Kentucky Books


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Kentucky Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Kentucky
Kentucky's Last Great Places
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2002-06-28)
Author: Thomas G. Barnes
List price: $32.50
New price: $21.17
Used price: $15.22

Average review score:

Wonderfully subtle pictures
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-16
Although perhaps some of the grand Kentucky scenery is missing, there are some wonderful pictures in this book. Barnes best photographs are perhaps in the subtle colors of the prairie, the Pennyrile and Barren. flowers and insects. Some of the snow dusted scenery, such as Rock Bridge in Daniel Boone National Forest is also well done.

Sometimes the writing tries to be too antidotal; for example he writes that he forgot the price that a five pound mussel would fetch in the commercial market; but I would have preferred knowing the price rather than his forgetting of it. The chapter on biodiversity provides an introduction to each of the regions, but a good map of each each of the regions would have helped me relate to the preserves he discusses.

A great book by a great man
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-28
I might be a little biased as Tom Barnes is my uncle... ok, ok, so I'm really biased, but I have read it all the way through and looked at the pictures on numerous separate occasions, and it never ceases to amaze and inspire me. It makes me wish I lived in Kentucky. :) He truly is a skilled and passionate photographer/writer. Buy this book!

Disappointing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-14
I bought this book to show friends here in Germany how lovely my home state is, since so few of them even know it exists. I was very disappointed. The photography is okay, but far from inspiring, and does not really capture the "great" places of Kentucky, nor why they can be so lovely. The response from people who have looked at the book at my house is just a shrug -- no "ooohs" or "aaaahs". It really doesn't do Kentucky justice.

A Beautifully Portrayed Work!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-15
I thought the photography and composure of this book was well done. The pictures are beautiful and make you want to explore the unknown places. I live in Kentucky and love to travel. My logo is: Simple Life~~~Simple Books. This falls into that category- simple yet breath-taking. Please get this book. Travel to Kentucky!

Lovely book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-04
This author's photographic work is gorgeous but this is not only a "picture book". It is a book of nature, ecology and environment and is worth exploring. I love Kentucky and grieve for the assaults and damages it has suffered for so long. It is my hope that if Kentuckians can see their home state as this book shows it, they will be more protective of it. Greed and exploitation have harmed Kentucky as have poverty and ignorance. The state and the nation need to protect Kentucky's natural environment. One complaint about the book: it needs a state map showing the regions the author writes about! There was no way to refer to the regions because there was no map of that sort. (There was a very limited map but not cross-referenced to the regions covered in the book.) This was an annoying omission from the book, but the book still merits high ratings for its beauty and information.

Kentucky
Lifeguarding: A Memoir of Secrets, Swimming, and the South
Published in Hardcover by Harmony (2006-07-11)
Author: Catherine McCall
List price: $23.00
New price: $4.94
Used price: $3.05
Collectible price: $24.00

Average review score:

I was disappointed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-31
This book paled in comparison to The Glass Castle [which I could not put down].
I did not find the individuals very interesting and I did not think they were developed to where they became complex, real characters.
I found myself skimming through the last chapters waiting for something dramatic to happen.
And I found the swimming metaphors too constant and annoying.

Good book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-26
I enjoyed reading the author's story and thought the writing was great. It really took me to the time and place. And very clever how she tied so much into water, emotions, etc. Hard to articulate my thought there, but it was brillant in places. Those that have read the book will know what I'm referring to. I will recommend this book to my book club. In reading the back flap about Ms. McCall, it appears she's settled and happy and that's nice to see.

A new author with a tender, honest voice
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-21
This book stands a part from other family stories for me because of the author's ability to discuss her family's strengths AND shortcomings with such honesty and such tenderness. So often authors who share family stories are skilled at detailing either the tremendous adversity of their childhoods or the greatness of the characters they have known. McCall does an excellent job of sharing the simple humanity of her family members, making them real to the reader, not simply characters to admire or villianize. I also appreciated the honesty with which McCall shared her coming out process and the deep understanding she seems to have of the role of her partners and their importance to her life. A tender, meaningful, and enjoyable read.

Courageous!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-19
Treading water, deciding whether to sink or swim, Catherine McCall's "Lifeguarding" is a stunning memoir and well worth the read.
"Lifeguarding" is about a middle class family leading a country club life but what appears to be real is false. Her father, a mediocre insurance salesman, drowns himself in booze and debt. To keep their lives afloat, Catherine's mother gets a job teaching. As she hides their family secrets, Catherine hides one of her own . . .
She is gay.
Catherine's struggle to understand her sexuality, her unconventional desires in a conventional time, makes "Lifeguarding" an unusual story. Her feelings and frustrations flow from pen to page. It is beautifully written, poignant and moving. Going into bars to remind her father to come home, or waiting for him to arrive for a day at the state fair, the reader is right there with the writer.
Catherine McCall takes us back to the agonies of adolescence, when life was supposedly simple. It reminds me of trying to win in the wrong lane. I'm happy to report . . . Catherine McCall is victorious!

Laurie Ames Birnsteel
Kahala

More than a memoir
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-09
I thought i was burned out with memoirs and along comes "Lifeguarding." Congratuulations to Catherine McCall for an honest, truthful memoir written in a straightforward manner, without the strident, over-the-top, self-proclamation and heavy-handed confessionals that have dominated the genre. This story flows gently but strongly and is a blessed change from the norm in this genre. Read it!

Kentucky
Month-By-Month Gardening in Tennessee and Kentucky: What To Do Each Month To Have a Beautiful Garden All Year (Month-By-Month Gardening in Tennessee & Kentucky)
Published in Paperback by Cool Springs Press (2003-12-31)
Author: Judy Lowe
List price: $19.99
New price: $12.36
Used price: $12.42

Average review score:

Love this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
I moved to KY a few years ago and wanted to garden for the first time in years. This book (and the companion one about what plants grow here) really helped. I am constantly flipping through it's mud-stained pages for reminders. I agree with another reviewer, though, that I wish it were organized by month instead of category (bulbs, annuals, etc.). However, if you only grow roses, say, the organization makes sense. I would recommend this book to any new gardener in KY or TN.

Very helpful, esp. for a newcomer to TN
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
I bought this book when we moved to TN 4 years ago. I think I've used every single section except for the vegetable section, which I plan to use for next summer when I finally set up a gardening area. The climate and soil in TN are unlike any other place that I've lived at in the US and this book is worth it's weight in gold for all the wonderful advice! We now have one of the nicest yards in our neighborhood thanks to this book and our hard work!

Very helpful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-18
Excellent advice for all times of the year, even in the winter months, when you might be wondering how to make yourself useful. There are chapters in all the areas involved: trees, shrubs, lawns, bulbs, etc. And of course it is specific to our area.

Useful information, useless organization!
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-17
Honestly, I'd love to give this book more than 2 stars, because it so clearly covers material needed by gardeners in our area (especially beginning to intermediate gardeners like me). Having lived on the West Coast, where the Sunset Western Garden Book is the definitive gardener's bible, I looked high and low for an analog here in the South.

This is not it.

Don't get me wrong: this book has some good information and what's there is written in a highly readable, friendly voice.

But it is not a reference book, and it will not answer every gardening question you may have. And it may even leave you with some new questions after you try to make sense of some of the overly simple descriptions. And maybe that's OK, because it's not billed as that kind of a reference guide.

What is IS billed as, though, is a month-by-month guide to working in the garden. And it's here that it actually fails the most.

Organized into sections by different types of plants (bulbs, shrubs, trees, etc), this book is then further organized within each of those sections by month... ALPHABETICALLY! If that's not the craziest thing you've ever heard, just try to imagine actually using this book to try to understand what you need to do this weekend. You would need to flip through each section for each type of plant in your garden, and then flip around the counterintuitive listing (since when does April come before February, which comes before January?) to find the appropriate month. Lather, rinse, and repeat for each type of plant in your garden.

Why the author and publisher of this book didn't realize it would have made immeasurably more sense to group all the information together for each month and sort those months in CALENDAR order, I have no idea. But I'm here to tell you, it ain't worth it. Stick with the Southern Living Garden Book and you'll be a lot less frustrated.

Month by Month Winner Book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-25
This book lives up to its title. I have been gardening for years and learned quite a few new tricks. The book has editions for all parts of the country so buy the right book.
TennesseeGardener.....

Kentucky
Ultima Thule
Published in Kindle Edition by Yale University Press (2000-03-11)
Author: Davis McCombs
List price: $16.00
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

here lies the good stuff
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-19
Recently I spent an extended vacation exploring Mammoth Cave National Park. I was amazed at the vastness and calm of the place. It has a grandeur and a haunting quality. Amidst it all I made another discovery: the powerful, in truth--the GREAT--poetry of Davis McCombs.

Somewhere in his evocations of place and suggestions of identity McCombs finds a beauty much like that of the caves. For the most part it isn't flashy. It is solid. It calls. It is true.

I'm not a huge fan of "narrative" poems. Most such literary beasts should become brave and full enough to stand as short stories. The language and, God help us, rhymes are more torture in such cases than poetry. Yet here in McCombs we have a master of narrative not seen on these shores since Poe.

More powerful than his narrative skills is McCombs's spareness of language. He communicates picture perfect verbal images with the dead-on certainty of phrase of a John Ashbery. He also does it without having to resort to Ashbery's often droning, lengthy verbosity.

My favorite thing about Ultima Thule is the sense of camraderie in McCombs's poetry. We journey into candlelit depths and to solitary gravesites. Yet we are not alone. The sense of brotherhood in these poems rivals the best of Whitman and Baudelaire.

Poe, Ashbery, Whitman and Baudelaire--these are some of my favorite poets. They are some of the greatest who ever lived. With Ultima Thule Davis McCombs joins their number.

An evocative collection
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-19
Davis McCombs's poems vividly evoke a strange and fantastic landscape. Kentucky's Mammoth Cave and the world above it are so fundamental to the narrator's voice and the poet's that it is as if all these elements are of a piece. What a tremendous debut!

three years later, I still remember these poems
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-30
McCombs chiseled away at the cave rock and came up with an edifying, gorgeous metaphor. Formally rigorous but not mincing, the book even uses a historical voice for a third that doesn't clank. I'm from KY, but I don't know this poet as other reviewers may: still impressed, still remember the awe I first felt reading these, the cold drop, three years ago.

classic
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-02
It seems to me that Davis McCombs's Ultima Thule has something particularly and refreshingly American about it. His writing shows a real craftsman's touch and sureness of hand. This remarkable book of poems is more than a reflection on the natural wonder of Kentucky's caves, it is a rare and mysterious exploration of the human spirit past and present.

Vibrant images of an unseen world
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-01
How beautiful to listen to slave/cave guide Stephen Bishop reflect on life through the continued metaphor of the cave. Yes, the voice belongs to a contemporary white university man, but the words are so real and the thoughts as deep as the bottomless chasms he describes. Thank you to WS Merwin for choosing such a poet, who does not dwell on the vulgar and the ugly as so many do, but instead drinks in beauty.

Kentucky
With a Hammer for My Heart: A Novel (Kentucky Voices)
Published in Paperback by University Press of Kentucky (2007-03-30)
Author: George Ella Lyon
List price: $16.00
New price: $16.00

Average review score:

Full of great characters
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-04
Reviewed by Michele Heather Pollock

Some folks say there are only a handful of stories in the world that get retold again and again in different guises. If that is so, then surely the coming-of-age story would be one of the most frequent: child meets trouble of some sort; child deals with the trouble and, in the process, grows up. What can make these stories interesting, what can keep us reading them again and again, is the nature and character of the child, and the nature and character of the trouble he or she runs into.

In With a Hammer for My Heart, that child is Lawanda, fifteen years old, growing up in a poor community in Kentucky. She wants to go to college, so she gets a job selling magazines. Her sales lead her up "the hill" to where Garland, an old WWII veteran lives in two old school buses. Garland is ostracized by the community because he drinks too much, and because he'd driven away his wife and kids. But Lawanda finds him and his bus, filled with books and old maps, interesting, and she finds herself befriending the old man.

The trouble comes in when the local community learns about Lawanda and Garland's friendship, which they neither understand nor want to tolerate. A rumor leads to an arrest, and Lawanda finds herself on a bus, headed across the state alone, looking for the one person she thinks can help her sort out the situation.

This is Lyon's first novel, though she has written more than 30 books for children and adults. It is a lovely book, full of great characters who each, while acting in what they believe is the best interest of Lawanda, alternately help and thwart her efforts to make the world right again. The cover is gorgeous, and while the typeface used in this paperback edition is distracting and odd, the story is capable of rising above that distraction to discuss ideas of hurt and healing, and the responsibilities we all have to the people we know and love.

Armchair Interviews says: Strong first novel from an established children's author.

Kentucky Treasure
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-19
If you like a good story told straight from the characters' mouths, then you will enjoy this book. As a Kentuckian, I enjoy stories with a decisively Appalachian flavor, and in With A Hammer For My Heart, Ms. George Ella Lyon (yes, the author is a SHE) weaves a deceivingly simple, yet powerful, story about family, friendship, and forgiveness. Told through the voices of its many characters, the story centers around the friendship between a young girl, LaWanda, and a war-ravaged veteran, Amos Garland. Determined to make her way to college, LaWanda charges into Garland's life selling magazines. Although he does not welcome company, Garland finds that he has become (somewhat unwillingly) a friend to LaWanda. However, through a series of tragic events, LaWanda's loyalty to her family and Garland are tested. Yet, in the end, LaWanda's strength and courage brings about powerful changes in the people around her. Ms. Lyon's first attempt at adult fiction is a success and I look forward to reading more of her adult work. She is truly one of Kentucky's treasures!

A Great Novel for Everyone!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-01
With a Hammer for my Heart was one of the greatest novels I've ever read.It was passionate,poetic & just a really lovely book.I gave it five stars because it was so greatly & beautifully written. George Ella Lyon is a literary genius. I thoroughly enjoyed this novel & hated to see it end.I would absolutely recommend this novel to anyone looking for a really great read.The plot is fantastic & I just loved the story.

Good, but not realistic characters. Could've been better.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-05
This book is about a little girl named Lawanda. She starts out trying to sell magazines and earn money for college. It's by selling these magazines that she meets Garland. Garland is an older man who lives in a bus, he is generally known as the town's hermit. He chases all strangers away until Lawanda comes along. As Garland and Lawanda get to know each other better, they each encounter conflicts that will forever change their existence. I found this book to be quality reading, but I really couldn't get into the characters. They had such fictional personalities, that it was hard to identify with some of their feelings. The descriptions are exceptional, and I think that's why the book is a Young Adult Book Award Nominee. Somehow I just don't think that Mr. Lyon did his best though. Perhaps another book would help him to create realistic characters.

The whole package!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-28
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Sometimes I read books just for the plot, sometimes for the characters, and occasionally for the writing itself. I enjoyed all three aspects of this book.

Highly recommended.

Kentucky
The Young Trailers (A Story of Early Kentucky)
Published in Hardcover by IndyPublish (2007-02-12)
Author: A. Joseph Altsheler
List price: $96.99
New price: $96.99
Used price: $113.60

Average review score:

A good read for pre-teens
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-12
The Young Trailers presents a very romanticized view of the world. Good guys are good, and the red savages are, in general, very threatening. Written 100 years ago (1907), Altsheler's views might not be politically correct in some circles today. The setting is Kentucky circa 1775-1780. The teenage boy hero, Henry, is heroic and never suffers from cowardice, indecision, poor judgement or any other character flaw. He basically goes native, is captured by Indians of an unnamed tribe, lives with them, then returns to his white settlement to defend it from Shawnees and put food on the tables.

There is a romantic interest between Henry and a teenage girl, Lucy, but they never do more than admire one another from a distance. The other characters, particularly Paul, Tom, Sol and Jim, are developed more fully in later volumes (mostly out of print) as they roam the woods fighting savages and protecting white settlements. Henry's boyhood enemy, Braxton, becomes a traitor in later volumes (see Scouts of the Valley), helping the Iroquois make war on whites. In the current volume, Braxton's character is not developed.

The simplistic nature of the characters makes these books suitable for pre-teens but probably not of interest to most adults. I did enjoy the series when I was much younger.

The Young Trailers
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-17
... I read the series by Joseph Altsheler when I was in grade school. I loved the exciting adventures the young men and women were having. My dad loved them as a kid also. I recently purchased the book from Amazon and read it - in fact, I had a hard time putting it down. I loved it in grade school and I enjoyed it again (I'm 57). I wish the publisher would make it available in paperback at a reasonable price. For [the hardcover price], I can't afford to re-live all of the memories. Why doesn't the Amereon Company take a chance and publish more!!

Books of our youth
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-25
My best friend and I, both now 75 years old, read all the Altsheler books about the eastern US frontier, the American Indians, and frontiermen. They are great stories. We think they will be good reading for our grandchildren, something of the past to show a simpler way of adventure from modern movies and TV. I fully agree with another reviewer that Atlsheler's books should be republished for the youth of today. I tried other book sellers who say they can get older books. It was a waste of time, I should have used Amazon first.

Adventure Stories just are written like this anymore!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-19
Excellent writing and taut plot formation make this book a real treat to read. Altsheler is the best of his genre.

Young Trailers Series
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-07
I was introduced to this series 14 years ago - I was 12 at the time - and have since purchased the series for myself. I have read each book numerous times and still enjoy them all and hope to introduce my children to them someday. This is definately a timeless classic for all ages, easy to read yet highly imaginative.

Kentucky
Regional diversity in environmental attitudes, knowledge and policy: The Kentucky River Authority (CDC development paper)
Published in Unknown Binding by Center for Developmental Change, University of Kent ucky (1991)
Author: Eric Howard Christianson
List price:

Average review score:

Reflections on a golden studio
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-14
Although a little dated (originally written circa 1969) this is still one of the great inside stories about what goes on (or more precisely did go on) in the old Hollywood. Written about the time that the old studio system finally collapsed, it collects some great anecdotes for film buffs. Besides, it is well written.

Great movie book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-16
If you like reading about "inside" Hollywood, this is a book I
highly recommend. Dunne goes inside 20th Century Fox and tells all. Actually quite funny.

Inside the insider's view of a major Hollywood Studio
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-28
This is a terribly funny and telling documentary. Mr. Dunne, who had a considerable reputation and experience as a screenwriter, somehow convinced the powers at Twentieth Century Fox to give him carte blanche and complete access to every peculiar nook and sneaky cranny at the studio. Sitting in on major meetings with the Zanucks,writers, producers, agents, stars, attending gala openings and hanging about sets, Dunne was the ultimate fly-on-the-wall. The movies in production during the year (1967)he spent soaking up this rarified atmosphere included "Dr. Doolittle," "Star," and "Hello Dolly," which means we get great dish on Rex Harrison, Barbra Streisand, Anthony Newley, Gene Kelly and Walter Matthau, to name only a few.

The stories are told in a droll, straight-ahead manner, which makes the gags even funnier. One can scarcely believe the kinds of things that Hollywood Heavies utter, apparently unashamed and on a fairly regular basis.

For the record, Mr. Dunne, also the author of a number of first-rate novels, was the late husband of writer Joan Didion, whose current memoir about dealing with his death - "The Year of Magical Thinking" - is deservedly at the top of the charts these days.

A must-read for industry buffs, but not for everybody.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-05
Excellent, casual writing style. Great stories of the Zanucks and others, their gut-based and fact-less decision making and egos. An easy read on that quick plane trip from Hollywood to your Napa hideaway.

This Classic Should Never Be Out Of Print...
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-14
Absolutely brilliant-people in Hollywood still refer to "AD" (After Dunne), and you know a book like this won't happen again. The attitude is "Where you find clowns there is usually a circus", and the level of amaturism on display here is astounding. The best section has to be the one on the making of the legendary flop "Dr. Dolittle"-you are there as they read the disastrous preview cards. A $18 million investment is on the line, and all the producer's girlfriend can think of is stealing a silver tray from a restaurant and what dress to wear for the premiere. Hilarious, and still required reading at film study courses today.

Kentucky
The crossing
Published in Unknown Binding by Grosset and Dunlap (1903)
Author: Winston Churchill
List price:
Used price: $14.99
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

Churchill, the Author
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-06
I find three books of this author, Richard Carvel, The Crossing and The Crisis loosly in a series. Carvel during the Revolution, The Crossing about the time Louisanna Putchas and the Crisis during the Civil War. These are three very good books and I believe I have all three but cannot locate The Crossing.

Crossing into Kentucky
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-09
My dad was born in 1921 in the farmlands of Edgar County, Illinois, and the Crossing by Winston Churchill (not the British leader) was his favorite book as a young boy. It is a tale of US western expansion, especially the crossing over the mountains into Kentucky, and much of the story is told through the eyes of a rather wide-eyed young man. I would recommend this book to parents who want to develop a love of history in their children and who want to spend time reading books together -- the rhythm of the author's writing is especially wonderful when read out loud. I would imagine boys would especially love this tale; however, I loved it, also, and I'm about as girlie a girl as you can get!

Bloody Kentucky
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-05
This book was not written by Sir Winston Churchill but a different author with the same name. I read this book as it was mentioned in my family history as a good description of the frontier in Kentucky around the Revolution. I rarely read novels but this book captured my attention and was a great read. It transported me back to a much tougher time in American history and in the area where my ancestors were located. It gave life and meaning to the hardships of my ancestors lives.

This Winston Churchill was Not Sir Winston S. Churchill
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-02
This is an excellent book about frontier days.

There is a common misconception about this book that many (including one other review) commonly fall into. This book was not written by the Brittish Prime Minister Sir Winston S. Churchill but rather by an american authour called winston churchill who was very popular at the turn of the century but who is sadly forgotton today. This other Winston churchil wrote several novels at the turn of the century. The way to tell the two apart is that the future prime minister always used the inital s. as did the early editions of his books. Unfortunetly reprints may not follow this rule.

Historical novel of Kentucky, the Old Northwest, and New Orleans
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-26

THE CROSSING was American novelist Winston Churchill's third and last historical novel, and deals mainly with the settlement of Kentucky and the winning of the Old Northwest by George Rogers Clark. Davy Ritchie is the main character; he runs away from his uncaring aunt (who had been raising him since his mother's death) and in the Virginia mountains joins up with the Ripleys on their way to Kentucky over the Wilderness Trail. With Indian troubles brewing in the Ohio/Illinois territory thanks to British agitation (the year is 1778), George Rogers Clark leads an expedition there to destroy the British forts; Davy goes along as drummer boy. Part 1 of the book, the best part, ends with Clark's victory at Vincennes.

Unfortunately, the book continues and the story deteriorates. Many years later, Davy gets involved in the Wilkinson plot - a plan to seize control of the Spanish lands in Louisiana and set up a separate country (Davy is opposed to it). He goes to New Orleans, falls in love with an aristocratic woman, Helene, converts her to Federalism, and brings her back to Kentucky.

As in his earlier two historical novels, the best things in this book are the historical incidents - Churchill had researched thoroughly before writing and was careful to get the historical details correct. The chief fault is likewise the same as in the past: his inability to draw believable, true-to-life characters; they are cardboard figures, all of a type. Also the plot is too drawn out; the book is actually two or three novels all clumped into one. The book was published at the tail end of an historical fiction craze that had influenced the public's reading preferences over the last ten years or so, and the book was not as popular as his earlier books. Churchill had planned two additional historical novels for his series, but never wrote them. Part 1 (The Borderland) of the book can still give much pleasure to the reader today, though much of the rest is lost to stiff characterization and too much incident. It's a shame Churchill didn't write straight history - it's definitely his strong suit.

Kentucky
Double Dealer: A Bert and Nan Tatum Mystery
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Press (2000-10)
Authors: Barbara Taylor McCafferty and Beverly Taylor Herald
List price: $26.95
New price: $15.55
Used price: $0.31

Average review score:

Fun and Murder with the Tatum Twins
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-22
Bert and Nan are at it again, mixed up in murder and trying to earn a living. These twins make the mystery more interesting by being up to their noses in suspicion.

A charming read, a few good chuckles, and a killer stalked by the daring duo. What more could we ask? It's a good book for a relaxing evening.

Antiques are murder
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-25
When an unsavory antiques dealer is murder, Nan and Bert Tatum are question because of recent fights they've had with him. But when Bert's daughter Ellie is arrested for the murder after confessing, the twins dive head first into the case to find the real killer. Further complicating matters for Bert is her ex-husband. Jake wants back into her life and is using this case to drive a wedge between her and current boyfriend Hank, the detective assigned to the case and responsible for arresting Ellie.

This is the fourth book in the Tatum twin mystery series, which is still going strong. The characters have become so strong and familiar that I didn't have any trouble at all with the alternating narration. In fact, part of the fun of this book is seeing the personalities of the twins switch after Ellie is arrested. The plot is slow in a couple places, but over all flows very smoothly.

If you're already a fan of these twins, this book is for you. If you haven't meant them yet, start with the first, DOUBLE MURDER. You won't regret it at all.

Double your laughs as well as your fun
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-22
"Double Dealer" is the best yet in the superb series featuring bright and witty identical twins, Bert and Nan Tatum. In this episode, featuring a Louisville flea market, mother Bert and Aunt Nan have to find the real killer of a sleazy dealer. They are driven to the detecting game by the fact that Bert's daughter has been arrested for the murder. The mystery is good, the characters are three dimensional and the dialogue sparkles. If you haven't met the Tatums, you will want to read the others in the series as well.

Fun and Witty Suspense
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-25
These twins will keep you in stitches! It is rare to find a good mystery that keeps you in suspense and smiling at the same time. I have read all of the twin books and Barbara's other series, and I haven't been disappointed yet.

A double delight!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-20
This is an enjoyable cozy with an unforgettable cast of characters who will ingratiate themselves in to your heart and onto your keeper shelf. I realize there is nothing funny about murder but the way these two go about solving it you can't help but chuckle from time to time.

Bert and Nan Tatum, whose mother named after them after the Bobbsey twins, Nan and Beatrice, are soon to be forty, identical twins and a one of a kind sleuthing team. Their mysteries take place in Louisville Kentucky, home of Six Flags Over Kentucky Kingdom and the Gigantic Flea Market.

In this the third Nan and Bert mystery, the twins, against their better wishes, return to sleuthing in order to find out who killed a unsavory flea market booth owner. When this mystery hits too close to home Nan worries as she watches her genteel twin sister change before her very eyes. Bert's maternal instincts transform her from a kind, sensitive woman to a protective mother with an agenda, the agenda being, to keep her daughter Ellie out of prison and to catch the murderer who is making her family suffer.

The plot is strong and current; in fact the contemporary atmosphere is so up to date that even Monica Lewinsky gets a mention. The mystery is hard to solve and the authors exercise good timing when introducing the suspects. As the ladies sleuth, the reader is entertained by their identical yet individual personalities.

Mystery readers, especially cozy fans, if you haven't read a Nan and Bert Tatum Mystery you are in for a double treat.

Kentucky
Fourth Down and Life to Go
Published in Paperback by Badcoaches (2001-09-19)
Author: Tony Franklin
List price: $19.95
New price: $150.00
Used price: $73.98

Average review score:

Interesting read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-06
This is a very insightful look into major college football from someone at the top of the profession.

TELLING THE TRUTH
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-20
BEING A CAT FAN, TONY FRANKLIN'S BOOK IN ONE WAY WAS A GREAT ONE TO TO READ, IN ANOTHER WAY, IT IS SAD THAT UK FOOTBALL HAD TO RESORT TO THE WAYS TONY PUT IT. I BELIEVE COACH FRANKLIN'S WRITINGS!! MAYBE NEWTON & IVY'S CLOSET SHOULD BE CHECKED OUT AS WAS BASSETTS. THANKS TONY. MAYBE SOMEDAY, (EVEN THO I DON'T BELIEVE IT WILL) UK FOOTBAL WILL IMPROVE. THIS WILL ONLY HAPPEN WHEN UK OFFICALS QUIT TRYING TO HELP THEIR RICH BOOSTERS AND HELP THE STUDENTS AND GENERAL PUPIC..

Entertaining, ...and now I want "The Rest of the Story"
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-19
This book was very entertaining and provided a solid look into the workings of UK, Inc. (aka UK Athletics). The book not only provides details on the ugly events rarely seen or heard outside of the inner circles, it also shines lights on many of the positive aspects of the program.

There were several stories (good and bad) in the book that, while I knew it possible for them to be true, my mind wanted to force me into disbelief. Fortunately, I have the good luck to know some of the many individuals mentioned in the book, so when I hit some of the stories, I simply picked up the phone and called. Without fail, every one confirmed the story in question! This leads me to believe the remaining stories are just as accurate. (Which I should have anyway, I've also had the honor of knowing Coach Franklin and he is pretty much a solid stand up guy.)

When all is said and done, the book is informative and educational, but it leaves me wanting for one more thing...the rest of "The Story".

Franklin book full of false accusations
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-31
Fourth Down and Life to Go is a largely one-sided account by a bitter and angry man who lashes out at many innocent people in addition to those Franklin believes he was wronged by. It's a story of turmoil within a coaching staff that got out of hand and ultimately led to the collapse of that staff. While the book is Franklin's personal view of the inside of a college football program, it sadly misses the mark due to false accusations and attacks on anybody associated with the program. If anything, Franklin's account is a lesson in how not to handle things as an adult when disagreements arise in the workplace. Franklin would have been better served to sticking to reporting the facts and stories that transpired. His interjection of paranoid and bitter beliefs and views about situations, circumstances, and others dramatically reduces the credibility that the book could have otherwise had.

Thought Provoking Lessons about Life
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-30
If Tony Franklin says it is true you can take it to the bank. This book is more than just an account of the Mumme Era. The approach that Tony has used to tell his story is set forth in lessons that apply to all walks of life. You do not have to be a football coach or fan to understand the valuable lessons brought forth in this book.

Some will read this book and say there is no way that what is written can be true. I truly believe what is said in this book about the Mumme era is a correct accout of what happended. Tony Franklin is a man of character who as his book states is a stand up type person.

Read the book with an open mind. Many will not know the names of the coaches and players mentioned but you can relate many of the lessons taught to your personel life. The things that happened at a division 1 SEC school will boogle your mind.


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