 (Larger Image)
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by Nicolaus Mills
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Touchstone (1994-10-01)
ISBN: 0671895583
EAN: 9780671895587
Dewy Decimal #: 325.73
Paperback: 224 pages
SKU: 091308083
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting...
More Product Infomation
|
Editorial Reviews
|
Product Description
This remarkakble collection of writings provides a wide diversity of answers to one of today's most emotionally charged questions. Spanning the whole political spectrum and covering issues from jobs and the economy to race and culture, it includes the strong opinions of writers and critics from Toni Morrison to Francis Fukuyama.
|
Customer Reviews
|
Different debates over immigration
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-07-03
1 out of 3 customers found this reveiw helpful
The editor of this book presents several different authors' viewpoints about immigration into the United Stares. many people of diferent backgrounds are presented here and compelling statements are made, discussing the ramifications of this hot topic right now.
|
|
Easy to read and learn about immigration
Rating (5)
Date: 2002-10-22
15 out of 15 customers found this reveiw helpful
I'm a college student and was asked to read this book for one of my classes. Going into reading this book, I knew absolutely nothing about the history of immigration, the details of the legislation, or the problems our nation is facing.The first thing that makes this book stand out from other similar books I have been reading for this course is that the book is organized. There are 11 articles by various authors and Mills does a great job in splitting these articles up into 5 categories. Every article was easy to read and understand. There were many times when I would get so into a story that I didn't want to put the book down until I finished it. Mills did a great job in selecting articles that didn't just pour facts and statistics at you. The most important thing I enjoyed about this book is that Mills did not take a side. The book contained articles that were for immigration, against immigration, and some articles that were neutral. I did not feel like I was being pulled in one direction with this book. Through these articles, the reader is left to decide whether he or she believes immigration is a good thing. Immigration is a very big topic, but Mills did a great job in discussing almost every aspect of immigration in a very unbiased way.
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|
Great introductory book to immigration...
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-02-20
20 out of 20 customers found this reveiw helpful
This text is a composition of short essays that lends insight into one of the most controversial issues of today. It provides the framework for a heated debate by arguing various perspectives of immigration. It's a quick read (not dry at all!), informative, interesting and succinct. Highly recommended for those who know very little about the controversy surrounding immigration and would like to catch up.
|
 (Larger Image)
|
by Nicolaus Mills
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Touchstone (1994-10-01)
ISBN: 0671895583
EAN: 9780671895587
Dewy Decimal #: 325.73
Paperback: 224 pages
SKU: 091308083
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting...
More Product Infomation
|
Editorial Reviews
|
Product Description
This remarkakble collection of writings provides a wide diversity of answers to one of today's most emotionally charged questions. Spanning the whole political spectrum and covering issues from jobs and the economy to race and culture, it includes the strong opinions of writers and critics from Toni Morrison to Francis Fukuyama.
|
Customer Reviews
|
Different debates over immigration
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-07-03
1 out of 3 customers found this reveiw helpful
The editor of this book presents several different authors' viewpoints about immigration into the United Stares. many people of diferent backgrounds are presented here and compelling statements are made, discussing the ramifications of this hot topic right now.
|
|
Easy to read and learn about immigration
Rating (5)
Date: 2002-10-22
15 out of 15 customers found this reveiw helpful
I'm a college student and was asked to read this book for one of my classes. Going into reading this book, I knew absolutely nothing about the history of immigration, the details of the legislation, or the problems our nation is facing.The first thing that makes this book stand out from other similar books I have been reading for this course is that the book is organized. There are 11 articles by various authors and Mills does a great job in splitting these articles up into 5 categories. Every article was easy to read and understand. There were many times when I would get so into a story that I didn't want to put the book down until I finished it. Mills did a great job in selecting articles that didn't just pour facts and statistics at you. The most important thing I enjoyed about this book is that Mills did not take a side. The book contained articles that were for immigration, against immigration, and some articles that were neutral. I did not feel like I was being pulled in one direction with this book. Through these articles, the reader is left to decide whether he or she believes immigration is a good thing. Immigration is a very big topic, but Mills did a great job in discussing almost every aspect of immigration in a very unbiased way.
|
|
Great introductory book to immigration...
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-02-20
20 out of 20 customers found this reveiw helpful
This text is a composition of short essays that lends insight into one of the most controversial issues of today. It provides the framework for a heated debate by arguing various perspectives of immigration. It's a quick read (not dry at all!), informative, interesting and succinct. Highly recommended for those who know very little about the controversy surrounding immigration and would like to catch up.
|
 (Larger Image)
|
by Nicolaus Mills
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Touchstone (1994-10-01)
ISBN: 0671895583
EAN: 9780671895587
Dewy Decimal #: 325.73
Paperback: 224 pages
SKU: 091308083
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting...
More Product Infomation
|
Editorial Reviews
|
Product Description
This remarkakble collection of writings provides a wide diversity of answers to one of today's most emotionally charged questions. Spanning the whole political spectrum and covering issues from jobs and the economy to race and culture, it includes the strong opinions of writers and critics from Toni Morrison to Francis Fukuyama.
|
Customer Reviews
|
Different debates over immigration
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-07-03
1 out of 3 customers found this reveiw helpful
The editor of this book presents several different authors' viewpoints about immigration into the United Stares. many people of diferent backgrounds are presented here and compelling statements are made, discussing the ramifications of this hot topic right now.
|
|
Easy to read and learn about immigration
Rating (5)
Date: 2002-10-22
15 out of 15 customers found this reveiw helpful
I'm a college student and was asked to read this book for one of my classes. Going into reading this book, I knew absolutely nothing about the history of immigration, the details of the legislation, or the problems our nation is facing.The first thing that makes this book stand out from other similar books I have been reading for this course is that the book is organized. There are 11 articles by various authors and Mills does a great job in splitting these articles up into 5 categories. Every article was easy to read and understand. There were many times when I would get so into a story that I didn't want to put the book down until I finished it. Mills did a great job in selecting articles that didn't just pour facts and statistics at you. The most important thing I enjoyed about this book is that Mills did not take a side. The book contained articles that were for immigration, against immigration, and some articles that were neutral. I did not feel like I was being pulled in one direction with this book. Through these articles, the reader is left to decide whether he or she believes immigration is a good thing. Immigration is a very big topic, but Mills did a great job in discussing almost every aspect of immigration in a very unbiased way.
|
|
Great introductory book to immigration...
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-02-20
20 out of 20 customers found this reveiw helpful
This text is a composition of short essays that lends insight into one of the most controversial issues of today. It provides the framework for a heated debate by arguing various perspectives of immigration. It's a quick read (not dry at all!), informative, interesting and succinct. Highly recommended for those who know very little about the controversy surrounding immigration and would like to catch up.
|
 (Larger Image)
|
by David Moats
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Harcourt (2004-02-02)
ISBN: 015101017X
EAN: 9780151010172
Dewy Decimal #: 306.84809743
Hardcover: 304 pages
Edition: 1
SKU: 103008058
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting...light shelf wear on dustjacket
More Product Infomation
|
Editorial Reviews
|
Product Description
In 2000 Vermont became the first state to grant gay and lesbian couples the right to join in civil unions-a groundbreaking decision that has inspired similar legislation in six states thus far. But it was not an easy victory; the ruling sparked the fiercest political conflict in the state's memory. David Moats was in the thick of it, writing a series of balanced, humane editorials that earned a Pulitzer Prize. Now he tells the intimate stories behind the battle and introduces us to all the key actors in the struggle, including the couples who first filed suit; the lawyers who spent years championing the case; and the only openly gay legislator in Vermont, who ensured victory with an impassioned, deeply personal speech on the House floor at a crucial moment.
Civil Wars is a remarkable drama of democracy at work on a human scale.
(02/08/2004)
|
Customer Reviews
|
Straightforward and fascinating
Rating (4)
Date: 2004-11-08
1 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
Of the books I've read on same-sex marriage this is the most straight-forward and readable. Written by the editorial page editor of the Rutland Herald (where he won a Pulitzer prize for his coverage of this issue) the book reads like a novel, filled with interesting characters and dramatic moments.
Moats' thesis is that the Supreme Court in Vermont chose wisely not to mandate same-sex marriage but instead to remand the issue to the legislature. It is his theory that in the end, civil union was a preferable compromise to marriage for two reasons. First, the very process of having the legislature involved, complete with extensive public hearings, allowed many citizens to feel that they were heard and involved in the process. Second, and more important, the creation of civil unions avoided the intense backlash that might have been expected (and had been seen in Hawaii and other states) from a sweeping constitutional ruling mandating marriage.
While I disagree with his conclusions about the advantages of civil unions, the book is fascinating to read and very well written, if a bit dated by recent events.
|
|
A Remarkable Journey
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-05-03
14 out of 16 customers found this reveiw helpful
Just a short while ago, Vermont wrestled with an issue that's gripping our country in a maelstrom. The end result, as most of us know, was the formation of the controversial but important recognition of same-sex relationships called "civil unions". What most of us don't know is the inner workings of the Vermont government as it came to deal with this issue, and the ultimate political sacrifice that many people played in order to ensure equal rights for all of its citizens. David Moats, editor of the Rutland Herald, describes in detail, how that all transpired in his book "Civil Wars: A Battle for Gay Marriage".Moats approaches the story from a journalistic standpoint as he describes couples who were fighting to get legal recognition of their long term relationships. With the court siding on their side, but giving the problem back to the state legislature, the storm of politics brews quickly and deeply. With the leadership of then governor Howard Dean, we see how the machinations of state government worked to churn out the only viable option at the time, civil unions. While being very a straightforward book, Moats treats the subject matter fairly and with respect. His handling of the gay relationships, and the people stories, is respectful and honorable. He clearly has opinions on gay marriage, and yet, those opinions doesn't shade his view of the events in Vermont. If you don't agree with legal recognition of gay relationships, at least you can appreciate, by reading this book, the intense scrunity and thoughtfulness those Vermont legislators put into forming this landmark bill. Perhaps one day, our own Congress will wrestle with the fact that its denying a group of citizens fair and legal recognition of their relationships based solely on whom they love. If that's the case, Moats' book gives us a sense of hope that fair minded people will come to the correct conclusion; that in our country, built upon espoused principals of fairness and equality, people must be afforded the same legal rights and protections offered to all of its citizens. There simply can be no other choice.
|
|
A superbly balanced account
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-04-29
9 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
Civil Wars is an exceedingly balanced book about the events creating the first civil union legislation for gays in the state of Vermont. Given, such a divisive subject, author David Moats does not interject his own views per se, except where his own experience adds color to the proceedings. Instead, he richly describes the history of the lawsuit that lead to the state Supreme Court decision, which placed the burden upon the legislature to remedy "the exclusion of same-sex couples from the secular benefits and protections offered married couples."In setting the stage for the events that followed, Moats not only vividly portrays the settings and what transpired in public meetings and both open- and closed-door legislative sessions, but imbues us with a sense of how the majority of the senators and house representatives struggled to do the right thing, often in opposition to their prior beliefs and the constituents in their districts. Given the appalling abuse they took, this took courage. One leaves this book with the impression that regardless of whether one believes that gays should or should not enjoy the same rights as heterosexuals, there are considerable numbers of people out there that don't deserve to be part of the human race, given the disgusting and obscene activities they indulged in, in order to persuade legislators not to pass any kind of pro-gay legislation.
|
|
There Are Many Heroes Here
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-04-09
11 out of 11 customers found this reveiw helpful
David Moats is the editorial page editor of the RUTLAND HERALD and the winner of a Pulitzer for his editorials in support of same-sex unions. This book grew out of Mr. Moats' interest in the whole gay marriage debate and the events that preceded the passage in Vermont of the historical civil union legislation. In this extremely well-written account, Mr. Moats covers all the major events that set the stage for this kind of history to be made in Vermont, that is, the three couples being brave enough to bring suit, the ruling of the Vermont Supreme Court and the ultimate passage into law of civil unions for gay people. He discusses the Stonewall riots, the murder of Harvey Milk, the AIDS epidemic, gays in the military, the lawsuit brought in Hawaii, the increase of adoptions by gay and lesbian couples, and the Matthew Shephard murder. He says in the prologue: In my view, the Vermont story ranks, not just with the Stonewall riots and the murder of Harvey Milk as landmarks of gay history, but with Birmingham and Selma as landmarks of our growth toward a more complete democracy."Governor Howard Dean showed tremendous courage in signing the civil union bill into law. He conducted himself here as he did when he later ran for the Democratic nomination for president. He was open and frank about doing the right thing. There are many other heroes here, Mr. Moates for starters, who is not gay. Certainly the three couples who brought the lawsuit, their attorneys and other gay people in Vermont were brave beyond measure. There were also many fine and decent people in both houses of state government, who were determined to do the right thing by gay people and in so doing, several of them later lost their seats in the state legislature. Two individuals stand out for me--Bill Lippert, vice chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, and Bob Kinsey, a 72 year-old Republican in the House, an elder in the Presbyterian Church where he and his wife had sung in the choir for fifty-two years. Initially he was opposed to any kind of gay marriage or domestic partnership bill but was persuaded to vote for the bill that eventually passed, probably in part because a teepee on his farm that he had built as a warming hut for skaters in the cold Vermont winters mysteriously burned. He believed the fire was caused by arsonists because of his stand on gay rights. "It was the human dimension of the gay marriage bill that touched him. . . He and his wife. . . had learned something about life and love and death. No one was going to instruct him about right and wrong or the disposition of his soul." Mr. Lippert, who is gay, gave an impassioned speech on the House floor that many believed brought his undecided colleagues to his side: "There's something strange about sitting in the midst of a delibertive body that is trying to decide whether I and my fellow gay and lesbian Vermonters should get our rights now. . . Don't tell me about what a committed relationship is and isn't. I've watched my gay brothers care for each other deeply and my lesbian sisters nurse and care. There is no love and no commitment any greater than what I've seen, what I know." When Mr. Lippert sat down, Robert Kinsey rose and said that he had just heard the greatest speech he had heard in his 30 years in government. There are many other instances of quiet and sometimes not so quiet heroism here. The jackals of course came out too. The infamous Phyllis Schlafly and Alan Keyes, to name two, made appearances to spread their hate as well. Mr. Moats in the last chapter of the book discusses some of the other significant events for gays and lesbians, The United States Supreme Court's striking down the Texas sodomy law, the ruling by the Massachusetts Supreme Court in favor of gay marriage as well as the decision of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, Canada upholding a lower court's ruling granting the right for gays and lesbians to marry. This book went to press too early for Mr. Moats to include the passage last week by the Georgia House-- the Senate has passed one weeks ago-- of a bill to allow the citizens of Georgia to vote in November for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage although there is already a law on the books in Georgia making gay marriage illegal. Sad to say, Georgia is not Vermont.
|
|
Timely and well-written
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-03-30
6 out of 6 customers found this reveiw helpful
I moved to Vermont from Texas in August of 2000, shortly after the Vermont legislature passed the civil unions bill. Large signs in people's yards and bright bumper stickers on cars still proclaimed, "Take back Vermont," "Take Vermont forward," and the insidious reply, "Never let Vermont be taken from behind."Some people, myself included before I moved here, picture Vermont as the quintessentially liberal, hippy state where anything goes. Not so. Emotion ran just as high here as it does now in other places where gay marriage is discussed and performed. David Moats' Pulitzer Prize winning editorials helped maintain civility and promote tolerance in Vermont when the confluence of fear, moral indignation, and a respectful demand for basic civil rights threatened to tear the state apart. By respecting all sides in the discussion, Moats' balance, both in his editorials and now in this book, helps people understand each other, while never concealing his conviction that gay marriage is a basic civil rights issue. This vital balance will be of value to anyone with a serious interest in this issue, no matter on which side of the question you may come down. And you'll enjoy the book, too! Civil Wars : Gay Marriage in America reads like a thriller, bringing all the characters, with their many human dimensions, to life. Moats shows the drama of people on both sides struggling with their own consciences and dealing with the often very different consciences of their neighbors. He shows how hearing the stories of real people in real situations can bring understanding and respect, even when it may not bring agreement. And, at the risk of sounding sentimental, I have to admit that I also found this book tremendously inspiring. This is not "inspirational literature," but, like all stories which reach deep into the heart of what it means to be human and to live together in human society, like all stories which deal with people struggling to live honest lives often at great cost to themselves, this is a very touching story. Think Profiles in Courage, think Gandhi, think James Baldwin. This is human history in the making, Moats' book has given me a deeper understanding and appreciation of the Vermont tradition of local, citizen-involved government, and the realization that the question of gay marriage is a battleground not only for civil rights, but for the definition of America. Are we a society based on respect and liberty, or on some people's religious ideals? The importance of this issue today cannot be underestimated, and Moats' contribution is tremendously valuable.
|
 (Larger Image)
|
by David Moats
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Harcourt (2004-02-02)
ISBN: 015101017X
EAN: 9780151010172
Dewy Decimal #: 306.84809743
Hardcover: 304 pages
Edition: 1
SKU: 103008058
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting...light shelf wear on dustjacket
More Product Infomation
|
Editorial Reviews
|
Product Description
In 2000 Vermont became the first state to grant gay and lesbian couples the right to join in civil unions-a groundbreaking decision that has inspired similar legislation in six states thus far. But it was not an easy victory; the ruling sparked the fiercest political conflict in the state's memory. David Moats was in the thick of it, writing a series of balanced, humane editorials that earned a Pulitzer Prize. Now he tells the intimate stories behind the battle and introduces us to all the key actors in the struggle, including the couples who first filed suit; the lawyers who spent years championing the case; and the only openly gay legislator in Vermont, who ensured victory with an impassioned, deeply personal speech on the House floor at a crucial moment.
Civil Wars is a remarkable drama of democracy at work on a human scale.
(02/08/2004)
|
Customer Reviews
|
Straightforward and fascinating
Rating (4)
Date: 2004-11-08
1 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
Of the books I've read on same-sex marriage this is the most straight-forward and readable. Written by the editorial page editor of the Rutland Herald (where he won a Pulitzer prize for his coverage of this issue) the book reads like a novel, filled with interesting characters and dramatic moments.
Moats' thesis is that the Supreme Court in Vermont chose wisely not to mandate same-sex marriage but instead to remand the issue to the legislature. It is his theory that in the end, civil union was a preferable compromise to marriage for two reasons. First, the very process of having the legislature involved, complete with extensive public hearings, allowed many citizens to feel that they were heard and involved in the process. Second, and more important, the creation of civil unions avoided the intense backlash that might have been expected (and had been seen in Hawaii and other states) from a sweeping constitutional ruling mandating marriage.
While I disagree with his conclusions about the advantages of civil unions, the book is fascinating to read and very well written, if a bit dated by recent events.
|
|
A Remarkable Journey
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-05-03
14 out of 16 customers found this reveiw helpful
Just a short while ago, Vermont wrestled with an issue that's gripping our country in a maelstrom. The end result, as most of us know, was the formation of the controversial but important recognition of same-sex relationships called "civil unions". What most of us don't know is the inner workings of the Vermont government as it came to deal with this issue, and the ultimate political sacrifice that many people played in order to ensure equal rights for all of its citizens. David Moats, editor of the Rutland Herald, describes in detail, how that all transpired in his book "Civil Wars: A Battle for Gay Marriage".Moats approaches the story from a journalistic standpoint as he describes couples who were fighting to get legal recognition of their long term relationships. With the court siding on their side, but giving the problem back to the state legislature, the storm of politics brews quickly and deeply. With the leadership of then governor Howard Dean, we see how the machinations of state government worked to churn out the only viable option at the time, civil unions. While being very a straightforward book, Moats treats the subject matter fairly and with respect. His handling of the gay relationships, and the people stories, is respectful and honorable. He clearly has opinions on gay marriage, and yet, those opinions doesn't shade his view of the events in Vermont. If you don't agree with legal recognition of gay relationships, at least you can appreciate, by reading this book, the intense scrunity and thoughtfulness those Vermont legislators put into forming this landmark bill. Perhaps one day, our own Congress will wrestle with the fact that its denying a group of citizens fair and legal recognition of their relationships based solely on whom they love. If that's the case, Moats' book gives us a sense of hope that fair minded people will come to the correct conclusion; that in our country, built upon espoused principals of fairness and equality, people must be afforded the same legal rights and protections offered to all of its citizens. There simply can be no other choice.
|
|
A superbly balanced account
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-04-29
9 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
Civil Wars is an exceedingly balanced book about the events creating the first civil union legislation for gays in the state of Vermont. Given, such a divisive subject, author David Moats does not interject his own views per se, except where his own experience adds color to the proceedings. Instead, he richly describes the history of the lawsuit that lead to the state Supreme Court decision, which placed the burden upon the legislature to remedy "the exclusion of same-sex couples from the secular benefits and protections offered married couples."In setting the stage for the events that followed, Moats not only vividly portrays the settings and what transpired in public meetings and both open- and closed-door legislative sessions, but imbues us with a sense of how the majority of the senators and house representatives struggled to do the right thing, often in opposition to their prior beliefs and the constituents in their districts. Given the appalling abuse they took, this took courage. One leaves this book with the impression that regardless of whether one believes that gays should or should not enjoy the same rights as heterosexuals, there are considerable numbers of people out there that don't deserve to be part of the human race, given the disgusting and obscene activities they indulged in, in order to persuade legislators not to pass any kind of pro-gay legislation.
|
|
There Are Many Heroes Here
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-04-09
11 out of 11 customers found this reveiw helpful
David Moats is the editorial page editor of the RUTLAND HERALD and the winner of a Pulitzer for his editorials in support of same-sex unions. This book grew out of Mr. Moats' interest in the whole gay marriage debate and the events that preceded the passage in Vermont of the historical civil union legislation. In this extremely well-written account, Mr. Moats covers all the major events that set the stage for this kind of history to be made in Vermont, that is, the three couples being brave enough to bring suit, the ruling of the Vermont Supreme Court and the ultimate passage into law of civil unions for gay people. He discusses the Stonewall riots, the murder of Harvey Milk, the AIDS epidemic, gays in the military, the lawsuit brought in Hawaii, the increase of adoptions by gay and lesbian couples, and the Matthew Shephard murder. He says in the prologue: In my view, the Vermont story ranks, not just with the Stonewall riots and the murder of Harvey Milk as landmarks of gay history, but with Birmingham and Selma as landmarks of our growth toward a more complete democracy."Governor Howard Dean showed tremendous courage in signing the civil union bill into law. He conducted himself here as he did when he later ran for the Democratic nomination for president. He was open and frank about doing the right thing. There are many other heroes here, Mr. Moates for starters, who is not gay. Certainly the three couples who brought the lawsuit, their attorneys and other gay people in Vermont were brave beyond measure. There were also many fine and decent people in both houses of state government, who were determined to do the right thing by gay people and in so doing, several of them later lost their seats in the state legislature. Two individuals stand out for me--Bill Lippert, vice chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, and Bob Kinsey, a 72 year-old Republican in the House, an elder in the Presbyterian Church where he and his wife had sung in the choir for fifty-two years. Initially he was opposed to any kind of gay marriage or domestic partnership bill but was persuaded to vote for the bill that eventually passed, probably in part because a teepee on his farm that he had built as a warming hut for skaters in the cold Vermont winters mysteriously burned. He believed the fire was caused by arsonists because of his stand on gay rights. "It was the human dimension of the gay marriage bill that touched him. . . He and his wife. . . had learned something about life and love and death. No one was going to instruct him about right and wrong or the disposition of his soul." Mr. Lippert, who is gay, gave an impassioned speech on the House floor that many believed brought his undecided colleagues to his side: "There's something strange about sitting in the midst of a delibertive body that is trying to decide whether I and my fellow gay and lesbian Vermonters should get our rights now. . . Don't tell me about what a committed relationship is and isn't. I've watched my gay brothers care for each other deeply and my lesbian sisters nurse and care. There is no love and no commitment any greater than what I've seen, what I know." When Mr. Lippert sat down, Robert Kinsey rose and said that he had just heard the greatest speech he had heard in his 30 years in government. There are many other instances of quiet and sometimes not so quiet heroism here. The jackals of course came out too. The infamous Phyllis Schlafly and Alan Keyes, to name two, made appearances to spread their hate as well. Mr. Moats in the last chapter of the book discusses some of the other significant events for gays and lesbians, The United States Supreme Court's striking down the Texas sodomy law, the ruling by the Massachusetts Supreme Court in favor of gay marriage as well as the decision of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, Canada upholding a lower court's ruling granting the right for gays and lesbians to marry. This book went to press too early for Mr. Moats to include the passage last week by the Georgia House-- the Senate has passed one weeks ago-- of a bill to allow the citizens of Georgia to vote in November for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage although there is already a law on the books in Georgia making gay marriage illegal. Sad to say, Georgia is not Vermont.
|
|
Timely and well-written
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-03-30
6 out of 6 customers found this reveiw helpful
I moved to Vermont from Texas in August of 2000, shortly after the Vermont legislature passed the civil unions bill. Large signs in people's yards and bright bumper stickers on cars still proclaimed, "Take back Vermont," "Take Vermont forward," and the insidious reply, "Never let Vermont be taken from behind."Some people, myself included before I moved here, picture Vermont as the quintessentially liberal, hippy state where anything goes. Not so. Emotion ran just as high here as it does now in other places where gay marriage is discussed and performed. David Moats' Pulitzer Prize winning editorials helped maintain civility and promote tolerance in Vermont when the confluence of fear, moral indignation, and a respectful demand for basic civil rights threatened to tear the state apart. By respecting all sides in the discussion, Moats' balance, both in his editorials and now in this book, helps people understand each other, while never concealing his conviction that gay marriage is a basic civil rights issue. This vital balance will be of value to anyone with a serious interest in this issue, no matter on which side of the question you may come down. And you'll enjoy the book, too! Civil Wars : Gay Marriage in America reads like a thriller, bringing all the characters, with their many human dimensions, to life. Moats shows the drama of people on both sides struggling with their own consciences and dealing with the often very different consciences of their neighbors. He shows how hearing the stories of real people in real situations can bring understanding and respect, even when it may not bring agreement. And, at the risk of sounding sentimental, I have to admit that I also found this book tremendously inspiring. This is not "inspirational literature," but, like all stories which reach deep into the heart of what it means to be human and to live together in human society, like all stories which deal with people struggling to live honest lives often at great cost to themselves, this is a very touching story. Think Profiles in Courage, think Gandhi, think James Baldwin. This is human history in the making, Moats' book has given me a deeper understanding and appreciation of the Vermont tradition of local, citizen-involved government, and the realization that the question of gay marriage is a battleground not only for civil rights, but for the definition of America. Are we a society based on respect and liberty, or on some people's religious ideals? The importance of this issue today cannot be underestimated, and Moats' contribution is tremendously valuable.
|
 (Larger Image)
|
by David Moats
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Harcourt (2004-02-02)
ISBN: 015101017X
EAN: 9780151010172
Dewy Decimal #: 306.84809743
Hardcover: 304 pages
Edition: 1
SKU: 103008058
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting...light shelf wear on dustjacket
More Product Infomation
|
Editorial Reviews
|
Product Description
In 2000 Vermont became the first state to grant gay and lesbian couples the right to join in civil unions-a groundbreaking decision that has inspired similar legislation in six states thus far. But it was not an easy victory; the ruling sparked the fiercest political conflict in the state's memory. David Moats was in the thick of it, writing a series of balanced, humane editorials that earned a Pulitzer Prize. Now he tells the intimate stories behind the battle and introduces us to all the key actors in the struggle, including the couples who first filed suit; the lawyers who spent years championing the case; and the only openly gay legislator in Vermont, who ensured victory with an impassioned, deeply personal speech on the House floor at a crucial moment.
Civil Wars is a remarkable drama of democracy at work on a human scale.
(02/08/2004)
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Customer Reviews
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Straightforward and fascinating
Rating (4)
Date: 2004-11-08
1 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
Of the books I've read on same-sex marriage this is the most straight-forward and readable. Written by the editorial page editor of the Rutland Herald (where he won a Pulitzer prize for his coverage of this issue) the book reads like a novel, filled with interesting characters and dramatic moments.
Moats' thesis is that the Supreme Court in Vermont chose wisely not to mandate same-sex marriage but instead to remand the issue to the legislature. It is his theory that in the end, civil union was a preferable compromise to marriage for two reasons. First, the very process of having the legislature involved, complete with extensive public hearings, allowed many citizens to feel that they were heard and involved in the process. Second, and more important, the creation of civil unions avoided the intense backlash that might have been expected (and had been seen in Hawaii and other states) from a sweeping constitutional ruling mandating marriage.
While I disagree with his conclusions about the advantages of civil unions, the book is fascinating to read and very well written, if a bit dated by recent events.
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A Remarkable Journey
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-05-03
14 out of 16 customers found this reveiw helpful
Just a short while ago, Vermont wrestled with an issue that's gripping our country in a maelstrom. The end result, as most of us know, was the formation of the controversial but important recognition of same-sex relationships called "civil unions". What most of us don't know is the inner workings of the Vermont government as it came to deal with this issue, and the ultimate political sacrifice that many people played in order to ensure equal rights for all of its citizens. David Moats, editor of the Rutland Herald, describes in detail, how that all transpired in his book "Civil Wars: A Battle for Gay Marriage".Moats approaches the story from a journalistic standpoint as he describes couples who were fighting to get legal recognition of their long term relationships. With the court siding on their side, but giving the problem back to the state legislature, the storm of politics brews quickly and deeply. With the leadership of then governor Howard Dean, we see how the machinations of state government worked to churn out the only viable option at the time, civil unions. While being very a straightforward book, Moats treats the subject matter fairly and with respect. His handling of the gay relationships, and the people stories, is respectful and honorable. He clearly has opinions on gay marriage, and yet, those opinions doesn't shade his view of the events in Vermont. If you don't agree with legal recognition of gay relationships, at least you can appreciate, by reading this book, the intense scrunity and thoughtfulness those Vermont legislators put into forming this landmark bill. Perhaps one day, our own Congress will wrestle with the fact that its denying a group of citizens fair and legal recognition of their relationships based solely on whom they love. If that's the case, Moats' book gives us a sense of hope that fair minded people will come to the correct conclusion; that in our country, built upon espoused principals of fairness and equality, people must be afforded the same legal rights and protections offered to all of its citizens. There simply can be no other choice.
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A superbly balanced account
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-04-29
9 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
Civil Wars is an exceedingly balanced book about the events creating the first civil union legislation for gays in the state of Vermont. Given, such a divisive subject, author David Moats does not interject his own views per se, except where his own experience adds color to the proceedings. Instead, he richly describes the history of the lawsuit that lead to the state Supreme Court decision, which placed the burden upon the legislature to remedy "the exclusion of same-sex couples from the secular benefits and protections offered married couples."In setting the stage for the events that followed, Moats not only vividly portrays the settings and what transpired in public meetings and both open- and closed-door legislative sessions, but imbues us with a sense of how the majority of the senators and house representatives struggled to do the right thing, often in opposition to their prior beliefs and the constituents in their districts. Given the appalling abuse they took, this took courage. One leaves this book with the impression that regardless of whether one believes that gays should or should not enjoy the same rights as heterosexuals, there are considerable numbers of people out there that don't deserve to be part of the human race, given the disgusting and obscene activities they indulged in, in order to persuade legislators not to pass any kind of pro-gay legislation.
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There Are Many Heroes Here
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-04-09
11 out of 11 customers found this reveiw helpful
David Moats is the editorial page editor of the RUTLAND HERALD and the winner of a Pulitzer for his editorials in support of same-sex unions. This book grew out of Mr. Moats' interest in the whole gay marriage debate and the events that preceded the passage in Vermont of the historical civil union legislation. In this extremely well-written account, Mr. Moats covers all the major events that set the stage for this kind of history to be made in Vermont, that is, the three couples being brave enough to bring suit, the ruling of the Vermont Supreme Court and the ultimate passage into law of civil unions for gay people. He discusses the Stonewall riots, the murder of Harvey Milk, the AIDS epidemic, gays in the military, the lawsuit brought in Hawaii, the increase of adoptions by gay and lesbian couples, and the Matthew Shephard murder. He says in the prologue: In my view, the Vermont story ranks, not just with the Stonewall riots and the murder of Harvey Milk as landmarks of gay history, but with Birmingham and Selma as landmarks of our growth toward a more complete democracy."Governor Howard Dean showed tremendous courage in signing the civil union bill into law. He conducted himself here as he did when he later ran for the Democratic nomination for president. He was open and frank about doing the right thing. There are many other heroes here, Mr. Moates for starters, who is not gay. Certainly the three couples who brought the lawsuit, their attorneys and other gay people in Vermont were brave beyond measure. There were also many fine and decent people in both houses of state government, who were determined to do the right thing by gay people and in so doing, several of them later lost their seats in the state legislature. Two individuals stand out for me--Bill Lippert, vice chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, and Bob Kinsey, a 72 year-old Republican in the House, an elder in the Presbyterian Church where he and his wife had sung in the choir for fifty-two years. Initially he was opposed to any kind of gay marriage or domestic partnership bill but was persuaded to vote for the bill that eventually passed, probably in part because a teepee on his farm that he had built as a warming hut for skaters in the cold Vermont winters mysteriously burned. He believed the fire was caused by arsonists because of his stand on gay rights. "It was the human dimension of the gay marriage bill that touched him. . . He and his wife. . . had learned something about life and love and death. No one was going to instruct him about right and wrong or the disposition of his soul." Mr. Lippert, who is gay, gave an impassioned speech on the House floor that many believed brought his undecided colleagues to his side: "There's something strange about sitting in the midst of a delibertive body that is trying to decide whether I and my fellow gay and lesbian Vermonters should get our rights now. . . Don't tell me about what a committed relationship is and isn't. I've watched my gay brothers care for each other deeply and my lesbian sisters nurse and care. There is no love and no commitment any greater than what I've seen, what I know." When Mr. Lippert sat down, Robert Kinsey rose and said that he had just heard the greatest speech he had heard in his 30 years in government. There are many other instances of quiet and sometimes not so quiet heroism here. The jackals of course came out too. The infamous Phyllis Schlafly and Alan Keyes, to name two, made appearances to spread their hate as well. Mr. Moats in the last chapter of the book discusses some of the other significant events for gays and lesbians, The United States Supreme Court's striking down the Texas sodomy law, the ruling by the Massachusetts Supreme Court in favor of gay marriage as well as the decision of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, Canada upholding a lower court's ruling granting the right for gays and lesbians to marry. This book went to press too early for Mr. Moats to include the passage last week by the Georgia House-- the Senate has passed one weeks ago-- of a bill to allow the citizens of Georgia to vote in November for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage although there is already a law on the books in Georgia making gay marriage illegal. Sad to say, Georgia is not Vermont.
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Timely and well-written
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-03-30
6 out of 6 customers found this reveiw helpful
I moved to Vermont from Texas in August of 2000, shortly after the Vermont legislature passed the civil unions bill. Large signs in people's yards and bright bumper stickers on cars still proclaimed, "Take back Vermont," "Take Vermont forward," and the insidious reply, "Never let Vermont be taken from behind."Some people, myself included before I moved here, picture Vermont as the quintessentially liberal, hippy state where anything goes. Not so. Emotion ran just as high here as it does now in other places where gay marriage is discussed and performed. David Moats' Pulitzer Prize winning editorials helped maintain civility and promote tolerance in Vermont when the confluence of fear, moral indignation, and a respectful demand for basic civil rights threatened to tear the state apart. By respecting all sides in the discussion, Moats' balance, both in his editorials and now in this book, helps people understand each other, while never concealing his conviction that gay marriage is a basic civil rights issue. This vital balance will be of value to anyone with a serious interest in this issue, no matter on which side of the question you may come down. And you'll enjoy the book, too! Civil Wars : Gay Marriage in America reads like a thriller, bringing all the characters, with their many human dimensions, to life. Moats shows the drama of people on both sides struggling with their own consciences and dealing with the often very different consciences of their neighbors. He shows how hearing the stories of real people in real situations can bring understanding and respect, even when it may not bring agreement. And, at the risk of sounding sentimental, I have to admit that I also found this book tremendously inspiring. This is not "inspirational literature," but, like all stories which reach deep into the heart of what it means to be human and to live together in human society, like all stories which deal with people struggling to live honest lives often at great cost to themselves, this is a very touching story. Think Profiles in Courage, think Gandhi, think James Baldwin. This is human history in the making, Moats' book has given me a deeper understanding and appreciation of the Vermont tradition of local, citizen-involved government, and the realization that the question of gay marriage is a battleground not only for civil rights, but for the definition of America. Are we a society based on respect and liberty, or on some people's religious ideals? The importance of this issue today cannot be underestimated, and Moats' contribution is tremendously valuable.
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by David Reuben Turner
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Arco Pub (1975-06)
ISBN: 0668001224
EAN: 9780668001229
Dewy Decimal #: 363.232
Paperback: 224 pages
Edition: 8th
SKU: 052408035
Condition: Used: Acceptable
Comments: ...ex library book in fair or better good condition. usual library markings..heavy cover wear. text fine.
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by Henry Etzkowitz
Product Group: Book
Publisher: West Pub. Co (1974)
ISBN: 0829900292
EAN: 9780829900293
Unknown Binding: 560 pages
SKU: 073108041
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: aug...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting...
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by Joe Conason
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books (2007-02-20)
ISBN: 0312356056
EAN: 9780312356057
Dewy Decimal #: 973.93
Hardcover: 256 pages
Release Date: 2007-02-20
SKU: 033008AC17
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting...wear on dustjacket and corners
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
“When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag, carrying a cross.” ---Sinclair Lewis, author of It Can’t Happen Here, 1935 For the first time since the Nixon era, Americans have reason to doubt the future---or even the presence---of democracy. We live in a society where government conspires with big business and big evangelism; where ideologues and religious zealots attack logic and the scientific method; and where the ruling party encourages xenophobic nationalism based on irrational, manufactured fear. The party in power seems to seek a perpetual state of war to hold on to power, and they are willing to lie, cheat, and steal to achieve their ends. The question must be asked: Are we headed toward the end of American democracy? Nobel Prize--winning author Sinclair Lewis depicted authoritarianism American-style in his sardonically titled dystopian novel It Can’t Happen Here, published in 1935. Now, bestselling political journalist Joe Conason argues that it can happen here—and a select group of extremely powerful right-wing ideologues are driving us ever closer to the precipice. In this compelling, impassioned, yet rational and fact-based look at the state of the nation, Conason shows how and why America has been wrenched away from its founding principles and is being dragged toward authoritarianism. Praise for the books of Joe Conason: “A comprehensive, well-researched indictment of a bunch of nasty people who really deserve it.” ---Molly Ivins on Big Lies “When Joe casts his eye on the cadres of the right, they invariably emerge battered, with their arguments filleted, their sources of money exposed, and their real motives laid bare.” —Michael Tomasky, former editor, The American Prospect, on The Raw Deal
“A hundred years from now the primary source on the so-called Clinton scandals will still be The Hunting of the President by Joe Conason and Gene Lyons.” ---James Carville on The Hunting of the President
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Customer Reviews
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How Bush's authoritarian presidency could lead to fascism
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-07-08
4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is the most forthright and incisive book on the Bush administration's lies, deceptions, subversions of the Constitution, and secret and illegal activities that I have read. Conason has a way with not only words but an ability to organize and present the damning facts in a clear and decisive manner.
He begins with a sort of reprise of some of the points made by Sinclair Lewis in his famous novel about the fascist threat to America in 1935, "It Can't Happen Here." Some of the parallels are stunning. For example:
"Buzz Windrip, a charismatic politician with little intellectual curiosity but great capacity to appeal to the regular guy, is elected president." George W. Bush could play this part.
"Windrip regularly expresses contempt for the press (except for the newspapers of the ultraright Hearst empire)..." Murdoch's media empire including Fox News fits nicely.
"Windrip is entirely the creation of Lee Sarason, a brilliant, ruthless strategist and advertising man..." Karl Rove fits.
Windrip "exudes a syrupy compassion for the white, Christian, middles-class family while proclaiming a staunch moral and patriotic conservatism. He often mentions that he has read the Bible at least a dozen times." Bush doesn't read that much, but he does hold daily pray sessions that everybody on staff is tacitly required to participate in.
"His most important supporters are the nation's religious fundamentalists, notably a radio preacher with millions of followers who hails Windrip as God's chosen leader, and the country's wealthiest businessmen, who understand that he is their wholly owned instrument despite his populist rhetoric."
"Soon after taking office [Sarason and Windrip] seize upon the genuine economic crisis besetting the country to arrogate more and more power to the White House. Windrip turns Congress into an advisory body and starts appointing hacks to the courts."
"His government conducts business in near-total secrecy, acting to suppress or control the press while the Hearst media serve as propaganda outlets...lavishing praise upon the president and all his works, including his plans for a preemptive war on Mexico." (The quotes are from pages 5-7.)
Throw in George Orwell's prediction of perpetual war in "1984" in order to control the population and increase centralized power, and we can see that our Bush nightmare has all happened before except then it was fiction. Now unfortunately it's all too real. In this regard, Conason recalls James Madison's statement: "No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."
And that brings us to Chapter 1, "The `Post 9/11 Worldview' of Karl Rove." Karl Rove, clearly has read his Madison (and Machiavelli too) and as one of the two brains behind Bush (Cheney is the other) he knew that the best way to increase the power of the presidency and to ensure Bush's reelection was to start a war. As Conason reports, Rumsfeld, Cheney, Rove, and Bush begin planning for the invasion of Iraq as soon as Bush was installed in the White House. In a most revealing insight into the neocon mind, Conason recalls conservative columnist "Irving Kristol's 1989 essay on the Grenada invasion, used by Reagan to draw attention away from the disastrous terrorist bombing of a marine barracks in Lebanon. `The reason we gave for the intervention--the risk to American medical students there--was phony but the reaction of the American people was absolutely overwhelmingly favorable,' Kristol gloated in retrospect. `They had no idea what was going on, but they backed the president. They always will.'" (p. 29)
Mickey Herskowitz, one-time Bush family confidant, summed up the Bush attitude with "Start a small war. Pick a country where there is justification you can jump on, go ahead and invade." Herskowitz quotes Bush as saying "One of the keys to being seen as a great leader is to be seen as a commander-in-chief. My father had all this political capital built up when he drove the Iraqis out of Kuwait and he wasted it....If I have a chance to invade, if I had that much capital, I'm not going to waste it. I'm going to get everything passed that I want to get passed and I'm going to have a successful presidency." (pp. 29-30)
The really chilling thing here is Bush's complete and utter disregard for anyone's life--our soldiers, Iraqi citizens--who cares? Bush only cared about self-aggrandizement. His motivation was purely the will to personal power and glory. Such a man is easily manipulated by people like Rove and Cheney.
Conason goes on to describe how Bush, Cheney, Rove, and Attorney General John Ashcroft circumvented the Constitution and bullied both the press and Congress into giving them what they wanted. He details how corporate America and the evangelical right wing co-conspired to move this country terrifyingly close to an authoritarian state. The amazing thing about all this information is just how public it really is. (Conason provides copious endnotes.) Yet how little does the general public understand about what is going on, and, to be honest, how little does the average person care?
The real legacy of the Bush administration may be the tremendous increase in presidential power that he achieved through such chicanery as the use of "signing statements" on bills he has signed, basically saying the president as commander-in-chief has the power to do what he likes regardless of what this bill says. In inaugurating what is now called "the long war," Bush has shown subsequent presidents the way to greatly increase their power. I suspect that future occupants of the White House, be they Republican or Democratic, will not be able to resist using such methods. Unless somehow Congress can be strengthened, the checks and balances that the Founding Fathers created will disappear and we will have an authoritarian state lead by an imperial president with immense power. That is the Bush Legacy.
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Yet Another Book About The Fascist Bush Administration
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-06-25
2 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
How many of these types of books will it take before America wakes up? In fairness to Bush, Fascist America did not begin with his administration as revealed in the book, Don't Weep for Me, America: How Democracy in America Became the Prince (While We Slept). The Bush administration merely accelerated it and brought it out of its subtle shadows and made it noticable to the politically active. The politically active would include those names, very familiar, listed on the "Acknowledgmnts" pages.
Author Joe Conason hits all the bases, all the liars, all the crooks in this detailed book about the subversion of the American Republic. The criminals (the known ones) are all featured, as if they were up on the stage wearing neon orange jumpsuits. John Yoo, Alberto Gonzalas, Karl Rove, Antonin Scalia, John Ashcroft and all the neo-cons lead by Kristol, Wolfowitz, Pearle, Abrams, etc.
"The name for what is wrong with them" writes Conason, "the threat embedded within the Bush administration, the Republican congressional leadership, and the current leaders of the Republican Party-is AUTHORITARIANISM". But to think that the democrats in Congress are not complicit, since they are allowing it to happen, is partisan absurdity.
According to Conason, William Kristol wrote in the Washington Post "Making ready for war...would 'require the president, at times, to mislead rather than to clarify, to deceive rather than to explain'. This comment is consistent with the neo-cons love of Machiavellian principles-see my review of the book, The Prince.
And in the end, what has happened in the past 100 years or so is exactly what Abraham Lincoln said in 1864, quoted in the book, "...corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed".
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Is this a friday the 13th movie?
Rating (1)
Date: 2007-11-04
1 out of 38 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is like Freddy...the exact same book, same lies, different cover...Bush is the devil, Cheneburton is Hitler...blah blah blah.
Keep buying these books...please. Waste your money.
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Publishers Weekly Review is factually wrong
Rating (4)
Date: 2007-10-22
4 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book provides excellent analysis as do other Conosan books.
Biased journalism, religion-tinged politics, and lobbying scandals ARE signs of creeping fascism. They are NOT "age-old commonplaces of democracy." Those characteristics are the age-old commonplaces of CAPITALISM.
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Every American Should Read this Book!
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-10-21
4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book is a well researched, well documented look at the Bush Administration. Everyone who cares about this country and its future needs to read this book. Think you know what the Constitution says? Think you know what the Founding Fathers intentions were? Think you know the perils we face today? Maybe . . . Maybe not. A truly eye-opening read.
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by SparkNotes Editors
Product Group: Book
Publisher: SparkNotes (2003-07-03)
ISBN: 1586638475
EAN: 9781586638474
Dewy Decimal #: 822.33
Paperback: 256 pages
Edition: Study Guide
SKU: 071608015
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting...crease in cover...edge wear
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Product Description
No Fear Shakespeare gives you the complete text of Julius Caesar on the left-hand page, side-by-side with an easy-to-understand translation on the right.
Each No Fear Shakespeare contains
The complete text of the original play A line-by-line translation that puts Shakespeare into everyday language A complete list of characters with descriptionsPlenty of helpful commentary
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Customer Reviews
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No Fear Shakespeare Julius Caesar
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-07-05
As an older adult that is somewhat isolated I started the study of Shakespeare on my own with just a big book that had annotaions that were often more cofusing than enlightening. It was rewarding but it was like plowing through a field full of big rocks. I found reading two or three scenes of an act with No Fear Shakespeare and then reading the corresponding section of Asimov's Guide to Shakespeare great fun. No Fear explains the nuances of language and setting while Asimov gives rich insight to the characters and events that makes it so easy to remember the varied characters and plot twists.
I found this method makes Shakespeare infinitely more easy to not only get through but savor and enjoy. My plan is to get as much of No Fear Shakespeare as I can including all the plays that I have gone through so laboriously in the past and apply the No Fear/Asimov technique. I hope it works as well for you as it did for me.
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Excellent resource
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-03-11
2 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
I teach high school students and must say that this book has been a valuable resource throughout our unit on Julius Caesar. My students are finally grasping what is being read and have really enjoyed the reading thus far. If only there had been a reference tool around like this when I was in school!!! The title is absolutely right, there is No Fear in reading Shakespeare any longer.
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not available
Rating (1)
Date: 2005-09-11
0 out of 44 customers found this reveiw helpful
I ordered this book for a class for my son. I was not able to get the book because it was not available.
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