The review from Amazon.com reviewer
I own the 1912 edition of this book and recommend it highly, in any edition, for anyone's cookery shelf. It can sit there quietly until you need to care for someone who is sick at home, then it becomes a gold mine of useful recipes and advice. I would also recommend Florence Nightingale, Notes on Nursing, for other practical sick care advice, A Soothing Broth, by Pat Willard, and the 1951 Red Cross Home Nursing book for its 'to the point' sensible advice and quaint but very useful illustrations. Newer editions of the Red Cross book are ok but the 1951 ed is my favorite for practical simple advice. Buy the Fannie Farmer book. Someday, when someone is ill, you'll be glad you have it. :-)
Product description
If you HATE the book with strange characters, introduced typographical errors, and jumbled words, this book is for you.
We don't use OCR'd book technology (Optical character recognition, usually abbreviated to OCR, is the mechanical or electronic translation of scanned images of handwritten, typewritten or printed text into machine-encoded text) to make the kindle version but we bring to you by THE SCANNING OR PHOTOGRAPH PROCESS. So everything you see here is almost same as original version. It may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact.
We hope you enjoy and are satisfied with our book. For more interesting books, please search for ‘AMA publication’.
AMA Publication
Important Notice!! Please read before you purchase.
- This book was produced from scanning process so you CAN’T use some text feature such as Adjust Font Size, Search or Highlight.
- Since this book does NOT support TEXT adjustment Function, we strongly do not recommend reading it with mobile phone, Android, BB or any small device.
- This book does NOT support Text To Speech Function.