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Willi Baumeister
Thomas Hart Benton
Albert Bierstadt
George Caleb Bingham
Cheri Blum
Hieronymus Bosch
Fernando Botero
Sandro Botticelli
Bill Brauer
Pieter Brueghel
Alexander Calder
Mary Cassatt
Paul Cezanne
Marc Chagall
Chuck Close
C.M. Coolidge
Paul Cornoyer
Leonardo Da Vinci
Salvador Dali
Jean Louis David
Edgar Degas
Gustav Dore
Raul Duffy
Thomas Eakins
M.C. Escher
Paul Gauguin
El Greco
Alfred Gockel
Sophie Harding
David Hockney
Winslow Homer
Edward Hopper
Edward Robert Hughes
Wassily Kandinsky
Warren Kimble
Paul Klee
Gustav Klimt
Dorothea Lange
Roy Lichtenstein
Juarez Machado
Rene Magritte
Edouard Manet
Henri Matisse
Michelangelo
Jean Francois Millet
Joan Miro
Claude Monet
Martha Moore
Edvard Munch
Louise Nevelson
Georgia O'keeffe
Pablo Picasso
Camille Pissarro
Jackson Pollock
Raphael
Van Rijn Rembrandt
Frederic Remington
Pierre August Renoir
Diego Rivera
Norman Rockwell
Mark Rothko
Henri Rousseau
Charles M. Russell
John Singer Sargent
Georges Seurat
Michael Sowa
Frank Stella
Wayne Thiebaud
Henri de Toulous-Lautrec
Vincent Van Gogh
Diego Velasquez
Jan Vermeer
Jack Vettriano
Andy Warhol
John William Waterhouse
David Lorenz Winston
Grant Wood
Frank Lloyd Wright
Andrew Wyeth

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JAN VERMEER BOOKS

Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Karen Wilkin. By Foundation for Cultural Review. Sells new for $5.95.
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No comments about Vermeer's world.(Critical Essay): An article from: New Criterion.



Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Ludwig Goldscheider. By Phaidon Press Ltd. There are some available for $20.25.
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No comments about Jan Vermeer: The Paintings Complete Edition.



Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Ernst Gunther Grimme. By M. DuMont Schauberg. There are some available for $85.49.
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No comments about Jan Vermeer van Delft (DuMont's neue Kunst-Reihe).



Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

By Mcgraw-Hill College. The regular list price is $35.15. Sells new for $34.95. There are some available for $0.01.
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No comments about In "Media" Res: Readings in Mass Media and American Politics.



Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Brad Finger. By Prestel USA. The regular list price is $14.95. Sells new for $10.17.
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No comments about Jan Vermeer (Living Art Series) (Living Art Series).



Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

By Benedikt Taschen Verlag. The regular list price is $4.99. Sells new for $82.15. There are some available for $19.99.
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2 comments about Jan Vermeer: The Complete Paintings: 30 Postcards (Postcardbooks).
  1. Every postcard in this book is beautiful. Each will make the recipient feel special. I am convinced of it.


  2. Since I was a child I loved Vermeer. And through the years that love has grown up and has become in a real subject of perpetual admiration . There are magnificent essays about the trascendence and remarkable importance of Johannes Vermeer (I really recommend for you to seek a Marcel Brion study, for instance).
    A friend of mine three years ago sent me a very brief conference in which Dali literally confessed that Vermeer was his favorite painter .
    This book is a treasure . The information is precise and fundamental . The reproductions are top of the line . This is a fundamental book for you and all the friends and well aprecciated human being you know who really cares about the art .
    Watch carefully the mesmerized face of the people in the Metropolitan Musseum in front of any of his paintings ,since I did it in 1998 . I was almost two hours exploring every little detail of every work.
    In this sense I really recommend a hidden artistic film of the nineties titled All the Vermeers in New York (Jon Jost) (see my review).


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Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Abrams. By Harry N. Abrams. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $3.49. There are some available for $3.00.
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1 comments about The Essential: Jan Vermeer (Essentials).
  1. you will want to own this book. You will find out how much is really known about Vermeer and see pictures of all the paintings you read about. You will be surprised at how much you recognize. A copy of this sent with Girl With a Pearl Earring will make a fabulous gift.


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Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Arthur K. Wheelock. By Harry N Abrams. The regular list price is $22.98. Sells new for $15.00. There are some available for $22.42.
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2 comments about Jan Vermeer (Library of Great Painters).
  1. This book is not an easy read, but it does provide wonderful insights into how Vermeer achieved the effects he did. It certainly heightened my appreciation of his work, both in technical and in artistic terms.


  2. A very, very poor cousin of ISBN: 0894682199. The colors of most plates are significantly distorted by a brownish (sepia) hue changing the original ones quite far, thus rendering the paintings very poorly ruining this book's visual appeal. At least "Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid" on p. 147 is destorted by a bluish hue. The hues are found in ISBN: 0810981939 from Abradale, 1998 edition, but they should be also present in ISBN: 0810917300 from Harry N Abrams the first one was a reprint of. 168 pages in each.


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Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Cynthia Voigt. By Simon Pulse. The regular list price is $5.99. Sells new for $2.58. There are some available for $0.51.
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5 comments about Elske: A Novel of the Kingdom.
  1. Cynthia Voight has woven a colorful tale that captures and steals the heart of the reader. If you enjoy reading a book about a timeless devotion to one another then this book is for you. The intricate tale of two women striving to bring order to the Kingdom will cause you to wonder and question the outcome of the book. you wiil find yourself caught in the tale until the last page has turned. If you do not believe me, then i sugest that you go and buy yourself a copy. Yes buy it, not check it out. This book will be one you want on your self so that you may enjoy it time and time again.


  2. 13-year-old Elske escapes rape and certain death at the hands of the leaders of her barbaric [Volkaric] society. She leaves her homeland and, through several contacts, finally becomes handmaiden to Beriel. Together they work to claim Beriel's rightful throne in the kingdom.
    This book should be for mature readers only. The Volkaric society is barbaric in that there is mention that men rape women in multiples, babies are given to wolves, etc. This thread goes through the book, not in a sickening way, but being descriptive of the society. Later, there is mention of a woman's bleeding time and the description of the birth process.


  3. I believe that Cynthia Voigt's previous installment in her "Kingdom" series was "The Wings of the Falcon". This is the only other book out of the series that I have completely read as of yet; however, it gave me the impression that Voigt is capable of writing much, much better novels than she did this time around. In "Elske", Voigt goes way into detail with less interesting events- banquets, walking from point A to point B, and so on and so forth. She also seems far too enamored by the pretty brightness and cleverness of the protagonist she has created, making much of how quick-witted Elske is while failing to put in any significant internal conflicts or character flaws that would have made her more compelling.

    One thing that would have improved the story would have been if Voigt had gone more into depth about the more interesting events of the story, or at least had Elske react more strongly to them. For example, another reviewer here spoke of the relationship between Elske and Dugald, her love interest. Voigt must have put in around five short interactions between the two- more or less- before they were confessing their desire for one another. And those interactions were not very deep, either- somehow, they failed to be convincing. Birle's spontaneous love in "On Fortune's Wheel" was much more convincing than Elske's; Cynthia Voigt could have made much more of it.

    Now, don't get me wrong- "Elske" is not necessarily a bad novel. The way the world and time period were depicted, as well as the customs and traditions of the peoples who inhabited it, were all very well fleshed-out and believable. However, the characters and plot were a huge disappointment after having read the much more gripping "Falcon" and parts of "On Fortune's Wheel". Perhaps the story would have been better if it had been told from the viewpoint of Beriel, the other protagonist of the story. Else was simply too bland and failed to compel. There were no faults evident in her character- she was just a pretty, modest, clever, quick-witted girl. There really was no depth to her. She reacted to just about everything with a calm that was supposed to depict her strength of character and whatnot, but really just came across as dull. Beriel, on the other hand, had a much more fiery character and went through a great deal of external AND internal conflict throughout the story- not to mention the fact that the things that befell her were far more interesting than anything that happened to Elske.

    However, Elske herself aside, on its own plenty of people will enjoy reading her story. Those who really found Cynthia Voigt's other books deeper and more interesting should be a bit disappointed.


  4. This was a well written story, any fantasy lover will be captivated by the complete world presented. The characters are strong and memorable. Elske is a compelling heroine that sets out on her own and her wit charms many men, but only one "knows the sweet honey of her name..."

    I found the author's exploration of a woman's role in the world a little predictable, but still interesting to read. The main character travels and lives in three different societies where women are treated in relatively different and sometimes brutally violent ways and readers are suppose to draw their own conclusions. I'm sure most young adult readers won't notice how formulaic it is, especially girl readers (If anything, they enjoy that and that's half the appeal of fantasy titles.)

    What bothers me the most is the violence that is depicted with the Volkaric society. The first chapter has a mass rape along side with the exposure of unwanted girl babies out to feed the wolves (which the main character & her grandmother against that society's express customs snap their necks before exposing them in a stroke of mercy.) I understand the author's use of it as a contrast, and it is not a "glorified" type of violence. The darkness and evil of the Volkaric only makes Elske's character all the more luminous and good. But the violence is there all the same. There is also another "rape" that is featured in the story's plot, one that involves an unwanted pregnancy. Again, it is not glorified, but it does take a serious and complicated matter and wraps it up pretty in two chapters.

    People who monitor what their children read may want to hold off on letting their younger teens read this. (I found this book in the adult section of my library and approved the librarian's discretion.) Some people will pooh-pooh this warning, some people don't care what their kids read, as long as they are reading. I myself worry that when kids are exposed to too much violence, they get de-sensitized to it. So take care with this title, its a good read, but has very mature themes in it.


  5. Interspersed with gentle references to the mythical protagonist of a previous novel, JACKAROO, this story continues Voight's predilection for resourceful heroines. Set in an unspecified medieval world of fictitious geography this book presents a very young heroine who barely escapes rape and immolation as the chosen Death Maiden among the heartless Volkaric horde. Raised as a Wolfer this daughter of a gentler clime and culture avoids both fates thanks to the wisely intense foresight of her grandmother--who chose to design her own revenge on her captors.

    In Trastad--a merchant city located on three islands--Elske
    learns the Norther tongue, gradually relaxes in a new, more humane
    lifestyle, eventually discovering that men and women can enjoy each other's private company in ways undreamed of by the hated Fruchtmen.
    But when she is assigned as the servant of the Fiendly Princess--Beriel, the Queen-in-waiting--that Elske comes of political and emotional age.

    Now 15 she provides invaluable service to her new mistress, who, despite her prickly, imperious manner, manages to win Elske's undying loyalty over the girl's natural obligation to her two first lords, known as Vars. But what is the fascination of this mysterious new weapon called "black powder" which men risk their lives to possess? Does Science have the power or the right to usher in the end the feudal lifestyle? Will both maid and mistress always scorn the idea of the marriage bed? How can a mere girl orphan help the future Queen regain her crown and her reputation in the distant South? Family dynamics are challenged as treachery and revenge are unleashed into an already beleaguered realm. Cleverly plotted with deep insight into the mysteries of the human heart, ELSKE proves satisfying fiction for both adults and YA readers.


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Posted in Jan Vermeer (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Susan Welch and John Gruhl and John Comer and Susan M. Rigdon and Jan Vermeer. By Wadsworth Publishing Company. There are some available for $24.39.
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2 comments about Understanding American Government.
  1. I bought this at Amazon.com from an Awesome Deal I found on DailyTool.com. I don't like this book too much because it dropped its value too much. I bought this at $50 and now it goes to two cents.


  2. I took a course in which the teacher used this manuel and I found it really helpful; pretty much everything is in there: basic principles of the political system with a lot of history (which is really interesting because that helps you to understand and remember what you learned: put things in context) The book is divided in about 15 chapters, each of them on a particular aspect: american society, federalism, justice system, elections, etc.

    I think the most important aspect of this book is all the history in each chapters.

    This book is fine for beginners and for intermediate as well.


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Page 1 of 6
1  2  3  4  5  6  
Vermeer's world.(Critical Essay): An article from: New Criterion
Jan Vermeer: The Paintings Complete Edition
Jan Vermeer van Delft (DuMont's neue Kunst-Reihe)
In "Media" Res: Readings in Mass Media and American Politics
Jan Vermeer (Living Art Series) (Living Art Series)
Jan Vermeer: The Complete Paintings: 30 Postcards (Postcardbooks)
The Essential: Jan Vermeer (Essentials)
Jan Vermeer (Library of Great Painters)
Elske: A Novel of the Kingdom
Understanding American Government

Copyright © 2005
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Last updated: Thu Jul 24 17:51:23 EDT 2008