J.K. Lasser’s Small Business Taxes 2012: Your Complete Guide to a Better Bottom Line

No related posts.

2 Responses to “J.K. Lasser’s Small Business Taxes 2012: Your Complete Guide to a Better Bottom Line”

  1. 1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    The life of Julius Caesar retold in an imaginary 21st century America, February 24, 2007
    By 
    Marshall Lord (Whitehaven, UK) –
    (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)
      

    This review is from: First Citizen (Paperback)

    This book was written in 1987. If read at face value, it projects a future in which the American republic decays into civil war and eventual dictatorship in the same way that the Roman republic collapsed and was replaced by the Empire in the first century BC.

    The central character (Granville) James Corbin, who narrates most of the book, has a life story extremely similar to that of Gaius Julius Caesar. Note the initials.

    To give you an idea how close the parallels are, the book opens with Corbin describing the circumstances of his birth, referring to a legend that he had been born by Caesarian section, and adding that this was a myth. (Just as the legend that the historial Julius Caesar was born by C-section is almost certainly also a myth, along with the associated suggestion that he has given his name to that medical procedure.)

    Throughout the book, after a chapter narrated by James Corbin, there will be a short section from one of his friends, associates, or enemies describing the same events but giving a rather different viewpoint. The book allows the reader to choose for yourself whether Corbin is a hero, a liar and villain, or both.

    Essentially this book retells the life of Julius Caesar in what, at the time the book was written, was a near future setting. By now the dates referred to in the first half of the book have come and gone, and real history in the intervening period bears no resemblance whatsoever to the story in tbe book. If you want to enjoy the book as a work of near future fiction you can simply put all the dates back twenty years or so, and it works.

    Alternatively, you can see this novel as a light-hearted way of imagining the life of Caesar in a context which is about as close as a modern set of circumstances could have come to the historical circumstances of his time.

    Not to be taken too seriously, but quite entertaining in places.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  2. 1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    old book, random author, excelent read, March 23, 2004
    By 
    devonism (Colorado Springs, CO) –
    This review is from: First Citizen (Paperback)

    F.C. is an excellent book. When I first got it, I read the whole thing in one day. It’s not a best seller, but defenitely worth reading.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

how to get out of debt