Central America Books


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

Central America
Cleveland: 1796-1929 (OH) (Images of America)
Published in Paperback by Arcadia Publishing (2004-07-04)
Author: Thea Gallo Becker
List price: $19.99
New price: $12.31
Used price: $11.95

Average review score:

Fantastic Photos of Cleveland!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-02
This book is full of great photos of Cleveland and tidbits of Cleveland history. Highly recommend for anyone interested in the history of Cleveland. The genealogist will find this a great addition to their collection. Great for putting that family history in context.

Central America
Climate Change: Debating America's Policy Options
Published in Paperback by Council on Foreign Relations Press (2004-07)
Author: David G. Victor
List price: $15.00
New price: $2.95
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Average review score:

Three contrasting perspectives are offered
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-10
Plenty of titles present exposes of the climate change coming: David Victor's Climate Change provides a political approach, debating American policy options in climate change and surveying the economic and social costs of changing climate conditions. Three contrasting perspectives are offered: one emphasizes the ability of wealthy societies to adapt, a second urges new attention to the defunct Kyoto Protocol, a third urges unilateral action creating a market for low-carbon emission technologies around the world. All provide important discussions.

Central America
Coasting: An Expanded Guide to the Northern Gulf Coast
Published in Paperback by Pelican Publishing Company (1998-07)
Authors: Jolane Edwards, Carolyn Lee Goodloe, and Laurel Wilson
List price: $15.95
New price: $5.74
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $15.95

Average review score:

this book is essential to all Gulf Coast travellers!!
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-17
"Coasting" is a great little guide of the beautiful Northern Gulf Coast from Appalachicola, FL. to Bay Saint Louis, MS. The author, a native of Fairhope, AL, gives great tips on finding the essence of this scenic area and its rich culture.If tourist traps are your bag, leave this book alone--you will not find them here! Instead, you will visit a home-owned and operated candy kitchen in Point Clear, AL; go on a quest for the region's best oyster Po Boy; find great bargains in shops and galleries off the beaten track. You will meet local artists, find the best beaches for bathing and shelling, and eat freshly caught Gulf seafood in dives and hole -in-the-wall bars. You will even find out about the best places to catch your own! So give "Coasting" and America's Third Coast a try. You will not be sorry!

Central America
Collision Course: The Strange Convergence of Affirmative Action and Immigration Policy in America
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (2002-04-04)
Author: Hugh Davis Graham
List price: $35.00
New price: $24.05
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Average review score:

Outstanding history, frightening future
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-08
Graham was a distinguished historian and political scientist at Vanderbilt and UC Santa Barbara. Sadly, he died just as it was time to go do a book tour in promotion of Collision Course, so the book got little publicity. As an expert on Congress and the workings of the federal bureaucracy, he is able to recreate just how we managed to stumble unintentionally into the current, highly contradictory, immigration and affirmative action systems. At a time when the nation was finally intending to help African-Americans, why did it suddenly import tens of millions of low wage workers to drive blacks from many workplaces? And if affirmative action was intended as compensation for slavery and Jim Crow, why was it extended to new immigrants, even illegal ones? And what does this portend for the future, when the "racial ratio" of beneficiaries from quotas compared to those who must shoulder the burden mounts ever higher?

Central America
Colombia: The Gateway to South America (Exploring Cultures of the World)
Published in Library Binding by Benchmark Books (NY) (1997-05)
Author: Lois Markham
List price: $27.07
Used price: $0.45

Average review score:

Without a doubt...the best book for students in grades 4-7
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-22
Hats off to author Lois Markham, "Colombia: The Gateway to South America," is the best source of information on Colombia for students in grades 4-7. Markham is a clean, succinct writer who has written numerous books for children, including biographies of Theodore Roosevelt, Thomas Edison and Helen Keller. However, Colombia is an extremely complex country and difficult to quantify.

Consequently, the author takes special care to present information in an accurate and objective fashion. Credit must also be given to Linda-Anne Rebhun, Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Yale University who contributed an expert review of the manuscript. Markham touches all the bases in this small compact (64 pages) book. She explains the geography of the four Colombias; mountains, coast, plains and tropical rain forest. She details the two main Indan groups in Colombia; the Chibcha in the plateaus near Bogota and the Tairona on the Coast.

Markham also describes how Spanish explorers found Colombia in 1499 and how early Conquistador's sought riches and not the development of a nation. The Spanish controlled Colombia for three centuries until the first independance in July 20, 1810 and the final defeat of the Spanish by Simon Bolivar on August 7, 1819. Still and all, this book is much more than geography and history information.

The author does an outstanding job reporting intimate details of the people of Colombia, of the family life, festivals and food. She also researches education and recreation inside Colombia as well as provide brief biographical essays of the great Colombian artists; Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Fernando Botero, Jorge Isaacs, Jose Eustasio Rivera and Alejandro Obregon. This book also contains beautiful photos of the Colombian landscape and people, a one-page country map, a two-page synopsis of country facts, a glossary, suggestions for further reading and an index. Highly recommended.

Bert Ruiz

Central America
Colonial Children
Published in Hardcover by Gateway Editions (2001-01-15)
Author: Albert Hart
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.93
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Average review score:

Must have history source!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-17
Wow, what a find for home schooling families and history teachers!

This reprint of a 1901 source reader in American history is the first in a series of four chronological readers that provide readings by the people of that time peoiod.

In Colonial Children you will read articles by Christopher Columbus, Two Italien Gentlemen, Governor John White, Captian John Smith, Anne Bradstreet, Colonel William Byrd, John Fontaine, Cotton Mather, Govenor William Bradford, Ben Franklin and others. These prominent people have left us with their impressions of Colonial America's discovery, wilderness,the natives, its growth, its children and its schools from their own journals, books and news articles.

The book is annotated to include pertinant historical data about who the writers were or where they lived. The writings were from 1000 AD to about 1790. The series also has a book about the Revolution and the Civil war.

Central America
Columbia River Basketry: Gift of the Ancestors, Gift of the Earth
Published in Hardcover by University of Washington Press (1994-12)
Author: Mary Dodds Schlick
List price: $45.00
Used price: $80.00

Average review score:

get it before it's gone!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-25
Ms. Schlick is the uncontested expert on native American basketry of the Columbia Plateau (eastern Washington and Oregon) and she knows and has the admiration of many--perhaps all--of the current weavers. Her book finally puts a face and name on the creators of the baskets and sees them as individual artists. I can't believe this book has been allowed to go out of print--get it while you can.

Central America
Columbus
Published in Paperback by Duckworth Publishers (2001-09-26)
Author: Felipe Fernanadez-Armesto
List price: $23.50
New price: $23.50
Used price: $8.61

Average review score:

A looney expands the world
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-14
To my knowledge, this is the most rigorous biography of Columbus so far. It is basically an unknown story, since what they teach us in school is almost all of it lies and myths, for example that Queen Elizabeth sold her jewells to finance the first trip, or that everybody in Columbus' time believed the Earth was flat. By any standard, Columbus was a bit of a lunatic who probably also suffered from what todat we call bipolar disease (for example, he thought that God spoke to him directly). He seems to have been given to theatricality and emotional blackmail, but undoubtedly he was also very intelligent and a great navigator. He also had an urge for social climbing, and he longed for glory and fame more than for money. He was obsessed with finding a way to China, India and Japan by sailing West, which suited the Western European powers's commercial interests. As said before, in his time the great debate among learned people was not over the flatness or roundness of the Earth, but about its size. Columbus, by grossly underestimating it, became convinced that the voyage to Asia was within reach. Had there been no American continent, he would have been murdered or starved to death. But he was also a very courageous and brave man, and so he made possible what seemed impossible. He was a very bad politician, and his emotional diseases made him quarrel with soon former friends, which of course marred his leadership abilities. His life, very well written by Fernandez-Armesto, is a glorious, tragic and incredible epic which reads like the best adventure novels.

Central America
Columbus Was Last: From 200,000 BC to 1492, A Heretical History of Who Was First
Published in Paperback by Anomalist Books (2005-11)
Author: Patrick Huyghe
List price: $14.95
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Average review score:

Indispensable Compendium on Pre-Columbus Era
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-21
Huyghe begins by reviewing the growing evidence for early settlement of the Americas which is becoming the new paradigm. This establishes that civilization that had a longer time to advance than previously thought, but as Huyghe reminds us, the many differences among "native" populations suggest "the impact of transoceanic latecomers."

Readers will be fascinated by the possibility of Chinese surveyors Ta-Chang and Shu-Hai exploring America over 4000 years ago as recorded in the Chinese Shan Hai Ching texts. This isn't the voyage detailed in Gavin Menzies' book 1421: The year China Discovered America. As he does elsewhere, Huyghe usually doesn't shy away from controversy, here noting the problems with dating and difficulties with matching the text with real locales. The text does reveal locations and peoples that could very well be on this side of the Pacific.

Northeast of Toronto in Peterbourgh is an inscription attributed to early Norse traders 3500 years ago. Such voyages would explain where all of the tons of copper mined from the Lake Superior region went to: Bronze Age Europe. The author then reviews a large sampling of inscriptions found around the Western Hemisphere attributed to Celts, Libyans and others.

He includes more intriguing Chinese voyages, to possible Roman contacts to Polynesians who seem to have left their mark. Plant life found in countries other than their origin. Architecture and artifacts nearly identical to that of foreign lands. One begins to wonder why more scholars don't take such early voyages seriously. And of course, no book like this would be complete without the voyage of Irish monk St. Brendan.

If any voyage should be taken seriously, perhaps Brendan's is it. We know monks fled Ireland from the Vikings and traveled throughout the Atlantic. We know the Vikings found monks in Greenland. And Viking sagas detail Irish found in North America. We made the mistake of not trusting the Norse sagas once before.

This is only a sampling of the voyages of pre-Columbus explorations that Huyghe surveys in his book. This compendium is a must for those interested in America's prehistory. Hopefully the author will produce an updated edition, but until then this book remains an "indispensable history."

Central America
Coming of Age in America: A Multicultural Anthology
Published in Hardcover by New Press (1994-05)
Author:
List price: $22.95
Used price: $0.47
Collectible price: $29.95

Average review score:

This truly is a worthwhile purchase.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-20
This book encompasses a a variety of short attention-grabbing and motivating short coming of age stories. The book is slpit up into 4 categories each of which contain about 4-5 stories. Those include "Fitting In" , "Family Matters", "Affairs of The Heart", and "Crisis." My personal favorite has to be A Bag of Oranges. It is worth it just to buy the book for that story! The book not only includes this but 20 more coming of age short stories. This book really stands out from the rest! Armed with this knowledge, I would say making the decision to buy this book is a no-brainer. Buy the book and an extra copy to give to a friend! That friend will thank you!


Books-Under-Review-->Computers-->Consultants-->Business Systems-->Accounting-->Central America-->66
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