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Selasa, 24 Februari 2015

Free Ebook Three New Deals

Free Ebook Three New Deals

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Three New Deals

Three New Deals


Three New Deals


Free Ebook Three New Deals

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Three New Deals

Review

“Controversial, well written, and convincing, this is historical analysis at its most invigorating.” ―Minneapolis Star-Tribune“Schivelbusch is a brilliant cultural historian . . . who brings a comparative cultural focus to the 1930s with fascinating and provocative ideas.” ―Los Angeles Times Book Review“Illuminating.” ―Bloomberg News“A feast of ideas, many of them strikingly appropriate to our own bellicose times.” ―San Francisco Chronicle on The Culture of Defeat“Fresh and provocative . . . A novel and thought-provoking book.” ―Houston Chronicle on The Culture of Defeat

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About the Author

Wolfgang Schivelbusch is an independent scholar who divides his time between New York and Berlin. His books include The Railway Journey, Disenchanted Night, and Tastes of Paradise.

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Product details

Paperback: 258 pages

Publisher: Picador Paper; 1st edition (November 27, 2007)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0312427433

ISBN-13: 978-0312427436

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 0.6 x 8.5 inches

Shipping Weight: 14.1 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

3.6 out of 5 stars

14 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#494,470 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

This book, a brief work of cultural history, outlines four parallel aspects of three political systems: the American New Deal, Italian Fascism, and German Nazism. The point of "Three New Deals" is that these political systems shared core similarities in certain programmatic manifestations. The author, Wolfgang Schivelbusch, fortunately does not claim that the three systems were essentially the same. He offers, instead, a discussion of the interplay between the governed and the governors in each of these systems—how each shaped the other, in ways that can be compared and contrasted across systems. The result is a book of modest interest from which, perhaps, something more can be spun.While cultural history is interesting, my purpose is not to examine "Three New Deals" as a view on the past, but as an onramp to the future. What applicable lessons, what tools, can we learn from this look at the troubled 1930s, when, like now, liberal democracy seemed like a dying system? By lessons, I do not mean pedagogical lessons, helping us to get liberal democracy back on track, since I don’t want to get it back on track. I mean how can what worked then to build mass support for political systems be used today to the same effect? Certainly, if the New Deal is not disqualified from polite society by its parallels to true Fascism and to Nazism, there is no particular reason a fourth, future, polity with the same parallels should be disqualified.I really need a name for this political program that I am constructing. It is, of course a reactionary program—in my usual phrase, “a new thing informed by the wisdom of the past.” Generically, I refer to it as Reaction, but that is neither evocative nor adequately precise. That will not catch fire. In part, the problem is that it’s hard to name a program that is not an ideology, but rather a set of principles based on history and human nature, which does not promise utopia, or guarantee happiness or universal justice, but merely offers living within the truth, and maximum possibility for human flourishing. “Restorationism,” a related term, is too backward looking for my purposes; the past is gone, which is a key principle of mine, and anyway not all elements of any past were wholly desirable. I am struggling to come up with something good. Neo-Realism? If you have an idea, let me know.But let’s parse the book. Schivelbusch makes clear his own angle from the book’s epigraph, a quote from David Hume: “As force is always on the side of the governed, the governors have nothing to support them but opinion. It is, therefore, on opinion that the government is founded; and this maxim extends to the most despotic and the most military governments as well as to the most free and popular.” We can forgive Hume his delusion that force is “always on the side of the governed”; he lived far away from Oriental despotism and long before both the modern totalitarian state and our own Cthulhu state. But his major point is insightful—that public opinion matters to any government. (In addition to public opinion, what he called “opinion of interest,” Hume was also talking about legitimacy, or what he called “opinion of right.” They are related, but not the same.) One necessary conclusion is that the support of the public is essential for the stability of any government, and its ability to fulfil its program, and the more support, the better. This is, no doubt, why Schivelbusch chose this epigraph, for the rest of his book discusses how public opinion was shaped by the the three regimes that are the subject of his study.The critical importance of public opinion in all times and places isn’t news, of course, and has little or nothing to do with democracy. José Ortega y Gasset pointed out that force, even in the modern world, followed public opinion. Julius Caesar and Augustus both were keenly aware of the need to keep public opinion, both aristocratic and plebian, in their corner. Such examples could be multiplied endlessly through the centuries. The trick, therefore, for those in charge is how to shape and shift that public opinion, rather than being tossed about by it. Such an effort is like the martial art of aikido—if you use your opponent’s own motions, but redirect them, it is a lot easier to win than by simply trying to overwhelm one force with another. In the same way, it is easier to create channels for public opinion and thereby lead and direct the flow in the desired direction, within the limits set by the opinion itself, which will vary in time and place. How to carve those channels, in four different ways, is the topic of the rest of Three New Deals.Schivelbusch begins with “Leadership.” While Roosevelt is now, as viewed through the prism of World War II, seen as the antithesis of Hitler and Mussolini, in the early 1930s all three were perceived as charismatic leaders outside the established system, who stood apart from the traditional ruling class and built a “direct emotional connection with the masses.” “Commentators freely noted areas of convergence among the New Deal, Fascism, and National Socialism. All three were considered postliberal state-capitalist or state-socialist systems, more closely related to one another than to classic Anglo-French liberalism. Hitler, Mussolini, and Roosevelt were seen as examples of plebiscite-based leadership: autocrats who came to power via varying but thoroughly legal means.”The mechanisms for, and therefore the impact of, this emotional connection to leadership were different: Hitler used the mass rally; Roosevelt the radio, “yet both were collective experiences.” Schivelbusch points out that the perception we have from speech excerpts of Hitler simply ranting is wrong; his speeches started and ended calmly, in a deliberate structure, and were regarded at the time as incredibly effective, just like Roosevelt’s “fireside chats”—especially at making the listener feel like he was being directly addressed. Both were carefully constructed and honed for maximum impact by the men who delivered them, who had a gift for oratory. Yes, it’s difficult to compare the two, in part because radios were much more common in American homes and, obviously, radio lacked the mass drama created by Hitler’s staging and a surrounding crowd (Schivelbusch naturally cites Gustave Le Bon). “Yet in both cases, the end result was similar. The individual abandoned [himself] fully to the speaker. . . .”So now we have our first necessary element in a modern program: a charismatic leader in the same mold, that is, one having this direct emotional connection with individuals while actually addressing them en masse. Modern exemplars are thin on the ground; no Western modern politician has had any element of this charisma. Barack Obama was puffed as a great orator; we can ignore whether that’s actually true, but note without dispute, I think, that charisma does not derive from positive reception by people who already agree with you. I doubt if anybody at all was ever convinced of anything by an Obama speech; his oratory was purely designed for the faithful. And, of course, like all modern politicians, it wasn’t his oratory at all—he read, word-for-word, speeches written for him by others. I’m pretty sure it’s impossible to create a “direct emotional connection” that way. Donald Trump may be good at the rabble rousing speech, and he is more extemporaneous, but his speeches are hardly honed, and he is also preaching mostly to the choir. Trump may be charismatic, but he is far too undisciplined to be this type of leader.Arguably, the rise of such a man is more difficult than in the past, simply because collectively addressing the masses requires them to pay attention, and people have so many different ways to spend their time, and money to satisfy their tastes. This is exacerbated by the atomization of society and the destruction of intermediary institutions, which, for good and bad, can impose pressure on their members to participate collectively. It’s not clear to me that in the present dispensation any charismatic leader could get traction—say, approval by 85% of people. In any case, it seems to me such a man must spring up full grown, like Athena from the head of Zeus. We will not wake up one day with Ted Cruz or Gavin Newsom as Maximum Leader. If such a man does arrive, we will know it—again, for good or bad. For my purposes, therefore, there is nothing to do to hasten this tool for implementation of the program.Schivelbusch next turns to “Propaganda,” “the means by which charismatic leadership, circumventing intermediary social and political institutions like parliaments, parties, and interest groups, gains direct hold upon the masses.” As he points out, World War I led to the massive use of extremely aggressive propaganda by the United States government. All successful propagandists, though, start by grasping what public opinion is, along with where it is trending, and then reinforce what are perceived as desirable opinions, or “illuminate the people if those trends lead nowhere,” in the words of Joseph Goebbels that Schivelbusch quotes. While the general form of propaganda was similar, the New Deal government, unlike the Third Reich, did not have propaganda directed from a central ministry. Instead, it had coherent propaganda diffused through multiple departments, responding to direction from Roosevelt. And American propaganda relied on cooperation, which it got, from the press, sometimes helped along by pressure, rather than direct coercion, although the Nazis did not often have to use coercion either.Beyond direct narrative propaganda of the obvious sort, the role of symbols was extremely important. Schivelbusch contrasts the successful Nazi use of symbolism (in part derived from Communist use of symbols) with the insistence upon strict rationality by their Social Democratic opponents. He gives the example of how the SD failed to push the powerful design by Sergei Chakotin of the “Anti-Fascist Circle,” three downward pointing arrows. (This symbol is still used by the so-called Antifa. That’s a topic beyond today, but it is interesting that Schivelbusch notes the quote attributed to Huey Long, “When America gets Fascism it will call it Anti-Fascism.”) Not that Schivelbusch thinks the SD could have won with more skillful propaganda; his claim is that “Propaganda works best in the service of a movement that is already on the rise, and its most effective moment comes in periods of crisis and revolution, when a fading regime is losing its potency and the nation’s will is as yet undecided.” No doubt Carl Schmitt would have had much to say on this.One equivalent in New Deal America was the Blue Eagle of the NRA (not the good one, rather the “National Recovery Administration”). This was the central symbol of an extremely aggressive, though relatively brief, campaign by the Roosevelt administration to force “voluntary” price and wage controls, through identifying by display of the symbol those people who were good and those who were bad, and thereby creating a snowball of psychological compulsion. The head of the NRA, Hugh Johnson, called for social ostracism and boycotts of those not participating, though he didn’t call it a boycott. Rather, merchants not participating went out of business because “The public simply cannot tolerate non-compliance with their plan.” Thus, the Blue Eagle was a classic form of what Schivelbusch calls the “symbolism of compliance.” Its equivalent in Germany was the use of “Heil Hitler,” display of swastika flags, and so forth. Its equivalent today is “Resist” and “I’m With Her” stickers, yard posters lying that “Hate Has No Home Here,” or signs in shop windows saying “Workers of the World, Unite” or “This Business Serves Everybody.”The purpose of all 1930s propaganda, narrative or symbolic, was to create the psychology of “voluntary compulsion.” It was not a substitute for actual political programs, which were offered and repeated in detail, but were given punch by symbolism. “What captivated the public imagination was not any particular project and its chances for success but the emotional charge of how such projects were presented.”So what does this imply for my program? It implies, for one, that modern “movement” conservatives are functionally worthless. (Sorry to my friends in the conservative movement.) Ideas may have consequences, but theirs don’t, because the masses aren’t listening, and they’re not going to wake up one day, realize what they’re missing, and rush to consume journals of opinion or YouTube videos with 324 views. The conservative movement does have uses—for example, building Rod Dreher’s Benedict Option can be done through such a movement and its publications. By definition, the Benedict Option is not a mass movement (though the government, with the support of the masses, if they are not turned by an angel with a flaming sword, or a man with an AR-15, will crush the Benedict Option, as I have said before and I will shortly expand upon). But good propaganda has exactly zero traction on the intellectual Right today (though “MAGA” does have some pull). It has somewhat more traction on the Left, but, really, not much by historical standards.Perhaps, in any case, propaganda’s effect is lessened today for the same reason that charismatic leaders cannot get the focused attention of the masses, and modern symbols of compliance often feel washed out —there is a lot of competition for eyeballs. I’m not sure what an effective propaganda campaign would look like; the only ones we have today are facile ones that ask of people nothing other than costless virtue signaling. Certainly, such virtue signaling is not costless for others, like orthodox Christian bakers, and such propaganda does have a real impact on the masses, but it seems to me there is little of the visceral, or any “emotional charge,” about it. One moment a flash of contempt for the Christian, who dares deny that “Love is Love is Love” is a profound truth; the next moment it is forgotten as Netflix offers a smorgasbord of cotton candy for the brain. For any propaganda to be successful in catching the vast majority of people and pushing them in a particular direction, good symbolism or no, it would have to be tied to some focusing event, jarring people out of their lives of ease and comfort to think for themselves again. If grabbed at that moment, let’s say at the same time the charismatic leader seizes the day, then we are well on our way to rerouting public opinion through our new channels.I will also note in passing, and keep discussion for another day (sorry I keep doing that), that good propaganda requires good creative ability. In the post-war era, creative types tend to be left-wing. Certainly, artists have not historically been left-wing; this is a wholly modern phenomenon, the basis and future of which bear examination. But as I say, not today. I also note that one necessary lesson from this discussion of leadership and propaganda is how rapidly the consensus represented by public opinion can shift. Public opinion is like a counter-weighted elevator; it seems like it would take an enormous effort to shift its direction, but it is so balanced that small changes reverse it entirely, multiplying the impact of both leadership and propaganda.Up next, Schivelbusch covers “Back to the Land.” Nationalism, in the sense of a classless community of the nation; and its cousin, autarky, get a brief treatment. Of course, the community of the nation has its enemies; in America, those were the “money changers” blamed by Roosevelt (not an anti-Semitic reference) and the supposed war profiteers. The governments in all three countries explored forms of regionalism and autarkic back-to-the-soil movements, in part a reaction to economic depression and resulting unemployment in cities, in part a form of re-enchantment and retreat to a supposedly more virtuous, primordial way of life, a type of “organic authenticity.” In the United States, this led to a lot of talk, and the construction of the abortive Arthurdale planned community in West Virginia. The Germans also nattered a lot about “settlements” (Siedlungen), but those never went much of anywhere inside Germany (still, it seems to me, though Schivelbusch does not mention it, that these same concepts must have underlain the plans for German repopulation of the “new lands to the East,” after the inconvenient Untermenschen had been seen off). Schivelbusch does not see these “back to the land” movements as a failure, however—he sees them as an integral and successful element of the overall propaganda effort of both the American and German regimes.My program is not going to have any back-to-the-land component. While there is something to be said for keeping farming as a possible occupation simply for nostalgia, modern agriculture doesn’t need family farms, nor does farming offer anything that catches and channels public opinion. Neo-Realism, or whatever we are calling it, will not offer price supports to farmers. It will not allow factory farming, either, though—allowing fat people to hoover up huge quantities of cheap fried meat is antithetical to human flourishing, and while animals have no rights at all, it is our duty to treat them, to exercise our dominion over them, in a moral fashion, which factory farming does not. But the days of working the soil for any significant portion of the population are over, and there is nothing inherently more virtuous about farming than any other occupation—though, certainly, total detachment from nature is not desirable, so there will be plenty of parks, national and otherwise.Finally, Schivelbusch turns to “Public Works.” Mussolini finally gets some mention (he is mostly missing from the first three topics). Here we return to neoclassical monumentalism, which, let’s be honest, impresses everybody. You are lying if you think Le Corbusier holds a candle to, say, the Jefferson Memorial. Classic architecture is classic for a reason. “Scholars gradually recognized neoclassical monumentalism—whether of the 1930s, the Renaissance, the French Revolution, or the Napoleonic empire—for what it is: the architectural style in which the state visually manifests power and authority.” In Washington, D.C., “most of the large neoclassical buildings associated with the city today were built between 1933 and 1939.” Similar projects were undertaken elsewhere. True, there are limits to this. The monstrous proportions of buildings proposed, but never built, by Hitler and Stalin take this arc too far, becoming anti-human and enshrining the state as a false god (the Amazon series "The Man in the High Castle" portrays many of these buildings as if-built; this reality comes through clearly).But buildings are only a small part of it; a government desiring to create a new thing must offer a broad range of public works that embody a unifying philosophy and create a unifying effect. Mussolini drained the Pontine Marshes and constructed therein new cities, “three-dimensional representations of the Fascist ideals of organization, control, and the absence of urban chaos.” The struggle to tame nature gave Fascism an epic tale that fit with charismatic leadership and propaganda; a masculine battle against disorder. In America, the equivalent, with less bluster but on a grander scale, was projects like the Tennessee Valley Authority (also used to extend the reach of the federal government beyond traditional limits). The Germans had the autobahn.[Review completes as first comment.]

Schivelbusch is an excellent analyst of political culture. He compares Roosevelt's new deal with Mussolini's Fascism and Hitler's National Socialism. The book is not a smear of Roosevelt, but rather an examination of how the prevailing political ideals of rationality and organization were implemented in the three countries. There is also thoughtful analysis of the use of media, radio in the US and rallies in Europe.

This is a truly brilliant book. It highlights the fact that political and economic crises often produce similar results, specifically a centralization of state power. Some people may not like this book because it suggests similarities between Roosevelt's New Deal and Fascism. However, the point here is not to suggest Roosevelt was racist or antisemitic (a totally idiotic notion) but to focus on the much larger issue of the use of state power in a crisis. The book has important lessons for the future. The current world order is doing a very poor job is dealing with deadly threats like the global environmental crisis. In a new series of world crises there is likely to be a huge centralization of power. Albert Speer once observed that when fascism comes back, it will come back as anti-fascism. The larger issue here is totalitarianism and its potential role in the world future.

If you want to know how completely corrupt FDR was, read this book.SEE what they planned for us. Extremely well written and documented. You should read if you want to know what the New Deal meant for our folks and for their children... yeah, you and me.

This book was obviously the predecessor to Jonah Goldman's best selling 'Liberal Fascism.' This is a quick study of reviewing governmental trends in the early 20th Century in response to post-WWI problems and the Depression.My only criticism is the minimal coverage of Mussolini's corporate state that was actually the blueprint for Hitler's programs and Roosevelt's New Deal. Mainly the comparisons are between Germany and the United States.This book could have also been longer with a more in depth review of these three societies. For a more in depth analogy albeit more politically-biased review, I would recommend 'Liberal Fascism.'

This book read well and had useful information; however, it was just the tip of the iceberg. The book was simply too short. The parallels between Roosevelt, Hitler, and Mussolini are clearly made. If that was the only premise of the book, then the author was very successful. But he could have had an expanded ambition and illustrated how the other was more successful.

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Kamis, 19 Februari 2015

Download PDF Day by Day With Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections

Download PDF Day by Day With Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections

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Day by Day With Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections

Day by Day With Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections


Day by Day With Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections


Download PDF Day by Day With Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections

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Day by Day With Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections

Review

Susan Tassone's Day by Day with Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections can be a genuine aid to our daily prayer. Every time we pick up this little treasure of a book, we will find the deep wisdom of St. Faustina's Diary presented in bite-size pieces, one nugget of wisdom at a time. In her daily reflections, Susan fleshes out the teaching on Divine Mercy in contemporary language with very helpful images and analogies. Spending time with the Lord in this way will help us all to taste the joy that St. Faustina experienced as she was drawn into the bosom of the Most Holy Trinity ... immersed in the love of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit (1670). - Most Reverend Thomas J. Olmsted, Bishop of PhoenixSusan Tassone shares with us the beauty, truth, wisdom, and spirituality found in St. Faustina's Diary. Now, with Day By Day with Saint Faustina, she hands us 365 theological gems with an original reflection and prayer for each one. This is a tremendous achievement...and a truly lovely and "pray-able" prayer book. - Most Reverend Robert P. Reed, Auxiliary Bishop of BostonSusan Tassone's new book is a means to experience God's overwhelming love for each of us. By spending a little time each day reflecting on a bite-sized morsel of the Diary of St. Faustina followed by a very succinct and eye-opening reflection, and then a short prayer God can change our perspective and our lives through His powerful love. Seeing how God worked in the life of St. Faustina helps us see how He wants to work in our own hearts. This treasure of a book is a wonderful way to develop a very doable habit of ongoing formation. I highly recommend it! - Father Joseph Roesch, M.I.C. - Vicar General, Rome, ItalyDay by Day with Saint Faustina is a spiritual storehouse a blessing that helps you reflect more deeply each day on the writings of this amazing saint and friend. Especially suited to men and women who face busy, demanding lives, these quotations, reflections and prayers will give you a spiritual boost each day of the year. - Michele Faehnle, Co-Author of Our Friend FaustinaThis much-needed introduction to St. Faustina, her spirituality, and God s never-ending mercy is a wonderful choice for those (including me) who have felt a little intimidated by the depth and length of the visionary's diary. Here, day by day, author Susan Tassone shares the key themes, beauty, and comfort the diary offers all of us. It s a grace-filled nudge that encourages each of us to read the diary itself - Father Edward Looney, Author of A Heart Like Mary's: 31 Daily Meditations to Help You Live and Love as She Does.Day by Day with Saint Faustina gives us a wonderful approach to comprehending the infinite Divine Mercy of God. I've long hoped that somebody would be able to open the depths of St. Faustina's spirituality in a way that would allow people to slowly acquire her ability to trust just as she slowly grew in prayer, in understanding God's will, and eventually in fully trusting in His love. - Father Dan Cambra, M.I.C., Holy Souls Sodality - The National Shrine of The Divine MercyDay by Day with Saint Faustina is a must-have and must-read companion for your daily prayer life to better discern God's will for you. Here's how to imitate St Faustina's daily pilgrimage on your own path to a deeper spirituality and closer, more personal, relationship with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. - David M. Carollo, Executive Director - World Apostolate of Fatima USA - Our Lady's Blue Army --Personal Endorsements

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From the Inside Flap

These pages bring you a beautiful collection of spiritual treasures drawn from the celebrated Diary of Catholic visionary and mystic, St. Faustina Kowalska (1905-1938).Arranged by an award-winning and best-selling Catholic author Susan Tassone into a handy, day-by-day form, these selections from Faustina's writings on Divine Mercy revealed to her over the years in mystical conversations with Jesus himself will help you do what Jesus told Faustina he wants you to do: trust completely in His mercy and show mercy to others.By means of these daily readings, you'll come to know and be enriched by St. Faustina's Secrets of Sanctity, awakening in you the qualities of Divine Mercy that Jesus himself infused into Faustina's soul: mercy (of course), but also trust, humility, and peaceful acceptance of God's will for you.Since her death just over 80 years ago, St. Faustina has been a source of strength and inspiration for millions of souls across the globe, including St. John Paul II who canonized her in the year 2000. Today, she can begin bringing you, too, the strength and inspiration you need.In Day by Day with St. Faustina, you'll learn how to:Grow daily closer to Christ in the Eucharist.Use your suffering to help others, including the souls in purgatory.Grasp the striking details of Faustina's mystical experiences, prophecies, and revelations and discover what they mean for you in particular.Soon you'll begin to experience in your soul the graces that were poured into hers.You'll find yourself becoming, like Faustina, an Apostle of Mercy, teaching others by word and example about the infinite love and compassion of God, who is Divine Mercy.

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Product details

Paperback: 416 pages

Publisher: Sophia Institute Press (March 21, 2019)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1622826523

ISBN-13: 978-1622826520

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 1.1 x 6.5 inches

Shipping Weight: 14.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

5.0 out of 5 stars

1 customer review

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#43,775 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

When author, Susan Tassone, gave me permission to share an excerpt from her new book, Day by Day with St. Faustina, in a newsletter I edit, I had quite a dilemma. I could not decide which one to share! This awesome book – which contains a quote from St. Faustina’s Diary for each day of the year, followed by a brief reflection on how to apply it to daily life, and a short prayer – is such a treasure. I started jotting down my favorites. It was not long before I filled a whole page! There are quotes about peace, prayer, love, Eucharist, Confession, mercy, trust, patience, humility, silence, suffering, doing the will of God, praying for the dying and the souls in Purgatory, and more. She also talks a lot about her guardian angel.I have read the Diary a couple of times and often read excerpts from it, but presented in short bites like this to reflect on each day will be so helpful to my spiritual life. I love the fact that the prayer each day ends with “Jesus, I trust in You.” Each quote in the book has a catchy title that will help recall the teaching for the day without having to memorize the whole quote. A few of my favorites include: “Divine Hide-And-Go-Seek”, “No Small Potatoes”, “Bells and Whistles”, “A Nun Called ‘Dump’”, and “Chatterboxes”. Even the appendix is very helpful. Besides instructions on how to pray the Divine Mercy Chaplet, and the Divine Mercy Novena, the Divine Mercy Promises are included. They are sprinkled throughout the Diary, but Susan listed them all in one place, which makes it more convenient if you want to share them with others. I love, love, love, this book! It has the anointing by the Holy Spirit! I wish I was wealthy and could buy copies for everyone!

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Day by Day With Saint Faustina: 365 Reflections PDF

Senin, 16 Februari 2015

Ebook Free You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero

Ebook Free You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero

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You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero

You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero


You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero


Ebook Free You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero

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Are you still puzzled why should be this publication? After having fantastic work, you may not need something that is very hard. This is what we say as the affordable publication to read. It will not only provide enjoyment for you. It will certainly provide life lesson behind the enjoyable features. From this instance, it is surely that this book is appropriate for you as well as for all people who need straightforward and enjoyable book to review.

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You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero

About the Author

Jen Sincero is the author of the New York Times bestselling books You Are a Badass and You Are a Badass at Making Money.

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Product details

Series: Miniature Editions

Paperback: 88 pages

Publisher: Running Press Miniature Editions; Box Min to edition (March 22, 2016)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0762460083

ISBN-13: 978-0762460083

Product Dimensions:

3 x 2 x 3.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

3.7 out of 5 stars

129 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#21,644 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Got this for a colleague as an anonymous gag gift. It was a huge it! Nothing beats the seeing the look on his face when he walks into his office and hits the button--except hearing Jen's voice project "Feed fear a suck-it sandwich!" into the office followed by people snickering...

I loved the real book. I saw this and use it as a reward for my volleyball teams I coach. Players pass it to a player they feel put it on the line during practice. They enjoy reading it the tidbits. They love the button. I sometimes pull messages from the button to motivate them.

I bought this as a Christmas gift for my girl friends this year. What a hit these were! Everyone loved the button, and the accompanying booklet of affirmations. What kind of gift do you give that people are still talking about months later? Loved it!

I got two as gifts for my two teen nieces. I thought they would find them cheesy, but surprisingly, they love them. Not really worth $10 each, but still a fun novelty item.

This is wonderful and very motivational! Nice to start your day off with something positive. I just lost my job due to restructure after 18 years and so it is helpful to start my days off right.

I think this is hysterical - for a small price, it is worth the laugh. I got one for my writing friends since we all suffer from self-doubts and for my husband who is going through a bone marrow transplant as I type this. We all need to remind ourselves of our potential badass at times. Yes, the voice is a little bit odd and the phrases are “interesting” but I did not go into this purchase thinking that this was going to be anything more than it is.

There are various sayings - one of which I really find annoying. So, after every time I hit it to hear you are a badass I keep tapping the button so prime it so the next time I hit it it gives the catch phrase I'm looking for. It's fun to use at work or around others who need a pick me up.

I bought this for a Christmas gift for a coworker and it arrived not working. One of the batteries appears blackish so I believe that is the problem. I searched my whole town for replacements with no luck. I don't feel I will be giving this gift as planned and I am completely bummed out.

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You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero PDF

You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero PDF
You Are a Badass® Talking Button: Five Nuggets of In-Your-Face Inspiration (Miniature Editions), by Jen Sincero PDF

Minggu, 15 Februari 2015

PDF Ebook , by Ilsa Madden-Mills

PDF Ebook , by Ilsa Madden-Mills

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, by Ilsa Madden-Mills

, by Ilsa Madden-Mills


, by Ilsa Madden-Mills


PDF Ebook , by Ilsa Madden-Mills

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, by Ilsa Madden-Mills

Product details

File Size: 2450 KB

Print Length: 299 pages

Publication Date: October 24, 2018

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B07JPKGLP2

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Lending: Enabled

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#2,722 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

Something you should know about me. I have read EVERYTHING that Ilsa Madden-Mills has written to date. She tends to write contemporary romance with a little dirty in it. Her writing superpower is creating characters and relationships that seem to exist in the “real world.” When I read her books, there is a part of me that believes I could be friends with the characters she creates. They are visceral in the way she creates them.Now, after an Amazon struggle the past couple of days, her readers are finally able to get our hands on I Bet You, the next book in a series of football romance stories set in Magnolia, Mississippi at a fictional university, Waylon University. The first book, I Dare You, released earlier in the year. I Bet You tells the story of Ryker, the star quarterback of the Waylon U football team, and Penelope, a fellow student. Penelope and Ryker are seemingly two very different people. Ryker is the sexy, attractive BMOC, wildly popular among the students, while Penelope is a beautiful nerdy romance-loving writer. Even through Penelope is attracted to Ryker, given her past, Penelope has made the rule: no football players. However, a quick bet, a plan to help Penelope attract Connor, and a lot of time spent together, leads them to the impossible.Characters: 💙💙💙💙💙One of the strengths of Madden-Mills’s romances is her characters. As I mentioned at the beginning of the blog post, her characters could be real people, people that you and I would consider personal friends. In this book, Ryker and Penelope are everything. In I Dare You, Ryker is Maverick’s player roommate. There isn’t a woman that Ryker doesn’t like. However, even with that flaw, he is loyal. As Maverick makes some unwise decisions, Ryker continues to support him, even to his own detriment. In I Bet You, Ryker continues his loyalty, this time to Penelope. We realize early on that the two are seriously attracted to each other. This attraction to Penelope leads him to show his loyalty by helping her connect with Connor, the boy she believes is a better match. Ryker readily forgoes his attraction to her to maintain his loyalty to their burgeoning friendship.As of late, authors such as Kandi Steiner with The Wrong Game and Meghan March with The Sin Trilogy have created the penultimate book boyfriends. They are sensitive, caring, willing to sacrifice their reputations for the heroines, sexy, and handsome. Whether you read Zach or Lincoln and now, Ryker, you cannot help but wish there were more men like them in the real world. Like Steiner’s Zach and March’s Lincoln, Ryker’s sensitivity to the Penelope makes him irresistible to the reader. This trend leads the reader feel strongly for the actions of the hero. You cannot help but root for Ryker because his clearly knows that Penelope is “it” for him: “I feel like I’m in a dream. And here’s the thing—I’ve had some kickass moments in my life, the time I won a state championship, the day I got my scholarship from Waylon, but nothing… nothing beats having her.”Now, Penelope embodies the woman who knows herself, and she does not care about other’s thoughts about her. She tells us early on that she forgives easily. She loves her historical romance, Twilight, vampires, and statement tees. She doesn’t feel the need to meet some societal expectations. Instead, she is simply who she is, and it is perfect for Ryker. She brings out the best in him, and she knows him better than other woman could ever know him: “The Ryker of my heart would never participate in a bet that involved me. And I didn’t need Margo to tell me that. Or Charisma to explain about how sometimes we say things we don’t mean. I know him. I think maybe I’ve known him for a long time, or my soul has. Since the moment I researched and wrote the article about him, he carved out a place in my brain, and now he owns my heart.” I love these two together.Story: 💙💙💙💙💙I have to admit that I did see the conflict coming from afar. When the focus of the book is betting, it is obvious that a bet would cause problems for Ryker and Penelope. And that is the case with this story. What I love about the story, though, is the redemption of Ryker in the end and Penelope’s ability to finally move past her anger and disappointment with her father. This can only occur when she faces the difficulty with Ryker. Characters overcoming their pasts always makes for a strong romantic trope.Even more, together, Ryker and Penelope are funny and charming and compelling to read. Focusing on their relationship would be enough for the story, but Madden-Mills also gives us more with Penelope’s “daddy” issues and Ryker’s sensitivity to perfectionism. These are common issues and readers can relate to them.Sexiness Quotient: 💙💙💙💙Madden-Mills always gives us enough sex in her books. We get enough to underscore the characters’ relationship. It adds another dimension to their love, but the sex does not overpower the relationship. The way in which they connect on a spiritual or emotional level is the most important, and sex simply adds a bit more to those levels. This is truly the case in I Bet You. Ryker and Penelope seriously want each other, and their bodies show this, but Madden-Mills does not give us all the raunchy details. She gives us enough physical to enhance the emotional and spiritual.Overall: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (5 Stars)I will always read anything from Ilsa Madden-Mills. I find myself in her stories. They are real and relational and readable. I Bet You took a bit to get to Amazon, but it is definitely worth the wait. Ryker and Penelope will make you laugh, make you cry, and make you love a little bit deeper.

Like others, I nearly DNF'd.Penelope was the worst virgin nymphomaniac I have ever read, she's was disturbingly obsessed with daydreams of sex. And ladies, it's embarrassing to like Twilight past the age of 15.Ryker was definitely changed from book one. But I could not understand his attraction to Red.The bird, and the dive into historical fiction scenes were random and odd.

4.5*It's a sexy enemies-to-lovers college romance that will make you all hot and have you swooning.Penelope is quirky, nerdy and hot, even though she has no idea that she's hot. She’s in school and she works two jobs. She knows what she wants and she holds her own. And the last thing she wants is Ryker Voss, the incredibly hot football player.Ryker is the starting quarterback and team captain for the football team. He's got groupies hanging on his arms and hanging on his every word. But not Penelope. She's not interested in him and his popularity. Ryker's about to get his ego taken down a few notches.Ryker just loves that fact that Penelope can't stand him. She never backs down and doesn't let him get away with his crap! What starts out as an aversion, quickly turns into an unstoppable attraction! We've got a whole lot going on in this story with a football bet, a jerk trying to make trouble and an unrequited crush.Ryker was incredibly sweet and romantic. These big football guys fall hard when they finally find the right girl. It's a beautiful thing. I really loved Ryker and Penelope. And a girl who adores a sparkly vampire, is my kind of people. A fun story with some great humor that I totally recommend.

I’m not a huge fan of NA/YA books but I’m very glad I took a shot here. This was so much fun and a lot sexy. There was a lot of comedic moments that had me laughing out loud. It was a bit of a predictable story but I actually liked that about this one. I loved Ryker and his genuine good heart. He loved Penelope and was prepared to fight for her even knowing he messed up. I really loved Blaze and Charisma and hope we get their story next.

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Kamis, 12 Februari 2015

Download Ebook Something New Under the Sun: Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age

Download Ebook Something New Under the Sun: Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age

This recommended publication entitled Something New Under The Sun: Satellites And The Beginning Of The Space Age will certainly have the ability to download conveniently. After getting the book as your selection, you could take more times or even few time to begin analysis. Web page by web page could have excellent conceptions to review it. Many factors of you will certainly enable you to review it wisely. Yeah, by reading this book and complete it, you can take the lesson of exactly what this publication offer. Get it and also dot it sensibly.

Something New Under the Sun: Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age

Something New Under the Sun: Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age


Something New Under the Sun: Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age


Download Ebook Something New Under the Sun: Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age

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Something New Under the Sun: Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age

Review

...I found this a gripping read. As Suomi remarked, "How hard we worked!" Having read Gavaghan's book, you can believe it, of him and all the other pioneers. To fight their way through technical, budgetary and bureaucratic obstacles, and to produce the prototypes of satellites we take for granted today, the scientists and engineers needed superhuman dedication. It is fitting that their efforts be acknowledged, admired and recorded for posterity. -- New Scientist, Charles Sheffield

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About the Author

Helen Gavaghan is a science writer and editor who has lived in Washington and London. She has a degree in Biophysics and a fascination with the world of space.

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Product details

Hardcover: 300 pages

Publisher: Copernicus; 1998 edition (November 7, 1997)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0387949143

ISBN-13: 978-0387949147

Product Dimensions:

6.1 x 0.8 x 9.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.1 out of 5 stars

3 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#1,227,061 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

On 4 October 1957, the Soviet Union launched the first artificial satellite into earth orbit. It was named Sputnik, which can be translated from the Russian as "fellow traveler" (Chertok 2006). It was soon itself to have many fellow travelers. Helen Gravaghan's Something New Under the Sun explores the history of this sputnik, the United States' reaction, and subsequent United States satellite programs relating to navigation, meteorology, and communication. This book, more than most, requires a complete reading from "Preface" through "Notes and Sources" in order to gain an understanding of the material presented. The majority of the book is derived from an extensive range of interviews that are listed in the "Acknowledgements" section and it is here that the book is strongest, revealing many intimate details of the personalities, technologies, and bureaucracies that shaped the first years of the Space Age. The weakest chapter of the book, unfortunately intended as a tribute to Sergei Korolov, the Great Designer of the Soviet space program, occurs when she does not draw as heavily on her interviews, but instead on "secondary sources". The personal recollections that she educed from her interview subjects put a very human face, in fact many human faces, on the accomplishments of the early days of artificial satellites and are an important addition to the history of the space program.The intimation that Gravaghan's project has strayed from its original intent comes in the preface where she reveals that the initial objective was to write a book that would cover the "history of every kind of civilian application satellite, from every country, from before the launch of Sputnik up to the 1990s." As her research progressed, she found that limiting her scope to civilian satellites would be impossible as nearly all the early satellite programs were at their heart military. It is surprising that this fact was revealed to her only during three years of research into the topic. That the development and mastery of earth-orbiting satellites would be of profound military importance was known to some before Sputnik and was a national obsession afterwards. In order to avoid an encyclopedic effort that probably would have consumed many years she then decided to omit "the 1990s, the 1980s, the 1970s, most of the 1960s, and satellites developed outside the United States." In narrowing the scope of the book, she was able to sharpen the focus and bring to life the excitement of a time when the best and brightest engineers and scientists were exploring the rapidly expanding limits of whole new fields of knowledge.The one excursion of the book beyond the efforts of United States is the first chapter that covers the launch of Sputnik and "Chief Designer of Cosmic-Rocket Systems" Sergei Korolev. The preface discloses an odd bias on Korolev's work in that it says that "...some tribute seemed called for... [d]espite his contribution to Soviet Union's Cold War armory". She reveals no such equivocation regarding the work on Transit, which was developed to enable submariners to target nuclear-tipped Polaris missiles, nor the communications and meteorology satellites that had direct military applications. This first chapter, "New Moon", veers dangerously away from scholarly historical research towards historical fiction and proves the necessity of reading a chapter's "Notes and Sources" section before foraying into the chapter proper. Gavaghan eschews the conventional system of attribution and provides narrative notes on her sources. It may be that given this book's high degree of reliance on interview and anecdote that gives it its sense of immediacy that conventional footnotes would have proved cumbersome. Further, the narrative notes are in themselves interesting reading. However, often it is impossible to determine from where a certain fact has come. For instance, it is not explicit if the episode where he awoke "to find his clothes frozen to the floor" was a recollection specific to Korolev from Georgii Oserov's En Prison avec Tupolev, extrapolated from Solzhenitsyn's First Circle, cited in the notes as a source for details of Soviet prison life, or derived from some other source. There are also passages given to imaging what Korolev "must" have been thinking that are unsupported by any documentation. Korolev's life story unembellished would make for a prototypical Russian novel: his birth in Ukraine in 1906, confined to a garden while being raised by his grandmother, living through World War I and the Russian Revolution, young love, the "disappearance" of colleagues, arrest and imprisonment under Stalin, and finally a chance to develop something that would change the world. It is unlikely that anyone without similar experiences could imagine what one who could summon such brilliance in the face of persistent brutality would be thinking at any one moment. Gavaghan allows that she "allowed my imagination to have more play in this chapter than in the rest of the book" and the narrative is certainly compelling, but those seeking a rigorous treatment of Korolev and the launching of Sputnik would do well to seek out her references.The best of Something New Under the Sun is based solidly on first-person interviews. The section on Project Moonwatch is a fascinating glimpse into the consciousness of the time regarding satellites and space exploration. In 1957, there was no radar that could track a satellite so early tracking schemes were dependent on visual observation. Anticipating the launch of a satellite as part of the International Geophysical Year, The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory had organized hundreds of amateur astronomers around the world into Project Moonwatch. A Moonwatch station, typified by one in Springfield, Virginia, consisted of a line of observers with small wide-field telescopes with overlapping fields of view set up either side of fourteen foot tall pole with a cross bar that defined the meridian. If a satellite came into an observer's view, "he would hit a buzzer and call out the number of his observing station at the moment when the satellite crossed the meridian pole." This event would be recorded on a tape along with a time signal. By combining the known latitude and longitude of the observing station, the elevation as the satellite passed the meridian, and the time of crossing an observation would made that, when combined with many other similar observations from around the world, would enable a rough calculation of the elements of the orbit. The story of teenager Roger Harvey, a Moonwatcher, hearing about the Russian satellite on a car radio while bringing back a mirror to be used in a telescope he was building tells in a very few words of a very different world where astronomy and interest in the space program was a hands-on participatory activity for enthusiastic young people. These stories were told nearly forty years after the fact, but they were clearly defining events for those people who participated in the first stirrings of the space age. In fact, the title for the book was suggested by a conversation Gavaghan had with Roger Harvey as he showed her the telescope he had used.The Moonwatchers' observations would allow a crude estimate to be made of the satellite's orbit. At that point the precision Baker-Nunn cameras, manufactured by Perkin-Elmer, would be used to photograph the satellite against the background of stars which would enable the calculation of a precise position. Gavaghan chronicles the problems Fred Whipple, leader of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's optical tracking project, had with the manufacturer as the delivery kept getting pushed back: "...the problem was that Perkin-Elmer had not put its best people on the job...the company had underbid and was now reluctant to pay for overtime when they expected to lose money on the contract." An ironic connection, not mentioned in the book, is that Perkin-Elmer is the same company that manufactured the incorrectly figured primary mirror for the Hubble Space Telescope twenty-five years later. The NASA report on that debacle stated: "...the estimated cost of the P-E contract had increased several-fold and the schedule had slipped substantially...The program was threatened with cancellation, and management ability was questioned." (National Aeronautics and Space Administration 1990, 3-4How Bill Guier and George Weiffenbach at the Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) first developed a method for tracking the Sputnik based on the Doppler shift and then expanded that principal into a world-wide navigation system is a story of how modern science works at its best. The essential part of this story is that even though there may be some element of luck in the circumstances, i.e., their radio's reference signal was unusually precise due to the lab's proximity to the National Bureau of Standards, the decisive moment comes when the years of scientific training and natural curiosity enable the scientist to discern within the cacophony of unknowns what is the really interesting question. For Guier and Weiffenbach that moment came when they heard the Doppler shift in the Sputnik signal; "Once they recognized the Doppler shift, they became more serious." They initially applied the miss-distance technique that the lab had used in developing proximity fuses for artillery shells. In the most detailed scientific explanation of the book, Gavaghan expertly explains the physics of the Doppler shift and how that was used to enable anti-aircraft proximity fuses to determine the closest "miss-distance" to the target. However they soon recognized that the orbital determination problem was more complex and that there were significant "ambiguities" in the interpretation of the data. In a telling insights into what makes the mind of a scientist, rather than view complexity as a problem, they "began to recognize the richness of the situation, its complexity'' and that "their Doppler curves might contain a lot more information about satellite motion than was immediately apparent." The initial calculations had been done by hand and on mechanical calculators. APL had recently acquired one of the new digital computers, a UNIVAC 1103A, and Guier was eager to apply the machine to their calculations. Programming the machine to perform the calculations was pioneering work in itself and some of the formalisms and documentation practices of programming had their start here. The speed of the computer enabled the team to perform iterative curve-fittings and generalize the problem into how to find the orbit of any satellite based on Doppler shift data.Upon confirmation that Guier and Weiffenbach were able to determine the elements of an unknown orbit from Doppler shift data, their boss, Frank McClure, head of the research center, proposed the inverse operation: determine an unknown position on the Earth's surface from a known orbit. This general problem had a very specific and urgent application. The submarine-launched Polaris nuclear missiles were an essential part of the United States' nuclear deterrent to offset the Soviet superiority in land-based ICBM throw-weight. In order to accurately launch their missiles, the submariners had to have an accurate fix on their current position. In the early 1960s, there was no sufficiently accurate technique to accomplish this. Guier and Weiffenbach's discovery of the unique Doppler signal signature of an orbit was to prove to be the central principal that made the Transit series of navigation satellites possible. Once the theory was in place, there still remained many practical problems not the least of which was being able to predict the parameters of a "known" orbit. It was know from the beginning that the Earth was not a perfect sphere, but the true complexity of the gravitational field was suspected by only a few based on studies of perturbations of the Moon's orbit. Refraction of the radio signal by the ionosphere, atmospheric drag, and interactions with the Earth's magnetic field were not constants, but varied according to the Sun's influence. The first problem was solved by using two frequencies and deriving a correction factor by comparing the how each of the two known signals had changed. The latter two of these effects showed up initially as orbital perturbations, and each deviation from the predicted path had to be analyzed to determine its cause, magnitude, and how to either counteract it or fit it into the growing body of computer software that was being developed to model orbits. The early Transit satellites were constructed with technology that was developing as it was being used and then launched into an essentially unknown environment. There were many failures, partial successes, and an increasing number of successes as Transit progressed and a large part of the development of satellite systems, launch vehicles, computers, and associated ground stations can be traced through this program. The system had at least one satellite aloft for use by submarines beginning in 1964 and was declared fully operational in 1968. The last Transit satellite was deactivated in 1997, having been surpassed in capability by the GPS constellation.The next section chronicles the development of meteorological satellites. In an time when every nearly weather forecast contains the ubiquitous satellite picture, it is surprising to learn that meteorologists did not at first see the value of imagery from orbit. The computer modeling of weather and climate that was just becoming possible due to the new high speed computers required numerical quantitative data and it was unclear how satellite imagery was going to supply this. How these problems were solved is told primary through the efforts of Verner Suomi, "the father of satellite meteorology." The subject of his doctoral thesis had been the radiation budget of a cornfield. After hearing a lecture on a proposed satellite program by Joseph Kaplan, the chairman of the United States' International Geophysical Year national committee, Suomi thought that a satellite would enable him to study the radiation budget of the entire earth. He formed a critical partnership with Robert Parent, an electrical engineer, and together they were able to build a simple, lightweight device that would survive the rigors of launch and return useful data. Ironically, returning data turned not be the problem; rather they found they were "drowned in data" since not only was the automated data processing at the time very limited, a timer that was supposed to turn off the satellite on 31 October 1960 failed and data was still being received eighteen months later. Several factors conspired to render the data less than complete, however Suomi had succeeded in getting numerical data relevant to meteorology from a satellite.One rather disorienting aspect of this section, and indeed the entire book, is that the author does not arrange the events in a chronological sequence, but rather prefers to relate the complete history of a point before moving to the next. As an example, on page 141 the beginnings of weather satellites from 1948 Air Force and RAND studies are described, through increased funding during the Eisenhower administration. There is a brief stop in 1940s to mention high-altitude weather balloons and the narrative resumes in the late 1950s to the 1960s and the TIROS program without any mention of Suomi's Explorer experiment. Then, on page 159, the author describes Suomi engrossed in the data being returned by his first experiment to reach orbit on 13 October 1959, but on page 161 appears the story of the prior unsuccessful launch of Suomi's experiment on 22 June 1959.The section on communications contains some of the best parts of the book being rich in detail from interviews, saved memos, and contemporaneous personal records. What emerges is a story of brilliant scientists and engineers, hard-nosed (and perhaps hard-drinking in the case of Pat Hyland of the Hughes Aircraft Company) managers and executives, and a cloud of NASA, Army, and Air Force bureaucrats swirling around them - almost a Mad Men (a television series on the AMC network) of communications satellites. The first efforts are centered on passive reflectors and culminate in Project Echo, a spherical one-hundred foot in diameter aluminum coated balloon, which successfully demonstrated that radio signals could be bounced off of an artificial satellite. The limitations of this approach were quickly evident, but the developments that made it possible were to prove vital in later efforts. For instance, Bell Labs used MASERs (Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) in the antenna design to amplify the very weak signals expected from Echo. These amplifiers, in addition to being used with subsequent satellites, were so powerful that they enabled the serendipitous l detection of the cosmic background radiation. Another major development was the Traveling Wave Tube (TWT) which enabled the amplification of radio signals. The major questions remaining concerned whether to use one satellite in geostationary orbit or a constellation of many medium altitude satellites to provide continuous coverage and whether these satellite(s) would be operated by a private corporation or the government. The geostationary satellite had appeared first in the literature, but the technical problems of placing a satellite there, aiming and amplifying the signal, and the unavoidable delay due to distance seemed to argue against it. The medium-orbit was easier to reach, the aiming and amplification requirements were less, and the transmission delay was not considered important. The difficulty and expense of launching, operating, and maintaining the large constellation of satellites necessary to provide continuous coverage was not definitively addressed. It was this later approach that Bell Labs and AT&T pursued, led by John Pierce, which culminated in Telstar, the first operational communications satellite. Meanwhile Harold Rosen and Don Williams at the Hughes Aircraft Company had set about to solve the problems of the geostationary satellite. The stability problem was solved by spinning the satellite and using an innovative two-thruster station-keeping system. This was much simpler and less massive than the three-axis approach then being used by RCA in developing the military's prospective geostationary satellite, Advent. The transmitted signal strength problem was solved by selecting an antenna that confined the radiation pattern to a torus rather a sphere. The political developments also began favoring the Hughes satellite, especially with the decision to form a public corporation, COMSAT, to operate the United States' communications satellites that effectively put AT&T out of that business. As the military Advent program became technically and financially bogged down, the Hughes program gained more support and finally received a "sole-source" contract to launch the first geostationary communications satellite, Syncom. The first launch failed, but the two subsequent launches were successful and led to Hughes building Early Bird, the first operational geostationary communications satellite.The book contains several errors that, while not vital to the central theme, should have been corrected in editing so as not to detract from the book's authority. The first may not be an error so much as an invitation to the reader to make a mistaken assumption. On page 10, the text describes the [R-7] rocket as being four stories tall and having "swayed with each uneasy movement" as it was being moved on the railroad tracks. Those familiar with the crawler-transporter used to transport the United States' Saturn 1B, Saturn V, and Space Shuttle may be put in mind of a smaller, but similar arrangement. In fact, the R-7 has always been transported horizontally and then erected to the vertical on the launch pad. The "four story" dimension is also unclear. The length of the rocket was 30 meters which is closer to ten stories. The diameter at the base was 9.76 meters which is somewhat more than three stories (Encyclopedia Astronautica n.d.). It is possible that she may be referring to the total height of the horizontal rocket plus its rail car, but the imagery is certainly unclear. Other, more clearly defined errors include:On page 41, the field of view of the Moonwatch telescopes is given as "12-in. field of view" which is essentially meaningless. Telescope fields of view are usually given in degrees. It turns out that the field of view of the Moonwatch telescope was 12.5 degrees (Build a Moon Watch Telescope 1957).Another error is found on page 44, where the plaques affixed to Pioneer 10 and 11 are described. The text states that the depiction of the hydrogen atom is "included to show our familiarity with the most abundant gas in the universe..." Aside from the tautology that any civilization that could launch a probe such as the Pioneer would have an excellent functional grasp of chemistry and basic astronomy, the depiction is actually not just a hydrogen atom, but "a schematic of the hyperfine transition of neutral atomic hydrogen-a universal 'yardstick'-providing a basic unit of both time and physical length throughout the physical universe" (Fimmel, Swindell and Burgess 1977) that is then used as measuring unit for the other figures on the plaque.On 114, Gavaghan gives an explanation for a method of compensating for the effects of atmospheric drag on satellite that seems to be completely inverted from the system described in a textbook chapter by Daniel B. DeBra (DeBra 1989), whom she cites as the inventor of the system. She describes the navigation satellite as being placed inside a larger satellite with a "tiny" separation between the faces. As drag would slow down the outer shell satellite, sensors would detect the narrowing gap with the inner satellite that was still moving unslowed and "tiny rockets" would "move[d] the inner satellite to compensate". Aside from the likely destructive effect of firing rockets within the "tiny" space inside the larger satellite, any rocket firing that would be confined to the interior of the shell satellite would not change the path of the whole satellite. Even if the inner satellite were to impact the outer shell, an equal impulse from the expelled rocket exhaust would be reacting with equal momentum against the opposite side of the shell. Any movement of the inner satellite would not be sufficient by several orders of magnitude to overcome a position error due to drag nor would it last for an appreciable length of time. The actual system as described in the reference is: "An internal unsupported proof mass is shielded by the satellite from the external disturbances. The position of the shield (or the main part of the satellite) is measured with respect to the internal proof mass, and this information is used to actuate a propulsion system which moves the satellite to follow the proof mass." (DeBra 1989, 206 This paragraph is filled with so many misunderstandings of satellite construction and basic physics that it raises the question of whether the author has a grasp on the basic science of satellites.On page 134, the author states that TIROS is an acronym "for thermal infrared and observing system. Ignoring the redundancy of "thermal infrared", the acronym is defined as "Television Infrared Observation Satellite" (National Aeronautics and Space Administration - Missions - TIROS 2010) on the NASA TIROS webpage.On page 141 Gavaghan mistakenly explains the beginning of the 1956 fiscal year as being October 1955. In fact, prior to fiscal year 1977, federal fiscal years ended on June 30 and began 1 July (Woolley and Peters 2008).On pages 145 and 154 the author refers to Bill Stroud "of the Army's Signal Corps of Engineers". The U.S. Army has a Signal Corps and a Corps of Engineers that are two distinct organizations. In fact, William G. Stroud worked for the Signal Corps Engineering Laboratories (Green and Lomask 1997, 16).On page 188 in the footnote, the author is comparing the increasing amounts of bandwidth required to send Morse code, teletype, voice telephone, scrambled voice, and commercial TV. The last figure, for television, is correctly given as 6 mc or mega-cycles, but this is incorrectly explained as 6,000 cycles per minute vice 6,000,000.Overall, Something New Under the Sun, tells a very engaging story of the men who pioneered the first artificial satellites on a very personal level that is drawn from interviews and personal papers of many of the major figures and people who worked with them and knew them well. In this aspect it succeeds in putting a very human face on the space race. There is a good deal of explanation of the technical aspects and science behind the satellites that is largely well-done, but the errors noted above detract from the technical authority of the book and call into question whether the author understood the science as well as she understood the people.'BibliographyChertok, Boris. Rockets and People - Volume II: Creating a Rocket Industry. Edited by Asif Siddiqi. Washington, District of Columbia: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 2006.DeBra, Daniel B. "Drag-Free Satellite Control." NASA Technical Reports Server. August 1, 1989.[...] (accessed June 19, 2010).Encyclopedia Astronautica.[...] (accessed June 18, 2010).Fimmel, Richard O., William Swindell, and Eric Burgess. Pioneer Odyssey, NASA SP-396. Washington, DC: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1977.Gavaghan, Helen. Something New Under the Sun: Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1998.Green, Constance McLaughlin, and Milton Lomask. "Vanguard, A History SP-4202." National Aeronautics and Space Administration. August 28, 1997. [...] (accessed June 19, 2010).National Aeronautics and Space Administration - Missions - TIROS. April 16, 2010. [...] (accessed Jun 18, 2010).National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Hubble Space Telescope Optical Systems Failure Report, TM-103443. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1990.Popular Mechanics. "Build a Moon Watch Telescope." August 1957: 170-171.Woolley, John, and Gerhard Peters. American Presidency Project, The. 2008. [...] (accessed June 17, 2010).

Excellent, deeply informative history of space satellites, the surrounding era and how that fostered as well as hindered the development and launch of satellites. Professionally and well written, this book is a must have for astronomers. You read not only of the American side of the space race but the Russian. I found myself cheering for both nations.

I really enjoyed this book's combination of technical (but not too technical) and personal detail. Not only did the book cover the birth and infancy of satellite technology it gave us a good luck at the personalities behind it. My criticism is that the book doesn't go far enough - it doesn't bring the story up to the present day. I realize that this is a daunting task but it would be useful to provide a context - to examine how far we've come. For example, a comparison of modern satellites and their predecessors would be very telling. The book examines just the initial years - more information on satellite development in the 60's and early '70s would put things in a better perspective. On a minor note, I would have preferred a standard bibliograpy and footnotes rather than the detailed bibliography that we're confronted with. There have been many books written about the early manned space program but not enough written on early unmanned efforts. And among those books, most focus on the interplanetary probes, making this book a welcome addition to the study of man's early forays into space.

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