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Reviews for Money Market Fund Primer

 Money Market Fund Primer magazine reviews

The average rating for Money Market Fund Primer based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2017-03-30 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Damian Cardone
This guide is a bit out of date (1987) but my discovery of it at a local library was fortuitous for my budding mushroom hobby. It has very good descriptions that are very readable, and contains the best illustrations I've yet seen to some basic characteristics like gill spacing inside its front cover. Also helpful (though beyond the scope I've yet explored the hobby) is a microscopic characteristics table in the appendices. Finally, the checklist of field characters provided is an excellent way to get started...from previous books I had constructed my own checklist which turned out not nearly so complete. I was unable to find a more recent edition, which is a shame. Otherwise I would recommend this as a near-perfect first guide to begins a mycology study. As it stands, it helped this beginner understand a few key points just a little more, so I'd consider it well worth a glance.
Review # 2 was written on 2020-09-17 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Jason Dunaway
5 stars for Far Rainbow; still uncertain where I'd place The Second Invasion from Mars. Far Rainbow is my favorite kind of Strugatsky: bizarre physics, incredible characters, a rich and surprising plot, and (akin to PKD) an inability to measure or understand the powerful events sweeping the characters along.. (Personal note: my favorite character, Leonid, gave me words I will strive to live by: (paraphrased) "In over a hundred years of life, I've never met an unpleasant person".) (PKD versus Strugatsky note, since these are the only two author teams (well, single author and pair of authors) who can capture that amazing quality of real life, where you never really know anything: at any moment you are working with fairly basic models built from past events; if something really wild turns up, you are just probing in the dark, nothing works, what can you do? Anyway, with PKD, the characters involved in the catastrophe are often either weak-willed and sort of buffeted around, try to wing it; or they are egomaniacs trying to control everything, with extreme recklessness. With strugatsky, though, one also encounters competent, humble characters who, while unable to tame these beasts, are able to restore some local amount of sanity, and act as guideposts to everyone else (and the reader). In Far Rainbow, there were Leonid and Camill. If I want to get really meta, it almost seems that PKD characters are typically very selfish, which is not the case with Strugatsky..? I'm simplifying vastly but the basic feel I get from PKD is "we are screwed in the face of this", whereas from Strugatsky it is "this is amazing, we can try to work with it..".) The Second Invasion from Mars is the kind of Strugatsky which I have trouble with, where satirizing soviet rule is the focus. Of course, it was still made interesting; it is not clear until the last paragraphs of the book whether Martians are involved, or if (as the narrator discusses) it's just a code name for a group performing a coup, and all other strange occurrences are due to rumors and inebriation (either way, it seems that the 1917 communist takeover was The First Invasion from Mars). The choice of perspective (a very old retired man) brings many things to attention which are rather crucial to the message (an effective takeover immediately placates the masses with basic things like bread & beer). Neat story, although not really my sort of thing..


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