William Meredith Books


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William Meredith Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

 William Meredith
Ascendancy : The Official Strategy Guide (Secrets of the Games)
Published in Paperback by Prima Games (1995-09-27)
Authors: William R. Trotter, Gary Meredith, and Selby Bateman
List price: $19.95
New price: $5.99
Used price: $0.01

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Good General Guide
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-29
The Ascendancy Strategy guide is a fun book, and it has a very nice poster of the various different specisis in the game. However, there are also three "scenerios" speaking from viewpoints of different alien races as they attempt to gain 'Ascendancy.' I found these to be a bit poorly written, as well as the fact that some things in the guide are just plain wrong.
Just something to think about, but it you are a die-hard Ascendancy gamer--like I am--then purchase it.

 William Meredith
Bluegrass Confederate: The Headquarters Diary Of Edward O. Guerrant
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (2005-04)
Author:
List price: $24.95
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Bluegrass Confederate.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-19
Excellent diary with lots of good information. Editors did a poor job as town names such as Jonesburg Tennessee should be Jonesbough, and a couple others that never existed or are badly mis-spelled. It is sad these errors had to get into the book. Otherwise an excellent read.

History is in the Details
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-27
This amounts to nearly 700 pages of transcribed diaries from an officer who saw very little action except in Southwest Virginia, East Tennessee and two campaigns in Kentucky. I echo the previous review by saying that this book is more for a specialist in those campaigns rather than for the general reader of the Civil War. What is as interesting is Guerrant's retelling of all the rumors he hears about the conduct of the war. He keeps hope alive that the Confederacy is winning until he learns of the surrender of Lee's army, in fact does not believe any northern sources and tries to accept every southern source. He also wears religious blinders, feeling that the South will win because God is on it's side. As a good Christian he is fignting for freedom and Southern rights (whatever they are, he doesn't say), but is not troubled by fellow Confederates murdering Black soldiers over a two day period after the first battle of Saltville. His enemies are Yankee Vandals and Niggers, not human beings and certainly not people like himself.

I am troubled about the quality of the editing. William C. Davis gets top billing, but there are so many errors in the footnotes, plus trivia footnoted and important information left unfootnoted, that I wonder how much of this Davis really read. Much of the editing is frankly done by an amateur and is not corrected. This is not what I expect from LSU Press for my fifty bucks. In the chapter notes for early 1863 the editor says Guerrant was looking forward to seeing his friends and family because he had not been home in a year. Yet, he had returned as part of the Confederate invasion in the fall of 1862 and did see friends and some family (he had failed to see his father.) Makes me wonder who really read the material. How about Grant's victory at Missionnary Ridge allowing the Federals to occupy Chattanooga? I thought that they were there already. Several footnotes refer to Federal soldiers as Yankees (I guess the 21st century still needs to catch up in some areas: this on a day when several "Yankee" soldiers have died in Iraq.) Given the competence of the editors and the price I say caveat emptor.

Bluegrass Confederate
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-21
Though not devoid of some human interest value, this is not an especially useful source for the historian. Guerrant saw little action, and writes scantily about what he did see. I can't imagine that most of his sojourns in West Virginia and Kentucky will be of interest to most scholars; there is an account of the Battle of Saltville, but that's about it. Eloquent, not to say melodramatic, jeremiads on the weather make up a good deal of the text.

On the other hand, Guerrant was the kind of diarist who thinks that posterity may read his diary someday, and he writes with verve and emotion -- multiple exclamation points, parenthetical clever remarks, and so on. After hundreds of pages -- for a Civil War diary this is exceedingly long -- that gets old, but he undeniably has his moments.

 William Meredith
The Rhetoric of Western Thought
Published in Paperback by Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company (2003-08-01)
Authors: James L. Golden, Goodwin F. Berquist, William E. Coleman, and J. Michael Sproule
List price: $59.95
New price: $19.99
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The Rhetoric of Western Thought...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-13
I was assigned this text book for a class on The Art of Human Communication, which is about the history of the philosophy of rhetoric. I'm a very good student, but I have a terrible time understanding this book - it's not clearly written at all. The writing is overblown and unclear, and nothing is in bold or clearly headed to make understanding the writing any easier. I also don't think it flows very well, it's hard to follow and understand. My professor has promised to change text books next semester, and I would recommend that others choose another text as well!

 William Meredith
100 chess problems; (Christmas series)
Published in Unknown Binding by The chess amateur (1916)
Author: William Meredith
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 William Meredith
2 pages from a Colorado River journal
Published in Unknown Binding by W. Meredith (1967)
Author: William Meredith
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 William Meredith
Abraham Lincoln's favorite poem: Its author and his book,
Published in Unknown Binding by E.W. Meredith (1935)
Author: M. L Houser
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Used price: $32.00

 William Meredith
An account of the fifty-first anniversary of the Boston Street Methodist Episcopal Church: And of Methodist beginnings in Lynn, Massachusetts : a semi-centennial ... held in the church June 19, 21, 24, 1904
Published in Unknown Binding by Published for the Church by Whitten & Cass (1904)
Author: William Henry Meredith
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 William Meredith
Adams, Caruthers, Clancy, Neely, and Townsend descendants: Composing the Adams, Legerton, Wakefield, Brockmann, and other twentieth century families of the Carolinas
Published in Unknown Binding by (1950)
Author: Charles Raven Brockmann
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 William Meredith
Address delivered before the New Hampshire agricultural society,: At its third annual exhibition, in Meredith-Bridge, Oct. 7, 1852
Published in Unknown Binding by Bazin & Chandler, printers (1853)
Author: William Sterling King
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 William Meredith
An address delivered before the Society of Alumni of Randolph Macon College, Va. on the 9th of June, 1852
Published in Unknown Binding by Johnson and Woolfolk, printers (1852)
Author: William Meredith Cabell
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Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->M-->Meredith, William-->3
Related Subjects: Works
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