Courageous Women: A Study on the Heroines of Biblical History is another volume in Stacy Mitch's popular Courageous series of Bible studies for women. An example is worth a thousand words. Using the stories of Sarah; Esther; Judith; the Blessed Mother; and other heroines of Scripture; Stacy Mitch helps her readers see how they can follow these examples in their daily lives. Divided into nine sections; this book is ideal for individual or group study.
#1381385 in Books 2008-09-04Ingredients: Example IngredientsOriginal language:EnglishPDF # 1 5.00 x 1.10 x 7.60l; .66 #File Name: 0192800620357 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Excellent book; but the Kindle edition is a little ...By Tom TerrificExcellent book; but the Kindle edition is a little odd. The book doesn't have a search engine of its own; so you have to use the Kindle search function. So when you look up a word; it finds not only the listing for that word; but every instance of it throughout the book. Then again; it was only $10; so I probably shouldn't complain. Oh yes; this edition handles Pali characters with their sometimes oddball diacritical marks pretty well; i.e. it's quite readable; unlike the epub edition I had briefly a few months ago -- that other company did refund my money though.4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Poor ProofreadingBy UpasakaAlthough this product provides clear; concise descriptions of 2000 topics; there are constant; egregious errors in the transliteration of Sanskrit and Pali terms. These errors occur even in the headwords of some entries; rendering a search for the correct term impossible. Some of the errors are simply unpronounceable; and so one is almost forced to ask if this work was proofread by a qualified person. This is not the standard I have come to expect from Oxford Dictionaries. I would rather have ordered the bound edition at four times the price.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. The few illustrations are of shockingly poor quality; and ought be expungedBy F. Stuart SmithThis is a handy little desk reference volume; convenient for writers touching on Buddhist subjects. The few illustrations are of shockingly poor quality; and ought be expunged. From Oxford University Press; one would normally expect greater attention to typography; stock; and binding. The present volume is; indeed; only a minimal improvement over Shambhala's "Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen."