent him back into the system, but he was able to dodge any responsibility for the prior crimes as they couldn't tie him to the acts. You'd think by now he'd start thinking about how to *really* change his life, but that was not to be. With his next release, he was again back to drinking, drugs, and telemarketing fraud. All this finally caught up with him, and he ended up back in jail once again, this time facing the possibility of spending the rest of his life behind bars. It was then that a transformation started to occur...
He reached out to a Higher Power and asked for help in turning things around. It was at that point that he started to understand that *he* was responsible for what had happened to him in life, and he had the choice on how to respond to his circumstances. He started to read a number of personal improvement books, taking the lessons to heart. Most importantly, he started to own up and take responsibility for his past actions. This didn't mean that all of a sudden his life got rosy. But it did give him a purpose and guiding principles to continue his personal growth and to pursue his life goals he was now focused on.
Long story short, he's now a free man, with all his crimes paid for. He's met and surpassed his goals he set for himself in prison, such as to become a good father to his son Hunter, to learn how to have a healthy relationship with a woman, to actually purchase and own a home, and to help others learn how to they too can change. He's gone from a burden on society, a person destined to live and die behind bars, to a productive member of society who is making a valuable contribution in the lives of many others who are walking the same path he was.
As I mentioned in the opening, this was a touching story. It shows that no one is beyond help or without value, and that it's possible for anyone to turn their lives around if they start to understand some basic principles of living. I was also once again reminded of the power of written goals, both short and long term. It's far too easy to make mental promises that don't have any concrete backing behind them. This is a lesson I still struggle with myself. And finally, the epilogue actually caused me to tear up a bit. The scene between Long and Hunter, reviewing the letters he wrote to him while in prison, is so very moving...
Some will probably read this and get hung up on the philosophies from people like Tony Robbins and Wayne Dyer. But the fact remains that there *is* wisdom there, and those things did transform Long's life. I would highly recommend this on both an inspirational/motivational level and on a teaching level. If you can get your young teens to read something like this, they might just hesitate a bit before making decisions that will cause them years of heartache and pain.

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Writers Digest Grand Prize Winner for Best Self-Published Book
Winner of the 2009 New York Book Festival's award in the Biography/Autobiography category
Runner-up for the 2009 Hollywood Book Festival's award in the Biography/Autobiography category
From the brutality of violent street crime to the compassion of a loving father for his son, this powerful memoir takes you from desperation to inspiration through the transformation of a drug-addled criminal into a fully realized, successful man.
The Upside of Fear exposes you to the harsh reality of a criminal life and creates a riveting portrait of true crime at its fundamental level--from buying the duct tape for an armed robbery to saving the life of a prison guard. Long recounts his harrowing journey of self-discovery and how he went from being a drunk in a jail cell to the CEO of a multimillion dollar business. Twenty years of drinking, drugging, robbing, and lying led him to more than a decade of time spent in prisons, jails, and halfway houses--and a strained relationship with a son he barely knew.
Through the revealing perspective of an eloquent criminal, you will learn how to change fear into a positive motivating force and use the mind to strengthen the will, even in the bleakest of circumstances. Long's story demonstrates that love can redeem even the most hopeless criminal, and that there can be no emotions stronger than the desire for redemption and the love of a father separated from his son by prison bars.
Praise for The Upside of Fear: ''This book comes from a magnificent person who learned the lessons of life out of profound prison experiences. Despite the harsh language, Wally Long is a true diamond in the rough who produced this inspiring and illuminating account of the path he took to freedom and prosperity.'' --Stephen R. Covey, author, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People and The Leader in Me: How Schools and Parents Around the World Are Inspiring Greatness, One Child at a Time
''Quite a story . . . [of a] turnaround from prison to contribution!'' --Tony Robbins, bestselling author of Unlimited Power and Awaken the Giant Within

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