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Kansas
Founding Fathers: Brief Lives of the Framers of the United States Constitution
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kansas (1994-02)
Author: M. E. Bradford
List price: $35.00
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Founding Fathers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-19
"Founding Fathers" is well written and well researched. Many thought provoking biographica sketches of the "Founding Fathers" from each of the 13 states. Not an easy rad due to the impact of the bios of each man, but well worth reading. Of interest was the lead roles played by the men who signed attended the Second Continental Congress, debated the Declaration of Independence, and now saw the need for a new form of government. Noteworthy also were those delegates who opposed the Constitution in its origin, yet returned home to help ratify the documment. Most surprising was the role played by James Wilson of Pennsylvania. Of course, James Madison, George Washington, Alexander Hamilton and Ben Franklin were important conference impact folk as you would expect.

Great Review of the Founding Fathers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-21
This is a great book that offers a summary of The Founding Fathers of the United States. The book does not waste too much time with detail but provides a wonderful overview of their lives and offers a jumping off point to other books for in depth reading. I feel I have a much better understanding of what our fathers wanted for us and how far we have deviated from the path.

Can't tell the players without a program
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-19
The brief and deceptively simple nature of this book makes you wonder why so few collected biographies of the Framers exist. But a closer look answers the question. Mel Bradford actually undertook for himself a pretty mammoth task: not only to tell who the Framers were, where they came from and what they did, but more importantly to analyze what they individually believed and what they were trying to achieve in Philadelphia that fateful summer.

Discussions of the origins and drafting of the Constitution are all too frequently simplified to the point where we assume that everyone agreed on the basic issues involved, and gathered only to work out the details. In fact, as Bradford shows, that was hardly the case at all. The author did a magnificent job, in my opinion, sorting out the degrees and shades of political opinion across a much wider spectrum than, I think, is generally thought to have existed. From extreme nationalists like Hamilton, who would have abolished the separate states entirely if he could have, to the most ardent anti-federalists, Bradford has dug into the original sources, the journals, memoirs, and letters, and brought forward the evidence to support the portraits he has created.

To respond to the reviewer who suggested the point of Bradford's work was to prove the Framers were all Christians bent on establishing a Christian government: I have to wonder how closely that reviewer really read this book. Bradford of course discusses many of the Framers' religious beliefs. In some cases, this is a necessary part of understanding their philosophical roots. It's also an inescapable part of biography, since many of the men were in fact active supporters of one or another branch of the Christian faith. But the very core of Bradford's argument is that the Constitution is nomocratic, not teleocratic. In other words (and in marked contrast, again, to most modern understandings), most of the Framers were not trying to shape or create a *novus ordo seclorum* at all, but rather (and simply) to lay out the rules by which a federal government would operate. Society would be left free to shape itself. Whether that shape was Christian or otherwise was a matter for people, families, and communities, not the government. Some of the men at the Convention may have had other plans, but they were kept from realizing them by the moderate majority of delegates.

"Founding Fathers" is a short book, but there is an awful lot crammed into it. As a basic reference, I think it's an essential part of any shelf of books dedicated to America's founding. As an introduction to the larger philosophical issues with which the Founders were dealing, and the ways in which they tried to address them, it's a summary, and an invitation to further study, that's pretty hard to beat.

The Founding Fathers: Framers of the Constitution
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-23
~Founding Fathers: Brief Lives of the Framers of the United States Constitution~ is a perennial classic and an excellent introduction to understanding the history of the early Republic and the men who framed the Constitution. The founding fathers featured herein, that is the framers of the 1787 Constitution, came from all walks of life. "One was a shoemaker, surveyor, lawyer, jurist, lay theologian, and statesmen. Two became president, one vice-president. Over half were experienced in the legal profession. The majority were well off and, for their time, well educated." They came together in Philadelphia and produced the most profound document in the history of the United States.

M.E. Bradford amplifies the length and scope of content of each mini-biography based in proportion to the respective founding father's contribution and influence. Some biographies are obviously limited in scope due to lack of available materials. The brevity of this book does not hamper its quality, as it is an excellent starting point for researching the founding fathers and the ones who are lesser known today, but monumental in their influence during the time such as Deleware statesmen John Dickinson, New Hampshires' John Langdon, New York's Gouverneur Morris and Virginia's George Wythe. The objectivity is to be commended, and Bradford gives the reader a good feel for the positions of each of the men and usually explains whether they were centralizing nationalists, moderate Federalists, or decentralizing Anti-Federalists. Each biography is annotated with a bibliographical list of source materials, which may be useful for probing deeper into each founding father's background. This book is well-written and offers great capsule biographies of the most influential men who helped frame the Constitution and shape it in the course of debates.

As for the other reviewer grumbling about Mel Bradford's making the American founding to be based on Christianity, I do not know where he gets that from. I think his criticism is unwarranted and I would point out that there is a flip side to the erroneousness of portraying ALL the founding fathers as devout Christians, which is his erroneous statement that "most were deists and freemasons." It is not however erroneous to say most were Christians, however popular the token deists among them were. Bradford did little more than sketch backgrounds on the founders; it just happens that Madison studied at seminary, Hamilton founded the short-lived Christian Constitutional Society, William Few was a devout Methodist, etc. That a few founders were deists, Jefferson foremost, possibly Franklin does not make the founders all secularists. Consider that the vitality of the Christian religion to the founding father's times compelled even the deist politicians to generally speak in Christian platitudes, and embrace public prayer. They typically speak in the rhetoric of Christian moralism, hence Jefferson's insistence on his being a "true Christian" and his extol of the morality of Christ. Franklin was no different. In the end, I am not a discerner of hearts, but I do know a great many of the founders made bold affirmations of their Christian faith.

Badly Documented, Flawed Premise
Helpful Votes: 36 out of 88 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-18
I have the original title, In Worthy Company, and while I agree with the author that the Founders were indeed worthy and gave us a Republic that has endured, the book's premise, that the Founders were Christians and that, by default, what they wrought is based on Christianity and the Bible, is flawed

The Founders were men of all faiths, Deists, Freemasons, and free thinkers. They were children of the Enlightenment and the Age of Reason, well-versed in the classics, and fully aware that English Common Law was descended from Roman Law, Saxon Law, and the Danelaw, none of which were Bible or Christian based.

There is a growing revisionist movement that is trying to prove that the Constitution is Bible based, which is false, and this revisionism is flawed history, a type of 'make it up as you go' and this volume is, unfortunately, in that category. It is badly researched, not documented at all well, and some of it is blatantly inaccurate. The author's treatment of the War of the Revolution in the section on George Washington is semi-fiction.

For an accurate, well-researched account of the origins of American political thought, Bernard Bailyn is a much better and reliable historian.

Kansas
Red Storm over the Balkans: The Failed Soviet Invasion of Romania, Spring 1944 (Modern War Studies)
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kansas (2006-11-16)
Author: David M. Glantz
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Puts It Together Nicely
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-19
Glantz was not well-served by his editors here; they chose the provocative title and Glantz throughout maintains this as some sort of 'lost' campaign that 'he found'. As the prior reviewer from Vienna stated, it's not so 'lost'. Targul-Frumos has been the subject of lectures and papers at US military academies and in technical journals from both sides since the late 1940's. So Glantz does overstate that point.
What Glantz does achieve is a unique synthesis of the diverse sources and he analyzes them skillfully. He puts it all together and gives it context that no other Eastern Front historian had yet done, just as he did with 'Operation Mars'. Unfortunately, the reviewer from Vienna is right about the small number of mistakes and, indeed, there are a few more than he cited. Editors let Glantz down there as well. They exist to pick up those little typos or tiny mis-statements. Like Glantz's other books, it reads a little dry, but I overlook that and give him five stars for the skill and value of his presentation and analysis. Not perfect but VERY needed.

disappointing
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-22
Being an avid student of the Russo-German war and having a few hundred books on the subject, ranging from detailed German unit histories to books with a wide scope like those by Earl Ziemke, I eagerly anticipated the arrival of this book as it promised to fill a gap in my knowledge of the Eastern Front. I was also worried, because I have all the books by Glantz and they can be divided into three categories: boring and unreadable (whenever he focuses on Russian sources; example: The Battle for Lvov), extremely interesting and well written (because they offer new information and new insights; example: Zhukov's greatest defeat) and books that offer a bit of both (example: When Titans Clashed). This latest book, I am afraid, falls into the last category. After reading it my first impulse was to rip out the first 150 pages. Being a book lover I did not do this of course, but still... In this first third of the book Glantz describes, no sorry, lists, units, commanders (boring the reader to tears) and actually describes what is on the maps!! Any editor worth his salt should have told Glantz to stop babbling and refer the material to an appendix or (in case of the battle dispositions) refer to the maps.
On the plus side: mainly thanks to German sources, the book does offer new information about the Red Army's failed spring campaign, which in the end is why I am still glad that I bought the book. If, like me, you want to know more about the fighting around Targul Frumos or the Dnjestr bridgeheads, I am afraid you will have to buy this book. Hence three stars (just sufficient).
However, I really hope that for Glantz' next few books somebody with common sense will sift through the material and make Glantz realise that, ultimately, a book should not only contain lots of information but first and foremost be READABLE! As a writer about the war myself as well as a voracious reader I think I know what I am talking about. Glantz can give me a call any day of the week for some free advice.

Jack Didden

Dreary, plodding reading
Helpful Votes: 26 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-13
OK, up front we all admit that David Glantz knows more about WWII on the Eastern Front than any other person alive. That said, this is operational military history at its worst. An endless barrage of corps & division numbers, grouping letters, directions of attacks & campaigns, etc., etc. The whole thing reads like an over-long after action report prepared by a junior officer who never took a liking to writing coherent narrative essays. There is no political context discussed in this book, nor is there discussion about weapons, weaponery, personalities, etc. Sure, its authoritative, but does that mean it has to be such a drudge to get through? I put this book down half-way through and read 4-5 other books before I worked up the patience to tackle this to its finish.

Great Book for advanced readers
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-10
This guy is simply the best military writer i've ever read.
At my age, i need a magnifying glass for the maps. That's my one objection, but i assume younger people will have no problem. This is another Glantz special: an utterly fantastic detailed miltary description of the initial Soviet attempt to invade Romania. These books must be a godsend for the companies that make wargames. After reading Glantz books, i feel like becoming a wargame designer myself! If you're into the movements of armies, corps, divisions, this book is heaven. The maps are great (though i wish they were bigger!)
If you want to read about the "personal" or "human interest" side of war, don't buy this book, there's nothing in it for you. It's also not for the casual military reader, it's very detailed.
I only wish some of Glantz' other publications werent so darned expensive; i'd own them all.
He's simply the best military writer i've ever read.

Glantz's Greatest Defeat
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-28
Glantz's books differ quite significantly in quality. Of the eight I have read, this was the worst. The writing is relatively poor, and features a lot of repetition, with little flow or tension. It feels rushed. The book is crying out for a good editor to really clean it up. The history, of course, is excellent as always. But I would recommend his operational studies of Mars and Kursk before this one. They are both excellent.

Kansas
Victory at Mortain: Stopping Hitler's Panzer Counteroffensive
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kansas (2002-03)
Author: Mark J. Reardon
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Victory at Mortain
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-02
My dad was on Omaha Beach D-Day and later captured outside Mortain at St. Lo and has many commendations including 2 purple hearts for his service. He is now an 85 year old Alzheimer patient whose most enjoyable times now are with family & friends who he still remembers and reading everything he can about the war, in particular, the areas he was involved in with the 30th Division Company C. He spends hours reading this and other books I've ordered then reading them again. His best memories are the early years and the war even though he rarely can tell you what day it is. It has been very hard on my mom trying to take care of him as he asks the same questions over again every few minutes but since I've bought so many war-related books for him he gets engrossed in them leaving her with much needed quiet time. He esp. likes "The D-Day Atlas: Anatomy of the Normandy Campaign" which he can track the various campaigns movements, battles, etc.

The Biggest German Counterattack in France in WW II
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-21
Mark Reardon's description of The Battle of Mortain is an outstanding contribution to military history. In this comprehensive study of the largest German counterattack in France in World War II, he sets forth the background of this momentus struggle, gives the reader the detail and blow-by-blow of the battle as it raged for six days and then sets forth a thoughtful and fresh analysis of what was important in bringing about the victory of the American forces.

By this work Mark Reardon has not only added significantly to the literature of World War II but has assured for himself a place in the front rank of military historians.

Robert Weiss, author of "Enemy North, South, East, West" soon to be reprinted as "Fire Mission! The Siege at Mortain, Normandy"

Only for the specialist
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-01
Starting on a positive note, this book is impressively researched, with dozens of original interviews.

But it is very poorly organized and difficult to read. When presenting a complex series of events, it is the author's responsibility to provide the reader with some kind of framework for following those events -- something more than "this happened, then this happened, then this other thing happened." Instead of providing this framework at the start of a chapter, where it would be useful, the author presents it at the end of the chapter, in a brief and not always helpful "conclusion."

Some of the chapters are essentially useless data dumps. The third chapter deals with German dithering about the units that will be devoted to the Mortain attack. The result is 20 pages of "first they decided to send X batallion, then they changed their minds, then they changed their minds back..." This could have been usefully compressed to about a page -- I'm not sure even a specialist would find this information useful, unless he or she is into unit histories.

Finally, the maps are awful. They are completely static, with no start or stop lines, lines of attacks or boundaries of control -- just unit symbols plunked down in the general area the unit occupied at a particular point in the battle.

Altogether, a hard slog.

Historical analysis that's actually exciting
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-27
Victory at Mortain is a comprehensive look at the German counterattack toward Avranches in early August, just following the COBRA breakout in Normandy. Reardon's book is useful, as the battle is under-studied and not widely known. Indeed there is only one other widely available and read book on the subject (Featherstone's Saving the Breakout). Further, Reardon's book is very good in that it provides insights into both German and US command decisions and tactical movements. In this way, it becomes easy for the reader to see exactly how both sides were making decisions, and how those choices directly played out on the battlefield.

Reardon starts his book with two chapters devoted to the situation in Normandy from July to the first few days of August 1944. These chapters show what the German plan for defense was (contain, contain, contain), and how the US breakout from Normandy progressed. This serves to set the context for the rest of the book. The very nature of the breakout served to "offer up" the option of a German counterattack through the Mortain area toward Avranches. This town represented the tenuous link between US Armies (First and Third) and served as the primary logistics/supply rout. Moving south through Avranches, US forces of the Third Army could and did turn west into Brittany and east to threaten the southern flank of the German 7th Army, which was trying to contain the US First Army. A German breakthrough to Avranches would surround most of the Third Army and have the simultaneous effect of solidifying the German 7th Army positions. This would have allowed the Germans to shift more resources to continue to contain the Normandy lodgments. It would have been a stunning blow to the Americans and would have completely derailed the Allied breakout from the vicious boccage country of Normandy.

Of course, this didn't happen. The counterattack (Operation Luttich) failed, largely due to an inauspicious infantry division...the US 30th. Although it got help at key points in the counterstrike against the German thrust from portions of the 2nd Armored Division (on the southern flank) and the 3 Armored Division (on the northern flank), the 30th bore the brunt of the initial onslaught. Being able to stop an entire Panzerkorp (including the vaunted 1st and 2nd SS Panzer Divisions, the 116th Panzer Division, the 2nd Panzer Division, and part of the 17th SS Panzergrenadier division) dead in its tracks is an amazing achievement. Reardon shows us that the German attack failed due to a combination of factors: bad German staff planning, bad German battlefield tactics, tenacious US roadblocks, the aggressiveness of the US 119th, 120th, and 117th regimental commanders, US artillery and airpower, and a bold American (3rd Army) thrust toward LeMans southeast of the battlefield and subsequent drive north to envelope the units that had participated in Operation Luttich in the Falaise Pocket.

Unlike the conventional wisdom about the battle, which focuses excessively on the the struggle for Hill 314 and the trapped second battalion, 120th infantry, Reardon spends more time on the attack through St. Barthelmy, and the northern flank, which represented the Germans' main push. He convincingly shows that the few AT guns and the battalion's worth of infantry holding St. Barthelmy effectively derailed the German plans. Further, Reardon faults German commanders for not bypassing the town, who instead chose to continue to ram against the US defenders. Although the Germans eventually did take the town, the other German units to the north now had an exposed flank. The Germans failed to press hard and stopped their advanced units, which then had to retreat. This action, and armored thrusts around Barenton (southeast of Mortain) were the keys to halting the German advance. Additionally, Reardon faults the Germans for uninspired leadership, for not securing the southeast flank at Barenton, for failing to use recon units in their proper role of info gathering rather than combat units, for failing to coordinate with the Luftwaffe, and for mismanaging artillery assets. These German problems, coupled with good regimental leadership on the US side, added up to a US victory.

Reardon does give pause, however. Had the Germans been more adept in their attack, it's not clear the Americans would have been able to contain them. Reardon notes that the divisional command functions nearly completely failed (or were non-existent). The 30th Infantry Division did not fight as a division, but rather are three nearly-independent regiments. This hampered coordination between regiments, hindered the ability to link artillery and armor assets with the battalions that needed them, and hurt the ability to time the counterattack against the Germans. In the end, bad German tactics and leadership, coupled with a sweep to LeMans to tear open the southern flank of the German army, is what sealed the deal.

This is a very good book. It is a useful history in that it provides an analysis and critique of both sides' command decisions, and displays how those decisions turned out on the battlefield. In my opinion, it is the definitive account of the German offensive at Mortain. My only problem with the book is that in places the text jumps temporally; there are places where a new section of the book will describe events that occurred prior to what was just happening in the previous section. This got very confusing, and at several places I had to jump back about a hundred pages to reference earlier text and maps. With some patience, however, this can be dealt with by any reader.

Great accounting of action
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-12
This book allowed me to look through the eyes of a person who was there. My father was a forward observer for the 113th and I believe he was there on that hill with the author. thanks for the opportunity to live it also.

Kansas
Arming Against Hitler: France and the Limits of Military Planning
Published in Hardcover by Univ Pr of Kansas (1996-06)
Author: Eugenia C. Kiesling
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Average review score:

Military History at its Finest
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-13
Kiesling is an impressive historian and author who has substantially increased our understanding of the nature of national security planning and warfare. She convincingly argues that France's defeat in 1940 was not inevitable. Her careful and thorough use of primary source material on the evolution of French military thought and security policy demolishes many of the most prominent myths perpetuated for over two generations on the reasons for the French defeat. Her chapters on doctrine, training, and the tyranny of the mundane should be required reading for military officers and public officials working in the US NSC, Intelligence Community, and the Department of Defense.

Seldom considered issues in the popular history
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-09
Many authors have written on the fall of France in 1940 but Keisling is the first to actually examine how French military structure and policy played perhaps the most significant role in the defeat. A one year conscript army and a totally untrained reserve would have made any doctrine unusable and thus made defeat likely. With an army such as that prepared by France in 1940 it is unlikely they could have made even their own version of mechanized warfare effective. This book will put paid to the arguments that the French officers paid little or no attention to mechanization, modern doctrine or were simply negligent.

Poor Assumptions Limit one's Ability to Effectively Plan
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-19
One of the main arguments of the book is that the French believed they had an effective, thorough, and well thought out doctrine. The fact that they did not was illustrated by the events of 1940 and the speed with which the country was overwhelmed.

Kiesling does and excellent job of presenting reasons why French doctrine was flawed, and also addresses why it was inadequately tested before the war. Numerous obstacles to the process are presented and explained in this well-researched account.

The implications of Kiesling's argument are profound. They suggest that no matter how thorough the planning and evaluation of a military doctrine, it can still be fundamentally flawed unless the assumptions underlying it are also tested.

Not so good
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-18
In 1940 using a plan designed by General Manstien Germany attacked France. The campaign cut off the French from their Belgian and English Allies who were forced to retreate or surrender. Germany was then left to conquer a much reduced opposition.

At the time it was thought that Germany outnumbered the allies and had vastly superior weapons. After the war it was found that the allies in fact outnumbered the Germans and that most German weapons were either inferior to or at most equal to the allied.

This book tries to argue that the preparations made by France were a factor in the French defeat. It is hard to show that this was the case. The book parallels a debate which took place in German conentration camps during the war. The French Military tried to put the government on trial for betraying the nation and letting France be defeated. Blum the prime minister of France was able to show how he had given the army everything that it wanted.

France lost the war not because of the size of its armies or the weapons it had but because of the stupidity of its military leaders.

The book simply fails to look at France in the context of German rearmament. If it did it would show that the French program was ratinal and adequate.

All in all not worth the money.

the best description about the French defeat in 1940
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-27
Kiesling main thesis is that the lack of trianing of reservist and regular officers led to an overly cautious military doctrine. The beginnning of the book describes some of the crisis facing the French military. Consrcipts were poorly trained since they only had two years worth of training. The same also applied to reservist. The French army was overly strained as to whether to devote resources to the reservists or the conscripts. The schooling that French officers received was limited to their particular branch of the armed forces and lacked any geopolitics or any overview of current military operations. To make matters worse the French army lacked any cohesion. Men in the reserves would be originally in their regional unit than transferred to an new unit based on their technical skills. As a result of this policy men lacked any time to become well adjusted to their unit. The end result of these above mentioned factors was that the French developed a doctrine that was highly centralized and overly cautious. I worked reccomend this book to read alongside James Corum's "The Roots of Blitzkrieg," in order to understand the French defeat in 1940.

Kansas
Center-pivot-irrigated sorghum silage (KSU farm management guide)
Published in Unknown Binding by Cooperative Extension Service, Kansas State University (1991)
Author: Kevin C Dhuyvetter
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Average review score:

Not scary -- beautiful and artistic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-11
The illustrations for this book are not scary. The situation for each letter is as follows "(Letter) is for (name) but who is chasing him/her?" The animal's name begins with the same letter. It is possible to be "chased by" an animal and not be in abject terror. It's all in how the parent presents the situation to the child. If you read the book in a way that makes it seem Sita is afraid of the Snake, it's your interpretation. If you make it light and funny that Ruben is chased by a Rabbit, that's how your child will take it. At the end "Zoe" and her "Zebra" seem to chase off all the "scary" animals anyway. It's no more frightening than your average Disney movie (in fact, it's much less).

Don't let the idea that "chased by" is "scary" keep you from enjoying this book with your child. The applique and embroidery work is exceptional and makes this book different from any other children's book I've seen. The colors are bright and each illustration is different. As other reviewers have said, the names and skin tones of the children are cross-cultural and the animals are diverse as well (not your usual menagerie).

The book is also well-constructed and large for a board book. It's easy for toddlers' hands to manipulate and the pages are large, allowing for enjoyment of the details even by the tiniest infant. I read this book to my Zoe from the time she was a wee baby and she still loves it. And it doesn't frighten her one bit.

Strange...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-21
I was hoping for a story (my baby is named Zoe) but instead it is another standard Alphabet book only featuring children with names that try way too hard to be diverse. Maybe my baby will grow into the illustrations, but right now she is confused by them.

My 6 year old and I love this book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-30
My 6 year old had this book in paperback for a year and read it so much it lost pages and I had to buy a new board book! He can recite it in the car on trips, and I hear him speaking the alliterations under his breath as he draws. Beautiful pictures and diversity. Thanks!

Beautiful but scary art
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-17
I'm a huge fan of books illustrated by Clare Beaton. The felt images are colorful and imaginative. In fact, I'd even consider buying an original to hang in my home if I could find one.

Zoe and Her Zebra is as good as Clare Beaton's best work. Each alphabet letter is gorgeously illustrated with a child whose name begins with that letter, being chased by an animal who also begins with that letter. For example, Ben is being chased by a Bear.

I also appreciated Beaton's efforts to make the cast of children multiracial and international. Alice and Ben are accompanied by Hamadi and Naiser, Olga and Pedro.

I have only two complaints. First, most of the children are also carrying an object which does NOT begin with the relevant letter. Why is Ben carrying a yo-yo instead of a ball? It seems like a missed opportunity to reinforce the letters.

Finally, and more importantly, almost all of the pictures are of scary situations, and the children are mostly frowning or sad. Poor Luke's hair is being parted by a Leopard's claw. And Pedro has a Porcupine quill stuck in his foot. It's only when we reach Z that things are happy, and Zoe is chasing the Zebra rather than the reverse.

Overall I love the book (and so does my 15-month old son), despite the somewhat grim context.

Disappointing
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-19
Without question, Clare Beaton's appliqué illustrations are gorgeous, and it's great that the text emphasizes diversity, but stick to her other books, like _How Big Is a Pig?_ or _One Moose, Twenty Mice,_ which are excellent and in the same visual style as _Zoe and Her Zebra._ This book is likely to frighten younger kids, with its depictions of frightened- and unhappy-looking children being chased by snarling animals.

I don't understand what Beaton and Barefoot Books were thinking with this book; what exactly is the point of using scary pictures to introduce the alphabet?? No doubt some people will point to Grimm's fairy tales and the like, to demonstrate that fear has a place in children's literature (which is absolutely true, it does have its place), but it's a poor rationale in this instance. First of all, most of the Grimm's fairy tales aren't intended for as young an audience as this book, and secondly, the Grimm's tales are *stories,* with plots and morals and some context for the scary parts, whereas this book has none of those things. The element of fear here is gratuitous; the author could just as easily have used non-threatening language and images without changing the substance of this book.

The fabulous illustrations are the only real redeeming factor with this book, and that bumps it up from a 1 star rating to a 3 star rating, in my opinion, but overall I would not recommend this book.

Kansas
Foundations of Wesleyan-Arminian Theology
Published in Paperback by Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City (1972-07-25)
Author: Mildred Bangs Wynkoop
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Setting the record straight
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-21
In a polite and matter of fact way, the author explains the differences between Calvinism and Wesleyan Arminianism. There is no name calling or insulting of those who hold the Calvinist view, only the clear, biblical, reason why it doesn't make scriptural sense. For further confirmation I would suggest one also read "Life In The Son" by Robert Foster.

Good systematic review of Wesleyan theology
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-06
I like the overall treatment because it covers a lot of ground fairly succinctly. Not a gripping best selling novel mind you, but it does what it needs to. In some of the later chapters her organization gets a little harder to follow, but overall a good work if you are wanting to have a solid grasp of the essentials.

The Debate Continues
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
Those who don't like Mildred Wynkoop's "Foundations of Wesleyan-Arminian Theology" (1967 and 1972 paperback) would do well to reconsider her brief but poignant work. This small book (only 128 pages total, two of which are an extended bibliography) firmly defines the differences between contemporary Arminianism and Calvinism. It is a one of a kind teacher for the Free Will-Predestination debate.

Beginning from a theological base Wynkoop accurately presents these late 16th century doctrinal movements. She explains that neither side understood the other to be biblically based. Considering the prominent followers of the initial Jacob Arminius and John Calvin (Eipscopus and Beza) she says that those students changed the original perspectives of their teachers. Debate, often turning murderous in the late Reformation period, began which continues into the current day.

With brilliant clarity the author describes the Synod of Dort's adoption of the Calvinists' "Answer" to Armininism and its heretical declaration for the Remonstrants (Arminius' followers). This book suggests that today's Prevenient Grace-Irresistible Grace debate took root from that 1619 decision. By the end Wynkoop traces the debate's influence on John Wesley and many modern Wesleyans (Wesleyans tend to follow Wesley's Arminian lead).

This enterprising book is a must read for all who have ever considered the Arminian-Calvinist controversy. If you are a member of the debate you will be informed with Wynkoop's Wesleyan perspective. If you are new to the quarrel she will teach you. This book is a quick read and will prove to be a valueable quick reference for all Free Will-Unconditional Election debate students. It is very recommendable.

Solid contrast between Arminian and Calvinist theology
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-16
This book offers a concise and well stated differentiation between Arminian (and Wesleyan) theological roots against Calvinist theology. The primary focus is on the historical contexts that led to the divergence of these two branches of Christian theology. As a primer, this is an excellent tool.

Introductory Level Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-21
This short introduction to Wesleyan Theology is an easy, and fun read as far as theology goes. The scope of the debate is is a brief statement of the historical developement of the theology, and a definition of its basic points. Therefore it is not a defensive work which will pit it against competing theologies. Other works dedicated to that purpose are more than sufficient for that.

I would recommend this for a good group study course, but it will not go beyond the surface.

Kansas
Guide to the Battle of Shiloh
Published in Paperback by University Press of Kansas (1996-08)
Author:
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Tour the Shiloh battlefield, from home or right there
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-04
Dozens of photographs, drawings, maps, and a comprehensive index make this an excellent guide to the battle of Shiloh.

In addition to actual military reports, the editors provide explanatory information that helps clarify the reports.

With input from the National Park Service, this handbook is an excellent tourbook for the visitor to Shiloh Battlefield Park, and a fine way for the reader at home to come to appreciate the importance of Shiloh.

It is well-organized, with listings of the forces involved, a recapitulation of casualties broken down by brigade AND division, and a comprehensive index to track down specifics.

not highly recomended
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-19
I feel that Jay Luvass didnt describe this battle in the best way he could. Being a Social Studies teacher, i feel i know alot about this battle and many of the details. I have also read many other books on this battle. I enjoy studying and reading up on this battle and i think that Jay could have done a much better job on portraying the main idea. If your not looking to learn all that much, then its and ok book but definitley do not read it for historical information.

The best guide book on the battle
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-10
The Shiloh battlefield guide is the fifth of many Civil War guidebooks and maintained the standard started in the Gettysburg guide. The book covers the first big battles of the American Civil War and a Battlefield Park that is the closest to the veteran's vision of "their" battle park. Shiloh is a confusing battle with a story that is being rethought by the experts; this is not a battle history as such. My recommendation is to read Cunningham's book "Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862" before visiting the field. This is best of the very few guidebooks on the battle and is an option to employing a guide or purchasing a park driving tour.
The series format is directions to a point on the field, orientation, a general lesson on what happened in your view, followed by first person accounts of the action. These guides are designed using the general staff training concept of a Staff Ride. This is when a class is taken to a historic location, discuss what happened and see how the terrain influences the event. Staff Rides are designed to be intensive "on the ground" training coupled with physical observation in the hopes students will gain experience for later use.
I am not saying this to frighten you away from this guide but to tell you this is not a walk about and look at the monuments type of guide. This guide will have several pages devoted to the action at this point. It may contain a critique of the local commander's actions with possible alternates.
My experience is that reading the book prior to my visit works best. This allows me more time observing the field and less time reading the book. Of the tour options, a professional guide is usually the best but most expensive choice. The park driving tour is the best choice for a quick trip through the field to get the kids passport stamp. This book is the best choice for a serious student of the battle looking for a detailed explanation.

I think it's great...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-28
This is the second battlefield guide in the Army War College series that I have used on a tour. I found it an indispensible aide to understanding how the battle unfolded.

The guide arranges the stops on the tour in a logical manner, and the selected descriptions of the battle by participants do an excellent job describing the combat. I highly recommend this guide to anyone touring the field.

I recommend that you use it in conjunction with the Trailhead Grpahics map of the battlefield, to ensure you have an accurate understanding of the terrain.

Very disappointing....
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-31
I have bought several of the guides in the U.S. Army War College Guide series printed by the University Press of Kansas, and have never been disappointed--until now. Living only a two-hour drive away from Shiloh, I have been to that battlefield too many times to count, and have in that time become very well acquainted with it and the surrounding area. I decided to give this book a try, mainly in the hope that it would reveal something to me at the battlefield that I didn't previously know about. I will repeat that I was disappointed, especially considering the high standard I had learned to hold this series of battlefield guides to.

First of all, there are gaps in the authors' coverage of the battlefield. In other words, they skip important parts of the battlefield while giving other parts plenty. I was also saddened to find out that the authors don't cover sites off the actual battlefield that have to do with pre- or post-battle events, such as the site of the Confederate council-of-war on April 5 or the location of Fallen Timbers, where Nathan Bedford Forrest fought a brilliant rear-guard action after the battle was over. This book would have been much better if the coverage had been widened to sites other than those located within the park itself.

Secondly, I feel as though the authors did not describe each tour stop very well. They would describe what was happening in the general area, but woudln't put that into the context of where you are then standing. For example, most tour guides would say something like the following: "From where you are now standing, Adams' brigade (randomnly picking names here) attacked in the field to your left. At the same time, Shaver's brigade attacked to your right." If the authors had done this, the book would have been much better.

For those who wish to see only sites within the park boundaries, and not see all the important sites associated with the battle outside the park, this would be a good, not great, battlefield guide. For those, like me, who are very adamant about touring the lesser know sites, this guide will be disappointing. I may even be a little too generous in giving it two stars

Kansas
The Kansas City Athletics: A Baseball History, 1954-1967
Published in Paperback by McFarland & Company (2003-09-04)
Author: John E. Peterson
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The Kansas City Athletics is a winner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
I found this book to be insightful and very well researched. As a historian, I enjoyed the detail, and the photographs -- particularly the team pictures from each year -- added to the product.

Outstanding history of the K.C. Athletics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-08
During my highschool and college years, the K.C. Athletics were my team. Their less than remarkable history and Charlie Finlay's escapades are accurately captured in this book.

Too Much Finley and Johnson - Hardly Anything About The Team
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-09
The title of this short review says it all: too much about Charlie Finley and Arnold Johnson, and not enuff about the players - you learn nothing about the players and the team in this book - you read all about stadium leases, concession revenues, deals to move to other cities, attendance figures, front office personnel salaries, etc. - I'm sure most A's fans didn't wake up eager to read the morning sports pages in Kansas City to read about attendance figures. What you DON'T get to know is the team - most players get, at the very most, a short paragraph or two, and some get nothing at all - you read some about the managers and coaches - there is no biographical info or anecdotal info on the players. Have you ever read a book and realize that the author isn't a professional writer? - you'll get that feeling with this book - about halfway thru, I realized I was reading about leases and concessions and revenues, and hardly NOTHING about the players. Readers, there is a reason why some books still are at their list price, years after they've been released, in paperback no less - this is why.

Must read if you're an avid A's fan
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-19
If you're a Philly, KC, or Oakland A's or hard-core baseball fan you should read this book. It's obvious that Rev. Peterson loved the KC A's and enjoyed his research in writing this book, and there was much research which into this book. Using Bill James' (Kansas native) Win Shares to value the dozens of trades made by the A's was quite interesting. It shows that the A's weren't quite the buffoons everybody thought that they were. Unfortunately several of the trades helped the Yankees in the short run, and the A's subsequently traded some of the players that they acquired and those players went on to good careers with other clubs.

I did find one or two factuals errors and one editing error. The book states that the expansion draft let each club designate 15 players of their 40 man roster to be eligible for the draft. Actually the clubs could protect 15 players from their 40 man roster. So the expansion clubs got to pick from the 16th best player on down from a team's 40 man roster. In memory serves after the first player was selected from your team, the original AL team could pull two more players back from being selected. The NL used a similar system one year later. Although dumping salaries weren't the issue that they would become in the expansion drafts of the nineties, many older players in the twilight of their careers were drafted by the expansion clubs (e.g., Bobby Shantz). Bobby had several nice years subsequent to expansion, but was essentially what today would be called a role player, but what a role player.

At first I was going to rate this book 4*, but decided to rate it 5* because it did retain my interest throughout the book and I looked forward to reading each succeeding chapter. It most definitely is an enjoyable read.

Well worth aquiring for K.C. A's fans
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-26
I grew up with the A's, moving to K.C. in 1961 when I was 8 years old. Although I love the Royals, the A's were my first team. This book brought back many memories and is well worth the cost. There are a few more typos and punctuation errors than I expected but these did not detract much from my enjoyment of the book. I have never seen this book for sale in K.C area book stores, so was thrilled to find out about this recently and aquired my copy from Amazon. Municipal Stadium was such a neat place to watch games - I'm glad I grew up watching the A's and Chiefs there. My dad was too cheap to park at the Sam's lots (but to his credit we rarely sat in general admission!), so he always parked in somebody's yard on Brooklyn Avenue. At least today you can still eat at Arthur Bryant's down the street, then go see the "info plaque" at 22nd & Brooklyn where the stadium was.

Kansas
Kansas: The History of the Sunflower State, 1854-2000
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kansas (2002-10)
Author: H. Craig Miner
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College Students, Keep Looking
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-23
I purchased this book with the greatest of intentions. Unfortunately, it is so rambling and disorganized that I was not successful.
In reading the other reviews, it is apparent that the focus of this book was on the college level student reader. True, to my knowledge there is nothing out there with the same focus. However, Land of Contrasts, while written at the supposed high school level (though I enjoyed it), is much more organized and a better read.
I did enjoy the Bleeding Kansas section, Civil War impact, and the building boom time period of the 1880's. Then the organization starts falling apart.
I tried hard to like this book, but I couldn't get past the way it jumped around in topical themes to decide whether I really was enjoying it or whether I was missing something somewhere. I decided to put it back on my book shelf and to get over the headache it had created, and then try again another day.
College students, keep looking out there.

Good for academics, but will probably bore most others.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-28
After buying this book, I regret not reading a few pages in the store so that I could decide on whether to keep looking for something more accessible.

The book is often tedious and rambling. While the basic organization is clear and logical, each chapter covers too many incidents and characters in too little detail, with weak transitions leading to an overall feeling of choppiness. Miner relies too much on quotes which feature the language of the day for added color, adding an unnecessary level of complexity in many instances.

Too many characters come, go and return too quickly; events do likewise. Even careful readers may find themselves referring back to previous pages and paragraphs to keep everything straight (which is, of course, detrimental to flow).

This is, frankly, not a book that will give most readers a good feel for Kansas in any way except in the abstract. It's full of great facts and research, but is just not compelling or colorful writing. I'm on the lookout for a more interesting read while I slowly work my way through this one.

A scholarly work on Kansas
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-17
I am not surprised at Mr. Fitzgerald's remarks regarding Craig Miner's fine new work on Kansas. Fitzgerald, who has published two successful books on "ghost towns" (actually "near dead" towns) in Kansas is a popularizer. His books, while fun to read, are by no means scholarly works. Miner's new book is scholarly, but interesting! Robert Richmond's book is a good survey of Kansas history, but is appropriate for a high school audience. Thomas Isern's book, Kansas Land, is written for a junior high audience. Until Miner wrote this book, there has been no survey of Kansas history that was apporpriate for college students and for scholarly study. Richmond's book has suggesstions for further reading at the end of every chapter. Fitzgerald seems to be underestimating Kansans in the way that they have been underestimated for 150 years, as simple, illiterate people of the land. Read Miner's book, and you will soon find out that Kansans are quite the opposite! Miner's book is written with the erudition that Kansans deserve. This is a fine book, a fitting history of Kansas for Kansans, and for others.
Historians will always bicker about each other's work, sometimes jealously, sometimes with clear reason. I cannot say that Mr. Fitzgerald is jealous, but he certainly did not make his argument with clear reason!

A Reviewers Reevaluation
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-09
With much anticipation, I waited for this book to be released. There has been no general historical monograph of Kansas since Robert Richmond's Kansas, A Land of Contrasts, back in the mid-1970's. Kansas is overdue for a new basic history. My original review of this book gave it 1 star. Since that time I have had the opportunity to read the volume a couple of times and my original comments may have been too harsh. The book does go indepth into areas which have not been addressed by other state monographs, especially with regard to civil rights movements in the 1960's and especially important issues of the last 30 years in the later chapters. Miner's evaluations of recent political changes in the last chapters was also quite thought-provoking. My original argument regarding the organization of this history remains and keeps me from giving it 5 stars. There is an enormous amount of information contained here and it needed, for lack of a better word, more user-friendly organization, maybe even some side-bars where the author could have more freedom to digress in related topics. This volume was meant for a scholarly audience and it will appeal quite well to this relatively small percentage of Kansans and deserves four stars. Whether this book will attract a sizable number of non-scholarly Kansans remains to be seen. This is not meant as a derogatory remark, merely a realistic observation. With regard to its chosen audience, however, it appears to be successful. With regard to illustrations, maps, and graphs, I would have enjoyed seeing more. Why not show off a little bit of Kansas visually? The photographs dept of the KSHS has several hundred thousand images and over 10,000 pertinent maps. Why was this valuable resource underutilized? To address Mr Avid, there is certainly no jealousy involved as I am not a historian nor a college professor and I write about subjects that I have an interest in pursuing. I own every book that Miner has authored and have enjoyed his previous works very much. My expectations with regard to this book were apparently unrealistic-- I was expecting a bigger and better model of Land of Contrasts. This book will help to alter the image of Kansas in a positive way among academics in other states who have an image of Kansas as a flat, dull lifeless place. The details outlined in Miner's book portray a far more complex state of mind than the outside world realizes. That is a good thing.

A landmark book for the thinking student of Kansas
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-26
Craig Miner's exhaustive volume demolishes the marginalization of Kansas in the writing of American history. Arguing for the importance of regional history, Miner persuades the reader that Kansas is not a "Great American Desert" historically, but a fascinating land, chockful of colorful characters, dramatic events, and great influence on the rest of the United States.

Given the exhaustive nature of the volume, every reader will find something of interest in Miner's history, from agricultural history to political intrigue. Most Kansas histories simply scratch the surface, citing "Bleeding Kansas" and prohibition as everything interesting about Kansas. Not so with Minor's work. The pro-communist Waldo McNutt shares the stage with the anti-communist Gerald K. Winrod in a story that will remind Kansans of the richness of their history and amaze others with what historical treasures have yet be unearthed in the middle of America.

The final chapter demonstrates what separates Miner from many other historians. A finely woven look at Kansas and its future, the author weaves in cultural allusions from Bob Dylan to Reynolds Price in order to understand the struggle for Kansas' identity. This is a rich work for any fan of American history.

Kansas
My Life with Corpses
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt (2004-06-07)
Author: Wylene Dunbar
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What's so bad about being a corpse?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-27
The corpses of Wylene Dunbar's title are probably not what you think. Her book is indeed populated in part by the dead, but her corpses are most often mobile beings, difficult to distinguish from the living even for someone with a practiced eye, such as Dunbar's protagonist and narrator Oz. Oz grew up the only living member of a family of corpses, her mother and sister having died before Oz was born, her father perhaps shortly thereafter. It is difficult, in Dunbar's world, to determine precisely when the transition from life to death occurs. The process of dying can be a lengthy one, and besides, corpses tend to retain the characteristics they enjoyed in life: "...a southern corpse does not forget her manners just because she is dead, any more than a midwestern one suddenly learns how to carry on a charming conversation about nothing at all."

Dunbar's story begins with an appealing mystery: the grave of Oz's childhood neighbor and friend Winfield Evan Stark has been found to be empty, Oz's own published account of her childhood among corpses lying in the grave in its place. This discovery prompts Mr. Stark's relatives to exhume a nearby grave in the hope of finding the missing body, a task over which Oz is for some reason set as overseer. While workmen dig up the grave, Oz writes a continuation of her earlier account, in part as a warning to the rest of us. As Oz discovered in adulthood, her family of corpses was not as unusual as she had supposed. There are corpses everywhere--vacationing in Canada, publishing articles in peer-reviewed journals, meeting with friends at coffee shops--and if you're not careful you may get the life sucked out of you as well.

Oz's narrative--Dunbar's novel--is punctuated by keen observations and patches of lovely writing:

"He was quite thin and I would say he was tall and lean, but you would think of Gary Cooper in High Noon when what I mean is that he was a rather beat-up stick; a long, emaciated collection of bones and skin supporting a large bearded head. Everything about him was that way, even his hair, which was slicked down and lightly grayed, above a long wolfhound face."

But Oz's philosophizing slows the narrative down, and neither she nor the characters she describes ever become real enough to make readers care what happens to them. What is maddening about the book, however, is that Dunbar leaves so many questions unanswered: why can people other than Oz see some corpses but not others? how did Stark "rescue" Oz from her family of corpses, and why did he bother rescuing her subsequently from her perfectly normal foster family? why is her book found in Stark's grave? And so on. This is evidently meant to be a thinking person's book, inspiring in us ideas about the loss of spirit that can precede corporeal death, but the imperfections of the premise around which Dunbar's serious narrative is constructed are too distracting for us to take the book very seriously. An ostensibly absurd premise can be made to work if it is logically consistent, if all the loose ends are tied up, but Dunbar leaves too much unexplained.

While My Life with Corpses disappoints, however, Dunbar is clearly a very good prose stylist. There are passages in this book that merit rereading. It will be interesting to see what the author offers us in the future.

Reviewed by Debra Hamel, author of Trying Neaira: The True Story of a Courtesan's Scandalous Life in Ancient Greece

Missing Something.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-05
I didn't get as excited about this book as the other reviewers have. I did not get much out of this book. The author is trying to blend the fantasy with the real, and it somehow misses the mark. I understand the metaphor of the "waking dead" and how she tries to juxtapose merely being alive with living life. But it just doesn't stir me. Something seems to be missing. I don't think the book is a waste of time, but I wouldn't necessarily recommend it, either.

Forget That It Couldn't Happen and You'll Enjoy This Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-13
To say that "Oz" had a unique childhood would be a drastic understatement. The memories she carries with her are unlike any held in the hearts of other children. Why so different? Oz was raised by a family of corpses.

Her mother and older sister were already dead when Oz was born, but her father was still somewhat alive. Having existed in a household of corpses, however, he was forgetting more and more how to live and one day he just crossed over into death. It happened with such subtlety that Oz isn't even certain when her father died.

While some may think this lifestyle odd, Oz never gave it a thought. When a person is raised in a particular manner, and knows no other, it is impossible to think of it as being abnormal.

At the request of a friend, the man who saved her from her life with corpses, Oz has written the account of her childhood. And now, she sits at his graveside, ten years after his death, and writes a further account as she awaits the exhumation of what some believe will be Mr. Stark`s empty coffin.

This new memoir, of sorts, will take Oz's first tale and expand upon it to share the valuable lessons she has learned since she was "saved" from her family. She tells of realizing that there are more corpses in existence than even she could have imagined and she relates her struggles with falling into the trap of becoming a corpse herself.

Rather than write of corpses as the gruesome entities that fiction fans are used to, Wylene Dunbar has brought them to a new level by instilling a philosophical aspect into their existence. My Life With Corpses is a provocative tome that, though requiring a sizeable suspension of belief, will have its readers picking between the lines to relate certain aspects to reality.

Whimsical, yet profound and thought-provoking
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-04
"You've heard the story of the boy who was raised by wolves," writes Wylene Dunbar in her second novel, MY LIFE WITH CORPSES. She plays off the idea of the feral child in intriguing and surprising ways: her protagonist and narrator, known only as Oz, is raised by corpses. Oz's parents and older sister have all died, yet they still reside on their Kansas farm and still commingle with the living, who can see them but can't see that they're deceased. They live, but without warmth or desires or any kind of distinctiveness. Oz is the only person who can see them for what they truly are --- the walking dead.

Coming seven years after Dunbar's celebrated debut, MARGARET CAPE, MY LIFE WITH CORPSES begins with Oz declaring her intentions to tell her strange life story as honestly as possible: "What I write you now is not a fiction or even half-true but, instead, the whole of what I know, if long concealed." While this limited point of view can be a little bit disconcerting, especially early in the novel, the technique works only because Dunbar so quickly and effectively establishes Oz as a dynamic, unpredictable, and tough-minded character, our Virgil through the land of the dead.

Oz's life with corpses has surprising consequences. For instance, since the dead cannot feel, Oz grows up more or less without emotions: "My mother taught me how to live without feeling," she writes, neither lamenting nor whining. "More than stoicism or the courageous bearing of plain, I was taught not to feel at all." Also, Oz's family raises her as a boy, so it's a shock both to her and to the reader when she later realizes that she is in fact a girl.

However, given Dunbar's wild imagining of the differences between life and death, it's no surprise that Oz becomes a philosophy professor, finally settling into a decidedly abnormal life in Oxford, Mississippi. Here she sees corpses all over campus, in her students (one of whom has decomposed so much that she is little more than a skeleton) and in her colleagues. These corpses, however, are not metaphorically dead, nor are they zombies or ghosts. Their deathliness is somewhere between literal and figurative, between real and unreal, and Dunbar has a lot of fun developing her own personal mythology of death. She is intrigued by the logistics of it, the philosophy of death as well as the science. For her death seems to exist as a condition as much of the soul as of the body. The corpses that stumble through the novel seem to have lost their life-fires and so only maintain the appearance of the fully human. Inside, however, they are cold.

MY LIFE WITH CORPSES is most interesting when it takes its title as its mission and describes the lives the dead lead. Corpses don't have to eat, yet they must do so regularly for practical purposes: "their ethereal nature gives them a tendency to float above the earth unless they are weighted down." Also, they don't like to touch, but experience intimacy through sheer proximity. As Oz observes, "this accounts for the fact that we bury our dead collectively in cemeteries and that couples and relatives express the desire to be buried side by side."

Later in the novel, however, Oz describes an "unexplained breathlessness" that results from the presence of too many corpses, even recollecting that she would eat alone instead of with her dead family. This detail, however intriguing, contradicts her earlier memories of long road trips with her parents and sister, when proximity was not just unavoidable but desired. While such inconsistencies may seem inconsequential individually, they accumulate into something a bit more damning by the novel's conclusion, revealing the holes in Dunbar's imaginative mythology.

Regardless of such flaws, underneath the surface whimsy of this outlandish conceit lies a current of inevitable loss and pain. MY LIFE WITH CORPSES is tragedy through comedy, or perhaps comedy through tragedy. Either way it serves as a reminder that "living must be learned, and it can only be learned in contact with those who are living."

--- Reviewed by Stephen M. Deusner

An Allegorical Amusement Park Ride Through The Haunted House
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-26
Do not be put off by the title. "My Life With Corpses" is an allegorical amusement park ride through the haunted house. We are all Dorothy, transported to a magical and mystical world, by the narrator, "Oz". Just like Dorothy, we will learn about ourselves, our relationships with others, and what is truly important. The book is cleverly written, thought provoking and potentially life altering.


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