California Books
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Excellent California Travel GuideReview Date: 2006-03-08
Funny and TrueReview Date: 2006-02-15
Definitely worth dropping a few bucks for if you are planning on discovering what makes Californians tick. (Just remember, Northern and Southern California really are two different states, lol.)
This is a book about the State your mother warned you about. Wacked Out California!Review Date: 2005-11-29
For visitors from outside of California, they might expect earth quake alerts, but instead the book is full of Quirk Alerts, special mini sections of extra special info. The book sections are almost as much fun as the places in the book, like "Room with a Skew", "Just Plain Weird", "Quirkyvilles", "Odd Shopping" "Quirky Cuisine" "and "Peculiar Pursuits".
Living in the San Francisco Bay area I am creating a to-do list of the all the stuff I have been I been missing within an hour of my house. This book pays special attention to food, with is my favorite subject, some of the restaurants that sound like they are worth a taste are Big Bubba's Bad BBQ, Aero Dogs, home of the Famous Flying Wiener (inside of an grounded airplane), the Squeeze In, a 10 foot wide restaurant, and Lou's Living Donut Museum. Plus a clothing optional restaurant at Harbin Springs ( I just hope the cooks are clothed.)
Eccentric CaliforniaReview Date: 2005-12-20
Her detailed explanation of each place makes me want to pack my bags and go see them all.
Coming from Phoenix, AZ I have not seen or been too much in the Golden State, but with 2006 around the corner and a great book. My News Year's resolution is to travel and get coffee stains all over this fantastic read.
And to all you want to be PRICE IS RIGHT CONTESTANTS.
This author has hit the nail on it's head.
Not only did I stay at the Farmer's Daughter Hotel and was prepped with the best insiders information. I also started milking the cows about 4:00am just to become the:
Showcase Showdown Winner.
Yes, I said WINNER!!!!!!
I'm very excited to see more with this book in 2006.
Thanks for the great information on California.
Eccenric California - Don't believe the misconceptions.Review Date: 2005-10-31
California is known for it's cutting edge social conventions, and admittedly, many first originated in the Golden State (from Frisbees and motels to skateboards and drive in churches).
Clearly, author Jan Friedman has her work cut out for her, but she seems up to the challenge, discussing festivals and events, peculiar pursuits, museums and collections, "quirkyvilles" (towns with a twist), offbeat tours, unusual cuisine , kitschy attractions, and anything and everything else that is different to say the least.

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Great information in californiaReview Date: 2006-07-17
Eichler, I grew up near them.Review Date: 2003-07-06
Scott K Dolik
A Wonderful Book!Review Date: 2002-12-06
is this book in black and white?Review Date: 2005-05-23
The Book on EichlerReview Date: 2006-11-15

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An essential read.Review Date: 2002-05-05
vision mexicoReview Date: 2005-09-08
Extraordinary account of Mexican HistoryReview Date: 2004-03-02
A wonderful book. A great read and one of the only books to give such a sweeping colorful detail to this essential period of Mexican history. A period that harpers to today's Mexican law which forbids foreigners from owning land in Mexico. Leftovers of the American adventure in Mexico can also be seen today in the national companies like Pemex and Cemex and the national railroads, most of whose infrastructure was built by Americans only be nationalized by the Mexican government in the 1920s.
A must read for anyone interested in Mexico, America, the border or the reasons for the way Mexico is today.
Seth J. Frantzman
IndispensableReview Date: 2002-05-15
While sweeping in scope, Hart's book provides more than just an abstract look at U. S. capital. This work is about individuals-replete with detailed portrayals of the key financial elite, both bankers and industrialists, and civil-war era generals who first pried open the door for U. S. capital investment in Mexico as well as the U. S. "colonists" that followed in their wake. Hart also sheds light into U. S. political and military might that helped buttress these financial elite's imperial pretensions-one key military intervention in Veracruz help tip the scales to Carranza during the Mexican Revolution. Although irascibly nationalistic, Carranza was more acceptable to the U. S. financial and political powers than were Villa or Zapata. Besides covering the political and military aspects of this imperial juggernaut, Hart provides insight into the implications of U. S. economic hegemony in Mexico and the resulting social and cultural interactions. Hart's description of cultural clashes and misunderstandings that occurred throughout this longue durée and the slow transformation into social, cultural, political and economic accommodations lends weight to the concept of an interrelated, albeit diffuse, cultural space that author Joel Garreau and others have christened MexAmerica.
Based on copious primary sources (some recently declassified) from widely dispersed archives and twelve years of research, Empire and Revolution is a seminal work from which future historians of Mexico and U. S. relations will need to begin their inquiry. This is a book that also should be read by all State Department types and businessmen dealing with Mexico and NAFTA-related issues. However, this book is not only for the specialists but also for all others interested in our neighbor to the South who desire to understand how interrelated our histories have been and will continue to be. This is an indispensable book.
Empire and RevolutionReview Date: 2002-04-28

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Well done bookReview Date: 2007-09-18
Enthralling!Review Date: 2007-03-03
The author now has a web page which includes different pictures of Nellie Madison after she left prison and remarried. If you are interested it is called Inside Info on Uncle John's Nellie.
Compelling crime drama and cultural historyReview Date: 2007-05-19
Nellie May Madison was an unusual and at times a desperate woman, but she found the inner strength to avoid being a victim on two occasions. The author masterfully re-creates her story, including pain-staking research about her Montana pioneer family.
The book has lots of surprising legal twists and turns. But what sets it apart is the larger story it tells about the life and times of Southern California during that period.
One note of caution: don't start the book if you need to go to bed early, I couldn't put it down.
Fantastic book-well researched, great topic!Review Date: 2007-04-20
The book is excellent. Sources are cited throughout, no tabloid style writing, no sensational prose. A welcome relief from most true crime stories. She did an amazing amount of research, interviewing people connected to Nellie, obtaining archival photos, everything you would hope to see but rarely do.
Nellie Madison's story deserved to be told, and Ms. Cairns did an excellent job sharing it.
Excellent research and writing and a fascinating storyReview Date: 2007-05-05
Alas, the law has always shaken a finger at slaying a sleeping drunk.
Nellie Madison woman shot her sleeping husband in the back, and the lawyers and the press didn't know what to make of it. Indeed, her lawyer kicked women off the jury and refused to put on the evidence that would explain why she did it, and the puzzled jurors contemplated the bloody bed set up in the courtroom and sentenced her to hang.
This book finally tells us the entire tale of Nellie Madison for the first time, and it is so terrifically researched, so well put together, you might forget the story took place in 1934. It's supposed to be an "academic" book, and was published by The University of Nebraska Press, yet it's anything but a stuffy academic treatment, and it's a physically lovely, beautifully produced book.
The crime rags were quick to put a moniker on Mrs. Madison, referring to her as "a real-life Roxie Hart," among other names, and dubbed her crime one of the most mysterious in the annals. An investigator called her "the coolest woman I have ever questioned."
Purple prose never fades, and the author couldn't help but quote some of the press accounts. My favorite, courtesy the Los Angeles Evening Herald and Express:
"Like the opening of a detective mystery will be the prosecution's evidence in the trial of the comely 'enigma woman.' There will be told in court the screams of a woman at midnight, excited footfalls in dim halls. Then, like the closing chapters of a 'thriller,' in which the mystery is solved, the story of Mrs. Madison will unroll before the jury, providing, it is hoped by the defendant and her counsel, an adequate excuse for blasting Eric Madison into eternity as he lay on his bed that fateful night."
She was an unusual woman; she began her marital adventures at 13 and was divorced several times -- this when divorce rates were in the single digits -- and yet she never had children.
Then she bought a handgun and made herself a widow. Witnesses originally thought the gunshots came from the adjacent Warner Brothers Studio. Despite the Hollywood backdrop, Nellie May missed her cue; she didn't weep into her handkerchief for the press. Indeed she refused to say anything at all about the murder until she was behind bars and sentenced to swing.
Then she told a story of rib-cracking abuse -- and it was backed up by the dead man's other loves, who told virtually identical stories of stranglings and beatings and humiliations that the flashpoint-tempered Eric Madison heaped upon the many women in his shortened life.
The Enigma Woman is a wonderful piece of storytelling, masterfully constructed, and the author obviously put many miles on her car getting the full story. I wish I'd written it, and I stand in awe of anyone who can glean so many fascinating details from a case that's coated in decades of dust.
I also noticed Amazon is pairing it for sale with The Good-Bye Door, the book out last fall about electrocuted 1930s serial killer Anna Hahn, another I enjoyed very much for the same qualities.
The Enigma Woman is top-shelf stuff for votaries of high quality historic crime stories. Professor Cairns will keep you mesmerized in contemplation of a most curious murder case, one in which our recalcitrant heroine could not speak until she was within the shadows of the gallows, one in which the victim may well have had it coming in spades and by golly got it.
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Required Reading for an AP TeacherReview Date: 2007-12-30
I did find the book to be very motivational, especially since I read it right before I taught AP for the first time. I liked the line where Escalante said AP results are kind of like a "report card for the teacher". The book also details the fact that Escalante would kick a student out of AP (or at least strongly threaten to) if they missed ONE homework. So while Escalante's accomplishment was extraordinary, I wish I had the luxury of kicking a student out of AP if they missed one assignment!!
The overall message of the book and film though is that with hard work, a person can succeed at anything they put their mind too. So it's nice to read a book with a positive message like that.
Shows the power of a dedicated teacher and high expectationsReview Date: 2000-04-14
It will Change your LifeReview Date: 2002-12-17
Stand and Deliver DedicationReview Date: 2000-09-16
Escalante: SiReview Date: 2005-05-15
After his success at teaching calculus to (yep, here we go again) mostly poor Latino students was dramatized in the movie Stand and Deliver, Jaime Escalante became the closest thing to a star in the little world of education. His story intersects the American sports-obsession in a number of important ways.
Escalante, who considered school sports a distraction for his students, in his own classrooms took the teacher-as-coach metaphor way beyond the 100-yard-line. A Bolivian immigrant and Lakers fan, he had a lot of sympathy and understanding for his students. But as an accomplished, determined professional, he had no time for their excuses or laziness: He used threats and jokes, camaraderie and charisma, insults and incessant drill, much the way a football coach does. He also had the "big game", a clearly defined goal with visible results: The advanced placement (AP) test that high-school students attempt for college credit. Better than basketball as a ticket to a future.
Like many sports coaches--and very few teachers--Escalante got 110% from his team. Starting from zero in 1978 (when he arrived there), by 1987 Garfield High was fourth in the United States in number of students taking AP calculus, and accounted for about a quarter of all Mexican-American high-school students who passed the test.
Journalist Jay Mathews starts with Escalante's childhood and teaching career in Bolivia, but spends about 2/3 of the fast-moving narrative on Garfield. It includes numerous vignettes of students dealing with Escalante's personality, his rigorous calculus teaching, and crises (or simply grinding poverty) in their lives. Mathews goes easy on generalizations, but here are his first two "lessons" near the books conclusion: "Teachers who bring students up to high standards are precious commodities. Leave them alone.... If left alone, teachers who work hard and care for their students will produce better results than ten times their number dutifully following the ten best recommendations of the ten latest presidential commissions on education."
Nancie Atwell says Shut your door and do what you need to.
The Garfield mascot, which became Escalante's symbol for himself and his students, is a bulldog. I believe that we are still "a nation at risk," especially where the education of poor and minority children, the life of our cities, is concerned. Jay Matthew's book, the story of a few determined teachers (and their principal!) will not hold the same lesson for everyone, but is an extremely valuable encounter.
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Well done!Review Date: 2007-10-11
a precarious situation. The book covers almost everything that you
can possibly think of.
Used it in real dispute.Review Date: 1997-08-07
Excellent self help guide on the subjectReview Date: 2006-03-04
The book is very well organized. Even though there is a lot of material, it is easy to extract the information pertaining to your very specific situation. The author covers a lot of those; as he dedicates specific chapters to auto repairs, auto accidents, lord-tenant dispute, etc... The author states that he covers the main type of cases that account for 99% of the cases tried in small claim courts. I believe him. If your case is outside those presented, there is a good chance it does not belong in small claims court.
The author gives crucial information about the basics of small claim courts. If you are not a lawyer, you are unfamiliar with all the procedures associated with it. Thanks to this book, you will know exactly what to do and when to file, prepare, and try a claim in small claims court. Once you have done the studying and the preparing it is not all that difficult. And, this book allows you to navigate through a bureaucratic process that would appear overwhelming and Byzantine otherwise.
This is my second NoLo book and hopefully the last. Who wants to deal with the Law if you don't have to? My first one was on how to fight a ticket. Thanks to NoLo, I reduced the price of my ticket by $120. Now, I anticipate recovering the cost of a fender bender where I am dealing with one uninsured and one unwilling party. It is not fun, but those NoLo books allow you to uphold your rights when you have to.
Win in Small Claims Court!Review Date: 2001-06-13
START WITH THIS BOOK FIRSTReview Date: 2001-06-29

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Very nice and completeReview Date: 2008-05-02
Well, It's ALMOST Perfect.Review Date: 2007-02-23
Just to be done with it, the "almost" refers to some features of layout and form, which are irritating. They are not so bad as to make me want to throw it at a passing raccoon, but they do exercise some of my less formal vocabulary.
As a wildlife rehabilitator, I depend on field guides a lot, and good ones are not as common as we all wish. This one is a dandy, and I am truly glad for it and recommend it to anyone interested in western states fishes, not just those of California.
As a serious cook, I am downright thrilled with the culinary section, which is flatly the best fish cookbook I have ever seen since the immortal Rombauer's JOY OF COOKING, the only other book I know which deals with ALL the details of preparation.
Excellent ResourceReview Date: 2006-12-11
CA Dept. of Fish & Shame Review Date: 2006-12-16
It is truly a travesty though that many of the alien fish in the state that have caused such devastation to native species have been deliberately introduced by the governmental agency responsible for the stewardship of California's freshwater ecosystems. Reading of the California Department of Fish & Game's persistent and ongoing mismanagement is alarming, and a clear indication that the citizens of the state deserve that the bunglers in charge of that office be bought to task and replaced by competent people.
Freshwater FishReview Date: 2006-10-13

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The Worthy SuccessorReview Date: 2004-04-27
Like Chandler's Marlowe and MacDonald's Archer, Mr. Harris' Thomas Kyd has become not only older and wiser over time, but also even more haunted by his past. Salvation appears in the person of a 14-year-old boy, a surrogate son, who offers at least a glimpse of hope for some kind of future. While the mature Kyd might be more reluctant to pull a gun, inflict a beating, chase a skirt, or crack wise, his observations of people and place are sharper than ever.
While the traditional elements of the genre are solidly on display, what sets this novel apart is the author's ability to always keep Kyd's moral sense in focus - the difference between right and wrong, just and unjust, pathetic and contemptible. Like those other great crime writers, Mr. Harris has a unique talent for tackling serious moral issues without being in the least bit moralizing.
Thomas Kyd returnsReview Date: 2004-04-06
I've been waiting for a third one ever since, and now it's finally here. Fortunately, I only had to wait five years rather than 20, like some people. Unfaithful Servant picks up Harris's PI hero, Thomas Kyd, a quarter of a century after the first novel, in foggy Santa Monica. Kyd still hasn't entirely got over his Vietnam days, and the 1990s were apparently lost to booze and bad memories. (Maybe that's why we didn't hear from him.) Anyway, the good news is that the third book was well worth the wait and may even be the best in the series.
The basic story reads a bit like a cross between Hamlet and About a Boy. One evening Hugo Vine, a spoiled 14-year-old Hollywood rich kid with a face full of jewelry and a $15,000 wrist watch, shows up in Kyd's office hoping to get him to spy on his movie star mom and newly arrived step-father. Hugo thinks his late father, an old-school movie industry titan whom he worshiped, was murdered by his step-father, Raj, a suave arriviste with a talent for flattery; trouble is, no one else in the family seems to share his concern. Initially, Kyd brushes the boy off -- he's not about to take money from a teenager -- but a few months later they meet again, and this time he is dragged into the case.
This is very much a Hollywood novel, as well as a Los Angeles one, and Harris uses the inside dope he must have picked up as a screenwriter (he wrote Trading Places, among other movies) to superb effect. The scenes showing what it's like to share a house with a world-famous actress are brilliantly done, and the ability of hangers-on to gradually take control of the person who supposedly controls them is chillingly demonstrated. Also memorable are the various minor characters -- Corelle Lamb, the buff black female police officer with a heart of gold who helps Kyd out; Ken O'Doul, his alcoholic lawyer; and Serafina, the Mexican housekeeper who functions as Hugo's surrogate mom. There are also dead-on descriptions of Venice Beach poetry readings (the poets are nude), AA meetings in which half the people present are Hollywood big-shots, and many wonderful descriptions of L.A. itself.
What makes the book so genuinely moving -- and how many detective novels can you say that of? -- is Kyd's growing love for young Hugo, and the often very funny relationship that develops between them. Though he initially dislikes Hugo, he soon realizes that the boy needs a father figure in his life as desperately as he himself seems to need a son. What happens between them as Kyd solves the mystery of Hugo's father's death is what gives this novel its tremendous emotional punch. If you're a fan of detective fiction, or indeed any kind of fiction, you should definitely take a look.
Good things come to those who waitReview Date: 2004-03-31
Fans of good, literate crime fiction and the work of Timothy Harris in particular (and there are many: see Steven Rea's "The Coolest PIs", Hardboiled Mysteries and Thrilling Detective online reviews, not to mention those here on Amazon.com for Harris' "Goodnight and Goodbye") will appreciate that sentiment, as it's been 25 years since P.I. Thomas Kyd has been on the scene.
That's one looong dry spell for any reader, but Harris has made it worth the wait by bringing our hero back , newly sober but having lost none of his sere sense of humor. And as ever, the descriptions of Los Angeles and its denizens are, by turns, devastating and poetic.
If you haven't yet read the first two novels in the series, consider adding "Kyd for Hire" and "Goodnight and Goodbye" to your library along with "Unfaithful Servant". I guarantee you, Kyd's a character you'll want to get to know better.
The return of KydReview Date: 2004-05-07
This is character driven, p.i. fiction very much in the Raymond Chandler tradition and not the sentimental and insipid who-done-its that have recently been making their way onto the best seller lists. Kyd is very much like Marlowe without sinking into imitation and self-parody as so many have. Like Marlowe, guilt and self-doubt eat away at him, and he is prone to getting beat up.
"Unfaithful Servant" never lags, and Harris' prose remains exciting throughout. Apparently Harris took a break from fiction to write screenplays, and Hollywood provides the background for this novel about the death of a producer, his widow, a major star whose career is about to fade, and his teenage son who forms a close bond with Kyd. The relationship between Kyd and the boy is very moving without ever becoming sentimental, and unlike the sanitized version often found in fiction, the boy feels real and very believable.
Here's hoping that Harris keeps the Kyd series going without taking another lengthy break! With all the detective fiction being published these days, this is the real thing -- the best I've read in years.
solid Southern California private sleuthReview Date: 2004-05-02
Not long afterward the lawyer to Hugo's mother renowned actress Sally Vine threatens to have Tomas arrested for aiding to the delinquency of a minor. Not concerned by the intimidation, Thomas tells Sally's retinue to go pound sand. However, Sally hires Thomas to keep an eye on her son who she worries is doing illegal things. However, Thomas soon learns that Hugo has deep questions as to whether his mother and his stepfather killed his father. The sleuth plans to learn the truth.
Thomas is an intriguing protagonist who is a combination nurturing hard boiled soul. The who-done-it takes awhile before it surfaces, but once it does it is fun to follow. Much of the early segment of the novel introduces the audience to Thomas. Readers who remain patient for the case to commence will enjoy this solid Southern California private sleuth tale starring a solid lead character and a delightful support cast.
Harriet Klausner

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Even for the novice!Review Date: 2007-01-12
California Fishing: Complete Guide to FishingReview Date: 2006-01-17
Suggestions worked.Review Date: 2005-09-21
Great fishing guideReview Date: 2004-06-12
Please note that this is not really a book for beginners. The tips and location details are not tutorials on fishing, but assume you have knowledge of the techniques discussed.
Wonderful fishing guideReview Date: 2004-06-12
Please note that this is not really a book for beginners. The tips and location details are not tutorials on fishing, but assume you have knowledge of the techniques discussed.

Used price: $1.75

In Pursuit of GhostsReview Date: 2003-09-30
It reminds me of one of my other favorites "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" by Robert Persig, which is the autobiography of a madman, switching with a critique of western philosophy. The dual narratives enrich each other like a good marriage, making a whole, which is better than the sum of its parts. Because this book isn't just about Biddy Mason, and was never intended to be. Its about the author and Biddy Mason, a person pursuing and dealing with centuries old ghosts, and the emotions they still have the power to evoke. It is the sausage factory of how histories are actually written.
I think in many ways the heart of the book, is less about Biddy Mason, than in the brief confrontation between Demaratus and the staid archivist she meets while searching for some files. He is writing a military history, and brushes her off when she says she is writing a social history. She understands something that he does not, which is that history is the most personal, romantic, and human of all the sciences. Human events cannot be understood clearly apart from the human beings involved with them and why they decided to do one thing rather than another, whether it is Robert E. Lee inexplicably sending Pickett's brigade across a mile of open ground into the withering fire of the Union army at Gettysburg, or Truman's lonely decision to drop the bomb on Hiroshima, or Neanderthals burying their dead with flowers. Human history is not events. Human history is the human heart and events.
Having said that, it would have been interesting at the end to know if the author had resolved her issues with black folks, or merely found more mysteries.
Chris Garcia
"The Force of a Feather"Review Date: 2002-04-20
I was immediately captivated by the authors ability to fairly treat each of the characters; especially since the issues involved were given to volatile possibilities in interpretation. Apparently, she chose to be impartial yet totally candid in her treatment of each. In order to have a well rounded narrative of "the search for a lost story of slavery and freedom", each life involved was given its place in this cause and effect chronicle. It was obviously vital for the characters involved to take his place and be counted and held accountable for his part in this gripping narrative.
Ms. Demaratus deserves accolades for her beautiful portrayal of justice triumphing even in the most unlikely of circumstances!!
Kudos for a job well done!!
Very InterestingReview Date: 2002-04-30
Beg to differ...Review Date: 2002-04-26
Many Forces Culminate in Powerful "Feather"Review Date: 2002-04-18
A meticulously researched work (along with vibrant illustrations), author Demaratus has managed to unearth the stories of some little known (and a few famous) Americans -- including Biddy Mason -- whose lives, by the mere forces of chance and fate, were to intersect during one of the most dramatic and fascinating periods of U.S. history (the years of Westward expansion leading up to the Civil War). Lives of free people and slaves, white and black, all of whom stood on the threshold of a defining historical moment, confronting hardship, brutality, adventure, loss and the fierce inevitability of change.
Biddy Mason was an astonishing woman by any measurement and the force of her life would resonate farther than she could have ever imagined. And this is exactly where this unique book makes a precarious, yet carefully and perfectly pitched, departure. For it is the author's own story -- her own inspiration to write and her arduous process to complete this work -- that is woven into the narrative, breathing both immediacy and an extraordinary sense of intimacy into "a search for a lost story of slavery and freedom." It's a daring literary choice, and one that I found to be both moving and gratifying.
It occurred to me more than once, while reading this book, that the progressive, embracing, non-judgmental style of the author might be a source of complaint for some. But Demaratus seems too respectful of her subjects to draw conclusions without fact, and is content on occasion -- and asks the reader as well -- to ponder what "might have been." As for the risks she took to tell this story, as well as her willingness to question her own conflicted personal beliefs, it only deepened my impression of this book as well as my sense for the author's integrity.
As for the other posted review, I can only surmise that the critic wanted Demaratus to write a different book that she did. But I don't think it is the critic's job to tell the artist what to create - only to assess and analyze what has been created. If the reviewer simply wants a biography of Mason, then I suggest the critic turn writer and get busy constructing it.
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