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<b>God’s operation</b> If Out of Control challenges us not to be individually overwhelmed by the world, <b>Living the Resurrection: The Risen Christ in Everyday Life</b> by Eugene H. Peterson challenges the church not to let the world overwhelm the faith. A former pastor and theologian, Peterson is best known as the translator and author of <i>The Message</i>, which retells the Bible in modern language. With <b>Living the Resurrection</b>, Peterson calls for the church to refocus itself on the resurrection of Christ as the central transformational mystery that sets every purpose and guides every step. Peterson argues that the church has been lulled into treating faith as a self-help project, defined by techniques and goals and programs. Christians are trying to manipulate, define and control something and someone who is completely outside their control. Resurrection is not available for our use, says Peterson. It’s exclusively God’s operation. With this book, he calls readers back to allowing God to transform them, rather than making feeble efforts to effect change the other way around. <b>Living the Resurrection</b> is worth reading and worth pondering, an eye-opener to a way of thinking and living that returns to the redemptive power of Christ.

<i>A writer in Franklin, Tennessee, Howard Shirley is the author of</i> Acts for God: 38 Dramatic Sketches for Contemporary Services<i>, as well as Christian video and devotional materials.</i>

<b>God's operation</b> If Out of Control challenges us not to be individually overwhelmed by the world, <b>Living the Resurrection: The Risen Christ in Everyday Life</b> by Eugene H. Peterson challenges the church not to let the world overwhelm the faith. A former pastor and theologian,…

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Edited by sportswriter and former PGA Tour caddie Bradley S. Klein, A Walk in the Park: Golfweek’s Guide to America’s Best Classic and Modern Golf Courses features compact yet evocative course descriptions and coolly informative essays on broader architectural and design issues. Best of all, there is a bevy of lustrous color photos that exploit the courses’ singular vistas.

Edited by sportswriter and former PGA Tour caddie Bradley S. Klein, A Walk in the Park: Golfweek's Guide to America's Best Classic and Modern Golf Courses features compact yet evocative course descriptions and coolly informative essays on broader architectural and design issues. Best of…
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<B>The aging brain: Act now so you don’t lose your mind</B> For more than two decades, deaths from heart disease have been decreasing at an impressive clip. Although it has been hotly debated whether the decline stems more from improvements in medical care or preventive steps, both factors flow from better scientific understanding of the disease. There has also been a steady drop in the frequency of strokes over the same period, largely because researchers discovered the connection between strokes and high blood pressure and found better methods of controlling it. Cancer, that other major killer, has been more difficult to bring under control, but years of investigation are beginning to pay off. Between 1990 and 2000, cancer death rates fell almost five percent the first measured decline in human history. Not all the news about disease is that good, but overall, scientific developments are helping us live a lot longer.

In <B>Saving Your Brain: The Revolutionary Plan to Boost Brain Power, Improve Memory, and Protect Yourself Against Aging and Alzheimer’s</B>, Dr. Jeff Victoroff points out the ironic threat posed by this longer life people are living long enough to be vulnerable to ARN that is, aging-related neurodegeneration.

Aging-related brain degenerations are now the fourth most common cause of death, and rising fast. Dr. Gary Small notes in <!–BPLINK=0786868260–><B>The Memory Bible: An Innovative Strategy for Keeping Your Brain Young</B><!–ENDBPLINK–> that the rate of new Alzheimer’s cases doubles every five years between ages 65 and 90, and people are increasingly living into their 80s and 90s.

As foreboding as this sounds, the central tone of each author is extremely hopeful. Knowledge of how the brain ages has expanded at an extraordinary pace since the beginning of the 1990s. Just as better understanding of heart disease, stroke and cancer led to effective methods of prevention and treatment, a vigorous defense against deterioration of the aging brain can now be mounted. Each book provides a rich source of measures aimed at saving your brain. It’s not surprising that Small, a renowned neuroscientist who directs both the UCLA Memory Clinic and UCLA’s Center on Aging, places enormous emphasis on improving memory as an integral part of any program to slow aging of the brain. He quickly gets down to business, describing his LOOK (actively observe), SNAP (create a vivid image), CONNECT (visualize a link) method, which he guarantees will immediately improve memory, and supplementing this system with a sequence of mental aerobics to stimulate the brain. Small goes beyond the basics to skills that both slow aging of the brain and enrich everyday life. In a similar beneficial manner, his program provides guidelines for optimizing other influences on brain health, such as diet and lifestyle, that will also improve health more broadly.

Victoroff, a Harvard-trained neurologist and neuropsychiatrist, covers similar topics in a strikingly different manner. Whereas Small lays out his program to keep the brain young after a brief survey of the underlying science, Victoroff describes the fascinating science at greater length. His presentation is by no means dry, precisely because the science is fascinating. And whereas Small’s recipe for saving the brain requires less than 12 compact chapters, Victoroff’s occupies a dozen-and-a-half wide-ranging chapters, with more extensive discussion; medical digressions on topics such as the effects of the workplace on brain health; more elaborate diagrams and figures; and even a brain-saving food pyramid that he constructed as a more effective alternative to the well-known U.S. Department of Agriculture diet pyramid.

Small has created a memory bible with an effective prescription for keeping that faculty robust. Victoroff has produced a comprehensive guidebook on brain health and its preservation. Which book a reader chooses depending on depth of interest and available time isn’t the central issue. What is? Most of us are headed for a long life that will increasingly be beset by mental deterioration. Get one of these extremely helpful books, follow its wise strategy and save your brain. <I>Al Huebner, a physicist, writes widely on science.</I>

<B>The aging brain: Act now so you don't lose your mind</B> For more than two decades, deaths from heart disease have been decreasing at an impressive clip. Although it has been hotly debated whether the decline stems more from improvements in medical care or preventive…
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The frenzied pace of this harried world is the disease which Out of Control: Finding Peace for the Physically Exhausted and Spiritually Strung Out seeks to treat. A pastor and clinical psychologist, respectively, Ben Young and Dr. Samuel Adams offer relief to anyone who feels overwhelmed by modern life. In many ways, this book could be a companion piece to The Rest of God, as it touches on similar themes, including a call for a return to a personal Sabbath. Out of Control suggests ways to bring each day out of the rushing current of the world and into the peaceful presence of God. The style of the book is friendly and straightforward, making Young and Adams’ advice easily accessible to everyone. There is no preaching or condemnation, but solid, practical advice on dealing with anxiety, stress, worry and the demands of a mile-a-minute, information-overloading world. If you find yourself barely hanging on to your last thin thread, this book is for you.

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 frenzied pace of this harried world is the disease which Out of Control: Finding Peace for the Physically Exhausted and Spiritually Strung Out seeks to treat. A pastor and clinical psychologist, respectively, Ben Young and Dr. Samuel Adams offer relief to anyone who feels…
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In Caddy for Life: The Bruce Edwards Story, all-world sportswriter John Feinstein offers a tribute to pro caddy Bruce Edwards. Completed before Edwards’ recent death from Lou Gehrig’s disease, the book captures his easy persona and lifelong love of the game, focusing in particular on his 25-year association with Tom Watson, who, through the late ’70s and early ’80s, was probably golf’s finest player.

In Caddy for Life: The Bruce Edwards Story, all-world sportswriter John Feinstein offers a tribute to pro caddy Bruce Edwards. Completed before Edwards' recent death from Lou Gehrig's disease, the book captures his easy persona and lifelong love of the game, focusing in particular…
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<B>The aging brain: Act now so you don’t lose your mind</B> For more than two decades, deaths from heart disease have been decreasing at an impressive clip. Although it has been hotly debated whether the decline stems more from improvements in medical care or preventive steps, both factors flow from better scientific understanding of the disease. There has also been a steady drop in the frequency of strokes over the same period, largely because researchers discovered the connection between strokes and high blood pressure and found better methods of controlling it. Cancer, that other major killer, has been more difficult to bring under control, but years of investigation are beginning to pay off. Between 1990 and 2000, cancer death rates fell almost five percent the first measured decline in human history. Not all the news about disease is that good, but overall, scientific developments are helping us live a lot longer.

In <!–BPLINK=0553109448–><B>Saving Your Brain: The Revolutionary Plan to Boost Brain Power, Improve Memory, and Protect Yourself Against Aging and Alzheimer’s</B><!–ENDBPLINK–>, Dr. Jeff Victoroff points out the ironic threat posed by this longer life people are living long enough to be vulnerable to ARN that is, aging-related neurodegeneration.

Aging-related brain degenerations are now the fourth most common cause of death, and rising fast. Dr. Gary Small notes in <B>The Memory Bible: An Innovative Strategy for Keeping Your Brain Young</B> that the rate of new Alzheimer’s cases doubles every five years between ages 65 and 90, and people are increasingly living into their 80s and 90s.

As foreboding as this sounds, the central tone of each author is extremely hopeful. Knowledge of how the brain ages has expanded at an extraordinary pace since the beginning of the 1990s. Just as better understanding of heart disease, stroke and cancer led to effective methods of prevention and treatment, a vigorous defense against deterioration of the aging brain can now be mounted. Each book provides a rich source of measures aimed at saving your brain. It’s not surprising that Small, a renowned neuroscientist who directs both the UCLA Memory Clinic and UCLA’s Center on Aging, places enormous emphasis on improving memory as an integral part of any program to slow aging of the brain. He quickly gets down to business, describing his LOOK (actively observe), SNAP (create a vivid image), CONNECT (visualize a link) method, which he guarantees will immediately improve memory, and supplementing this system with a sequence of mental aerobics to stimulate the brain. Small goes beyond the basics to skills that both slow aging of the brain and enrich everyday life. In a similar beneficial manner, his program provides guidelines for optimizing other influences on brain health, such as diet and lifestyle, that will also improve health more broadly.

Victoroff, a Harvard-trained neurologist and neuropsychiatrist, covers similar topics in a strikingly different manner. Whereas Small lays out his program to keep the brain young after a brief survey of the underlying science, Victoroff describes the fascinating science at greater length. His presentation is by no means dry, precisely because the science is fascinating. And whereas Small’s recipe for saving the brain requires less than 12 compact chapters, Victoroff’s occupies a dozen-and-a-half wide-ranging chapters, with more extensive discussion; medical digressions on topics such as the effects of the workplace on brain health; more elaborate diagrams and figures; and even a brain-saving food pyramid that he constructed as a more effective alternative to the well-known U.S. Department of Agriculture diet pyramid.

Small has created a memory bible with an effective prescription for keeping that faculty robust. Victoroff has produced a comprehensive guidebook on brain health and its preservation. Which book a reader chooses depending on depth of interest and available time isn’t the central issue. What is? Most of us are headed for a long life that will increasingly be beset by mental deterioration. Get one of these extremely helpful books, follow its wise strategy and save your brain. <I>Al Huebner, a physicist, writes widely on science.</I>

<B>The aging brain: Act now so you don't lose your mind</B> For more than two decades, deaths from heart disease have been decreasing at an impressive clip. Although it has been hotly debated whether the decline stems more from improvements in medical care or preventive…

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This book takes a look at one of the oldest religious traditions: the Sabbath the day of rest. In his book, The Rest of God: Restoring Your Soul by Restoring Sabbath, Mark Buchanan challenges us to go back to the original intent of the Sabbath, as expressed at its inception, commanded in the Torah and pointed to by Christ: a rest from one’s labors, blessed by God. The Sabbath was created for man, not man for the Sabbath, Christ said, and the implications of this truth are what Buchanan examines. Buchanan is not calling for a return to blue laws and suit-and-tie Sundays, but a recognition that God calls us indeed created us to rest from our work, one day each week. Sabbath rest means recognizing God, restoring ourselves and enjoying the life he has given us.

Buchanan writes with skill and beauty, using phrases, images and stories that are a delight to read and a joy to the soul. Regardless of your background, The Rest of God is a healing treasure in a far too harried world.

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.

This book takes a look at one of the oldest religious traditions: the Sabbath the day of rest. In his book, The Rest of God: Restoring Your Soul by Restoring Sabbath, Mark Buchanan challenges us to go back to the original intent of the Sabbath,…
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With its thorough research and unstinting personal and professional detail, Ben Hogan: An American Life fills in the blanks of the life of one of America’s most enigmatic and overachieving sportsmen. Hogan (1912-1997) overcame childhood trauma he saw his father commit suicide to carve out a legacy as an unrelenting shot-maker who set the standard for the later greats of modern golf. Author James Dodson probes Hogan’s seemingly jinxed early career, his ascension to the pinnacle of his sport, his contentious relationship with the press, his remarkable comeback after a calamitous 1949 auto crash, and his sometimes difficult but devoted marriage.

With its thorough research and unstinting personal and professional detail, Ben Hogan: An American Life fills in the blanks of the life of one of America's most enigmatic and overachieving sportsmen. Hogan (1912-1997) overcame childhood trauma he saw his father commit suicide to carve…
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Prepare for the kind of laugh that starts deep in your belly and lingers on the lips, distilling into residual chuckles that punctuate the silence of your armchair. Patrick McManus’ new collection of essays, The Bear in the Attic, is that kind of book. McManus’ humor is inspired by the forests and streams of his native Idaho, a world in which hunting and fishing are the sports of gods, and one doesn’t look for finer entertainment anywhere else. Much of the author’s wit derives from his mythic lack of success at these recreations. He bags so few deer that his hunting friends are convinced his presence on a hunt is bad luck. McManus also updates old hunting and fishing jokes lying about the size of your fish; the ways in which the old, sage hunter gets the neophyte to do all the work under the guise of teaching him; and the neophyte’s hunt for the mythical sasquatch. But the old pro is at his best when he is spinning long, elaborate yarns with sophisticated twists that require the reader to follow carefully and put two and two together to get five or six. His title story, The Bear in the Attic, starts out with the apparent kidnapping of a young girl. Turns out the kidnapper is her grandfather (the author, of course). To entertain her, granddad promises to tell her about a bear in an attic. He begins with the story of how McManus’ cowardly cousin goes AWOL from the U.S. Army by hiding in his parents’ attic. He does so in collusion with his mother, though his father never knows a thing until the FBI raids the place and takes the young man off to lockup. But what does all this have to do with a bear? McManus’ granddaughter asks. The storyteller then spins off into the sequel in which his uncle brings home a bear cub. McManus’ aunt thinks the pup is cute and adopts it. The bear cub calls her Mawmaw. Eventually, the animal is opening the refrigerator himself, downing whole bags of dog food at one sitting and occupying the uncle’s favorite chair. Pretty soon, the bear isn’t so cute, but when he wants to hibernate in the attic, Mawmaw doesn’t have the heart to refuse him. Is this just a funny story involving wildlife or a metaphor for child-rearing? The reader will have to draw his own conclusions. McManus doesn’t supply any more clues. If you go far enough back in the tradition of storytelling, the skillful liar like Ulysses is also the greatest storyteller. McManus freely admits that he stretches the truth to get a good tale.

Hunters and fishers learn the art of creative lying. After all, admitting that you caught only a small fish or clean missed that deer is just a little too dreary. McManus takes the campfire hyperbole to new levels of magic, and the reader is always the winner. Lynn Hamilton writes from Tybee Island, Georgia.

Prepare for the kind of laugh that starts deep in your belly and lingers on the lips, distilling into residual chuckles that punctuate the silence of your armchair. Patrick McManus' new collection of essays, The Bear in the Attic, is that kind of book. McManus'…
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Bob Knight is the subject of a fine biography by Steve Delsohn and Mark Heisler, Bob Knight: An Unauthorized Biography. Knight has won three national championships and an Olympic gold medal during a stormy career that’s taken him from Army to Indiana to Texas Tech, making friends and enemies by the bushel along the way. The central question about him always has been whether the ends (championship teams, a clean program) justify the means (intimidation, verbal abuse, etc.). The authors don’t come out with a direct answer; they are too busy interviewing as many people as they can find to comment on the events in Knight’s career. The resulting book is a balanced look at a life that almost forces people to choose sides.

It’s easy to conclude after reading this biography that Knight would have benefited from a little discipline from his bosses early in his coaching career. Maybe then he could have controlled his behavior and remained just as good a coach. In any case, Knight remains a fascinating character, and Delsohn and Heisler deserve credit for this fascinating portrait. Budd Bailey works in the sports department of the Buffalo News.

Bob Knight is the subject of a fine biography by Steve Delsohn and Mark Heisler, Bob Knight: An Unauthorized Biography. Knight has won three national championships and an Olympic gold medal during a stormy career that's taken him from Army to Indiana to Texas Tech,…
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Until the 1950s, golf remained a rather elitist game, played for relatively modest purses and equally modest media attention. In The Wicked Game: Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, and the Story of Modern Golf, Howard Sounes provides a rigorously well-written history of how that all changed. Arnold Palmer, says Sounes, is the guy chiefly responsible for golf’s high-profile, big-money modern ways, having captured a devoted fan following in the late ’50s through dramatic tournament wins and the projection of a common-man personality. Sounes shows how Jack Nicklaus built on Palmer’s efforts and includes a detailed account of the life and precocious achievements of Tiger Woods. Fascinating biographical material is mixed with sociocultural analysis of golf’s growing pains, in particular the hard-won fight for black golfers to gain access to exclusive events and major money-making opportunities. Sounes also includes solid coverage of the sex-discrimination flap at the 2003 Masters. This is one of the most important sports books in recent seasons.

Until the 1950s, golf remained a rather elitist game, played for relatively modest purses and equally modest media attention. In The Wicked Game: Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, and the Story of Modern Golf, Howard Sounes provides a rigorously well-written history of how…
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Don Haskins only coached in one Final Four, but it was arguably the most important such appearance in history. Haskins led the Texas Western Miners in 1966 when the team started an all-African-American lineup against an all-white Kentucky team in the final. The result has been called the Brown v. Board of Education of college basketball. Texas Western (which changed its name to the University of Texas at El Paso the following summer) won the national title, and segregated teams were instantly on their way out.

That game was the subject of a recent movie that shares the title of Haskins’ autobiography, Glory Road. Haskins, a no-frills personality if there ever was one, tells the overdue story about how a team from El Paso came out of virtually nowhere to change the game forever. Haskins loved to coach, and he liked to win. He did both with boys’ and girls’ prep teams, and won several hundred games once he took over at Texas Western.

Haskins has a simple yet eloquent explanation as to why his team had five black starters: I just started my best players. Isn’t that what coaching is all about? It didn’t occur to him to do anything else. It’s nice to get his memories on paper in this entertaining memoir, written with Dan Wetzel.

Budd Bailey works in the sports department of the Buffalo News.

Don Haskins only coached in one Final Four, but it was arguably the most important such appearance in history. Haskins led the Texas Western Miners in 1966 when the team started an all-African-American lineup against an all-white Kentucky team in the final. The result has…
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Essentially, Voices of Valor was born in 1983, when the then director of the Eisenhower Center at the University of New Orleans, historian Stephen E. Ambrose, started interviewing D-Day veterans for an oral history project. Realizing how extraordinary it would have been to have had the technology to tape-record the soldiers of Gettysburg or Vicksburg during the U.S. Civil War, Ambrose and his associate, Captain Ron Drez, USMC a decorated rifle company commander in Vietnam in 1968 embarked on a mission. For over a decade they canvassed America, attending veterans’ reunions and tracking down forgotten men. The Eisenhower Center collection grew to more than 2,000 accounts of D-Day experiences. “This is the most extensive first-person, I-was-there collection of memoirs of a single battle in existence,” Ambrose wrote in the acknowledgments to his best-selling book D-Day: June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle of World War II.

D-Day was the turning point of World War II. British prime minister Winston Churchill summed it up best when he deemed it “the most difficult and most complicated operation ever to take place.” That is saying a lot, for it was a rare day during the war when something crucial didn’t transpire somewhere in the Pacific, Burma-India-China, the Middle East, North Africa, the Soviet Union, the North Atlantic or Europe. On June 4, 1944, for example, the Americans marched triumphantly into Rome, headquarters of Fascist Italy and the first major capital to be liberated by the Allies. But the D-Day invasion in northern France two days later was a turning point of a different sort: land conquered by the Nazis was taken back for freedom. It was only a narrow strip of sea-sprayed beach, but it was land, hard-fought for, and it was the beginning of the end for Adolf Hitler.

Everything about D-Day was large the overarching strategy, the vast mobilization, the sheer number of troops. But it is the daring boldness and intrepid courage of the men America’s 1st, 4th, and 29th Infantry Divisions, and its 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, along with the British 3rd and 50th Infantry Divisions, the Canadian 3rd Infantry Division, and the British 6th Airborne Division plus the incredible job of the U.S. Navy and Air Corps, that stand out. One can read biographies of Dwight Eisenhower or watch footage of John Ford, but the only way to understand D-Day fully is as a battle at its smallest: that is, one soldier and one reminiscence at a time. Collectively, these fighting men were the Voices of Valor the title of this book.

Infantryman Al Littke of the 16th Regiment Combat Team, for example, watched the naval bombardment of Omaha Beach as he waited in a boat to join the landing. “With all this fire power, it should be a cinch,” he recalled saying to himself, “I thought I was untouchable.” Leonard Griffing was a paratrooper with the 101st Airborne Division, preparing to drop onto French soil from a low-flying airplane. “As I stood there with my hands on the edge of the doorway ready to push out,” he recalled, “it seemed that we took some kind of a burst under the left wing because the plane went in a sharp roll and I couldn’t push myself out because it was uphill, so I just hung on.” D-Day was not one day, but a composite of many days, experienced by each of those individuals who played a part on the Allied side from the 120,000 men who landed during the initial action to the millions of personnel who supported them. In this volume, the story of D-Day is told through the impressions of those who were there. None of the people who lend their voices here saw the grand sweep of the battle, but rather only one small snapshot of it. Assembled in this book, Voices of Valor, are those memories some tragic, some humorous, and all of them imbued with human drama. They comprise the big picture of the largest invasion force ever assembled. Voices of Valor: D-Day June 6, 1944 includes two audio CDs of D-Day participants’ accounts introduced by Douglas Brinkley. Brinkley is a professor of history at the University of New Orleans, director of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Center for American Studies and author of several books. Co-author Ronald J. Drez is writing a children’s book on D-Day for National Geographic.

Essentially, Voices of Valor was born in 1983, when the then director of the Eisenhower Center at the University of New Orleans, historian Stephen E. Ambrose, started interviewing D-Day veterans for an oral history project. Realizing how extraordinary it would have been to have had…

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