Organizational Behavior Book Review
Organizational Behavior, Eighth Edition, continues in its tradition of being an up-to-date, relevant and user-driven textbook.
Kreitner and Kinicki’s approach to organizational behavior is based on the authors’ belief that reading a comprehensive textbook is hard work, but that the process should be interesting and sometimes fun. Thus, they consistently attempt to find a way to make complex ideas understandable through clear and concise explanations, contemporary examples, a visually appealing photo/art program, and/or learning exercises. With every edition, the authors make every effort to respond to user feedback and ensure the text covers the very latest OB research and practices.
The cover again depicts the well-known Wolf brand, but this time with a black and white illustration of two wolves. This remains a central theme because Kreitner and Kinicki see wolves as an instructive and inspiring metaphor for modern Organizational Behavior. Wolves are dedicated team players, great communicators, and adaptable. These are key success attributes in today’s workplace.
About the Author: Robert Kreitner Robert Kreitner is a Senior Lecturer in Management at Arizona State university. He is a popular speaker who has addressed a diverse array of audiences worldwide on topics including the 21st century workplace.
Angelo Kinicki is a professor of management at Arizona State University. He received the Instructor of the Year Award for executive Education from the center for executive development in the college of business administration at ASU.


Review
"Melman's work represents a valuable addition to a section of British historiography that all too often focuses--overly simplistically--on the links between culture and the promotion of a unified, conservative, state-propagated sense of national identity. Previous historians have tended to view popular conceptions of history as revolving around narratives, when in reality ordinary people often view the past in a far more disjointed and disorderly form. Melman's work represents a useful corrective to such assumptions."--Stephanie Barczewski, Journal of Modern History
"A powerful, imaginative, and exciting interdisciplinary book."--Rohan McWilliam, American Historical Review
"Her text and the meticulously constructed bibliography are replete with generous references to the writings of John Burrow, Stefan Collini, Stephen Bann and other historians whose interpretations she wishes to extend rather than replace. This is a book that should be read in conjunction with their work."--History
"A kaleidoscopic inquiry into the popular imagination of history that succeeds triumphantly in presenting the strange and partially-obscured mentalities of non-elite people in the past. Dealing principally with the ways in which the French Revolution and the Tudor monarchy have been presented and consumed in modern English culture, Melman's unusually broad survey of periods and sources brings out the populist, gothic, and grotesque elements of 'historical consciousness' in a wholly original way, and helps to disturb some of our more comforting myths about English people's consciousness of their own history. Ambitious, sophisticated, and swashbuckling."--Peter Mandler, University of Cambridge
"Astonishingly wide-ranging...an outstanding contribution to our understanding of modern historical culture."--Rosemary Mitchell, Journal of Victorian Culture
"The Culture of History is an engaging, original, and provocative study of popular history that combines a broad historical sweep with persuasive detail drawn from an unusual complex of sourcesIt is exciting, well written , and a major revisionist work."--Reba Soffer, California State University
"A brilliant new book."--Leslie Howsam, Canadian Journal of History
"Tremendous breadth and analytical power...a stunning contribution to historical scholarship on how the English past was understood."--Sonya O. Rose, Victorian Studies
The Culture of History: English Uses of the Past 1800-1953 Book Review Billie Melman takes us on a panoramic voyage of the 'culture of history' which developed in England after the French Revolution. She vividly recovers unexplored aspects of popular history, and unpicks notions of the uncosy past, a place of pleasurable horror and sensationalism, which survived into the 1950s.
About the Author:Billie Melman Billie Melman was educated in Tel Aviv and London. She is Professor of Modern History at Tel Aviv University. She has written extensively on British popular culture, British orientalism and the culture of colonialism, on history and memory, and on gender.


From Library Journal
Nobel laureate Milosz states in his introduction that the purpose of this personal and eclectic collection is to present poetry that is "short, clear, readable, and...realistic, that is, loyal toward reality and attempting to describe it as concisely as possible." And for the most part, he has succeeded. The poems have a clarity and immediacy that would appeal to even the most poetry-averse reader. Most of the selections are from classical Chinese and 20th-century American and European (primarily Eastern European, Scandinavian, and French) poets. The poems are grouped by intriguing headings ("The Moment," "The Secret of a Thing," "A Woman's Skin"), and Milosz has written brief prefaces to many of them, creating an unusual sense of dialog between editor and reader. "My intention," says Milosz, "is not so much to defend poetry...but rather, to remind readers that for some very good reasons it may be of importance today." This refreshing and wise anthology is recommended for all collections.?Christine Stenstrom, Brooklyn P.L., N.Y.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition. From Booklist This is the second international poetry anthology to be published in as many months. The first,
The Vintage Book of Contemporary World Poetry , is organized geographically. Milosz, who, naturally, appears in the
Vintage collection, has approached his work as anthologizer from a far more personal and thematic perspective. His introduction is passionate and enlivening as he guides readers toward his vision of poems as forms of enchantment, then his clustering of poems under such alluring headings as "Epiphany," "The Secret of a Thing," "The Moment," "People among People," "Woman's Skin," and "Nonattachment" deepens and extends the readers' understanding of his poetics and the poems he has so lovingly chosen. Milosz remains a vital presence throughout the volume. There are plenty of American poets here, quite a few Chinese poets, and a diverse scattering of Europeans, but place of origin isn't as significant, ultimately, as place of arrival: a poem that speaks to everyone in every land.
Donna Seaman --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. Review Prayer For My Son
by James Applewhite
The Mason
by Aloysius Bertrand
A Ballad Of Going Down To The Store
by Miron Bialoszewski
Brazil, January 1, 1502
by Elizabeth Bishop
And Every Space That A Man Views Around His Dwelling-place
by William Blake
In The Lake District
by Joseph Brodsky
The Cobweb
by Raymond Carver
The Window
by Raymond Carver
Wine
by Raymond Carver
Supplications
by Constantine P. Cavafy
Waiting For The Barbarians
by Constantine P. Cavafy
A Ringing Bell
by Ch'ang Yu
Getting Up In Winter
by Ch'ien Wen Of Liang
Along The Grand Canal
by Ch'in Kuan
Coming At Night To A Fisherman's Hut
by Chang Chi
Recalling The Past At T'ung Pass
by Chang Yang-hao
Morning
by Chu Shu-chen
Man Is Born In Tao
by Chuang Tzu
The Need To Win
by Chuang Tzu
Like They Say
by Robert Creeley
The Snake
by Emily Dickinson
Of His Life
by Wayne Dodd
Of Rain And Air
by Wayne Dodd
Greece
by Gunnar Ekelof
A Journey
by Edward Field
Black Meat
by Jean Follain
Buying
by Jean Follain
Face The Animal
by Jean Follain
A Mirror
by Jean Follain
School And Nature
by Jean Follain
A Taxidermist
by Jean Follain
Waxwings
by Robert Francis
The Most Of It
by Robert Frost
A Strange New Cottage In Berkeley
by Allen Ginsberg
Perhaps ... For The Loneliness Of An Author
by Gong Peiyu
Adult
by Linda Gregg
A Dark Thing Inside The Day
by Linda Gregg
Night Music
by Linda Gregg
Woman At Lit Window
by Eamon Grennan
Flight
by Jorge Guillen
On The Mountain
by John Haines
The Train Stops At Healy Fork
by John Haines
Above Us
by Julia Hartwig
The Image
by Robert Hass
Late Spring
by Robert Hass
Clearances; In Memoriam M.k.h., 1911-1984: 3
by Seamus Heaney
Elegy Of Fortinbras
by Zbigniew Herbert
A Story
by Jane Hirshfield
The Armenian Language Is The Home Of The Armenian
by Moushegh Ishkan
The Catacombs In San Callisto
by Rolf Jacobsen
Cobalt
by Rolf Jacobsen
Express Train
by Rolf Jacobsen
Rubber
by Rolf Jacobsen
Little By Little, Wean Yourself
by Jalal Ad-din (jalaluddin) Ar-rumi
Out Beyond Ideas Of Wrongdoing And Rightdoing
by Jalal Ad-din (jalaluddin) Ar-rumi
Boats In A Fog
by Robinson Jeffers
Carmel Point
by Robinson Jeffers
Cremation
by Robinson Jeffers
Evening Ebb
by Robinson Jeffers
The Lightning
by Judah Al-harizi
The Lute
by Judah Al-harizi
The Sun
by Judah Al-harizi
A Prayer That Will Be Answered
by Anna Kamienska
My Wife And Children
by Jaan Kaplinski
We Started Home, My Son And I
by Jaan Kaplinski
Daybreak
by Galway Kinnell
To A French Structuralist
by David Kirby
Odysseus To Telemachus
by George L. Kline
Late Lights In Minnesota
by Ted Kooser
Cosmetics Do No Good
by Steve Mark Kowit
In The Morning
by Steve Mark Kowit
Notice
by Steve Mark Kowit
What Chord Did She Pluck
by Steve Mark Kowit
When He Pressed His Lips
by Steve Mark Kowit
I Can't Help You
by Ryszard Krynicki
And With March A Decade In Bolinas
by Joanne Kyger
Destruction
by Joanne Kyger
Images: 1
by Valery Larbaud
Images: 2
by Valery Larbaud
Images: 3
by Valery Larbaud
Images: Post-scriptum
by Valery Larbaud
The Card-players
by Philip Larkin
Butterfly
by David Herbert Lawrence
Mystic
by David Herbert Lawrence
Ordinance On Arrival
by Naomi Lazard
Irises
by Li-young Lee
Irises: 2
by Li-young Lee
Contraband
by Denise Levertov
Eye Mask
by Denise Levertov
Living
by Denise Levertov
Witness
by Denise Levertov
A Woman Meets An Old Lover
by Denise Levertov
A Sleepless Night
by Philip Levine
Hopelessness
by Li Ch'ing-chao
Ancient Air
by Li Po
Ancient Air
by Li Po
Zazen On The Mountain
by Li Po
Old Fisherman
by Liu Tsung-yuan
Rainbow At Night
by Antonio Machado Ruiz
Summer Night
by Antonio Machado Ruiz
Orchards In July
by Zbigniew Mache
An August Afternoon
by Bronislav Maj
A Leaf
by Bronislav Maj
Seen Fleetingly, From A Train
by Bronislav Maj
A Dream At Night
by Mei Yao-ch'en
An Elegy For Ernest Hemingway
by Thomas James Merton
Dusk In Winter
by William Stanley Merwin
For The Anniversary Of My Death
by William Stanley Merwin
Utterance
by William Stanley Merwin
The Bridge
by Oscar Vladislas De Lubicz- Milosz
Bellrope
by Robert Morgan
Honey
by Robert Morgan
Magnificent Peak
by Muso Soseki
Old Man At Leisure
by Muso Soseki
The Torah Of The Void, Sels.
by Nachman Of Bratzlav
Bladder Song
by Leonard Edward Nathan
Toast
by Leonard Edward Nathan
I Go Back To May 1937
by Sharon Olds
The Kingfisher
by Mary Oliver
Wild Geese
by Mary Oliver
Fisherman
by Ou Yangxiu
After Collecting The Autumn Taxes
by Po Chu-yi
After Getting Drunk, Becoming Sober In The Night
by Po Chu-yi
Climbing The Ling-ying Terrace And Looking North
by Po Chu-yi
A Dream Of Mountaineering
by Po Chu-yi
Golden Bells
by Po Chu-yi
Lodging With The Old Man Of The Stream
by Po Chu-yi
Madly Singing In The Mountains
by Po Chu-yi
The Philosophers: Lao-tzu
by Po Chu-yi
Rain
by Po Chu-yi
Sleeping On Horseback
by Po Chu-yi
Starting Early From The Ch'u-ch'eng Inn
by Po Chu-yi
The Frog
by Francis Ponge
Sudden Appearance Of A Monster At A Window
by Lawrence Raab
City Of The Moon, Sels
by Kenneth Rexroth
The Lights In The Sky Are Stars: The Heart Of Herakles
by Kenneth Rexroth
A Long Lifetime
by Kenneth Rexroth
Part 1.
by Kenneth Rexroth
Going Blind
by Rainer Maria Rilke
Carnations
by Theodore Roethke
Moss-gathering
by Theodore Roethke
A Sketch For A Modern Love Poem
by Tadeusz Rozewicz
A Voice
by Tadeusz Rozewicz
Aleutian Islands: 1
by Frederic Sauser
Fish Cove
by Frederic Sauser
Frisco-city
by Frederic Sauser
Harvest
by Frederic Sauser
South: 1. Tampa
by Frederic Sauser
Empire Of Dreams
by Charles Simic
After Midnight
by Louis Simpson
Dragonfly
by Gary Snyder
Late October Camping In The Sawtooths
by Gary Snyder
Foundations
by Leopold Staff
Vacation
by William Edgar Stafford
Study Of Two Pears
by Wallace Stevens
Exile In Japan
by Su Man-shu
On A Painting By Wang The Clerk Of Yen Ling
by Su Shih
Question
by May Swenson
The Greatest Love
by Anna Swir
I Starve My Belly For A Sublime Purpose
by Anna Swir
I Talk To My Body
by Anna Swir
I Wash The Shirt
by Anna Swir
I'm Afraid Of Fire
by Anna Swir
Poetry Reading
by Anna Swir
The Same Inside
by Anna Swir
The Sea And The Man
by Anna Swir
The Second Madrigal
by Anna Swir
She Does Not Remember
by Anna Swir
Thank You, My Fate
by Anna Swir
Troubles With The Soul At Morning Calisthenics
by Anna Swir
Four In The Morning
by Wislawa Szymborska
In Praise Of My Sister
by Wislawa Szymborska
In Praise Of Self-deprecation
by Wislawa Szymborska
Seen From Above
by Wislawa Szymborska
View With A Grain Of Sand
by Wislawa Szymborska
Teaching The Ape To Write Poems
by James Tate
Outskirts
by Tomas Transtromer
Syros
by Tomas Transtromer
Tracks
by Tomas Transtromer
Another Spring
by Tu Fu
Clear After Rain
by Tu Fu
Coming Home Late At Night
by Tu Fu
Dejeuner Sur L'herbe
by Tu Fu
Snow Storm
by Tu Fu
South Wind
by Tu Fu
Sunset
by Tu Fu
To Pi Ssu Yao
by Tu Fu
Travelling Northward
by Tu Fu
Visitors
by Tu Fu
Winter Dawn
by Tu Fu
The Day We Die
by Anonymous
Invocation Of The Creator
by Anonymous
Magic Words
by Anonymous
The Author Of American Ornithology Sketches A Bird, Now Extinct
by David Wagoner
Loons Mating
by David Wagoner
The New Wife
by Wang Chien (768-833)
The South
by Wang Chien (768-833)
Dancing Woman, Cockfighter Husband, And The Impoverished Sage
by Wang Wei (699-761)
Drifting On The Lake
by Wang Wei (699-761)
A Farewell
by Wang Wei (699-761)
Lazy About Writing Poems
by Wang Wei (699-761)
Magnolia Basin
by Wang Wei (699-761)
Morning, Sailing Into Xinyang
by Wang Wei (699-761)
Song About Xi Shi
by Wang Wei (699-761)
Song Of Marching With The Army
by Wang Wei (699-761)
Watching The Hunt
by Wang Wei (699-761)
A White Turtle Under A Waterfall
by Wang Wei (699-761)
Facing Bonnard
by Aleksander Wat
A Joke
by Aleksander Wat
Persian Parables, Sels.
by Aleksander Wat
So Beautiful The Lungs
by Aleksander Wat
The Plain
by Sandor Weores
Rain
by Sandor Weores
As Toilsome I Wander'd Virginia's Woods
by Walt Whitman
By The Bivouac's Fitful Flame
by Walt Whitman
Cavalry Crossing A Ford
by Walt Whitman
Common Farmer
by Walt Whitman
Dirge For Two Veterans
by Walt Whitman
A Farm Picture
by Walt Whitman
I Am The Poet
by Walt Whitman
A Noiseless Patient Spider
by Walt Whitman
Red Squaw
by Walt Whitman
The Runner
by Walt Whitman
A Sight In Camp In The Daybreak Gray And Dim
by Walt Whitman
Proletarian Portrait
by William Carlos Williams
The Red Wheelbarrow
by William Carlos Williams
To A Poor Old Woman
by William Carlos Williams
Dusk In My Backyard
by Keith Wilson
Depiction Of Childhood
by Franz Wright
Auto Mirror
by Adam Zagajewski
Moths
by Adam Zagajewski
Love In The Classroom
by Al Zolynas
The Zen Of Housework
by Al Zolynas
--
Table of Poems from Poem Finder® --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. A Book of Luminous Things: An International Anthology of Poetry Book Review Nobel laureate Czeslaw Milosz selects and introduces 300 of his favorite poems in this “magnificent collection” that ranges “widely across time and continents, from eighth century China to contemporary americanca” (San Francisco Chronicle).
About the Author:Czeslaw Milosz Czeslaw Milosz was born June 30, 1911 in Seteiniai, Lithuania, as a son of Aleksander Milosz, a civil engineer, and Weronika, née Kunat. He made his high-school and university studies in Wilno, then belonging to Poland. A co-founder of a literary group "Zagary", he made his literary début in 1930, published in the 1930s two volumes of poetry and worked for the Polish Radio. Most of the war time he spent in Warsaw working there for the underground presses. In the diplomatic service of the People's Poland since 1945, he broke with the government in 1951 and settled in France where he wrote several books in prose. In 1953 he received Prix Littéraire Européen. In 1960, invited by the University of California, he moved to Berkeley where he has been, since 1961, Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Presented with an award for poetry translations from the Polish P.E.N. Club in Warsaw in 1974; a Guggenheim Fellow for poetry 1976; received a honorary degree Doctor of Letters from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 1977; won the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 1978; received the "Berkeley Citation" (an equivalent of a honorary Ph.D.) in 1978; nominated by the Academic Senate a "Research Lecturer" of 1979/1980.


Pharmacotherapy in Primary Care Book Review
A complete single-source guide to drug therapeutics for primary care
Pharmacotherapy in Primary Care gives you a uniquely balanced, all-inclusive look at drug therapies for all the conditions commonly seen in primary care and clinical pharmacy -- from cardiovascular to nutritional disorders.
The book's diverse authorship -- comprising both physicians and pharmacists -- ensures that content is delivered in the most complete, relevant, and impartial way possible. Ideal for use at the point of care, this handy resource is conveniently organized by disorder and utilizes a standard template for therapeutic decision-making.
FEATURES
Standardized, streamlined approach to therapeutic decision-making in each chapter, consisting of:
- A high-yield, systematic review of the clinical literature that informs pharmacotherapy interventions
- Specific recommendations that optimize drug therapy for each disorder covered in the book
- Helpful treatment algorithms to speed clinical decision-making
- Evidence-based summaries that present the book's insights within the highly practical context of evidence-based medicine
- Important emphasis on identifying the variables that go into initial drug therapy decisions--plus key issues related to long-term monitoring, contingency planning, and referral
About the Author: William Linn William D. Linn, PharmD, Associate Professor, Feik School of Pharmacy, University of the Incarnate Word, San Antonio, TX
Marion R. Wofford, MD, MPH, Professor of Medicine, Director of General Internal Medicine, Hypertension Division, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS
Mary Elizabeth O'Keefe, MD, Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, PA
L. Michael Posey, BPharm, American Pharmacists Association, Washington, DC

