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CLINICAL CHEMISTRY BOOKS
Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
By Elsevier Science.
The regular list price is $89.95.
Sells new for $76.92.
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No comments about Meyler's Side Effects of Herbal Medicines (Meylers Side Effects) (Meylers Side Effects).
Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
Written by Construction, and Renovation of Laboratory Facilities Committee on Design and Board on Chemical Sciences and Technology and National Research Council and Construction, Committee on Design and Renovation of Laboratory Facilities. By National Academies Press.
The regular list price is $37.00.
Sells new for $36.99.
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1 comments about Laboratory Design, Construction, and Renovation: Participants, Process, and Product.
- As always, the title of a book does not tell us its true content and scope. In this case the title and the content match, but in a very bureaucratic way. The ideas are carefully worded, but all the design challenge and the exemplification through images are gone. There is not a single image or exemplification diagram inside the book. It is an excellent INTRODUCTION to the design activities and concepts for a general-but-somewhat-specialized architectural task, but it is simply bothersome to professionals with a harsh need of an updated guidance in the technological and normative issues involved in that kind of interdisciplinary work. Had the book included the word "Introduction" my personal sense of deception was not so assured and asserted. If you want an introduction to that field before more deep technical literature, this book is really worth of each dollar you pay for it.
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Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
By Springer.
The regular list price is $269.00.
Sells new for $207.28.
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No comments about Bioactive Molecules and Medicinal Plants.
Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
Written by Daniel, Coaten. By Low-impact Living Initiative (LILI).
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $16.38.
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No comments about Make your own Essential Oils and Skin-care Products.
Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
By Humana Press.
The regular list price is $179.00.
Sells new for $134.24.
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No comments about Molecular Targeting in Oncology (Cancer Drug Discovery and Development) (Cancer Drug Discovery and Development).
Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
Written by Donald J. Wink and Sharon Fetzer-Gislason and Julie Ellefson Kuehn. By W. H. Freeman.
Sells new for $57.25.
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1 comments about Working with Chemistry: A Laboratory Inquiry Program.
- The Lab book is the amost ambiguous piece of material ever written to mankind. I dont suggest any Chemistry student to use this book if he wants to still enjoy the subject. With this book I've grown a strong disliking for Chemistry Lab. The book provides no clear instructions for the procedures and therefore makes lab confusing and frustrating. A WASTE OF MONEY
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Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
By Wiley.
The regular list price is $160.00.
Sells new for $122.94.
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No comments about Chromatographic Methods in Clinical Chemistry and Toxicology.
Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
Written by William J. Marshall. By C.V. Mosby.
The regular list price is $46.95.
Sells new for $45.92.
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2 comments about Clinical Chemistry.
- This is a thourough and concise reference addressing major clinical concepts. Its very colorful and easy to read, visually appealing, and far less daunting than the 2000+ page doorstops that are housed on the same shelf. Be warned, if you need a doorstop this book is not for you. This is just a major clinical concepts book with excellent diagrams and explanations. I would compare it to the BRS books, the Lange Review books, or the older NMS/Blueprints series in terms of content. If you are a fan of these types of texts then this book is for you!
- I bought this book because it is written by british authors which I think based on my experience of purchasing books are more informative than american authors. This book is a good book in clinical chemistry. Its main deficiency is that it is not comprehensive and does not include all the material experienced in the clinical chemistry lab. In general it is a good book for beginners.
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Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
By The MIT Press.
The regular list price is $65.00.
Sells new for $46.89.
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No comments about Instruments and Experimentation in the History of Chemistry (Dibner Institute Studies in the History of Science and Technology).
Posted in Clinical Chemistry (Sunday, October 12, 2008)
Written by Robert Klitzman. By Da Capo Press.
The regular list price is $27.95.
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5 comments about The Trembling Mountain.
- The subject of cannibalism should grab the attention of the reader. Instead, on page after page, you are startled by grammatical inconsistencies. Nobody has bothered to proofread this book -- not the author, the reader, the editor. The author does not transport you in any way into an exotic world, but instead has you grinding your teeth as you read through such language as "I seen..." This reads like a hasty job, not one that has been put together with love and pride.
- Written with the intensity of a thriller, THE TREMBLING MOUNTAIN is a brilliant examination of the cultures of the mind. Read it now.
- I had read Dr Klitzman's earlier book "Being Positive" and wanted to read more of his work, the title sounded very strange but bought the book after the life affirming experience of reading the first. Dr Klitzman is one hell of an explorer !, brave, adventurous and a great medical investigator and researcher. The Papua New Guinea Highlands might hold the answers to the questions that medical researchers have been asking for years and Dr Klitzman is a trail blazer to these answers. This story deserves to be read by anyone who is affected directly or indirectly by any disease from cancer to HIV, it will give you a better insight and hope.
- This book tells the story of a young man who travels to Papua New Guinea to try his hand at medical research. The book jackets accurately describes it as "a gripping medical mystery, an exotic travelogue, and a stirring coming-of-age story." Just one year out of college, Klitzman sets off to Papua New Guinea alone to work on a project arranged by Carleton Gajdusek to survey the incubation time for kuru. Klitzman soon finds himself living in the Highlands, where he spends his time seeking out former cannibals who are dying of kuru so that he can interview them about when they last ate human flesh.
Klitzman's cultural insights are quite compelling- -instead of finding fault with all that frustrates him, he is able to put the difficulties in context and realize that people are much the same everywhere, underneath their material trappings. One of the fascinating facets of this book is that at the time when Klitzman was doing his research in PNG, kuru was dying out- -the project that he was working on was to find the incubation period for a disease without a future, or so it seemed at the time. When Mad Cow began popping up a few years after Klitzman finished his project, the results suddenly became extremely important for trying to estimate potential deaths due to tainted beef. The book serves as a good reminder that basic research may prove its worth long after the fact. The book's main narrative takes place in Papua New Guinea in 1983-84, 7 years after independence. It provides interesting historical documentation of living conditions in PNG in the time immediately following independence. In 1997, Klitzman returns to the area where he did his research, and observes how many aspects of life in PNG had deteriorated in the intervening time, despite the quantity of wealth coming into the country. For this reason, area specialists may find much of interest in Klitzman's detailed descriptions of living conditions in the early 1980s in PNG.
- This is a really awful book - embarrassingly bad writing (p.205 "How was your trip?" Roger asked with disgust, foaming at the mouth." Page 276: "Ray's blue eyes exploded in ecstasy as he spied a butterfly.") Also, there are many sentences that one must skip or pause to decipher because the sentence just doesn't make any sense. (Who the heck edited this book?)
The book contains precious little about Kuru and less about cannibalism. Also there is not much on Mad Cow Disease. There is here lots and lots and lots of Robert Klitzman. But, even as a "personal account," this book is sadly not very interesting or readable. (Maybe if the author had published this as an edited journal date by date, it would have worked a bit better. Ah, maybe not.)
We read that there amid the fleas and the smelly New Guinea people he thinks about his future. "I decided that I wanted to live an active life, engaged with the world. What I had seen and learned intellectually from Carlton [Gajdusekan - Nobel Prize winner and "sadly" convicted pedophile] was living life. Literary critics [and presumably editors] missed the point by being too analytic and petty, I thought."
This is essentially a vanity publication [and rip-off of the reading public]. Perhaps it is interesting to some relative or close friend of the author (though I doubt it). While the author can add this title to his list of publications, the author should pray that no future writing monies ever depend on the quality of this book.
I cannot imagine any reason anyone would waste his/her time or money on this dreadful book.
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Meyler's Side Effects of Herbal Medicines (Meylers Side Effects) (Meylers Side Effects)
Laboratory Design, Construction, and Renovation: Participants, Process, and Product
Bioactive Molecules and Medicinal Plants
Make your own Essential Oils and Skin-care Products
Molecular Targeting in Oncology (Cancer Drug Discovery and Development) (Cancer Drug Discovery and Development)
Working with Chemistry: A Laboratory Inquiry Program
Chromatographic Methods in Clinical Chemistry and Toxicology
Clinical Chemistry
Instruments and Experimentation in the History of Chemistry (Dibner Institute Studies in the History of Science and Technology)
The Trembling Mountain
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