Central America Books


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Central America Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Central America
Through The Eyes Of The Condor: An Aerial Vision of Latin America
Published in Hardcover by National Geographic (2007-09-18)
Author: Robert B. Haas
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Average review score:

Book lover
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-20
I love this book. I hated the price, sorry, very expensive but I love the pictures. Ann

Amazing images
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
This was an amazing book! The photos have such beautiful color and perspective. As an added bonus, all proceeds from this book sales go to the National Geographic Sociiety!

Amazing, stunning collection.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-18
General-interest public lending libraries will appreciate this oversized volume packed with photos sweeping Latin America's landscapes. It comes from a renowned aerial photographer who provides over a hundred images representing his years of travel to fourteen Latin American countries. His photos celebrate towns, people, cultures and geography alike, providing double-page, panoramic photo spreads unparalleled elsewhere. Any collection with any interest in Latin American geography and culture - or geographic photography - needs this amazing, stunning collection.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Central America
Tobacco War: Inside the California Battles
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (2000-03-17)
Authors: Stanton A. Glantz and Edith D. Balbach
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Best Political Science Book of the Year
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-08
I could hardly put this book down. The battle being fought is truly a life and death matter, alliances and strategies evolve on both sides, and the Tobacco Industry uses their multi-million war chests to mislead the public over and over and over again. Even when you think you can relax after a victory by the anti-tobacco forces, in the next chapter the Tobacco Industry is lurking behind yet another door with a butcher's cleaver, which ends up being wielded by tobacco funded politicians and the California Medical Association to cut tobacco education funds and to weaken the anti-tobacco media campaign. Really this book is about much more than California and its battle with the tobacco industry. It is the best book I've ever read about why we need campaign finance reform and effective sunshine laws. You are shown all the nitty-gritty details, the back room deals, the closed-door bargaining. You'll emerge from this book well-prepared to detect lies in future wars, and to read between-the-lines in daily newspaper coverage.

An eye-opening "Must Read" manual for activists
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-08
"The Tobacco War" is part social and political history, part "how-to" manual. Not a dry catalogue of events, but written with a sense of the human drama surrounding each twist and turn of the tale. Co-author Stan Glantz, involved so deeply in the movement, offers the most incisive, comprehensive, and definitive perspective on the California anti-tobacco effort available. I was astounded to read of the intrigue and jaw-dropping audacity of the Tobacco Industry and its allies in the State government on one hand, and the incredible courage and tenacity of those fighting it in the most aggressive and effective way in history on the other. The growth in political savvy and will of the American Lung Association, the American Heart Association, and the American Cancer Society is catalogued in detail, as are the machinations of the State legislature, the governor's office, and lobbyists and pressure groups when money comes up for grabs. This is an outstanding text for the social or political scientist, activists of any type, and anyone in state local politics. It is a remarkable and practical instruction manual for anyone in tobacco use prevention today. These heroes have not left the field. Their enemy, the Tobacco Industry, is immortal.

Putting a Face on a Faceless Industry
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-27
The tobacco industry is one of the most evil industries allowed to operate in America. From child labor to seductive advertising to distribution of a deadly product and ending in mountains of money in political bribes, The US Tobacco Industry has just about every imaginable negative attribute of corporate America, all rolled into one, neat package.

Tobacco War puts a face on a faceless industry, and it is not a very pretty face. From exposing the hidden truths of the seductive advertising schemes and the green blood that flows through the veins of America's political system in every level, Tobacco War doesn't simply archive news stories, lawsuits and events, but connects the dots and presents the reader with a realistic picture of how big tobacco operates.

Likewise, tomorrows activist are reading this book today to gain the edge in a climate of misinformation. Provides grass-roots information for activists to develop and deploy campaigns.

Think your cigarette maker cares about you? They have you hooked, and you are the least of their worries. They are working to reel the next generation of smokers in for the kill.

And so far, the catch is coming in... wallet and all.

Central America
Tombs Travel and Trouble (Resnick's Library of Worldwide Adventure)
Published in Hardcover by Alexander Books (2001-05)
Authors: Lawrence Griswold and Mike Resnick
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An Outstanding Work of Ridiculous Self-Importance
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-03
Lawrence Griswold's account of his travels in South America and southeast Asia in the 1920s and 30s is as endearing as it is ridiculous. Much in the same manner as the geographers and historians of the ancient world, his narrative walks the fine line between epic real-life experience and absurd, cliched hyperbole. The result is an entertaining tale of faraway places in a time when the world was a little less accessible, and political correctness had not yet been invented. Griswold's unflappable persona in the work coupled with his descriptions of the people he meets along the way provides most of the humor, as well as the ridiculousness of several of the situations in which he and his traveling companions find themselves. The anecdotal and episodic nature of the book means that it is not a whole unit overall, but Griswold does an excellent job of finishing his creation with flourish: the tale of the Komodo dragon and the castor oil.

Jungle Fever
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-08
I picked up a hard copy first edition of this at the Strand in NYC. This is the type of book I love. Well written adventure in a world that has passed. What has also passed is book quality. The edition I have is so solidly put together, someone will pick up same in 2070 and no doubt enjoy this book as much as I did. A testament to the hardware and software . The 20 and 30s period was at the cusp of when the jungles of Malaysia, Panama, and Brazil were not yet overly intruded upon by the outside world. Lawrence's sense of humor in the many situations ultimately demonstrate his respect for the locals and locale (but his being a "boss" on these expeditions hides that a bit). Incidences of death amongst colleagues, porters, and now rare wildlife (there are few tiger hunts here that are bit sad)are too easily put aside. But on a one off basis there are some great moments with the West Pointer in Panama, the irresponsible American kid taken along to the Philippines, the hardships of the overweight archeologist up the Amazon, the tiger encounter in Malaysia and more. I laughed aloud many times. This balances the distress one gets on a de-capitation or two and depletion of Sumatran rhinos. An excellent read. Some of the situations tie out so wonderfully here that one wonders about some creeping fiction. I have found though that travel done right leads one into situations that can not be made up. Lawrence, I keep my doubts in check.

Real life Indiana Jones and his true tall tales.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-11
Our all-American adventurer friend, Lawrence Griswald takes his archaeology passion to the jungles of Central and South America where he meets with killers, traps and really big snakes. Then, off to Indonesia to be the first to capture the deadly living dinosaur: the Komodo Dragon. If these 20's and 30's Indiana Jones adventures are to be believed, then Griswold was the greatest explorer ever. Otherwise, he's the greatest story spinner ever. Either way, who cares. Watch out for the chapter called "Thirst!"

Central America
Total Confinement: Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison (California Series in Public Anthropology, 7)
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (2004-02-26)
Author: Lorna A. Rhodes
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amazing
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-18
this book is amazing and so are her classes. i've been lucky enough to take two of her classes. we really are lucky that people like her are writing.

Extreme Othering: Rehabilitation or Warehousing?
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
How much correcting do we do? I believe that we should be correcting behavior, not warehousing people. Because if these guys leave here and move into my neighborhood I want something productive out of them. Let's have them get a job and pay some taxes, you know.
Officer (in Rhodes 199)

Thus in reform "the criminal becomes simultaneously the `other' (a byproduct of damage, disorder or difference) and yet potentially `like us' (wanting the same thing, thus reformable, but needing useful strategies for conformity, skills for survival...)
Lorna A. Rhodes (Total Confinement 198)

If repression has indeed been the fundamental link between power, knowledge, and sexuality since the classical age, it stands to reason that we will not be able to free ourselves from it except at a considerable cost.
Michel Foucault

In Total Confinement: Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison, Lorna Rhodes, plays Marlow to several versions of Kurtz in this prison Heart of Darkness. I chose the Conrad metaphor because essentially Rhodes is speaking to the `Other' of the `Other.' Confined to a maximum security prison, the prisoner is our `Other.' To be mentally ill in a prison is to be removed from general population and further confined. Essentially, these `extreme' `Others are the end of the line. Ironically, towards the end of her project, the questions run a grade more fundamental. What are we doing here? Are we here to reform or warehouse? If the answer is to reform, then arguably a more fundamental re-questioning is due. How can we turn these guys back into, not just general population, but society at large; when all we are doing is making things worse. In the end, Foucault reminds us that we have invested so much into this discourse that we cannot extricate ourselves from it without considerable cost. Do we try something different?

Reminded of Abramsky's musings where I wrote: "Abramsky writes, "Violence, it seems, is nascent within most human beings. Put all except the most resolutely pacifist individuals into conditions in which they have absolute control over others they believe to be "bad" or criminally minded, and chances are the confrontations will escalate into violence; that cruel impulses normally hidden deep below the surface will bubble up and find an outlet; that the infliction of pain, and the giving of orders for others to inflict pain, will become commonplace" (Abramsky 34). Abramsky conjures up the spirit of Hannah Arendt and speaks of the 1961 trial in Jerusalem of Nazi Adolf Eichmann. Indeed, the irony of Eichmann was not that he was spectacular. On the contrary, it was Eichmann's "ordinariness" (Abramsky 34) that makes him and as a result this book so compelling." Rhodes argues, just as Abramsky that there seems to be an institutional quality about prisons that take away from the specificity of the individual and lumps all `criminals' - even the `crazy' ones - and treats them along policy lines that no longer (or arguably ever did) have any efficacy. While Abramsky seeks to, at least on one level, to reveal the banality and institutional quality of the prisons, Rhodes takes us deeper into the heart of darkness. We speak, just like Marlow, to Kurtz.

Rhodes takes into account the inmates' perspective and actions within the confines of the `control unit' of the supermaxes. In this regard, Marlow is listening to Kurtz and telling us there is more there than meets the eye - if we even get that far. Waxing optimistic, she asks the questions through both the inmates and the correction workers to see if there is any hope in the prison "system." In conclusion, Rhodes ultimately shows us that the modern-day prisons tell us more about ourselves than the prisoners we confine.

As much as American Furies is an important piece of literature on the issue of prisons, Total Confinement adds and Rhodes takes a fundamentally different tack - theoretically, politically, and philosophically. Total Confinement gives us a subaltern perspective on the supermax system. In this ethnographic survey, Rhodes takes on a more humanistic approach. What happens when people are forced into a box (no pun intended) to confirm to becoming "Christian gentlemen" (Rhodes 198). She asks is there real relief from "the inertia of prison bureaucracy"? Rhodes, I would contend, argues that the answer lies in prisoner "humanity." Since contemporary prisons really say less about the prisoners but more about the society that creates, runs, and maintains them, then it is we, not prisoners that are compelled to ask the hard questions. While Abramsky, I argue waxes cynical and is pessimistic, Rhodes posits that everyone is "struggling it out" in our prisons, and "hope" is alive.

What does the prison Kurtz have to say? Does the subaltern really speak? What is heard is that deep within the caverns of these prisons is a psychological give and take that build more resentment and less understanding of the situation on either side - prisoner or correction worker. Trapped in an administrative framework, good intentioned correction workers are stifled and prevented from effecting creative solutions to problems. Mind you, there are good reasons for thinking safety first but the overkill in terms of equipment and facility - Is it really doing any good? After a careful examination of Abramsky and Rhodes, I am convinced more than ever that the problem is really more fundamental. In effect, the institutional momentum is driving more and more reactionary solutions to a more fundamental problem that is not being addressed.

Miguel Llora

Highly recommended
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-01
This is a meticulously researched and theoretically sophisticated expose of a deeply hidden yet increasingly important facet of American culture. As the United States more and more becomes a prison nation, books like this will become essential reading not only for scholars but for average citizens.

Central America
Traveling Literary America: A Complete Guide to Literary Landmarks
Published in Paperback by Jefferson Press (2005-09-01)
Author: B. J. Welborn
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Average review score:

Fascinating Literary Places to Visit
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-18
Ever since I visited Cross Creek (Rawling's home), I've been on the look out for more author's homes or related sites to visit. It was such a great experience to see her place after reading her books.
Now with Traveling Literary America, readers can visit places associated with Dr. Seuss, Mark Twain, Jack London, Edgar Allan Poe and other admired authors. Besides such well known authors, he includes more offbeat literary figures such as poet Joyce Kilmer's home (New Brunswick, NJ) and songwriter Woody Guthrie's birthplace (Okemah, Okla).
I can't wait to see some of these places and having the book on hand allows me to fit them in wherever I travel in the US.

A Complete Guide To Literary Landmarks
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-31
Anyone who loves books-which presumeably includes anyone reading this review website, will love Traveling Literary America. It is a hefty (more than 500 pages) and features more than 200 literary sites in nearly all 50 states, including author homes, memorials, poetry walks, exhibits and museums. What's more, author B.J. Welborn offers descriptions of towns associated with a particular writer (Jack Kerouac's Lowell, Mass; Willa Cathers "Catherland" in red Clouod, Neb); unusual literary treasures (Yiddish Center in Amherst, Mass); art colonies (MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire); hiking trails (Edna St. Vincent Millay Poetry Trail in New York), and sidebars on literary movements (Romanticism, the Beat Generation). There is a lot of fascinating stuff in here.

A Must-Have for Literary Tourists
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-28
I'm sure I'll be using this book as a reference for many years to come. If you do any kind of book-related traveling, you'll be glad you picked up a copy.

Welborn crossed the U.S. several times while researching the book, and her diligence shows. The guide is loaded with excellent facts and useful tips, and it couldn't be easier to navigate.

The book lists over 200 homes, museums, exhibits, memorials, etc., and it's divided into sections by region of the country. It includes historical information about each author and his or her work, as well as little-known tidbits that will make your journeys infinitely more interesting.

If you're looking for a thorough reference on author homes and other literary landmarks, this is the book for you.

Central America
The Vikings and America
Published in Paperback by Thames & Hudson (2000-04)
Author: Erik Wahlgren
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Highly informative and very interesting
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-21
Although published in 1986, this remains a very informative book on the Vikings and their presence in North America. Wahlgren was a professor of Scandinavian languages, so he adds a very interesting linguistic layer, and uses many Old Norse words to bolster his arguements. He has included a great deal of archaeological evidence to explain the Viking way of life in Greenland and Newfoundland., and also information from the Icelandic sagas regarding Leif Eiriksson's and others' voyages.

Wahlgren explains very well some of the hoaxes and misinterpretations of "evidence" of the Vikings in numerous areas of North America. He delves into the controversy over the Kensington Stone (a stone with a runic inscription found in Minnesota), and with his linguistic background expertly debunks it.

I particularly enjoy Wahlgren's very readable style, full of cute little asides, while remaining scholarly. His personality and wit really shine through.

Very interesting and fun read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-07
I read this book really quickly, I couldn't put it down. Wahlgren's idea is interesting and he backs it up well, with lots of interesting history and anecdotes. I'd like to see some arguments against it before believing he's right, but he makes a convincing argument. I enjoyed the book and hope to read more by him. Worth reading for anyone interested in Viking and old North American history.

A fascinating mix of known fact and mystery
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-23
A very well written, well illustrated, and fascinating recounting of Norse overseas activities in the Atlantic. After reaching and settling Iceland in the late 800s and Greenland in the late 900s, on several occasions recently settled Greenlanders indulged their exploratory and settlement urges and sailed for American shores, which Leif Eriksson had found and named Vinland ("Wineland") at his southern reach in about the year 1000.

Erik Wahlgren, a former professor of Scandinavian languages at UCLA, vividly describes the Viking background and the developing Norse culture, of which the Icelandic sagas became, many believe, the first truly notable body of literature in any Germanic language. As penetrating depictions of life, especially the better family sagas still have power to fascinate the modern reader. (This book's title can be a bit misleading since the Iceland and Greenland settlers were not "Vikings," i.e. sea raiders, but settled farmers and stockmen.) After describing the two saga versions of the Vinland story, in an interim chapter the author effectively debunks Minnesota's Kensington Stone as a hoax (the subject of an earlier Wahlgren work) as well as discussing other dubious claims. The rest of the book focuses chiefly on the Vinland ventures.

But just where WAS Vinland? Was it at the northern end of Newfoundland, the ruins Helge Ingstad and his wife Anne Stine Ingstad uncovered and painstakingly excavated in the 1960s while finding a number of undoubted Norse artifacts? Although the Ingstad claim has has been accepted by many, Wahlgren thinks not. "Ingstad's dilemma stems from his natural preference for a thoroughly identified Old Norse habitation site over a theoretical one that has not been physically confirmed." . . . "The reconstructed Norse houses at L'Anse aux Meadows represents a first-class achievement in modern archeology, and a major enrichment of our geographical and historical knowledge." . . . "The Ingstad find stands on its own merits and needs no crutch. By the same token, it is not Vinland." Drawing on geographical, botanical, cultural and linguistic evidence, the author thinks it might have been built and used for a short time by other voyagers of which we have no extant record (the saga literature is very family selective and much of it has been lost over the centuries.) Or even -- in a tentative hunch Wahlgren throws out -- that it might just possibly have been Karlsefni's "Straumfjord" of Erik's Saga.

The author then makes a very plausible case for Leif's Vinland or land of grapes having been in the Maine-New Brunswick coastal border area, which is better left to the interested reader to judge for oneself after considering the cases for locations others have put forth. Wahlgren's theory is intriguing and definitely in the running. A previous reviewer thought his arguments convincing but reasonably expressed a desire to see opposing arguments. One can get a good idea of other major contentions by reading Ingstad and Carl Sauer (see my other reviews by clicking on the above link).

These are by no means all of the Norse activities that Wahlgren discusses interestingly, lucidly and often wittily, including evidence of visits to the High Arctic -- fully as distant a voyage from the primary Greenland settlement area as Norway itself and even more difficult and hazardous. Too, there is definite record of one small ship with seventeen Greenlanders aboard being storm-blown from Markland (Labrador) to Iceland at the late date of 1347 and intimations of periodic visits to those North American shores to secure much-needed timber, "although not one in a hundred of these voyages had the slightest chance of being recorded." Wahlgren's final chapter contains a short but riveting account of what is known of the demise of the Norse Greenland settlements, after existing for half a millennium. For those who wish to get a visceral "feel" of life there, a recent and magnificent piece of historical fiction based on virtually all that is known of that time and place, and written in saga style, is Jane Smiley's "The Greenlanders" (see the Amazon reviews).

Central America
The Way to the Western Sea
Published in Paperback by Anchor (1990-02-01)
Author: David Lavender
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well written and researched .. easy reading
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1997-02-11
this is one of the best Lewis and Clark books, well researche and very easy to read. The objectivity of the author makes the book come forward to the present day and lets the reader see the total effect of the Lewis and Clark discoveries. A must read for any student of western history

Excellent story of Lewis and Clark's journey
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-29
Lavender has presented the story of Lewis & Clark in a format that makes reading history exciting. As a teacher of American History, this book is on my suggested reading list and the one most often discussed in class.

For students of the American West or Lewis & Clark, this as a "must read".

A most excellent adventure
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-27
David Lavender just may have written the definitive history of the Lewis and Clark expedition. It is a wonderfully wrought narrative, capturing the full width and breadth of this incredible journey. Lavender's sardonic tongue deflates many of the myths surrounding the "voyage of discovery," noting that for the most part this was a well-trodden path. The only actual "discovery" was that of linking the Missouri to the Columbia. However, this makes it no less an adventure.

He downplays the significance of Sacagewea. For the most part she was little used on this voyage. Her one major contribution was helping to secure horses for the great fording of the Bitteroot Mountains. Still, Lavender lavishes much attention on her and her son, which it seems that William Clark did as well. Her presence seemed to secure safe passage during their final leg down the Columbia River, as it made the expedition team seem less war-like.

Lavender also provides the background for the voyage, detailing President Jefferson's dream to establish an American Northwest Passage, linking one ocean to another. Lavender probes the seemingly paternal relationship between Jefferson and Lewis, and how Jefferson was able to win Congress over to a third attempt to cross the continent, despite questions regarding Lewis' qualifications. Jefferson personally trained Lewis for the expedition and provided added tutelage in the form of the leading lights of American science. Like a devoted son, Lewis made every effort to carry out the mission, which Jefferson sponsored, even when it seemed foolhardy to do so.

For those who haven't travelled this route before, you will be in good hands with David Lavender. For those who have, I think you will marvel at how masterful a job Lavender does in recording the events, giving the best rounded version of the "voyage of discovery" that I have read.

Central America
What I Saw in California (Bison Book)
Published in Paperback by University of Nebraska Press (1985-05-01)
Author: Edwin Bryant
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Fantastic Detail!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-26
As a student of the Overland experience and a resident near the original trail in Nevada County I was just fascinated by this wonderful account. I wholeheartedly recommend this book and have given it as a gift to other early West enthusiasts.

Masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-23
Edwin Bryant's work is a classic not only of overland travel in 1846 but also of life in early California during the same time period.
The Kentucky newspaperman's writing style approaches poetic composition. He was a keen observer of every minute detail on the trail and when in California:
Geography; Indians; weather; describing the many people along the route; river fordings; acting the part of doctor to the many ailing emigrants; traveling with the Donner party; he and a handful of men separating from the main wagon train in Fort Laramie to go it alone; the perils, mishaps, hazards and beauty of the trail; meeting several celebrated individuals including Joseph Walker, Fremont, Sublette, Hastings, Hudspeth and Kearney to mention a few.
When in California, Bryant walked right into the United States' conquest of California from Mexico. He was a volunteer in Fremont's army to thwart insurgents. These and other timely events are well depicted. Bryant's description of what happened in the horrific Donner party expedition are piercing.
This is an exceptional book and highly recommended for enthusiasts of the early west.

Great! This book should be a text book!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-06
In his own words Bryant describes his life on a wagon train going to California from the East Coast. If Bryant had a fault, it was that he too descriptive of the trail and events on the trail! If this wasn't enough, he was a doctor of the day, well, in his words, "Almost a Doctor." He was going to California to complete his studies. Like any good intern, he kept notes of who he treated on the trail and how he treated them. Also, being a bachelor, he was invited by the father of an eligible daughter to travel with them, "to let nature run it's course." This book should be a text book on the high school or the collegiate level.

Central America
What Is Sexual Harassment?: From Capitol Hill to the Sorbonne
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (2003-08-13)
Author: Abigail C. Saguy
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Average review score:

Assistant Professor of Sociology, Princeton University
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-01
Saguy's book accomplishes much and does so in an accessible and sophisticated way. I have used it to teach my undergraduates in an introductory gender course and they found it compelling and powerful. For them it opens up a black box of taken for granted assumptions about the relationship between gender and policy. It shows how gender shapes cultural and institutional arrangements, which in turn influences policy form and implementation, which in turn affects policy impacts and social change. The study does so with thoughtful analyses of indepth interviews of lawyers and human resource personnel, media analyses, and key informant interviews. My undergraduates thoroughly enjoyed the book and frequently referred to it in later discussions and essays. It had clearly impressed them. I will certainly use it in future courses.

I could also easily see using this book to teach about public policy. It is an excellent exemplar for social policy analysis. This is a beautifully written, excellent comparative analysis, and powerfully insightful study of how policies evolve in different contexts, yielding profoundly different implementation and impacts for individuals and society. In this way it can be useful not only for those interested in the specifics of the topic, but also for those interested in the broader questions of policy making, implementation and consequences.

Finally, I was recently at the University of Florida when Saguy's book came up in a conversation about women's studies. What is Sexual Harassment was to one of the senior scholars "a wonderful 'next generation' piece of scholarship" for future women's studies scholars to emulate.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-09
In this pathbreaking comparative study, Saguy sheds light on a crucial aspect of the lives of many working women by analyzing the various frames through which sexual harassment is understood in two national contexts. While norms against sexual harassment are growing deeper roots in the American workplace, accusations of sexual improprieties remain often the object of ridicule in France. Saguy's explanation of this and other differences goes beyond traditional culturalist models. The beauty of her analysis is to capture some of the ways in which sexuality is used to gain power in the workplace, and the role played by cultural frameworks in mediating these modalities."--Michele Lamont, co-author of Rethinking Comparative Cultural Sociology: Repertoires of Evaluation in France and the United States

Interdisciplinary legal scholarship at its best
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-08
For more than 100 years, starting with Oliver Wendell Holmes' famous essay "The Path of the Law," American legal scholars have bemoaned the lack of a serious sociological jurisprudence, that would treat law as a social phenomenon, rather than as a conceptual game or an opportunity to indulge in covert advocacy disguised as scholarship.

Holmes was merely the first in a long line of legal thinkers to ignore his own advice (in his 30-year judicial career, he did basically nothing to advance any serious interdisciplinary study of law).

In her new book, Abigail Saguy demonstrates how a rigorous sociological investigation of a now-common legal concept from a comparative perspective can yield all sorts of insights into the nature of the politics of law.

Saguy compares the concepts of sexual harrassment as they have been developed by the American and French legal systems. Part of the book's value is how it reminds us that what now seems like a central concept of American, and to a much lesser extent, French, law, was something that literally did not even exist 30 years ago. She traces the genesis of the concept in the feminist movements of the 1960s and 1970s, and describes how the concept has taken significantly different forms in France and America.

Her interviews with numerous prominent legal and political actors in both countries are fascinating, as is her analysis of the factors that have led to sexual harrassment being framed as a form of sex discrimination in America, and a crime of violence (albeit a widely ignored one) in France.

While Saguy's methods are markedly empirical, she does not overwhelm the reader with statistics. Rather, she weaves an engrossing narrative, that will interest lawyers, legal scholars, especially those with interests in comparative law, employment law, and gender politics, sociologists, political activists, and anyone else who is concerned with the use and abuse of sexual power in the workplace. (Among the many taken-for-granted issues Saguy helps clarify is the apparent arbitrariness ivolved in limiting the concept of sexual harrassment to workplace interactions).

This is a terrific book. If the academy produced more work like this, we wouldn't be suffering our current embarrassment of being able to read "The Path of the Law" 103 years after its publication with such a distinct sense of plus ca change . . .

Central America
Where Were You When?: 180 Unforgettable Moments in Living History
Published in Paperback by Readers Digest (2008-04-10)
Author: Ian Harrison
List price: $19.95
New price: $7.24
Used price: $7.10

Average review score:

Powerful reminders for things I thought I would never forget!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-04
Who would have thought we could ever forget many of the things contained in the book. Since I lived through most of them, the short descriptions were all I needed, and a younger person might have their appetite whetted to learn more. Excellent book in that it is easy to pick up and put down, and provides a quick glimpse into important events.

A great conversation starter
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-11
I got 4 copies of this book (one for myself and 3 gifts). Everyone I gave it to raves about how interesting it is. My aunt put it on her coffee table, and the Thanksgiving guests took turns paging through and reading random entries. The older generation told younger people about their own memories of some of the events. Everyone talked about recent events that we all were around to witness.

An Awesome book of Historical Happenings
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-21
A friend loaned me his book. After a few pages I knew it was a keeper. Anyone who loves history, especially of the US, should read this book.
So much information. Since I have been around a long time, I can remember a lot of the happenings.

I have since purchased a copy for my library and two others for my sons for their birthday gift. They will enjoy it as much as I have.

Any school age child will find it helpful for writing reports of some of the events in the book.

I highly recommended "Where Were You When" to everyone.


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