Read Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius Scholarly Articles Volume 16 Audible Audio Edition Peter Fritz Walter SiriusC Media Galaxy LLC Books

By Tanya Richards on Sunday, June 2, 2019

Read Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius Scholarly Articles Volume 16 Audible Audio Edition Peter Fritz Walter SiriusC Media Galaxy LLC Books



Download As PDF : Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius Scholarly Articles Volume 16 Audible Audio Edition Peter Fritz Walter SiriusC Media Galaxy LLC Books

Download PDF Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius Scholarly Articles Volume 16 Audible Audio Edition Peter Fritz Walter SiriusC Media Galaxy LLC Books

Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius deals with an important topic both for science and spirituality direct perception. How do humans perceive reality? Is there something like a universal reality, one that is valid for all of us, or is reality always personal? And how does the memory surface work? Is our school system the right one, or do we have to implement fundamental changes so as to mold our school system after the way our brain learns? Would that not be the most intelligent way of doing it?

The author tried to answer these questions in this essay, taking reference to Eastern spiritual traditions as well as Western scientific thinking, with a special focus upon Herbert James Campbell's neurological research on preferred pathways and the pleasure function, as well as Edward de Bono's remarkable research about the nature of the human memory surface.

What became clear after general brain research and the special focus upon preferred pathways was the rather astounding coincidence between these scientific findings about super-effective whole-brain learning and associatively linked memorization patterns, on one hand, and the way geniuses learn, as it's documented by biographical genius and polymath research, on the other.

Information can be found, for example, through biographical research on the lives and almost miraculous learning capacities of Leonardo da Vinci, Giordano Bruno, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Albert Einstein, and many others. And this then leads to the insight that there is about nothing less effective in terms of learning output than our current mainstream school system, as it virtually suffocates the human brain and besides, invalidates and impairs the right-brain hemisphere, which leads to the result that we face worldwide millions if not billions of deficient thinkers.


Read Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius Scholarly Articles Volume 16 Audible Audio Edition Peter Fritz Walter SiriusC Media Galaxy LLC Books


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Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 34 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Sirius-C Media Galaxy LLC
  • Audible.com Release Date April 5, 2019
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B07Q9J8GMP

Read Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius Scholarly Articles Volume 16 Audible Audio Edition Peter Fritz Walter SiriusC Media Galaxy LLC Books

Tags : Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius (Scholarly Articles, Volume 16) (Audible Audio Edition) Peter Fritz Walter, Sirius-C Media Galaxy LLC Books, ,Peter Fritz Walter, Sirius-C Media Galaxy LLC,Patterns of Perception Preferred Pathways to Genius (Scholarly Articles, Volume 16),Sirius-C Media Galaxy LLC,B07Q9J8GMP

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Ebook La Révolution française 17891799 9782290173718 Books

By Tanya Richards

Ebook La Révolution française 17891799 9782290173718 Books





Product details

  • Mass Market Paperback
  • Publisher J'ai lu (April 3, 2019)
  • Language French
  • ISBN-10 2290173711




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Read Online Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books

By Tanya Richards on Saturday, June 1, 2019

Read Online Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books



Download As PDF : Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books

Download PDF Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books

New York Times bestselling author and artist James Dean brings Pete the Cat fans some fun in the sun!

Pete the Cat is one groovy cat at finding shells and building sand castles at the beach. But when it gets too hot, there’s only one way to cool off—jump into the ocean! Except Pete might be a scaredy-cat when it comes to the water.

Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach is a My First I Can Read book, which means it’s perfect for shared reading with a child.


Read Online Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books


"My little girl loves Pete! She was reading 98% of words in these books before she even started Kindergarten. Now I get her the books because she enjoys reading them and because they have cute stories and repetitive sight words that help kids familiarize themselves with the words and gain confidence."

Product details

  • Age Range 4 - 8 years
  • Grade Level Preschool - 3
  • Lexile Measure 280L (What's this?)
  • Series My First I Can Read
  • Paperback 32 pages
  • Publisher HarperCollins (May 21, 2013)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0062110721

Read Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books

Tags : Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach (My First I Can Read) [James Dean] on . <strong><em>New York Times </em>bestselling author and artist James Dean brings Pete the Cat fans some fun in the sun! </strong> Pete the Cat is one groovy cat at finding shells and building sand castles at the beach. But when it gets too hot,James Dean,Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach (My First I Can Read),HarperCollins,0062110721,Animals - Cats,Readers - Beginner,Beaches,Beaches;Fiction.,Cats,Cats;Fiction.,Pete,Children's Books/Ages 4-8 Fiction,Children Preschool,Easy Fiction,Easy Reader,Fiction,JUVENILE,JUVENILE FICTION / Animals / Cats,JUVENILE FICTION / Readers / Beginner,JUVENILE FICTION / Sports Recreation / Water Sports,Juvenile Fiction,Juvenile Fiction/Animals - Cats,Juvenile Fiction/Readers - Beginner,Juvenile Fiction/Social Themes - Emotions Feelings,Juvenile Fiction/Social Themes - New Experience,Juvenile Preschool Ages 2-4,Monograph Series, any,Picture storybooks,Social Themes - Emotions Feelings,Social Themes - New Experience,Sports Recreation - Water Sports,United States

Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books Reviews :


Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books Reviews


  • I purchased these books for a 6 year old/1st grade budding reader. Prior to getting this book I had already purchased 6 of this Pete the Cat I can read series from Walmart (Pete the Cat Sir Pete the Brave; Sir Pete the Cat Tip Top tree house; Pete the Cat Pete's Big Lunch; Pete the Cat Pete's train trip; Pete the Cat and the Surprise Teacher; Pete the Cat Too cool for school) I wanted more so I got them from because Walmart never had any that I did not already have. The books were $3.78 at Walmart so the price on was comparable. I love the series! The words are in big print. The art work is great and the pictures assist with the helping the child figure out the words and context. Also uses the most common sight words. Most important, each book has some simple but effective message about sharing, being a good friend, overcoming your fears, or being yourself. This book is a Guided Reading Level E
  • My kids love Pete the Cat and the set of books for beginning readers is great. The sentences are short and vocabulary are at the perfect level for the beginning reader. We have almost all the books as well as some of the more non beginner books as well. highly recommended!
  • I ordered this book "Pete at the Beach" on Feb 21st. 2019, and received it today, on the Feb 23rd.
    Front book showed a creased, like the book has been opened several time.
    1st page has a handwriting with "Jacob" name in pencil.
    Don't want to read thru the book, since I don't know how many people have been touched and used it, I turned to last page to check ... hair and dusty stuffs were there.
  • Super fun read. Kiddos love this series so this is a good add. Easy read for Kinder age.
  • My 5 year old is a smart cookie, but we had a hard time motivating her to start using her sight words to read. Enter Pete the Cat, and my daughter is in LOVE! She loves to read ME the stories now, and even the words she has to sound out are not too tough. The best part is the stories are actually fun!
  • The book itself is a bit flimsy for my taste, but my son loves it.
  • My little girl loves Pete! She was reading 98% of words in these books before she even started Kindergarten. Now I get her the books because she enjoys reading them and because they have cute stories and repetitive sight words that help kids familiarize themselves with the words and gain confidence.
  • Cute book for little kids.Interestingly, the cats like being read to as well. Got 2 - one for a gift and one ot keep atthe beach condo, for all those little people who think they don't want to go in the water.
More aboutRead Online Pete the Cat Pete at the Beach My First I Can Read James Dean 8965132283559 Books

Read Online Annelies A Novel Audible Audio Edition David R Gillham Saskia Maarleveld Penguin Audio Books

By Tanya Richards

Read Online Annelies A Novel Audible Audio Edition David R Gillham Saskia Maarleveld Penguin Audio Books





Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 14 hours and 50 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Penguin Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date January 15, 2019
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B07MF9CHGR




Annelies A Novel Audible Audio Edition David R Gillham Saskia Maarleveld Penguin Audio Books Reviews


  • Two years ago- 2017 - the German railroad, Deutsche Bahn, proposed naming its new highspeed trains after important figures in German history. Some of the names proposed were "Konrad Adenauer", "Karl Marx", "Ludwig Erhard", and..."Anne Frank". Evidently not everyone at Deutsche Bahn was asleep at the proverbial wheel and the sheer wrongheadedness over naming a train after Anne Frank was pointed out. Officials took the name out of contention for a train a few months later and some other names like "Willy Brandt" and "Marlene Dietrich" were tactfully substituted for the "Anne Frank Unlimited" (to Auschwitz?). All this goes to show, though, the power that the two words "Anne" and "Frank" still play in our world today. She has lately been the subject of at least one work of non-fiction, and several novels. The latest one, David Gillham's "Annelies A Novel" has just been published.

    Like it's recent predecessors, Gillham's book presupposes that one of the other residents of the Amsterdam attic hiding place - besides Otto Frank - survived their ordeal. Ellen Feldman's novel, "The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank", has Peter surviving Mauthausen and going to the United States and making a life there for himself, while in 2013, author Jillian Cantor wrote about Anne's sister, Margot's new life in the US, in her novel, "Margot A Novel". David Gillham's novel follows the same plot line - survival of the camps and adjusting to a new life.

    "Annelies" - Anne Frank's full first name - is a pretty good book. Gillham uses parts of Anne's diary as the beginnings of his short chapters, which together show a bit of her life in the attic, but more specifically her immediate post-war life in Amsterdam. Anne tries to make sense of both her own survival and the deaths of her mother and sister. She also tries to decide what she wants to do next in her life. Her diaries, supposedly, had not survived the raid on the Attic, but later they are returned to her. In some ways, her post-war life is that of a normal teenager and in others it's the life of a concentration camp survivor with her Auschwitz numbered tattoo as an ever-present reminder of her past.

    Like a few other reviewers of "Annelies", I had an uneasy feeling about the novel. David Gillham tries to reimagine Anne's life - as others have done with Margot and Peter - with a happier ending. But should we be doing that? Or is it just more respectful for Anne and her compatriots be left to reside in their own reality?
  • Annelies is a compelling, intense read. I simply couldn't tear myself from it. I was torn for most of the reading, however, in my feelings toward the character of Anne. I felt compassion and empathy for all she endured, but she also annoyed me. Anne spends a great deal of the novel, raging about, as if she was the only one who suffered, and being quite nasty. She does act like the entitled, spoiled, cosseted child her stepmother accuses her of being. The author includes intriguing twists in the story. I applaud him for taking on this incredible task of writing a what if story about Holocaust icon such as Anne Frank. I do wish the author had included a brief bibliography at the end, to share he titles he read and researched. Thanks to Penguin First Read for the advance copy.
  • I was glued to this book. There was, in reading this novel, a feeling of healing I do have to agree with another reviewer that I wish it had told more about the adult life of Anne. In particular I wonder what books she wrote? But perhaps it was wise to leave this to our imagination .
    In these times one often reads things into books that may not have been intended but in the portrayal of postwar Netherlands and the deportation of German nationals including Jews back to Germany I was reminded of the terrible injustice of deportations of immigrants by ICE to countries they fled to save their lives.
    The author takes risks in removing the iconization around Anne Frank yet respecting and remembering her and her family.
    In this time of rising hate we must remember those lost This book helps. Never again!
  • Anne Frank has always been of interest, and Mr. Gillham creates a heartbreaking re-telling of what she and her family endured and what her life could have been had she survived.

    We follow Anne before, during, and after the war that describes her family's confinement and the horrors they endured at the concentration camps.

    Mr. Gillham brings Anne back to life and fictitiously lets us see how she is trying to put her life back together as she reunites with her father who in actuality is the only surviving family member.

    The detailed writing and re-telling will hold your interest from the minute you begin reading.

    This book is a tribute to all of those who suffered, survived, perished, and helped in any way possible during history's darkest hours.

    Mr. Gillham did an outstanding job of researching as well as using a creative method of portraying Anne Frank's life as it may have been even though she did not survive the Holocaust.

    Through Mr. Gillham’s marvelous writing style we are transported back in time as we experience what Anne experienced during her captivity and as she tries to re-enter her previous life that is always filled with the presence and reminders of her captors and how she had to comply.

    ANNELIES is a beautiful, heartfelt book you will want to absorb with attention to every detail.

    Anne seems as though she was and would have been a feisty young lady that the world has missed and could have learned from. 5/5

    This book was given to me as ARC by the author in exchange for an honest review.
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Download PDF Internment Samira Ahmed Books

By Tanya Richards

Download PDF Internment Samira Ahmed Books





Product details

  • Hardcover 400 pages
  • Publisher Little, Brown Books for Young Readers (March 19, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0316522694




Internment Samira Ahmed Books Reviews


  • I had very high hopes for this book. After reading the summary I was filled with anticipation, is it going to be like the holocaust? Guantanamo? Nope. This book had such potential to be something really great. This is something that could become a real thing in our future. The execution however left much to be desired. I don't believe the author did any sort of research for a book like this. She has no basic knowledge of how any sort of camp or prison works or just chose to ignore anything practical. By far the one thing that I think just makes the whole story crap is that you wrote a 17-year-old starting a revolution inside the camp and stopping the Muslim internment. I think it was a poor choice to write a book about such an important topic and then make it about a girl who is obsessed with her boyfriend.
  • This book begins during a horrific time for Muslims in the U.S. A president has been elected who tweets his hatred of Muslims almost daily. Fake news abounds and refugees are being called rapists and criminals. The Secretary of War is an Islamophobe – and yes, that’s a cabinet seat we haven’t seen for a while in real life. It has a slightly different ring to it than Secretary of the Army or Secretary of Defense. Nazis have marched on DC and books are burning. There is so much wrong with the country and one of the crushing things is that so many people encouraged or allowed all of this.

    Layla Amin and her family have watched things rapidly change around them. Muslims, much like the Jewish people in 1930s Germany, have begun to see their rights and freedoms stripped away one at a time. Layla just wants a normal life where she can be with her boyfriend without worrying about curfews and the unraveling of her world. Layla and her parents don’t see things the same way. They want to see the good in people. They still believe that they will be okay if they don’t make waves. They have hope and prayers, but Layla wants more than that to hold onto as more things are ripped away from them.

    Samira Ahmed has crafted a story that is terrifying in its possibilities. Many of the issues in the book seem to have been lifted straight from our current newspapers. The story is all too realistic. It’s set just a bit in the future and it could certainly inspire some fear and heartache in readers. While there is hatred, bigotry, and violence against Muslims, there is also a lot of hope. Her parents are an excellent example of that and while the young people are frustrated by hope without action, they too have hope. One of the young people says that holding onto hope is hard work. This is quickly followed by a Rogue One quote, “Rebellions are built on hope.” There are people of all ages who step up at times, but the majority of the heavy lifting in this book is done by the young people. It’s a powerful testament to the strength and courage of young people. I loved that aspect of the story. Youth are often underestimated. Here the youth don’t wait for leaders, they become leaders.

    By taking them to an internment camp, Layla feels that the government has taken her voice and choice. Through the book, Layla discovers that this may not be entirely correct. As she meets other frustrated people, she learns and grows and finds her own way of being in this restrictive place. She also discovers the power of unity and finds ways to be heard.

    This is partially a story of survival. It offers a glimpse into what some people are willing to do to survive. What people are willing to give up to survive can be astounding and not always in good ways. Ahmed also shows us what some people are willing to do for others.

    This book is a warning, a message of hope, and a call to action. The cap on the cover says Resist and so does the entire book.
  • I had no naive ideas that this book would not be a hard read. I knew what I was getting into, literally a quarter of my bookcases are full of non-fiction or historical fictions that take place during the Holocaust or WWI/WWII. Even then I had to close the book sometimes because it all seemed too real.

    Layla, her parents, and thousands of other Muslims are sent to an internment camp called Mobius, the fact that it was close to the Japanese internment camp Manzanar was not lost on me either. The cause of such a drastic move? Islamophia. Does it sound familiar? This book is placed in what seems like a few years from now, in this presidency, under this current political climate and that made this book all the more urgent.

    The scenes that take place in the book are appalling not because they are violent, but because we see actions like this committed every day. A hijab being ripped off a woman's head, a man being shot just because he is Muslim, a woman being silenced because she has no right to speak. How did they end up here? The census, that one that keeps track of our religions, ages, nationalities, and livelihoods that we report to the government every now and then. That flimsy piece of paper, if you checked Islam you are at Mobius.

    The president has declared Muslims an enemy of the state, so they rounded them up just like they did to Japanese-Americans in the past. Layla had learned of this history in school and it was her only reference to what was happening to her, it made her scared and at times selfish but determined. She refused to live the rest of her life there. So she decided to make a start much like Sophie Scholl did during the time of Nazi propaganda. This was scary because let's remember that Sophie was executed. She knew it was a risk but to be honest she could have died just as easy by just being within those gates, anyone who made false moves were taken away never to be seen again.

    I won't ruin the story by elaborating on the allies that she finds or those that learn of her plans and join her in the revolution, because that is honestly the best part of the story. The teenagers in this book used their place of "Privilege" as minors to get ahead. They couldn't be treated like the others, they couldn't just simply be disappeared without a trace. So they stood tall and spoke for those who couldn't. That is the point of the book. It is to educate the younger generation, allow them space to reflect, and show them that just because their young does not mean they are powerless. A small voice is better than no voice and this book does its best to bring that home.

    Despite all its harsh reminders, it also gives us a sense of hope. Not everyone in the country agrees with what is going on, kind of like now. Those people fought for them when they learned of the injustices, even some that allowed it to happen realized it was a big mistake and joined the cause. It is the kind of situation where you won't really know how to react until it's happening and I am glad the book provides a space for both.

    Rating 5/5 ❤❤❤❤❤

    My rating is a #unpopular opinion with many readers of this book, I will give some examples of the complaints below and my reasoning behind why it shouldn't matter. You can make your decision on this and read it for yourself as we all know books are perceived differently by different readers.

    The book is too obvious, it doesn't give us space to make our own conclusions said by most people over the age of 21- The book wasn't made for them, it was made for younger readers who need books that tell a compelling story quickly and with all the consequences and backstory because attention spans for reading these days is short. I mean come on, I get annoyed when a commercial interrupts my anything and its only 30 seconds.

    Layla is selfish it looks like all she wants is her boyfriend- Her mom and dad are in the camp with her, so the only person on the outside she can really want is her boyfriend, but that scene where she begs to call him is not about David. It's about everyone's loved ones outside those gates. Everyone has to beg for a phone call, get it approved, and still be careful because they are being listened to. For Layla that was David but for others, that was a husband, a son, or a daughter.

    Layla is too informed about previous internment camps in history- I learned about the Holocaust and Japanese internment camps when I was in tenth grade, two years younger than Layla, and was taught by an amazing student teacher, who really ingrained in us the importance of studying situations like this and learning from them. I have continued to educate myself and read about those moments in history ever since then. So yes, she could have been that educated about the topic at 17.

    David is annoying- Indeed he is, I honestly am still trying to comprehend if he could have been written in a different way where he didn't seem so clueless and unaware of what was going on around him. I know he was trying his best and did play a role in it but he just seemed out of place a bit.

    The Director of the Internment camp is cartoonish- yes he is, but what matters is not his reactions but his power. Time and time through the book he shows that he can get away with literally anything. He gives an air of desperation to Layla's resistance. The fact that his actions have no consequences is what matters. Because it means that at Mobius there were no respites, no way out, no one to protect them. They were no one. He got angry like a child sometimes and turned blue in the face because of her actions, but let's not pretend that there weren't people in internment camps who died just because a guard was in a bad mood.

    The book was too raw, too crass it felt like it was throwing its beliefs at me- It is raw at times and in your face but if you were inside the internment camp it would be in your face, you would be in the middle of the violence, you would feel the oppression, this book is not about beliefs its about right and wrong. The book makes you feel like you are there like there is no place to go. That is the point, they had nowhere to go.

    Now that you have been informed about the chief complaints of the book, I hope that you give it a chance and make your own opinion on the matter. This is such an important book for young adults to have a discussion about these days, and for adults to read and share with others.
  • It IS happening. In summer 2018 children of asylum seeking parents were taken from their parents and put into detention camps. Asylum seeking families are also held together in socalled "family detention prisons by ICE. Although these are predominanty Christian, religious hatred is rising. In October 11 worshippers were murdered at a synagogue. In France hate crimes against Jews happen almost daily. 51 worshippers were murdered in mid March 2019 at a mosque in New Zealand.
    Although Muslims have not been interned, they face great prejudice. When the mosque shooting happened the President did the best he could never to mention that the victims were Muslims.
    This book is not dystopian. Young people and adults need to read it and do what we can to erase bigotry from our hearts AND our government.
    The way we are safe and free is by standing up for each other.
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Download Detective dell'arte Italian Edition eBook Roberto Riccardi

By Tanya Richards

Download Detective dell'arte Italian Edition eBook Roberto Riccardi



Download As PDF : Detective dell'arte Italian Edition eBook Roberto Riccardi

Download PDF Detective dell&#39arte Italian Edition eBook Roberto Riccardi

Un film nel 2014 li ha resi famosi. Erano i Monuments Men, 350 uomini di tredici Paesi che salvarono i capolavori dell'arte dalle devastazioni della Seconda guerra mondiale. Di militare avevano ben poco, erano in prevalenza esperti di arti figurative, archivisti e restauratori. Nello stesso periodo Rodolfo Siviero, agente segreto e critico d'arte, riportava in Italia con operazioni degne di un romanzo d'avventura i capolavori sottratti dal "Kunstschutz" voluto da Hermann Göring. Era figlio di un carabiniere. Prima di lui c'era stato lo scultore Antonio Canova, nominato ambasciatore dal papa per recuperare le opere portate via da Napoleone in forza del trattato di Tolentino. Nel 1969 l'Arma dei Carabinieri ha creato una struttura dedicata alla salvaguardia dell'arte, composta da squadre abituate a lavorare sui grandi scenari internazionali utilizzando tecniche professionali e innovative. È il nucleo (ora comando) Tutela patrimonio culturale. I suoi uomini hanno rimesso al loro posto La Muta di Raffaello, Il giardiniere di Van Gogh, il Cratere di Eufronio, la Triade capitolina. I risultati vanno ben al di là delle cronache giudiziarie viaggiano fra il passato e l'eterno. Nel cinquantenario della fondazione del Tpc, a cui sono dedicati eventi e mostre in tutto il mondo, questo libro racconta le indagini, i successi e i casi su cui non è stata ancora scritta la parola fine. Dalla riapertura delle domus di Pompei al giallo del Caravaggio rubato e ai falsi Modigliani, dal salvataggio delle opere d'arte dopo il terremoto in Umbria del 2016 all'impegno in Iraq per la protezione e il recupero dei beni archeologici dopo la Seconda guerra del Golfo, è una carrellata di storie avvincenti e colpi di scena. Che non solo svelano il mondo sommerso dei tombaroli, dei furti su commissione e dei falsari di mestiere, ma rivelano anche le emozioni, i ricordi, gli aneddoti dei detective dell'arte, che hanno fatto del loro lavoro una passione senza confini.

Download Detective dell'arte Italian Edition eBook Roberto Riccardi


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  • File Size 5799 KB
  • Publisher RIZZOLI LIBRI (April 9, 2019)
  • Publication Date April 9, 2019
  • Language Italian
  • ASIN B07PQWHL3T

Read Detective dell&#39arte Italian Edition eBook Roberto Riccardi

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Download In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past Henry Louis Gates Jr 9781510747685 Books

By Tanya Richards

Download In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past Henry Louis Gates Jr 9781510747685 Books



Download As PDF : In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past Henry Louis Gates Jr 9781510747685 Books

Download PDF In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past Henry Louis Gates Jr 9781510747685 Books

With a new preface, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. discusses African-American immigration and ancestry in the context of the American political climate.

Unlike most white Americans who can search their ancestral records, identifying who among their forebears was the first to step foot on this country’s shores, most African Americans encounter a series of daunting obstacles when trying to trace their family’s past. Slavery brutally negated identity, denying black men and women even their names. But from that legacy of slavery have sprung generations who’ve struggled, thrived, and lived extraordinary lives.

For too long, African Americans’ family trees have been barren of branches, but advanced genetic testing techniques, combined with archival research, have begun to fill in the gaps. Here, scholar Henry Louis Gates, Jr., backed by an elite team of geneticists and researchers, takes nineteen extraordinary African Americans on a once unimaginable journey, tracing family sagas through U.S. history and back to Africa.

Dr. Gates brings to life the recovered pasts of

Oprah Winfrey
Whoopi Goldberg
Chris Rock
Tina Turner
Maya Angelou
Peter Gomes
Mae Jemison
Quincy Jones
Morgan Freeman
Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot
Tom Joyner
Benjamin Carson
T.D. Jakes
Linda Johnson Rice
Kathleen Henderson
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Don Cheadle
Bliss Broyard
Chris Tucker

More than a work of history, In Search of Our Roots is an important book that, for the first time, brings to light the lives of ordinary men and women who, by courageous example, blazed a path for their famous descendants. In accompanying the nineteen contemporary achievers on their journey into the past and meeting their remarkable forebears, we come to know ourselves.

Download In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past Henry Louis Gates Jr 9781510747685 Books


"Not what I thought it would be. I needed a book to assist with genealogy research."

Product details

  • Paperback 456 pages
  • Publisher Skyhorse; Reprint edition (March 12, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1510747680

Read In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past Henry Louis Gates Jr 9781510747685 Books

Tags : In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past [Henry Louis Gates Jr.] on . <B><B>With a new preface, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. </B>discusses African-American immigration and ancestry in the context of the American political climate.</B><BR><BR> Unlike most white Americans who can search their ancestral records,Henry Louis Gates Jr.,In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past,Skyhorse,1510747680,African American,GENERAL,General Adult,HISTORY / African American,History of the Americas,History/American,History/United States - General,Non-Fiction,REFERENCE / Genealogy Heraldry,Reference/Genealogy Heraldry,SOCIAL SCIENCE / Black Studies (Global),Social Science/Black Studies (Global),Social Science/Ethnic Studies - African American Studies,geneology; oprah winfrey; record sources; federal census; slave schedules; pbs program; genetic tests; dna strands; family records; african-american experience; questionable interpretations; dna tests; middle passage; black families; family histories; family trees; whoopi; angelou; celebrities; researchers ancestors; trace; henry gates; america; africa; books on genealogical researches; books on dna analysis; books on family trees; Heraldry; Ancestry; ancestors; lineage; family lineage; branches of the tree; history of relatives; ancestry of relatives; uncovering lineage; uncovering the past; learning about yourself; learning about myself; learning about the past; how did I get here,geneology;oprah winfrey;record sources;federal census;slave schedules;pbs program;genetic tests;dna strands;family records;african-american experience;questionable interpretations;dna tests;middle passage;black families;family histories;family trees;whoopi;angelou;celebrities;researchers ancestors;trace;henry gates;america;africa;books on genealogical researches;books on dna analysis;books on family trees;Heraldry;Ancestry;ancestors;lineage;family lineage;branches of the tree;history of relatives;ancestry of relatives;uncovering lineage;uncovering the past;learning about yourself;learning about myself;learning about the past;how did I get here

In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past Henry Louis Gates Jr 9781510747685 Books Reviews :


In Search of Our Roots How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past Henry Louis Gates Jr 9781510747685 Books Reviews


  • Henry Gates' book, IN SEARCH OF OUR ROOTS, gives much more information than its accompanying PBS documentary, "African American Lives," and lays out the processes used to gather that information. This book is most relevant to those who have done or plan to do serious genealogy. It would also be of interest to those who are admirers of the people it covers. I have been obsessed with trying to trace my family into slavery and beyond for the past eleven years. I started this project in 1996 after reading Edward Ball's book, SLAVES IN THE FAMILY, because it struck a note which resonated with certain of my family's oral history.

    I began my search before census data was digitized and searchable on the internet. Countless hours were spent going through microfilmed records and traveling to local archives. At that time DNA testing seemed only used to prove or negate paternity.

    It's been said that black genealogy is very difficult but not impossible. Early mentors told me that if you cannot trace your people as humans, you must trace them as property. In this process you come to many dead ends where the line(s) just die out. Gates' book shows this and I found it to be a help in showing how his genealogists dealt with some of the barriers. Their use of conjecture was informative. For example, a simple thing such as searching for a slave owner in another state based on the last name of the former slave in the slave schedules had not occurred to me. If I did not have a record with the slave owner's name in the county where the ex-slave was living I assumed that there was no further information.

    I am envious of the army of professional genealogists, historians and archivists that Henry Gates had at his disposal for this project. He also seemed to have had a huge budget for DNA tests. I entered his contest to pick a "regular" person to be included in the "African American Lives" project to have some of these resources placed at my disposal, but it was not to be. Previously I was able to do some limited DNA testing which was helpful in showing that I had none of Native American blood spoken of by my father's family and now could abandon time wasting searches through Indian records. The book was helpful in describing the DNA heritage of Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot, with whom I share the L3d haplogroup. I had been researching East African slavery to figure out how my ancestors ended up as slaves in South Carolina and Virginia from areas where slaves to the Americas were not taken. I did not have the $400 to test African ancestry of tribes and even if I did, I did not have the historians to interpret the results with tribal warfare and migration patterns.

    On my own I have taken my and my husband's family back six generations. I have accumulated a sizable collection of genealogy books. Gates' book is very good in that it is informative and inspires one to go forward with a very difficult search. I can overlook the "factual errors and questionable interpretations" that were mentioned in other reviews because I was experienced enough to immediate recognize that they were errors. Either Gates did no genealogy himself or he did not write or have a knowledgeable person proof read those sections.
  • No matter what your race is, this is a fascinating book. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. is one of the most interesting intelligent men in our country. The histories and DNA of these famous people will keep your attention.
  • No problems with vendor or product.
  • Loved reading about something of my favorite celebrities backgrounds.
  • Not what I thought it would be. I needed a book to assist with genealogy research.
  • Absolute Crapola.
  • Gates, in his introduction, says that the "average" African American is likely to have X percentage of African bloodlines, Y percentage of European and Z of Native American. He then shows this with a number of famous African Americans, including building the case that an alleged American Indian ancestor in most black families' past lineage was likely actually a descendant of a black-white relationship.

    The most fascinating story, in many ways, is that of Anatole Broyard and his daughter, Bliss. Anatole was born in Louisiana of mixed ethnic parentage but, at the age of 17, decided to start "passing" as white, eventually becoming a columnist with the New York Times. His daughter, Bliss, found out the truth from her white mother just before Anatole died.

    Contra some people, Anatole was born and raise as "black," therefore he belongs in this book, precisely because of the issue of "passing."

    The other interesting part is where Gates uses DNA analysis to connect the people of the book to specific African tribes and groups within their African heritage. That said, although he does make caveats at times, he may be claiming a bit too much for what DNA actually can, or cannot, tell us.

    It's still a very good book overall, though.
  • I found this collection of genealogies and family histories of 19 African Americans to be both fascinating and moving. The family histories explore many different aspects of African American history and the black experience in the US, always tying individual stories to broader historical themes in a way that was generally successful, if sometimes repetitive and often lacking in detail. Therefore, despite the criticisms outlined below, I think this is a valuable book, and would certainly recommend it to anyone interested in African American history or genealogy.

    That said, I was troubled by the factual errors and questionable interpretations that riddle the book. Gates is neither a historian nor a geneticist by training, so these lapses are perhaps unavoidable, but they detract from the book's overall impact. Perhaps most troubling is Gates's problematic use of DNA evidence. DNA evidence is particularly important in African American genealogy because it is almost always the only way descendants of slaves can find a direct, albeit generalized, connection to their African ancestry. But DNA test results are not as straightforward as Gates presents them. In the admixture test, for example, two siblings might have quite different results, despite having identical ancestors, because each sibling is the product of a different recombination of their parents' DNA. A brief section explaining exactly what DNA tests can and cannot tell us about our ancestry, and more careful wording when describing DNA test results, would have improved the book.

    The book also contains several factual errors. Among the ones I found the 1870 census doesn't list birthdays or family relationships (it lists ages, and family relationships were not recorded until the 1880 census) (p. 8); Harris County, Georgia, is on the Alabama border, not "near the South Carolina border" (p. 198); and the slave schedules in the federal census were made in 1850 and 1860, not 1840 and 1850 (p. 420). While each error in itself is minor, the errors combine to suggest a degree of carelessness in research or editing that weakens the book's overall message. This is unfortunate, because it's an important message.
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