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TEACHERS BOOKS
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by W. J. McEldowney. By Victoria University Press.
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No comments about Geoffrey Alley, Librarian: His Life and Work.
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by Robert Paul Wolff. By University of Rochester Press.
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No comments about Autobiography of an Ex-White Man: Learning a New Master Narrative for America.
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by Pierre Swiggers. By David Brown.
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No comments about Haiim B. RosTn. Bio-bibliographical Sketch Followed by the Late Prof. RosTn's Text: The Jerusalem School of Linguistics And the Prague School (Biobibliographies Et Exposes Nouvelle Serie).
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
By Providence House Publishers.
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No comments about Politics, Morality and Higher Education: Essays in Honor of Samuel DuBois Cook.
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by William Edward Wormsley and William E. Wormsley. By Xlibris Corporation.
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No comments about Thailights.
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by D. J. Enright. By Carcanet Pr.
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No comments about Memoirs of a Mendicant Professor.
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by Alfred Holbrook. By Kessinger Publishing, LLC.
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No comments about Reminiscences Of The Happy Life Of A Teacher (1885).
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by Zig Ziglar. By Doubleday.
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5 comments about Zig: The Autobiography of Zig Ziglar.
- If you ever need an inspirational help of great success in life then I would recommend Zig Ziglar. Ziglar is author of best-seller, 'I'll See You At The Top' and many other motivational books, has helped thousands improve their lives to achieve that success in every aspect of living. As you read his auto-biography you'll learn about his remarkable story how he beat the odds and applied it to the teachings of Jesus Christ. You will learn to take the next step in your plan and keep God's plan at the center of your plans just as Zig did. His approach is a down-home, wholesome manner with the business savvy of a wise, honest salesman. Most of what he learn of being successful and the importance of networking with honest and wise mentors. The first part of the book tells of his early life and the family that shaped his destiny. In his early adult years he was hard-working and used his knowledge to make money and there were times he made financial mistakes as a result of foolish decisions. This was a time God wasn't a part of his life where his life had no meaning or purpose. The last part of the book, is about his change in life when he reflected back on the moral values in his early childhood and his mother. He then gave his life to Christ. He then found his purpose as a public speaker. From then on instead of his self-centered ambition he gave it all to God. And Zig has been successful ever since. Like Norman Vincent Peale, Zig applied biblical principles to the goals he has with the plans God manifest in the center of his life. Zig's secret is never quit, have faith in God and a whole lotta love. He's a mentor you can trust with a solution. Wish there were more like Zig.
- Zig's life was a great testament to what he teaches. He walks the walk. His life is in balance, and even through tragedy, still reached out to make a difference for all lives he touched through his motivational seminars. His character is outstanding, and his level of integrity speaks for itself.
This book shows the good, the bad, and the ugly. Life has not always been rosy for Zig, but he is living proof that you can overcome anything. As he always says: "you can have anything you want if you just help enough people get what they want". This book shows that Zig has faults just like the rest of us, and he makes that really clear in this book. He is humble and in some cases ashamed of some of his past behavior. No sugar coating in this one. The fact that he is such a strong christian is also satisfying to those of us who are believers. He makes it very clear who gets the credit for all of the blessings in his life. This book is a great read, and will be hard to put down if you are a fan. True to form, it's humorous with only a hint sorrow in some parts. He really is an amazing person.
- I was exposed to Zig's philosophy some years ago and have read See You at the Top more than once. His "Check up from the Neck up" and the need to prevent "Hardening of the Attitudes" and "Stinkin Thinkin" are well ingrained. This was an interesting read and learning about his background and history was very well laid out and informative.
- Zig is a very humble man. He tells the story of his life in stages that are inspirational in that the mundane things in life are all part of the whole that we experience. The early years in his life are full of mishaps in his opinion, yet lead to a logical place that may not have existed otherwise.
His story of his older daughter's (Suzan's) illness and death, and the reaction of some of his mentors and partners in understanding, is one of the most touching renditons I have ever read and it is beatifully preserved by his younger daughter (Julie - you kind of feel the hominess of the family in the reading of this book) who edits his writing.
Also, "The Wall of Gratitude", and how each person on it influenced him is another unselfish display of how he has become who he is. It is as if these mentors of his should have their pictures hung in many more dens/offices throughout the country because of their influence to him that he has passed to so many others.
I met Zig and felt his sincerety in his conversation with me that I hope to duplicate in all I do - that's how good the meeting was! I can see why God called him to do what he does. In his autobiography he states all of the facts (and faults) of his personal life unashamedly. I do not think I could have shared some of the things he shared; too personal, but, his humility is seemingly endless.
I first saw Zig in a sports motivational video in high school in the seventies. I got a lot of motivation out of it. It has stuck with me for all of these years: yet I was amused and amazed me to read about the experiences he had around that time and to the time at the end of this book.
Obviously this review has come three years after the last one, yet it should show how timeless this story is, and, like Zig's salvation, it truly is "better late than never."
- This was the first book I've read by Zig Ziglar. This very charming book details his childhood in America's rural South in the midst of the Depression, his early adult years, and adulthood. I'll write about the book in reverse chronological order.
I especially enjoyed the part about his early adulthood, where he writes honestly about the uncertainty he went through. His adulthood part was interesting as well, although he tended to compress the 40+ years a little too much. After chronicling his childhood so meticulously, the later parts of the book seem a bit lacking in detail.
His writing about his early childhood was very entertaining, a little sentimental, and excessively moralizing. Zig had a lot of mentors and learned valuable lessons, but he tends to stretch them too thin and draw almost too many morals to them. That he learned a lot about character and whatnot is unsurprising (he is a motivational speaker, after all), but it gets somewhat boring, a contrast to his humorous and vivacious "See You at the Top!
For this, I give Zig an "excellent rating", which corresponds to 4 out of 5 stars in my humble book.
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Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by Walt Wood. By Infinity Publishing.
The regular list price is $13.95.
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No comments about Lucky Walter.
Posted in Teachers (Friday, November 21, 2008)
Written by John, 1814-1870 Mcclintock. By Kessinger Publishing, LLC.
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No comments about The Life And Letters Of Stephen Olin V2: Late President Of The Wesleyan University.
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Geoffrey Alley, Librarian: His Life and Work
Autobiography of an Ex-White Man: Learning a New Master Narrative for America
Haiim B. RosTn. Bio-bibliographical Sketch Followed by the Late Prof. RosTn's Text: The Jerusalem School of Linguistics And the Prague School (Biobibliographies Et Exposes Nouvelle Serie)
Politics, Morality and Higher Education: Essays in Honor of Samuel DuBois Cook
Thailights
Memoirs of a Mendicant Professor
Reminiscences Of The Happy Life Of A Teacher (1885)
Zig: The Autobiography of Zig Ziglar
Lucky Walter
The Life And Letters Of Stephen Olin V2: Late President Of The Wesleyan University
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