Best of
School

1979

Community And Growth


Jean Vanier - 1979
    It is a series of starting points for reflection discovered through everyday life, through mistakes and set-backs, through inspiration, through moments of dissension as well as unity. To Vanier, living with others is an adventure whose end is interior liberation -- the freedom to love and be loved. The greatest of Vanier's books, the distilled essence of his life work and thought

The Norton Anthology of American Literature: Volumes A & B


Judith Tanka - 1979
    From trickster tales of the Native American tradition to bestsellers of early women writers to postmodernism, this edition conveys the diversity of American literature from its origins to the present. Volume 2 covers the period of 1865 to the present.

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (Great Illustrated Classics)


Deidre S. Laiken - 1979
    The world's best-loved children's stories set in large type for easy reading.-- Over 100 illustrations in each book

Motel of the Mysteries


David Macaulay - 1979
    Imagine, then, the excitement that Howard Carson, an amateur archeologist at best, experienced when in crossing the perimeter of an abandoned excavation site he felt the ground give way beneath him and found himself at the bottom of a shaft, which, judging from the DO NOT DISTURB sign hanging from an archaic doorknob, was clearly the entrance to a still-sealed burial chamber. Carson's incredible discoveries, including the remains of two bodies, one of then on a ceremonial bed facing an altar that appeared to be a means of communicating with the Gods and the other lying in a porcelain sarcophagus in the Inner Chamber, permitted him to piece together the whole fabric of that extraordinary civilization.

The Norton Anthology Of American Literature


Nina Baym - 1979
    This modern section has been overhauled to reflect the diversity of American writing since 1945. A section on 19th-century women's writing is included.

How to Dig a Hole to the Other Side of the World


Faith McNulty - 1979
    Facts about the composition of the earth are conveyed painlessly and memorably.’ —SLJ. ‘An exciting adventure. . . . Illustrations [by Caldecott Medal winner Marc Simont] explode with color and action.’ —CS. Best Books of 1979 (SLJ)Children's Choices for 1980 (IRA/CBC)A Reading Rainbow Selection

World Tales


Idries Shah - 1979
    In this fascinating collection, Idries Shah shares this insight with us as we read the astonishingly similar versions of tales as they developed throughout the world.

The Book of World History


Anne Millard - 1979
    A brilliant overview of world history from prehistoric times to the early 20th century

Oliver Button Is a Sissy


Tomie dePaola - 1979
    “There is a good balance between the simple text . . . and the expressive pictures . . . an attractive little book.”--School Library Journal

Aruni and Uttanka: Tales of Devotion and Reward


Kamala Chandrakant - 1979
    Young or old, their devotion and obedience were almost superhuman. Luckily, as described in the Mahabharata, the gods looked kindly on them. After all, these young men had earned the right to happiness.

The Norton Anthology of American Literature: v. 1


Nina Baym - 1979
    From trickster tales of the Native American tradition to bestsellers of early women writers.

There's a Rainbow in My Closet


Patti Stren - 1979
    During a long visit, Emma's grandmother helps her understand why it's good to be different.

The Portable Machiavelli


Niccolò Machiavelli - 1979
    For example, the famous "the ends justifies the means" quote is actually a gross exaggeration of what Machiavelli originally wrote, which was "in the actions of all men...when there is no impartial arbiter, one must consider the final result." The biggest counterargument Bondanella and Musa can supply is the simple fact that they include a less famous piece Machiavelli did called "The Discourses." This piece is often not mentioned or even casually footnoted because it presents the true Machiavelli - a man who was supportive of a Republic government run by the citizens. Any one who believes Machiavelli is a supporter of despots will be surprised to read him speaking in support for fair and public trials and a balance of power between rulers and their people.

The Basic Kafka


Franz Kafka - 1979
    Published together for the first time are selections from all Kafka's writings: The Metamorphosis, Josephine The Singer, plus his short stories, parables, and his personal diaries and letters.

The Norton Anthology of American Literature


Nina Baym - 1979
    Under Nina Baym's direction, the editors have considered afresh each selection and all the apparatus to make the anthology an even better teaching tool.

Sharing Nature with Children: The Classic Parents' & Teachers' Nature Awareness Guidebook


Joseph Bharat Cornell - 1979
    New nature games--favorites from the field--and Cornell's typically insightful commentary make the second edition of this special classic even more valuable to nature lovers world-wide. The Sharing Nature movement that Cornell pioneered has now expanded to countries all over the globe. Recommended by Boy Scouts of America, American Camping Association, National Audubon Society and many others.

Calculus With Analytic Geometry


Ron Larson - 1979
    This was the first calculus text to use computer-generated graphics, to include exercises involving the use of computers and graphing calculators, to be available in an interactive CD-ROM format, to be offered as a complete, online calculus course, and to offer a two-semester Calculus I with Precalculus text. Every edition of the series has made the mastery of traditional calculus skills a priority, while embracing the best features of new technology and, when appropriate, calculus reform ideas. Now, the Eighth Edition is the first calculus program to offer algorithmic homework and testing created in Maple so that answers can be evaluated with complete mathematical accuracy.Two primary objectives guided the authors in writing this book: to develop precise, readable materials for students that clearly define and demonstrate concepts and rules of calculus and to design comprehensive teaching resources for instructors that employ proven pedagogical techniques and saves the instructor time. The Eighth Edition continues to provide an evolving range of conceptual, technological, and creative tools that enable instructors to teach the way they want to teach and students to learn they way they learn best. The explanations, theorems, and definitions have been thoroughly and critically reviewed. Additionally, the exercise sets have been carefully and extensively examined to ensure they cover all calculus topics appropriately. Questions involving skills, writing, critical thinking, problem-solving, applications, and real-data applications are included throughout the text. Exercises are presented in a variety of question formats, including matching, free response, true/false, modeling, and fill-in the blank. The Eduspace online resources have been integrated into a comprehensive learning system that combines numerous dynamic calculus resources with online homework and testing materials. Eduspace with eSolutions combines all the features of Eduspace with an electronic version of the textbook exercises and the complete solutions to the odd-numbered text exercises, providing students with a convenient and comprehensive way to do homework and view the course materials. The Integrated Learning System addresses the changing needs of today's instructors and students. Recognizing that the calculus course is presented in a variety of teaching and learning environments, the program resources are available in print, CD-ROM, and online formats. SMARTHINKING online tutoring brings students real-time, online tutorial support when they need it most.

O Cobrador


Rubem Fonseca - 1979
    Rubem Fonseca's Rio is a city at war, a city whose vast disparities- in wealth, social standing, and prestige- are untenable. In the stories of The Taker, rich and poor live in an uneasy equilibrium, where only overwhelming force can maintain order, and violence and deception are essential tools of survival.

Winning Through Enlightenment


Ron Smotherman - 1979
    Recommended by Norman Vincent Peale, with a comment by Werner Erhard, and a foreword by Ken Keyes Jr., this book is about bringing an enlightened condition to everyday life. It is composed of short, easy to digest chapters, straight to the point, and full of lasting value. Readers report reading and rereading this book over and over. Many people buy it in bulk to share with friends.

The Dragon Can't Dance


Earl Lovelace - 1979
    The people of the shantytown Calvary Hill, usually invisible to the rest of society, join the throng and flaunt their neighborhood personas in masquerade during Carnival. Aldrick, the dashing "king of the Hill," becomes a glorious, dancing dragon; his lovely Sylvia, a princess; Fisheye, rebel idealist, a fierce steel band contestant; and Philo, Calypso songwriter, a star. Then a business sponsors Fisheye's band, Philo gets a hit song, and Sylvia leaves the Hill with a prosperous older man. For Aldrick, it will take one more masquerade—this time, involving guns and hostages—before the illusion of power becomes reality.

Clinical Neuroanatomy Made Ridiculously Simple [Book & CD-ROM]


Stephen Goldberg - 1979
    The book now includes and interactive CD with a lab section, 3D rotations, interactive anatomy, tutorial on neurologic localization, and quiz. Third edition.

Gator Pie


Louise Mathews - 1979
    Color illustrations. A group of alligators attempt to split a pie so that everyone gets a piece.

As One Without Authority


Fred B. Craddock - 1979
    Revised with three new sermons, inclusive language, and NRSV texts, it is still as fresh and provocative as ever.

The Value of Fantasy: The Story of Hans Christian Andersen


Spencer Johnson - 1979
    A brief biography of the 19th-century Danish author of many well-known fairy tales, which stresses the value of personal fantasies and imagination.

The Value of Dedication: The Story of Albert Schweitzer


Spencer Johnson - 1979
    Presents a biography of Albert Schweitzer who based his philosophy on what he called "reverence for life" and dedicated his life to serving humanity.

What My Heart Wants to Tell


Verna Mae Slone - 1979
    So He sent us His very strongest men and women." So begins the heartwarming story of Verna Mae and her father, Isom B. "Kitteneye" Slone, an extraordinary personal family history set in the hills around Caney Creek in Knott County, Kentucky.

The Value of Friendship the Story of Jane Adams


Ann Donegan Johnson - 1979
    Jane wanted to help people from a very young age and eventually saw her dream come true in Chicago and other places.

Daniel's Duck


Clyde Robert Bulla - 1979
    ‘Good, warm feelings result from reading this gentle tale set in rural Tennessee during pioneer days.' 'CS. ‘A lovely book on all counts.' 'NYT. Notable Children's Books of 1979 (ALA)

The Norton Anthology of American Literature: American Literature 1865-1914 (Volume C)


Nina Baym - 1979
    This volume—Volume C, the third out of five—covers American literature from 1820 to 1865.

Kayaks down the Nile


John Goddard - 1979
    She has been playing a vital role in the development of the human race for 6,000 years. The water of the Nile is the source of life for an immense human population, which consists of dozens of breeds. Moreover, the Nile runs along an impressive variety of nature: from the 4,500-meter-high Moon Mountains - the Ruwenzori Mountains in Uganda, with an exotic alpine vegetation that turns into dense, tropical rainforests - to the scorching, cork-dry deserts of Sudan and Egypt. Between these two extremes lies the largest swamp in the world.Since the very beginning of human history, this great river has fascinated and challenged people. For centuries, countless expeditions have attempted to follow her endless course through Africa and to solve the oldest and most controversial mystery in geography: the secret of its origins.In 1950, John Goddard and his two companions, as the first in history, followed the river from its source in the heart of Africa to its mouth in the Mediterranean. The call of the Nile is the diary of Goddard: a travelogue in the best tradition of the great explorers of history.

Power System Analysis


Charles A. Gross - 1979
    The major components of the power system are modeled in terms of their sequence (symmetrical component) equivalent circuits. Reviews power flow, fault analysis, economic dispatch, and transient stability in power systems.

Management Information Systems


Raymond McLeod Jr. - 1979
    Focusing on the role of managers within an organization, the volume emphasizes the development of computer-based Information Systems to support an organization's objectives and strategic plans. Focusing on the Systems Concepts, the Systems Approach is implemented throughout the text. The volume covers essential concepts such as using information technology to engage in electronic commerce, and information resources such as database management systems, information security, ethical implications of information technology and decision support systems with projects to challenge users at all levels of competence. For those involved in Management Information Systems.

The Military Balance 2019


International Institute for Strategic Studies - 1979
    

Roman Realities


Finley Hooper - 1979
    It's based on the major primary sources of Roman history, with illuminating parallels between ancient & modern times. As Hooper says in his introduction, "Anyone concerned about present problems will profit from reading about how the Romans went about solving theirs." Finley Hooper's history of Rome covers the usual ground from Rome's origins to the Western Empire's end. But it sparkles with lucidity, grace, insight & confident learning. Not merely a scholarly narrative, Roman Realities plays off modern scholarship against what the Romans (eg, Livy, Polybius, Cicero, Plutarch) said of themselves & their past, thereby drawing readers directly into the historical issues & drama & into disparate Roman minds. With an awareness of what evidence is reliable, he interweaves Roman reportage & philosophy, anecdotes & analyses to provide a rich version of human character, social life, politics & culture in Rome thru periods of vitality & decay, renewal & ultimate decline. We see Hannibal, unsurpassed military tactician, defeated finally by Roman resilience; Julius Caesar, brilliant, charming, confident, strong & popular, undone by lack of tact & self-discipline; Cicero, orator of genius, moralist of traditional virtues, victimized by his vanity; Augustus, austere, decisive, capable of cruelty & good sense, who set a precedent impossible to follow. Hooper's manner is well-suited to his interpretation of Rome's fall. From the late years of the Republic onward, respect for constitutional political life lessened: some citizens took the law into their own hands & finally the power of the military & the emperor & the influence of the rich subverted the strong political spirit which had sustained Rome for centuries. At the same time, the Empire also lost the allegiance of the intellectuals, who'd nourished the Roman spirit through meditations on law, history & philosophy: thinkers now became theologians & turned toward the other world. Hooper's survey (a successor to Greek Realities '67) breathes life into a subject easily made dull & thus serves as a fine introduction & synthesis.--Kirkus (edited)

Cost and Choice: An Inquiry in Economic Theory


James M. Buchanan - 1979
    [Cost and Choice] starts off as an essay in the history of cost theory; the central ideas of the book are traced to Davenport and Knight in the United States, and to a series of distinguished writers associated at various times with the London School of Economics. The author emerges from this discussion with what can be described as the ultimate in subjectivist cost doctrines. . . . Economists should learn the lessons offered to us in this little book—and learn them well. It can save them from serious errors."—William J. Baumol, Journal of Economic Literature

Compassionate and Free - Tersentuh dan Bebas: Teologi Seorang Perempuan Asia


Marianne Katoppo - 1979
    Katoppo explains why Asian Christian women like herself seek the right to be different, to be the Other, rather than having to accept identities borrowed from men and other cultures.

Tormented Master


Arthur Green - 1979
    It unlocks the great themes of spiritual searching that make him a ^gure of universal religious importance.

The Value of Giving: The Story of Beethoven


Ann Donegan Johnson - 1979
    A brief biography of Ludwig van Beethoven, emphasizing the importance of giving in his life.

Exploring Social Psychology


Robert A. Baron - 1979
    They can get all they need here in this updated bestseller. Keeping close to its roots, this edition retains both the classic and current research, coverage of diverse issues and a lively writing style. Topics include: understanding social behavior, perception, prejudice, interpersonal attraction, and more. Ideal for social psychologists at any stage of their career.

Clinical Procedures for Medical Assistants [With CDROM and 4 DVDs]


Kathy Bonewit-West - 1979
    Step-by-step, hands-on guidance helps you quickly learn to perform procedures such as taking vital signs, collecting and processing lab specimens, preparing patients for examinations, assisting with office surgeries, and other treatments and procedures. Includes four DVDs with video demonstrations of the skills in the book

The Value of Love: The Story of Johnny Appleseed


Ann Donegan Johnson - 1979
    A biography of John Chapman whose distribution of appleseeds and trees across the Midwest made him a legend and left us a legacy we can still enjoy today.

The Higher Learning in America: A Memorandum on the Conduct of Universities by Business Men


Robert Maynard Hutchins - 1979
    Hutchins' classic is once again available, with a brilliant personal and professional appreciation by Harry S. Ashmore. When it was published in 1936The Higher Learning in Americabrought into focus the root causes of the controversies that still beset the nation's educational system. Taking office in 1929 as president of the University of Chicago, Hutchins began his tenure by declaring the learning available in even the most prestigious universities grossly deficient.He cited himself as case in point. At Yale he had graduated at the top of his college class and set a record in the law school that led to appointment as professor and, at 26, promotion to dean. But he had acquired only "some knowledge of the Bible, of Shakespeare, andFaust, of one dialogue of Plato, and of the opinions of many semi-literate and a few literate judges, and that was about all."The curricular reforms and administrative reorganization he undertook at Chicago are set forth in this volume, along with the philosophical arguments he worked out to explicate and defend his views. His goal was to reestablish the liberal arts and humanities as the basis for undergraduate education, consigning specialization and research to graduate and professional schools. Hutchins envisioned the university as a community of scholars who, in addition to teaching and research, provided independent thought and criticism of a society being rapidly transformed by science and technology. Challenging the educational establishment at every pertinent level, he became the most celebrated-and most controversial-intellectual of his era.After twenty-two years at Chicago, Hutchins became associate director of the newly enriched Ford Foundation, where he was primarily responsible for the bold reforms sponsored by its Fund for the Advancement of Education and Fund for Adult Education. In 1960 he established the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions at Santa Barbara to maintain an ongoing dialogue between scholars and practitioners that would "identify and clarify the basic issues of our time, and widen the circles of discussion about them."

Practical Metallurgy and Materials of Industry


John E. Neely - 1979
     The easy-to-read, highly accessible Sixth Edition includes many of the latest industry processes that change the physical and mechanical properties of materials. This book can be used as a "materials processing" reference handbook in support of Design, Process, Electrical and Chemical technicians and engineers.

The Cherokee Indian Nation: A Troubled History


Duane H. King - 1979
    A must for Native American history.

Young Mussolini and the Intellectual Origins of Fascism


A. James Gregor - 1979
    

I Can Read about Caves


Corinne J. Naden - 1979
    Caves -- more than just holes in the ground!

Culture Builders: A Historical Anthropology of Middle Class Life


Jonas Frykman - 1979
    It is an enquiry into the roots of present day middle class culture, as it developed between about 1880 and 1910 in Sweden. As their starting point the authors have taken the middle class virtues that are recognizable in the stereotype of the typical Swede: the nature-loving and conflict-avoiding person, obsessed with self-discipline, punctuality, orderliness and the importance of living a rational life. From this stereotype, the industrial and professional middle classes are easily recognizable as the ones who have defined the dominant ideas about the good and proper life. In summary, this book describes 'the process through which middle-class culture building moved from the position of counter-culture to dominant culture and then to national culture, and finally became invisible as ideas about human nature' (Löfgren 198 :81). This process however, is not typical for Sweden alone (which may have been the reason why the authors do not refer to Sweden in their title), but since the book deals with Sweden only, the title is somewhat misleading. The question as to what is typically Swedish, their national character or identity, is not seriously raised, because any comparison with developments in other countries is absent. This means that it is impossible to get an impression or estimation, however rough, of the ways or degrees in which the typical Swede differs, for instance in conflict-avoidance, from other national identities or stereotypes

Freud, Biologist of the Mind: Beyond the Psychoanalytic Legend


Frank J. Sulloway - 1979
    Drawing upon many new sources, including a detailed study of his private library, Sulloway demonstrates that Freud, in spite of later denials, always remained a "biologist of the mind," that, indeed, his most creative inspirations derived from biology. In a series of detective-like reconstructions he shows how psychoanalysis arose when Freud, influenced by contemporary Darwinian biology & the bizarre researches of his intimate friend Wilhelm Fliess, substituted an evolutionary for a physiological model of mind. This revolutionary reassessment of Freud & psychoanalysis runs directly counter to what both Freud & his followers have propagated--a mythology picturing him as the lonely "psychoanalytic hero" who, by himself & against a universally hostile outside world, invented a totally original psychology thru analyses of his patients & himself. Sulloway not only unmasks the historical distortions behind this legend, but exposes the political functions it's served in psychoanalytic history. Brilliantly written, meticulously researched, this work transforms our understanding of Freud.

A Short Walk


Alice Childress - 1979
    There she earns money dealing cards and performing in a number of traveling vaudeville shows. She survives the Great Depression, and experiences life as a wife, mother, lover, actress, and independent businesswoman. Torn between befriending Filipino and white neighbors, and the view of the Black Nationalist Marcus Garvey movement, Cora survives divisive politics and learns that since "Life is just a short walk from the cradle to the grave... it sure behooves us to be kind to one another along the way."

The Fascist Revolution: Toward a General Theory of Fascism


George L. Mosse - 1979
    Co-editor of the Journal of Contemporary History and author of nearly two dozen books, Mosse has helped to shape our contemporary understanding of fascism and consequently of 20th-century history. He has trained dozens of practicing historians, leaving the field indelibly altered. The essays collected here have all appeared previously in academic journals and scholarly volumes. Following the usual convention in which "fascism" refers to the generic phenomenon (while "Fascism" alludes to the Italian manifestation), Mosse examines such various facets as: fascist aesthetics and the avant-garde; fascism and the French Revolution; the nexus between fascism, nationalism and racism; fascism and the role of intellectuals; fascism (specifically, National Socialism) and the occult; and fascism and homosexuality. The author opens his introduction by acknowledging the changing interpretations of fascism over the last five decades. His own method might be described as cultural analysis, or to borrow a term from Clifford Geertz and cultural anthropology, "thick description." To be sure, class analysis, long favored by many Marxist and leftist historians, fails to fully capture fascism's essence. And yet even a cultural approach poses certain inherent difficulties. For, as Mosse and others have pointed out, a paradox lies at the heart of "fascist studies": intellectuals have chosen rational analysis to study and explain a movement that is irrational by its very nature, i.e., inherently hostile to the humanistic tradition. Hardly an introductory work for the novice, but instead a fundamental summation of a lifetime.

Analog and Digital Communication Systems


Martin S. Roden - 1979
    Reorganization and updates in this edition include the section on digital communications as well as design applications and computer exercises: many graphs are prepared and formulas solved using MATLAB o

New Directions in American Intellectual History


John Higham - 1979
    This volume reflects the recent resurgence of interest in intellectual history. It exemplifies the concerns of a new generation of intellectual historians and highlights the various directions probed by their scholarship. Taken in its entirety, the book is the broadest and most sophisticated examination of a historical specialty yet published.The book contains theoretical perspectives on the field and scholarly evaluations of major themes in American intellectual history. John Higham's introduction evaluates the changes and problems in the discipline, including its part in the development of other fields of inquiry.Laurence Veysey, Gordon S. Wood, and David A. Hollinger each take up the question of intellectual history's importance and its relationship to other disciplines, particularly social history and the social sciences.Several historians explore the role of beliefs and values in American history. Rush Welter defends a continuing effort to identify an 'American mind'. Sacvan Bercovitch offers a perceptive new reading of Perry Miller's influential essay, "Errand into the Wilderness." Henry F. May reflects on the similarities and dissimilarities between religious and intellectual history. Dorothy Ross takes a new look at two broad interpretations of American political thought - the 'liberalism' of Louis Hartz and the 'Republicanism' of J.G.A. Pocock. Thomas L. Haskell writes about the deterministic implications of recent approaches to intellectual history.Other contributors relate beliefs to the larger culture. Murray G. Murphey proposes an anthropological understanding of belief and culture and stresses the hazards of broad generalizations in intellectual history. David D. Hall, by analyzing the impact of printing upon popular thought, suggest ways that historians can relate the beliefs of intellectual elites to those of the masses. Thomas Bender focuses on the interaction between the city and the professions. Neil Harris shows how photography has changed the way American society 'sees' and relates to an environment. And Warren I. Susman analyzes modern psychology's understanding of human personality in shaping the development of the larger society. Paul K. Conkin's afterword summarizes the current state of the field, highlighting the many continuities with the discipline's past.

Do You Know?


B.G. Ford - 1979
    More than 100 fascinating things to know!Do you know where rubber comes from? The tallest animal? How big the moon is? The talking bird? How long animals live? The smallest dog?