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A mold-breaking new graphic novel you’ll want to consider is La Perdida, by Jessica Abel, who publishes the zine Artbabe. La Perdida follows Carla, a young Mexican-American woman who sets out with vague motives to explore her heritage. She goes to Mexico City to crash with an ex-flame, a blue-blooded writer called Harry, but before long they fight and she dives into the city on her own. Things go from interesting to exciting to terrifying pretty rapidly, and the consequences for Carla, Harry and many of the locals she befriends are dire. Abel’s black-and-white drawings are both loose and bold, a combination of strong lines, evocative gestures and very basic facial features. The dialogue is in both Spanish and English, which enhances the tension that automatically exists between curious visitor and struggling native. Alienated in the huge city, Carla finds it hard to decide who her friends are, so she assumes she has none which proves to be the biggest mistake she makes.

A mold-breaking new graphic novel you'll want to consider is La Perdida, by Jessica Abel, who publishes the zine Artbabe. La Perdida follows Carla, a young Mexican-American woman who sets out with vague motives to explore her heritage. She goes to Mexico City to crash…
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You know Blue’s Clues if you have children. The animated show on Nickelodeon aims to make its eight million preschool-age viewers laugh, play and think. But what does a show with a dancing dog have to do with business? The number one show for preschoolers now airs in 60 countries and has spawned enough books, videos, CDs and clothing to generate $1 billion in sales in 2000 alone. Maybe the show’s lessons aren’t just for those under age 5.

Blue’s Clues for Success: The Eight Secrets Behind A Phenomenal Business by Diane Tracy chronicles the personal story of the amazingly creative artists behind the show and serves as a primer on how to define mission, research, customer base, work processes and technology. Tracy, who has worked as a creativity coach for many Fortune 500 companies, spells out, simply and effectively, the eight principles behind the show’s phenomenal success. (1. Mobilize the energy in your organization by turning your MISSION into a mantra. 6. BRAND your product or company. Know what you want to be and live up to it.) Follow these clues to find your own success.

You know Blue's Clues if you have children. The animated show on Nickelodeon aims to make its eight million preschool-age viewers laugh, play and think. But what does a show with a dancing dog have to do with business? The number one show for preschoolers…
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Israeli author Etgar Keret is known and loved, especially among younger readers, for his short, potent stories. So Jetlag, which pairs five of his tales with five different illustrators, seems a natural fit. It’s clear just five pages in that this is not your average comic book. The first story, Hatrick, has a magician retiring in despair after his innocent pulling-a-rabbit-out-of-a-hat finale yields increasingly horrific results. Keret’s deadpan tone and the restrained Picasso-esque illustrations by Batia Kolton are a perfect foil for the brutal story. Things get progressively weirder from there: X is about a girl who lives in a village near the gates of Hell and falls in love with a vacationing corpse. There’s also a zanily drawn, surreal plane-crash saga, a simple tale of a boy and his piggy bank and a story about a man who falls for a tightrope walker but ends up with her pet monkey. Highly recommended.

Israeli author Etgar Keret is known and loved, especially among younger readers, for his short, potent stories. So Jetlag, which pairs five of his tales with five different illustrators, seems a natural fit. It's clear just five pages in that this is not your…
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Incorporating religious values into business practice is a scary topic for many managers. Some see it on the level of church and state separation a sacred division of home life versus work life that should never be crossed. But a new trend in business says honoring life values can translate into better business practices.

As Ben ∧ Jerry’s co-founder Jerry Greenfield once said, Sometimes people ask if we’re talking about hippie values (at Ben ∧ Jerry’s). We say, It’s more like biblical values. Do unto others, as you would have them do unto you. As you give, you receive.’ Just because the idea that the good you do comes back to you is written in the Bible and not in some business textbook doesn’t make it any less valid. Four new books perfectly capture this emerging intersection of the religious or value-based life and the inspired marketplace.

Casting a wider net Laurie Beth Jones, the author of Teach Your Team to Fish: Using Ancient Wisdom for Inspired Teamwork, says her mission is to recognize, promote, and inspire the divine connection in all of us. The author of Jesus, CEO and Jesus, Inc., Jones utilizes the interactions of Jesus with his disciples and followers to illustrate how the leader in all of us can make our work meaningful and fulfilling. Using New Testament illustrations, Jones attacks almost every leadership dilemma and offers strikingly sensible ways to look at teamwork and workplace problems.

A witty and thoughtful writer, Jones presents arguments that are easy to understand. Her previous books have been bestsellers with good reason. Managers across the country have looked for ways to inspire and motivate employees, only to learn that taking their values to work can translate into enthusiastic and value-driven employees.

It isn’t necessary to be a born-again Christian to learn great business principles from Teach Your Team to Fish. Jones offers Jesus as a teacher, as Tao Te Ching or Socratic Dialogues have offered inspiration for other writers in building good business practices.

A cheerful giver Parables are not always rooted in the ancient. The Generosity Factor by Ken Blanchard and S. Truett Cathy is a collection of short tales about the myriad ways in which people’s lives intersect. At its heart, this modern day Canterbury Tales shows the life-altering power of giving with generosity. Like Chaucer’s famous travelers, each pilgrim has a story and each story leads him or her to seek a better way.

The characters include The Broker who finds his money-filled life strangely bereft of meaning; his Driver, whose life shows him that there are many ways to find happiness; and The Executive whose work defines generosity and serves as an example for change for The Broker.

Written by the author of The One-Minute Manager and the founder and chairman of the fast-food chain Chik-fil-A, this modern parable defines five principles of generosity that can inspire success in the workplace and in the heart.

Moses, CEO The Bible on Leadership: From Moses to Matthew Management Lessons for Contemporary Leaders by Lorin Woolfe offers a business case study approach to the intersection of biblical values and best business practices. Woolfe provides hundreds of examples of CEOs, entrepreneurs and great leaders who’ve made value marriages work. From Starbucks, Merck and Tom’s of Maine, to USAA Insurance and of course Ben ∧ Jerry’s, Woolfe defines values and chronicles leaders who have put their money where their hearts are.

This is a surprising and thought-provoking book. Why? Because it is filled with the names and quotes of the giants of modern industry, sports, marketing and service. Mammoth names in business all share the same thought again and again without values, money and success are nothing. Steven Covey sums up the message well: Life is a mission, not a career. If you’ve been thinking about the meaning in your business life and want to find a reason to lead and make your business successful, start with this book.

Incorporating religious values into business practice is a scary topic for many managers. Some see it on the level of church and state separation a sacred division of home life versus work life that should never be crossed. But a new trend in business says…
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Most of us would probably agree that making Superman angry is not the best career move. But in Bill Willingham’s Day of Vengeance, that’s exactly how the vengeful spirit Eclipso forces his wicked way into the mind and body of the Man of Steel in order to take over the world. (All supervillains want to take over the world. Why? What will they do with it then?) In this cross-pollinated book, part of the excellent series Countdown to Infinite Crisis, the gorgeous color artwork complements a scary storyline and appearances by many in the vast pantheon of superheroes, including even the wizard Shazam. The Infinite Crisis story arc, which also includes the excellent The OMAC Project, deals with the fragility of identity, so all the main good guys end up doing evil deeds, and not always because they’ve been possessed by demons.

Most of us would probably agree that making Superman angry is not the best career move. But in Bill Willingham's Day of Vengeance, that's exactly how the vengeful spirit Eclipso forces his wicked way into the mind and body of the Man of Steel in…
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It doesn’t take more than a few minutes of reading Laurie Lynn Drummond’s debut collection, Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You to realize that this nomadic ex-cop can flat-out write. With spartan prose exposing a visceral power, Drummond has crafted the fictionalized tales of five Baton Rouge policewomen, based on her experiences as a uniformed officer in that same city.

Bringing to life the mind-numbing boredom interrupted by moments of sheer terror that categorize police work, Drummond’s stories burrow into your guts and carve out a place for themselves. These women and their strengths, weaknesses and emotions come across as an amalgam of one cop, one woman. The same one who in “Absolutes” can shoot a man, then shove her hand into his chest to keep him alive, could also be the cop who viciously slaps her young daughter for chattering too much in “Cleaning Your Gun.” With Joseph Wambaugh’s ear for cop dialogue and a mystic earthiness all her own, Drummond makes her characters come to life, and at the end leaves us with an idea of what they’re searching for: a glimmer of decency and a bit of hope at the end of the day.

Ian Schwartz writes from New York City.

It doesn't take more than a few minutes of reading Laurie Lynn Drummond's debut collection, Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You to realize that this nomadic ex-cop can flat-out write. With spartan prose exposing a visceral power, Drummond has crafted the…
Review by

Incorporating religious values into business practice is a scary topic for many managers. Some see it on the level of church and state separation a sacred division of home life versus work life that should never be crossed. But a new trend in business says honoring life values can translate into better business practices.

As Ben & Jerry’s co-founder Jerry Greenfield once said, "Sometimes people ask if we’re talking about hippie values (at Ben & Jerry’s). We say, It’s more like biblical values. Do unto others, as you would have them do unto you. As you give, you receive." Just because the idea that the good you do comes back to you is written in the Bible and not in some business textbook doesn’t make it any less valid. Four new books perfectly capture this emerging intersection of the religious or value-based life and the inspired marketplace.

Casting a wider net

Laurie Beth Jones, the author of Teach Your Team to Fish: Using Ancient Wisdom for Inspired Teamwork, says her mission is to recognize, promote, and inspire the divine connection in all of us. The author of Jesus, CEO and Jesus, Inc., Jones utilizes the interactions of Jesus with his disciples and followers to illustrate how the leader in all of us can make our work meaningful and fulfilling. Using New Testament illustrations, Jones attacks almost every leadership dilemma and offers strikingly sensible ways to look at teamwork and workplace problems.

A witty and thoughtful writer, Jones presents arguments that are easy to understand. Her previous books have been bestsellers with good reason. Managers across the country have looked for ways to inspire and motivate employees, only to learn that taking their values to work can translate into enthusiastic and value-driven employees.

It isn’t necessary to be a born-again Christian to learn great business principles from Teach Your Team to Fish. Jones offers Jesus as a teacher, as Tao Te Ching or Socratic Dialogues have offered inspiration for other writers in building good business practices.

A cheerful giver

Parables are not always rooted in the ancient. The Generosity Factor by Ken Blanchard and S. Truett Cathy is a collection of short tales about the myriad ways in which people’s lives intersect. At its heart, this modern day Canterbury Tales shows the life-altering power of giving with generosity. Like Chaucer’s famous travelers, each pilgrim has a story and each story leads him or her to seek a better way.

The characters include The Broker who finds his money-filled life strangely bereft of meaning; his Driver, whose life shows him that there are many ways to find happiness; and The Executive whose work defines generosity and serves as an example for change for The Broker.

Written by the author of The One-Minute Manager and the founder and chairman of the fast-food chain Chik-fil-A, this modern parable defines five principles of generosity that can inspire success in the workplace and in the heart.

Moses, CEO

The Bible on Leadership: From Moses to Matthew Management Lessons for Contemporary Leaders by Lorin Woolfe offers a business case study approach to the intersection of biblical values and best business practices. Woolfe provides hundreds of examples of CEOs, entrepreneurs and great leaders who’ve made value marriages work. From Starbucks, Merck and Tom’s of Maine, to USAA Insurance and of course Ben ∧ Jerry’s, Woolfe defines values and chronicles leaders who have put their money where their hearts are.

This is a surprising and thought-provoking book. Why? Because it is filled with the names and quotes of the giants of modern industry, sports, marketing and service. Mammoth names in business all share the same thought again and again without values, money and success are nothing. Steven Covey sums up the message well: Life is a mission, not a career. If you’ve been thinking about the meaning in your business life and want to find a reason to lead and make your business successful, start with this book.

 

Incorporating religious values into business practice is a scary topic for many managers. Some see it on the level of church and state separation a sacred division of home life versus work life that should never be crossed. But a new trend in business…

Review by

The Bible covers thousands of years of history, culture and religion. Making sense of it all is a daunting task; it’s all too easy to get lost in the sea of odd names and ancient cultures or to forget just where in all those pages to find a particular reference or event.

The Illustrated Everyday Bible Companion is an excellent tool for understanding the concepts and customs within the Bible’s historic span. Described in its subtitle as An All-in-One Resource for Everyday Bible Study, this amply illustrated volume lives up to its billing, providing an encyclopedic listing of Biblical names, objects and concepts and placing each within its cultural and historical context. Packed with photos and drawings, this impressive guide also includes concordance information and a thematic summary of each book of Scripture. Want to know where King Jehoshaphat and King Ahab formed an alliance? The summary of 2 Chronicles will set you straight (18:1-3, in case you wondered).

The Illustrated Everyday Bible Companion is easy to read and fun to thumb through. A suitable guide for personal study or family devotions, it places a true understanding of the Bible within the reach of every reader, not just historical scholars and seminarians. A writer in Franklin, Tennessee, Howard Shirley is the author of Acts for God: 38 Dramatic Sketches for Contemporary Services, as well as Christian video and devotional materials.

The Bible covers thousands of years of history, culture and religion. Making sense of it all is a daunting task; it's all too easy to get lost in the sea of odd names and ancient cultures or to forget just where in all those pages…
Review by

Pramoedya Ananta Toer, the Indonesian author of All That is Gone, makes each word resonate with meaning. Translated by Willem Samuels, Toer’s eight semi-autobiographical tales are teeming with cruelty and beauty. A winner of the PEN Freedom-to-Write Award, Toer spent years as a political prisoner in his homeland in the 1960s and ’70s. Those years come through in his writing, a mix of longing and desperation that possess the stark, bleak beauty of a full moon or a trackless desert.

The stories, which take place in the author’s rural East Java hometown of Blora, begin with the haunting title story, in which a man looks back at his lost youth and innocence, captive to cobwebbed memories. That helplessness is mirrored throughout Toer’s collection, most notably by the citizens of Blora, who in the mid-20th century are under the thumb of various warring factions and conquerors whose hegemony extends to their thoughts and beliefs. In “Acceptance,” the book’s longest story, we watch as war causes the disintegration of a large family. Other tales are equally as grim child abuse, torture, political and physical domination are just some of Toer’s themes. Yet his skill is such that humanity is present in each tale, lurking in the shadows.

Ian Schwartz writes from New York City.

Pramoedya Ananta Toer, the Indonesian author of All That is Gone, makes each word resonate with meaning. Translated by Willem Samuels, Toer's eight semi-autobiographical tales are teeming with cruelty and beauty. A winner of the PEN Freedom-to-Write Award, Toer spent years as a political prisoner…
Review by

Incorporating religious values into business practice is a scary topic for many managers. Some see it on the level of church and state separation a sacred division of home life versus work life that should never be crossed. But a new trend in business says honoring life values can translate into better business practices.

As Ben & Jerry’s co-founder Jerry Greenfield once said, Sometimes people ask if we’re talking about hippie values (at Ben & Jerry’s). We say, It’s more like biblical values. Do unto others, as you would have them do unto you. As you give, you receive.’ Just because the idea that the good you do comes back to you is written in the Bible and not in some business textbook doesn’t make it any less valid. Four new books perfectly capture this emerging intersection of the religious or value-based life and the inspired marketplace.

Casting a wider net Laurie Beth Jones, the author of Teach Your Team to Fish: Using Ancient Wisdom for Inspired Teamwork, says her mission is to recognize, promote, and inspire the divine connection in all of us. The author of Jesus, CEO and Jesus, Inc., Jones utilizes the interactions of Jesus with his disciples and followers to illustrate how the leader in all of us can make our work meaningful and fulfilling. Using New Testament illustrations, Jones attacks almost every leadership dilemma and offers strikingly sensible ways to look at teamwork and workplace problems.

A witty and thoughtful writer, Jones presents arguments that are easy to understand. Her previous books have been bestsellers with good reason. Managers across the country have looked for ways to inspire and motivate employees, only to learn that taking their values to work can translate into enthusiastic and value-driven employees.

It isn’t necessary to be a born-again Christian to learn great business principles from Teach Your Team to Fish. Jones offers Jesus as a teacher, as Tao Te Ching or Socratic Dialogues have offered inspiration for other writers in building good business practices.

A cheerful giver Parables are not always rooted in the ancient. The Generosity Factor by Ken Blanchard and S. Truett Cathy is a collection of short tales about the myriad ways in which people’s lives intersect. At its heart, this modern day Canterbury Tales shows the life-altering power of giving with generosity. Like Chaucer’s famous travelers, each pilgrim has a story and each story leads him or her to seek a better way.

The characters include The Broker who finds his money-filled life strangely bereft of meaning; his Driver, whose life shows him that there are many ways to find happiness; and The Executive whose work defines generosity and serves as an example for change for The Broker.

Written by the author of The One-Minute Manager and the founder and chairman of the fast-food chain Chik-fil-A, this modern parable defines five principles of generosity that can inspire success in the workplace and in the heart.

Moses, CEO The Bible on Leadership: From Moses to Matthew Management Lessons for Contemporary Leaders by Lorin Woolfe offers a business case study approach to the intersection of biblical values and best business practices. Woolfe provides hundreds of examples of CEOs, entrepreneurs and great leaders who’ve made value marriages work. From Starbucks, Merck and Tom’s of Maine, to USAA Insurance and of course Ben ∧ Jerry’s, Woolfe defines values and chronicles leaders who have put their money where their hearts are.

This is a surprising and thought-provoking book. Why? Because it is filled with the names and quotes of the giants of modern industry, sports, marketing and service. Mammoth names in business all share the same thought again and again without values, money and success are nothing. Steven Covey sums up the message well: Life is a mission, not a career. If you’ve been thinking about the meaning in your business life and want to find a reason to lead and make your business successful, start with this book.

 

Incorporating religious values into business practice is a scary topic for many managers. Some see it on the level of church and state separation a sacred division of home life versus work life that should never be crossed. But a new trend in business…

Review by

Redemption is the theme of Story: Recapture the Mystery by Steven James. A storyteller and poet, James skillfully weaves together personal stories, re-imagined fairy tales, biblical scenes, imagined conversations with angels, philosophical musings and poetic interludes to tell the redemptive story of Christ. It is a potpourri of language and imagery, mingled to delicious effect, calling the reader to see the gospel story with fresh eyes, breaking through the numbness of familiarity to expose the wonder and adventure God offers. This highly original retelling of the Scripture is often beautiful, often haunting and thoroughly compelling. It is a reminder that Christ’s promise of life, anew is constantly with us, then, now and always. A writer in Franklin, Tennessee, Howard Shirley is the author of Acts for God: 38 Dramatic Sketches for Contemporary Services, as well as Christian video and devotional materials.

Redemption is the theme of Story: Recapture the Mystery by Steven James. A storyteller and poet, James skillfully weaves together personal stories, re-imagined fairy tales, biblical scenes, imagined conversations with angels, philosophical musings and poetic interludes to tell the redemptive story of Christ. It is…
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A few years ago, committed amateur golfer Ron Cherney and sportswriter Michael Arkush sent letters out to 200-plus pro golfers, male and female, soliciting their feedback about their personal best individual shots in competition. The result is My Greatest Shot: The Top Players Share Their Defining Golf Moments, which compiles the responses of 80 pros, active or retired, including Palmer, Nicklaus, Woods, Watson, Billy Casper, Vijay Singh, Phil Mickelson, Mickey Wright, Kathy Whitworth, Carol Mann and others. For each respondent, the authors provide a brief bio, career highlights and quotes on the game and life in general.

A few years ago, committed amateur golfer Ron Cherney and sportswriter Michael Arkush sent letters out to 200-plus pro golfers, male and female, soliciting their feedback about their personal best individual shots in competition. The result is My Greatest Shot: The Top Players Share…
Review by

<B>When a good girl’ goes bad</B> Who is Gloria 21169 and why is she involved with the residents of Big Dipper Township? The answer to the first question is found in the opening chapter of Mike Heppner’s high-tech novel, <B>The Egg Code</B>. Gloria is not a woman, but a high-speed router, technically known as an RS/6000, T-3 compatible bit processor, one of many specialized computers designed to handle the flow of traffic in the emerging Internet.

In 1989, the Internet as we know it today was still in the early stages of development. The Gloria router is an essential part of this development, but as one of the characters explains, It’s a very bad router. Gloria has gone rogue taking over the entire network and its developers aren’t sure why.

Heppner cleverly dangles the answer just in front of the reader’s nose, enticing us with a series of opening vignettes designed to introduce the residents of Big Dipper Township, a small Midwestern community. The introductory chapters veer crazily across time and place, an unusual plot device that Heppner uses to maximum effect. By forsaking a more conventional linear chronology, he injects a tantalizing note of mystery into the early part of the book. In the beginning, it’s not clear who all the characters are and what their connection is with one another, which creates a compelling sense of intrigue. By leaping back and forth in time, we’re able to see clearly the seeds of dysfunction being sowed and watch as these seeds sprout, and slowly, inexorably shred the fabric of life in Big Dipper Township, sending its residents toward a collision of sorts with the Gloria router.

Heppner’s cast of characters includes a motivational speaker whose words are muddled by his impending emotional collapse; a dancer who believes she can fly; a pushy stage mother and her son; an average Joe of a furniture salesman; and a hacker bent on using the Gloria router as a tool of destruction.

In this impressive debut novel, Heppner tackles his complex subject with a sure hand, creating a story that heartbreakingly displays the eternal frailties of human nature. <I>Steve Powers is a freelance writer in Burleson, Texas.</I>

<B>When a good girl' goes bad</B> Who is Gloria 21169 and why is she involved with the residents of Big Dipper Township? The answer to the first question is found in the opening chapter of Mike Heppner's high-tech novel, <B>The Egg Code</B>. Gloria is not…

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