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The book was very informative.Review Date: 1998-07-23
Great readReview Date: 1999-04-20

Used price: $33.28

a real history bookReview Date: 2005-10-12
A book where author knows his sources and have a clear view of achivments and drawbacks of Soviet space programm
An author who can read Ruusian and have of net contact of the sources
I found the style of language difficult but fluid.
The other side of the space race.Review Date: 2004-02-21


DescriptionReview Date: 2008-03-24
Enter W. Hodding Carter. For an Outside magazine feature he's agreed to paddle the ninety-nine-mile waterway in Everglades National Park to examine the landscape from all angles -- physical, political, cultural, and very personal -- and get to the rock-bottom heart of the story. Stolen Water is the outgrowth of Carter's journey.
Through investigative research, eyewitness accounts, and interviews with key players in the conservation controversy, Carter offers a rare portrait of a national treasure. Utterly important, and at times downright hilarious, Stolen Water is a classic American adventure tale, and an environmental parable for our time.
The author's newest book is:
Off the Deep End
Provides some facts about the friends & foes of the areaReview Date: 2005-01-06

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Collectible price: $23.95

Compelling mysteryReview Date: 2008-09-28
Fascinating character study in this police proceduralReview Date: 2001-10-18
Bear wants to do it because a victory allows him even more time with his family. Though he has doubts that an African-American can win here, Linton persuades him to try. However, a brutal murder with evidence pointing towards Gary leaves the investigating Bear with quite a conflict of interest that could violate state ethics laws if he is not careful.
STRAWMAN'S HAMMOCK is a powerful police procedural that augments the investigation with the political side of law enforcement. The story line is filled with action that never lets up until the case is solved. Bear is a great character whose morality keeps him trying to do the right thing while his wife enhances the reader's understanding of his complex character. Darryl Wimberly has written a strong tale that sub-genre fans will appreciate.
Harriet Klausner

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"You don't judge it, it judges you"Review Date: 2008-06-12
The writer William Gass once described a book as "so good you don't judge it, it judges you." SWIMMING UP THE TIGRIS by Barbara Nimri Aziz is that kind of book. Like most other writers on the Middle East I have focused so intently on America's two military invasions of Iraq that I misjudged the near-fatal impact of the economic sanctions on the Iraqi people.
Aziz describes (or to be more accurate, allows the Iraqi people to describe) the various ways in which the sanctions and embargoes devastated Iraq more deeply than the 1990-91 Gulf War. To grasp the enormity of that charge, bear in mind that the U.S. dropped more bombs on Iraq during the first Gulf war than were dropped on three continents during all of World War Two.
In brief, self-contained chapters Aziz shows the incredible resilience of the Iraqi people and their determination not to let their identity as a people be erased by America's casual brutality. In order to survive the sanctions Iraq rebuilt and literally reinnvented its economy, its medical system, even its oil industry --and unfortunately, its attitude toward America.
Aziz resembles the Nobel Prize winning novelist Toni Morrison in her refusal to accept the obvious answer to any question. (Has anyone but Aziz argued that the sanctions and embargoes hurt Iraq more than the bombs?) Another thing Aziz has incommon with the magnificent Ms. Morrison is her uncanny ability to find the truth in terms of what is not there. Example: One of the most beautiful and harrowing chapters in the book is Aziz's observation that the defining characteristic of Iraq's playgrounds is the absence of children. (Just silence.)
The poem by Lisa Suhair Majaj that introduces the chapter "Empty Playgrounds" is called "Arguments." It is, in itself, worth the price of the book.
Given the current political atmosphere in the U.S. --the drum-beating for a war or sanctions with/on Iran-- SWIMMING UP THE TIGRIS is required reading if we want to avoid the same mistakes with Iran we made with Iraq.
A beautiful, truthful book.
A Must ReadReview Date: 2007-12-31
Independent journalist Barbara Nimri Aziz traveled throughout Iraq, beginning in 1989 in the days after the end of the Iran/Iraq war and up until the most recent disastrous invasion and brutal occupation. Her quest as an anthropologist was to document Iraqi society. She became a reluctant war correspondent.
This book documents the terrible years of grinding deprivation that was Iraq under the deadly US/UN sanctions. Why look at that period? Because everything that is happening today is rooted in the merciless sanctions period where more than 1.5 million people perished unnecessarily.
Every family in Iraq was touched. Everybody there would never be the same. Aziz writes brilliantly and compassionately about the people of Iraq, the ones we never hear from. The ones whose destiny is tied up with ours so completely.
--

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Ethnohistory and Archaeology As It Should be Done....Review Date: 2008-08-02
This book, by William Keegan of the Florida Museum of Natural History, is one of the best efforts I have ever read to bring a past human culture, and past human individuals as well, to life. Keegan's study, focusing on the archaeological sites associated with several Taino caciques - chiefs - weaves myth, history, archaeology, personal experiences with modern people of the Caicos Islands and with modern researchers, into a fascinating, convincing narrative. Focusing on Guacanagari, the cacique who allied with Columbus and the Spanish at first contact, and Caonabo, the "stranger king" of the narrative who opposed the Spanish, Keegan makes a convincing case for having found the site of Caonabo's home - thus bringing not just a past culture but a unique individual to life for the modern reader.
Keegan's book is a must-read for all archaeologists who want to understand how true "postprocessual" archaeology can and should be done, and it is a fascinating interpretation of the sites and people associated with the discovery of the New World for any reader. I strongly recommend this book for anyone with an interest in understanding the role of myth. belief, and thought in the creation of human culture.
Beyond ArchaeologyReview Date: 2007-09-21

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Great Recipes - Interesting storiesReview Date: 2004-03-05
Fascinating Look At FoodReview Date: 2008-03-17
The Taste Makers is a fascinating look at food from "the New World. Foods that, when introduced to Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries, saved millions of people from starvation and enormously increased the entire world's food resources and tremendous population growth."
This book is filled with all sorts of interesting trivia and history for various foods we consider commonplace. For instance, did you know that nearly 60% of the world's diet has its origin in New World plants? How about the fact that the cultivation of spice plants precedes the beginning of history? Or that Europeans in the early history of the potato did not embrace the potato as a form of sustenance. Potatoes were thought to be for "naked savages only," and there were rumors that the potato could cause leprosy. The tomato was originally a weed with little red fruits that grew between the maize and beans.
Also, Mayan farmers planted corn, squash, and beans on mounds called milpahs. They worshipped these three foods as the"three sisters of life." The Spaniards initially rejected chocolate. Once they embraced it, chocolate became a well guarded secret enjoy only by the aristocracy and clergy long before it became popular with the general population.
Each chapter is dedicated to an essential New World food that gained prominence in the Old World kitchens. Following much of the interesting data listed above, the reader learns of the many cultures and countries that were key in the food's place in history. Recipes of all sorts adorn the ending pages of each chapter. Sometimes, helpful hints--how to peel peppers, when to use chili oil, the proper way to blanch edible pods, etc.--also are provided.
This book is a wealth of history, recipes, helpful information, nutritional benefits, and fun food trivia. Oppenheimer rounds out her book with a chapter on "Food Fashions" through the ages. She writes, "If you look at the table of contents you will see that the recipes here are largely made up of grains, fruits and vegetables, with modest quantities of meat, fish, and dairy products. They require little time for preparation, they are made up of easily accessible ingredients and they constitute the healthiest diet in the world. Because so many of them stem from the peasant diets of other centuries, they are in general inexpensive and hearty. They delight my taste buds and I hope they will delight yours."
Yes, Vicki, many of the recipes DO delight my taste buds! I have tried at least one or two recipes from each chapter, and not once was I disappointed!
by Lee Ambrose
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women

The Bible on Congressional ElectionsReview Date: 2000-12-01
A political science classicReview Date: 2005-08-15
--Bill Arnone

Used price: $13.50

Fluid and compellingReview Date: 2006-02-19
You'll have to read the book yourself to find the answers, but rest assured that will be smooth sailing. Berg's narrative style is fluid and compelling, revealing a resourceful and dynamic organization which has done much to open up the electoral process to greater black participation.
NAACP vs. CommunismReview Date: 2007-07-18
Manfred Berg's "Black Civil Rights and Liberal Anticommunism: the NAACP in the Early Cold War" investigates the NAACP and its ties to communism during the beginning of the Cold War. Berg explains that some historians have claimed that the NAACP set back the civil rights movement by twenty years by participating in the purges of communists within its organization. They claim that by aligning themselves with the anticommunist Truman administration they damaged the credibility of the organization. Berg claims conversely, that the NAACP's adherence to anticommunism in fact saved the organization from almost certain political suicide.
Following the Second World War, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) became caught in the mass hysteria of anti-communism which marked the beginning of the Cold War between the U.S. and Soviet Union. The NAACP's efforts to end racial discrimination against African Americans in the U.S. had garnered criticism from white conservative politicians who claimed that the NAACP's rhetoric was communist in nature. Soon the NAACP found itself in a difficult position of having to choose between political freedom within the organization and the
organization's survival.
The NAACP was formed in 1909 by philanthropic white socialists and educated African American activists. Initially NAACP leaders like W.E.B Du Bois did not agree with the communist rhetoric. Du Bois claimed that African Americans were excluded from the American proletariat and therefore were not able to participate in the "Great Proletarian Revolution." The political climate changed however after the beginning of Great Depression. Some NAACP delegates believed that for African Americans to achieve progress, they needed to improve their socio-economic class.
Soon a divide developed between NAACP leaders developed. Leaders disagreed whether the best way to secure civil rights for African Americans was to concentrate on ending racial discrimination or that the problem was rooted in a deeper socio-economic class struggle which was afflicting the whole of American society. In his article, "Black Civil Rights and Liberal Anticommunism: the NAACP in the Early Cold War" Manfred Berg claims "The NAACP expected racial change to result from political reforn1s not from revolutionary class struggle."
The American Communist Party (CPUSA) began spreading their propaganda among African Americans Communism became an attractive political movement all long African Americans and some NAACP members. The CPUSA claimed that it was against racial discrimination and that African Americans were the victims of white chauvinism. Ideological clashes began between conservative elements of the NAACP who believed that the NAACP should focus solely on the point of racial discrimination versus the communist sympathizing elements of the NAACP and other civil rights organizations. The NAACP and the International Labor Defense (ILD), a communist affiliated organization clashed over the Scottsboro case of 1931 in which nine black youths were accused of raping two young white girls.
The NAACP underestimated the importance of the case to the cause of civil rights while the ILD offered the nine boys a legal defense team. Even though eight of the boys were sentenced to death, the IDL was successful in having four of the boys acquitted while the remaining five were eventually pardoned. The Scottsboro case cemented the distrust between conservative NAACP leaders and the CPUSA.
With the beginning of the Cold War following the end of the Second World War, the U.S. began its campaign to spread the ideals of democracy abroad in hopes of combating the spread of communism and Soviet influence. The U.S. began receiving criticism from the Soviet Union and other nations as to its unwillingness to end racial segregation and promote democracy within its own borders. Similarly, the U.S. was criticized for its unwillingness to pressure its allies France and the U.K. to end their rule over their segregated colonies abroad.
W.E. Du Bois petitioned the U.S. delegation to the U.N. to call for a resolution which would end racial discrimination world wide. Some had their reservations about what the saw as a move which might hurt the U.S. politically. Even one of the NAACP's most esteemed board members former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt thought that a call for racial equality within the U.N. would discredit the U.S. abroad. White conservative politicians claimed that Du Bois and the NAACP were attacking their own country and that it was part of a communist led conspiracy against America. Du Bois remained adamant that a call for racial equality within the U.N. was needed. Conservative NAACP leaders felt that Du Bois had become too radically left and thought that his praising of the Soviet Union as a model state was damaging to their cause. More disagreement followed as Du Bois and the NAACP leadership clashed over the NAACP's public support for President Harry Truman in the 1948 presidential election. Du Bois and his likeminded colleagues supported former vice-president Harry Wallace's candidacy for President. In the wake of "McCarthyism" and anticommunist hysteria, conservative NAACP leaders were desperate to distance the organization from communist elements. Because Harry Wallace was seen as the champion for socialists and communist sympathizers, NAACP leaders chose to align themselves with Truman and the moderate left. The NAACP began efforts to separate itself from suspected communist elements within the organization. Members who espoused communist rhetoric were questioned and some were expelled from NAACP membership.
Berg claims that although these tactics infringed upon the members right to free speech, it was a necessary tactic for the NAACP to survive within the age of McCarthyism. Berg also claims that since the question of civil rights had taken a
backseat to the issues of national security and Cold War politics, it is doubtful that any petitions for civil rights would have made a significant impact on the American political scene.
Recommended reading for anyone interested in American history, civil rights history.

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DelightfulReview Date: 2008-06-06
Tommie Turtle's Secret is GREAT!Review Date: 2007-11-10
Within the pages of the book are lessons on values; accepting limitations; recognizing and developing abilities; tolerance; friendship; etc. Seems each time I read Tommie another lesson is evident.
I recommend Tommie for Children of all ages. Tommie would be a great gift to find under the Christmas tree this holiday season.
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