Depression Books
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Depression Books sorted by
Average customer review: high to low
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Nailing It (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
List price: $15.95
New price: $8.38
Average review score: 

It is hard to beat their description
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-29
Review Date: 2006-08-29
They describe this audio as "like the car wreck that shut down the town or the time the puppeteers walked out of the Oddfellows'
variety show, and the dark ones, primarily the death of his father. Reminiscent of Garrison Keillor in his folksiness, Dietz
has a tone and delivery that are all his own--though many of his expressions are taken, appropriately, from the voices of
the community he's talking about." It is hard to beat that description, so I won't even try. More reviews at AudioColumn.com
The Natural Medicine Guide to Depression
Published in Kindle Edition by Hampton Roads Publishing Company (2003-02)
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.99
Average review score: 

Informatively studies a variety of causes for depression
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-08
Review Date: 2003-04-08
The Natural Medicine Guide To Depression by medical journalist Stephanie Marohn informatively studies a wide variety of causes
for depression and recommends an assortment of treatments (other than drugs) that can help alleviate depression and its diverse
symptomatology. Natural medicine treatments such as homeopathy, flower essence therapy, psychic healing, traditional Chinese
medicine, and others are discussed, in this thoughtful guide. However, the remedies here showcased should not be seen as a
first resort because the experience of a professional doctor is of utmost importance. The Natural Medicine Guide is a recommended
supplement to, not a replacement of, standard medical care in the treatment of depression.

The Nature of Melancholy: From Aristotle to Kristeva
Published in Kindle Edition by Oxford University Press, USA (2000-09-28)
List price: $40.00
New price: $31.07
Average review score: 

A fine anthology
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-05
Review Date: 2006-09-05
Philosopher Radden culls the works of 32 authors, preceded by an excellent 50-page introduction to the topic, once a commonplace
idea, now "an insignificant category, of little interest to medicine or pscyhology..." The pleasure in learning from this
valuable work is a modicum of joy in the midst of sorrow.
My full review appeared in The Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2002.
My full review appeared in The Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2002.
The New Deal and American Indian Tribalism: The Administration of the Indian Reorganization Act, 1934-45
Published in Hardcover by University of Nebraska Press (1980-02-01)
List price: $25.00
Used price: $19.99
Average review score: 

This is an excellent resource for research.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-15
Review Date: 2008-04-15
I had to write an essay on the New Deal's effect on the Native American way of life (which, believe me, has very little written
on it) and this book was absolutely perfect. Everything I wanted to know about the New Deal in relation to Native American
Indians was readily at my fingertips in this easy to understand, well organized, comprehensive guide to the Indian New Deal.
I highly recommend it.
New Dealers, The: Power Politics in the Age of Roosevelt
Published in Hardcover by Knopf (1993-03-31)
List price: $27.50
New price: $12.75
Used price: $0.68
Collectible price: $35.00
Used price: $0.68
Collectible price: $35.00
Average review score: 

Public Investment and Those who Made it Happen: an Important Aspect of the New Deal
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-13
Review Date: 2006-03-13
Franklin Roosevelt is considered by many historians of the American West to be the most important president for western USA,
because FDR's massive public investments in energy, water, and credit greatly developed the infrastructure of the region and
made the region more viable for private economic investment. Massive investments were also made in the Pacific Northwest,
parts of the South, and other areas. These investments helped fuel the decades of booming economic expansion that followed
- the great post-war boom.
Examples of these investments include the Norris Dam, Humboldt River Aqueduct, Los Angeles Aqueduct, Bonneville Navigation Dam, Grand Coulee Dam, Pocatello Reservoir, All American Irrigation Canal, Wyoming Drought Canal, Houston Ship Canal, Denver Water Tunnel, Nebraska Power Project, Fort Peck Dam, Mississippi erosion Mattress, and 26 Dams and Locks on the St. Louis-Minneapolis Waterway. Thousands of schools, bridges and tunnels were also built - too many to list.
This book profiles the New Dealers who worked to further the economic developments of their areas of interest. Some profiles are more interesting than others. A stronger overall history weaved throughout would have made the book even better. Big investments in the infrastructure were made.
Other kinds of investments made too. FDR's GI Bill also made a huge investment in America's human capital. Thousands of Americans were able to attend college for the first time. This helped greatly expand the middle class and helped lead to the great post-war boom. FDR brought electricity to hundreds of thousands of people who had no electricity before FDR became president. Huge amounts of credit also were extended to regions to foster development. Decades of booming, stable prosperity followed - the great post-war boom.
A great book on the economic history of America, to put these investments in context, is John Gordon Steele's "An Empire of Wealth." There had been other big investments previously in American history but not on this broad of a scale and usually only for the Northeast.
So much emphasis has been placed on Roosevelt's Great Depression relief programs and Social Security - his basic welfare state (later expanded by subsequent presidents and Congress) - that the New Deal's long-term economic achievements often get overlooked.
In addition, FDR's economic stabilizers created lasting economic stability and prevented another depression. These reforms included the SEC to police financial markets, FDIC to end bank runs and save the banking industry, Federal Reserve Open Market Committee to control the money supply, and other regulatory agencies to prevent detrimental economic behavior, etc. Prior to FDR, there had been several depressions in American history. After FDR, a depression never happened again. Decades of booming, stable prosperity followed - the post-war boom.
The New York Times review of this book, by Alonzo Hamby, said that the idea of New Deal investment in the infrastructure "had its origins in the huge Federal spending and economic planning of World War I and... was midwifed in the 30's... by regional politicians, especially the Texans Jesse Jones, Sam Rayburn and Lyndon Johnson.
"Carried out by public administrators (especially David E. Lilienthal) and furthered by private entrepreneurs (foremost among them Henry J. Kaiser), the New Deal brought the comforts of modernity and the blessings of industrialization to the Pacific Northwest, the Tennessee Valley and thousands of farms and small towns in the 'colonial' areas of a nation dominated by a Northeastern imperial metropole. World War II consolidated these changes, Mr. Schwarz writes, creating shipyards and aircraft factories that stretched from the Canadian border to San Diego, spilled over into Texas and dotted the Gulf Coast. After the war, he says, state capitalism manifested itself in numerous foreign development schemes that provided markets for American goods and in massive enterprises like the space program.
"Let no one assume that this is simply interesting academic history with no relevance to today's policy debates. The New Deal, Mr. Schwarz tells us, 'built the world's largest middle-class society by following an experimental industrial policy'...
"Mr. Schwarz tells his story through a series of biographical profiles of New Deal precursors... [and] invariably wanders down side issues that are often intriguing... but take attention away from his central argument...
"In truth, if the term applies to any Federal expenditure that promotes economic development, then it is part of an American tradition shared by conservatives and liberals, dating back to Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson and encompassing the transcontinental railways, the Panama Canal and, above all, the river and harbor appropriations that were a key ingredient of politics long before World War I. One concludes this book uncertain just where the pork barrel ends and state capitalism begins, but it clearly is an important and suggestive work, essential to a comprehension of the age of Roosevelt."
Finally, Eisenhower continued the investment in the infrastructure by building the interstate highway system. Lyndon Johnson greatly expanded public investment through his Great Society programs. (Some of his welfare programs, by the way, received fair critisims). Perhaps his best investments were in education: Head Start, student loans/grants, K-12 funding, etc. That helped greatly expand the pool of educated workers needed for the information age. LBJ also made huge investments in space programs and other infrastructure investments.
Examples of these investments include the Norris Dam, Humboldt River Aqueduct, Los Angeles Aqueduct, Bonneville Navigation Dam, Grand Coulee Dam, Pocatello Reservoir, All American Irrigation Canal, Wyoming Drought Canal, Houston Ship Canal, Denver Water Tunnel, Nebraska Power Project, Fort Peck Dam, Mississippi erosion Mattress, and 26 Dams and Locks on the St. Louis-Minneapolis Waterway. Thousands of schools, bridges and tunnels were also built - too many to list.
This book profiles the New Dealers who worked to further the economic developments of their areas of interest. Some profiles are more interesting than others. A stronger overall history weaved throughout would have made the book even better. Big investments in the infrastructure were made.
Other kinds of investments made too. FDR's GI Bill also made a huge investment in America's human capital. Thousands of Americans were able to attend college for the first time. This helped greatly expand the middle class and helped lead to the great post-war boom. FDR brought electricity to hundreds of thousands of people who had no electricity before FDR became president. Huge amounts of credit also were extended to regions to foster development. Decades of booming, stable prosperity followed - the great post-war boom.
A great book on the economic history of America, to put these investments in context, is John Gordon Steele's "An Empire of Wealth." There had been other big investments previously in American history but not on this broad of a scale and usually only for the Northeast.
So much emphasis has been placed on Roosevelt's Great Depression relief programs and Social Security - his basic welfare state (later expanded by subsequent presidents and Congress) - that the New Deal's long-term economic achievements often get overlooked.
In addition, FDR's economic stabilizers created lasting economic stability and prevented another depression. These reforms included the SEC to police financial markets, FDIC to end bank runs and save the banking industry, Federal Reserve Open Market Committee to control the money supply, and other regulatory agencies to prevent detrimental economic behavior, etc. Prior to FDR, there had been several depressions in American history. After FDR, a depression never happened again. Decades of booming, stable prosperity followed - the post-war boom.
The New York Times review of this book, by Alonzo Hamby, said that the idea of New Deal investment in the infrastructure "had its origins in the huge Federal spending and economic planning of World War I and... was midwifed in the 30's... by regional politicians, especially the Texans Jesse Jones, Sam Rayburn and Lyndon Johnson.
"Carried out by public administrators (especially David E. Lilienthal) and furthered by private entrepreneurs (foremost among them Henry J. Kaiser), the New Deal brought the comforts of modernity and the blessings of industrialization to the Pacific Northwest, the Tennessee Valley and thousands of farms and small towns in the 'colonial' areas of a nation dominated by a Northeastern imperial metropole. World War II consolidated these changes, Mr. Schwarz writes, creating shipyards and aircraft factories that stretched from the Canadian border to San Diego, spilled over into Texas and dotted the Gulf Coast. After the war, he says, state capitalism manifested itself in numerous foreign development schemes that provided markets for American goods and in massive enterprises like the space program.
"Let no one assume that this is simply interesting academic history with no relevance to today's policy debates. The New Deal, Mr. Schwarz tells us, 'built the world's largest middle-class society by following an experimental industrial policy'...
"Mr. Schwarz tells his story through a series of biographical profiles of New Deal precursors... [and] invariably wanders down side issues that are often intriguing... but take attention away from his central argument...
"In truth, if the term applies to any Federal expenditure that promotes economic development, then it is part of an American tradition shared by conservatives and liberals, dating back to Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson and encompassing the transcontinental railways, the Panama Canal and, above all, the river and harbor appropriations that were a key ingredient of politics long before World War I. One concludes this book uncertain just where the pork barrel ends and state capitalism begins, but it clearly is an important and suggestive work, essential to a comprehension of the age of Roosevelt."
Finally, Eisenhower continued the investment in the infrastructure by building the interstate highway system. Lyndon Johnson greatly expanded public investment through his Great Society programs. (Some of his welfare programs, by the way, received fair critisims). Perhaps his best investments were in education: Head Start, student loans/grants, K-12 funding, etc. That helped greatly expand the pool of educated workers needed for the information age. LBJ also made huge investments in space programs and other infrastructure investments.

A New Mother's Guide - Surviving The First Year - Audio Book With Print Edition
Published in Audio CD by (2007)
List price:
Average review score: 

Survival Guide For New Moms
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-12
Review Date: 2007-11-12
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R2J89JAT1PQ30Q Surving
The First Year - A Guide For New Mothers.

New York Jews and the Great Depression: Uncertain Promise (Modern Jewish History)
Published in Paperback by Syracuse University Press (1999-11)
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Average review score: 

thorough and interesting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-31
Review Date: 2004-12-31
Most of the editorial reviews are self-explanatory - a few things that surprised me:
1. The hardship that the Great Depression caused for synagogues and other Jewish institutions; I have always taken the financial stability of Jewish institutions for granted, but evidently Jews in the 1930s did not have this luxury.
2. That concerns over assimilation are nothing new. In 1929, almost 80% of NYC Jewish children received no religious training or Hebrew instruction (p. 184).
3. Where Jews lived (see p. 82 for table). I had always known that some once-Jewish neighborhoods have lost most of their Jewish population (mostly notably in the Bronx). But I did not know about similarities between then and now: for example, the Upper West Side, then as now, was heavily Jewish- and ditto for Borough Park (though the latter area was less homogenously Orthodox in the 30s than today). Other areas were virtually Jew-free in the 30s (Greenwich Village, Park Slope, Brooklyn Heights) and may actually be more Jewish today, as gentrification has brought in Jewish professionals. Similarly, the Jewish presence in Queens was minimal in the 30s, but is far larger today- I was astonished to learn, for instance, that Forest Hills was less than 10% Jewish in 1932.
1. The hardship that the Great Depression caused for synagogues and other Jewish institutions; I have always taken the financial stability of Jewish institutions for granted, but evidently Jews in the 1930s did not have this luxury.
2. That concerns over assimilation are nothing new. In 1929, almost 80% of NYC Jewish children received no religious training or Hebrew instruction (p. 184).
3. Where Jews lived (see p. 82 for table). I had always known that some once-Jewish neighborhoods have lost most of their Jewish population (mostly notably in the Bronx). But I did not know about similarities between then and now: for example, the Upper West Side, then as now, was heavily Jewish- and ditto for Borough Park (though the latter area was less homogenously Orthodox in the 30s than today). Other areas were virtually Jew-free in the 30s (Greenwich Village, Park Slope, Brooklyn Heights) and may actually be more Jewish today, as gentrification has brought in Jewish professionals. Similarly, the Jewish presence in Queens was minimal in the 30s, but is far larger today- I was astonished to learn, for instance, that Forest Hills was less than 10% Jewish in 1932.

No estas Deprimido estas Distraido (Texto Completo) [You Aren't Depressed, You're Distracted (Unabridged)]
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
List price: $19.90
New price: $10.45
Average review score: 

Facundo Cabral es un gran escritor y Cantautor!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-18
Review Date: 2008-12-18
Me encanta este video libro...es sin lugar a dudas unos de mis predilectos a la hora de escuchar las realidades de la vida,
porque, en verdad el que no se ocupa se preocupa!
Gracias Facundo Cabral!
Gracias Facundo Cabral!

No Glass Slipper: Surviving and Conquering Painful Life Experiences
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2006-07-17)
List price: $15.95
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Average review score: 

No Glass Slipper - Survivng and Conquering Painful Life Experiences
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-20
Review Date: 2006-09-20
The author approaches the issues of abuse and past trauma in an unusual and entertaining way, by examining the lives of five
celebrities Streisand, Winfrey, Barrymore, Berry and Moore. The book should how each faced severe challenges in their youth
but learned to survive and eventually triumph. Each biography is introduced by a well known fairytale which illustrates life
struggles specifically as it applies to the celebrity it is introducing. The book is instantly compelling. After an informative
introduction, the author's first chapter deals with surviving by meeting challenges directly and coping with adversity. Here,
Coffey specifically but briefly considers her five examples of women who are succeeding--not only in their professions but
in their lives. We see that "success" is not so much an arrival as it is a process. The general structure of Coffey's book
follows a pattern of discussion and example, concluded with a self assessment questionnaire for the reader. I recommend this
book for anyone interested in past traumatic issues whether for themselves or for general knwledge.
No Time for Tears (Heartland Heritage Series)
Published in Paperback by Harvest House Pub (1992-02)
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Average review score: 

Delightful storytelling with mysterious twists
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-27
Review Date: 2004-07-27
The Heartland Heritage Series takes us back to a time when the American spirit was tested to it's limits. Rich history and
strong spiritual insight unfold in this riveting drama set in the dustbowl days of the Great Depression. To the Harringtons,
the Depression seemed remote. Some belt-tightening. Fewer luxuries. At least they had their land...But then the drought. And
the mysterious fires-the work of an unsettled mind-throwing the town into deeper despair. In such troubling times, young Marvel
Harington sees her parents growing apart, the strain threatening their once-close family. We can't lose hope now. There must
be a way out, with No Time For Tears!
HealthIssueBooks.com-->Degenerative-Nerve-Diseases-->Depression-->84
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