Kansas Books


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

Kansas
A Prairie Beacon:The Peace Creek, Kansas Church of Christ
Published in Paperback by Leathers Publishing (2007-03-10)
Author: Grant M Clothier and Jeanie Montford Clothier
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Average review score:

Faith of my fathers
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-02
I am awed and inspired by this book. I, too, am descended from the rugged farmers who settled this area. I found my family's name mentioned a few times plus those of other beloved extended family members. Anyone who is part of a struggling church family will perhaps at once be ashamed at the puny-by-comparison struggles to establish and maintain churches today and also inspired to be better servants of the Lord by harnessing the vast resources we do have to help further the Kingdom of God. I couldn't put this down until I had read it cover to cover. I would recommend it for anyone, related to these folks or not. It is indeed humbling and inspiring.

Kansas
Prairie Birds: Fragile Splendor in the Great Plains
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kansas (2001-03-30)
Author: Paul A. Johnsgard
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Average review score:

Excellent Detail and well written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-02
Johnsgard's books always excell because they are written in a way that everyone from birding experts to novices can understand. This book details the many prairie bird species in North America. Well written and illustrated, the book is a great addition to the bird enthusiast's library.

Kansas
Prairie Poetry: Cowboy Verse of Kansas
Published in Paperback by Wichita Eagle and Beacon Publishing Co. (1995-10)
Author:
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Average review score:

A Portrait of Kansas in Words
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-20
I picked up a co-workers copy of this poetry collection and was first caught up by the wonderful photography accompanying the poems. Inspired by the images, I began reading bits and pieces of the collection. Someone like myself who has grown up with inseparable ties to the Kansas ranching industry will immediately recognize the scenes portrayed by the various poets. From the ever-trustworthy cowdog, the beauty of the undisturbed range, and cantankerous horses and cattle to the realistic portraits of the men and women who've made these things their life, this book brings back fond memories of people and events I know and have known. I am eagerly awaiting my own copy of "Prairie Poetry: Cowboy Verse of Kansas." All of the authors included have ties to Kansas, whether by birth, by choice, or both. Any enthusiast of cowboy poetry and ballads should consider adding this volume to their collection.

Kansas
Prairie Recipes and Kitchen Antiques
Published in Hardcover by Bonus Books (1992-12)
Authors: Wilma Kurtis and Anita Gold
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Unique and very highly recommended
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-27
Prairie Recipes And Kitchen Antiques presents an impressive compendium of original recipes drawn from pioneer families residing in Wayside, Kansas (the site of the original "Little House on the Prairie"). Wilma Kurtis and Anita Gold begin with an informative introduction to pioneer life, artifacts, and photographs. this segment is followed by recipes organized into chapters on Beans and Potatoes; Beverages and Punch; Breads and Spreads; Cakes; Candies; Canning and Preserving; Cookies; Desserts; Fritters, Pancakes, and Grits; Ice Creams and sherbets; Main Dishes and Casseroles; Pies; Puddings and Hard Sauce; Salads, Salad Dressings, and Cottage Cheese. There is a fascinating chapter on Wayside Remedies and a "user friendly" index to the recipes. Prairie Recipes And Kitchen Antiques is a unique and very highly recommended addition to any personal or community library cookbook collection.

Kansas
Prairie Skies: Cabin in the Snow
Published in Library Binding by Aladdin Library (2002-09-01)
Author: Deborah Hopkinson
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Average review score:

Great advenute for boys
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-18
My son loves pioneer stories. But books like Little House on the Prairie mostly feature girls. Here's a great series with a boy as the main character. Highly recommended!

Kansas
The Praying Parent: Making a Lasting Difference in Your Kids' Lives
Published in Paperback by Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City (2005-04-01)
Author: Debbie Salter Goodwin
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Average review score:

One of the best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-21
I can't say enough about how this book has inspired my prayers for my children and beyond. The principles Debbie has put forth so resonate with what I believe prayer is about but didn't know how to put into words. Debbie has done that with such clarity. If someone is serious about reaching the heart of God on behalf of a loved one, this book is a true gift.

Kansas
A Preface to American Political Theory
Published in Paperback by University Press Of Kansas (1992-09-03)
Authors: Donald, S. Lutz and Donald S. Lutz
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Average review score:

The Lutzian project and methodology
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
This book is best seen within the context of Donald Lutz's career. His early career was highlighted by a prolonged investigation into the colonial documents and tradition that culminated in the U.S. Constitution.
This investigation culminated in the publication of two important books. The first was a collection co-edited by Lutz along w/ Charles Hyneman, American Political Writing During the Founding Era: 1760-1805. This is an essential collection of pamphlets, articles, speeches, essays, sermons, etc. from the period in question. The second book was Lutz' summary of his learning from this period of work, The Origins of American Constitutionalism (I promise a review within a week or two). This latter book is one of the most important books published on its subject matter within the last 30 years or so.
The work under discussion is a summation of his methodological reflections from that period of investigation. He is suggesting how someone who is approaching the investigation of the American political theory (which I will call Apt) should conduct their work. He wants to outline what he thinks is distinctive about the field, what are appropriate methodologies, what the source material is and how to avoid certain common fallacies.
One of his main goals is to distinguish Apt from the European tradition of political theory. The first difference he notes is that Apt "has always worked implicitly from an operational definition of politics based on constitutionalism" (p.23). Lutz believes that that was the case from the earliest colonial times. From the earliest settlements, colonists wrote compacts based on charters that were the first steps toward our current understanding of a constitution. Those documents came to consistently meet the following requirements: to define a way of life, to create and define a people, define the political institutions that form the government, define the regime, the public and citizenship, establish authority, distribute political power, manage conflict and limit governmental power (24). One of Lutz' later books, The Colonial Origins of the American Constitution (published by Liberty Fund) contains many of the documents that Lutz sees as being part of this development.
Apt (in Lutz' view) is thus a discipline that is based on foundational documents that "speak institutionally rather than philosophically" (27). This is another of the differences that distinguishes Apt from the European tradition. This difference implies others. The European tradition is based on the theoretical works of an intellectual elite. They often contain meanings that must be teased out of the work through great effort. Apt is based on the work of what Lutz calls "the political class" (102). This is that 10 to 15% or the population that is politically engaged throughout our history. These were people who wrote in order to be clearly understood so that the institutional ideas they were suggesting would receive the consent of the people. Their work often does not put forth a theoretical innovation so much as put forth a rhetorically powerful statement that the public will understand and embrace as exemplary of their own beliefs.
Lutz points out that a major problem for Apt is what constitutes a "complete" document. In the central third chapter, he presents what he sees as the necessary documentary evidence that must be amassed and compared in order to have a complete text of The Bill Of Rights. He offers his list on pp. 79-81. It includes everything from the Magna Carta through The Pilgrim Code of Law through the Virginia Declaration of Rights through the various amendments proposed by the ratifying conventions of the various states through all the working versions that led up to the final adapted version of The Bill of Rights. In this chapter, Lutz demonstrates the sort of learning that can be teased out of a collection of documents like this. He presents a fascinating table (Table 3.2 on pp.56-60) entitled Amendments Porposed by State Ratifying Conventions Compared with Madison's Original Porposed Amendments. Lutz' analysis and conclusions from this presentation seem unanswerable. Madison simply ignored all requests from the State Ratifying Conventions to alter the proposed national institutions or to curtail their powers and focused entirely on protecting individual rights from the national government (pp.61-63). This chapter is altogether brilliant.
All in all, Lutz is pioneering a discipline that is at once analytical, theoretical, and philosophical. He believes (influenced by Eric Voegelin) that we have to start off with how a people define themselves. But we can go beyond that to evaluate how well their institutions serve to create the sort of people and nation that they want to create. We can then tease out what institutions work and how. This knowledge is then used to study and perhaps advise developing democracies. This is the work that Lutz seems to be engaged in now to judge from the reviews I have read of his latest book, Principles of Constitutional Design.
This book is not just a suggestive primer on methodology. It offers superb examples of that methodology at work and serves as an entry point to the work of an important constitutional scholar. Good stuff, people.

Kansas
Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower (American Presidency (Paper))
Published in Paperback by University Press of Kansas (1979-02)
Author: Elmo Richardson
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Average review score:

Ike finally gets his due
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-11
Read this for graduate American history course. The Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower by Chester J. Pach, Jf. and Elmo Richardson seeks to provide a lucid, cogent, and relatively brief (263 pages) analysis of the Eisenhower presidency. Many early historical writings about Eisenhower's presidency came to the conclusion that he was beyond his depth in the presidency because he lacked any previous elective political experience. The image of the Eisenhower grin and his generally genial demeanor could not conceal his obvious bafflement when the subject was tax policy, civil rights, or farm subsidies. When he spoke extemporaneously, his statements were frequently so baffling that an assistant frequently had to offer clarification to listeners so they could understand the president's point, assuming there was one. Issues that puzzled or bored him he assigned to subordinates-John Foster Dulles for the daily management of foreign relations, George M. Humphrey shaped economic policy, while Sherman Adams handled a host of domestic matters-and reserved his energies for golf, bridge, and fishing. Eisenhower did not so much run the country, as preside over it; at a time of national complacency, he was able to provide some welcome inertia. This image of Eisenhower was challenged by revisionist and post revisionist historians beginning in the 1970s. According to revisionist scholars, Eisenhower only appeared to be a complacent chief executive: although he willingly let his subordinates take responsibility for decisions, within the Oval Office and the Cabinet Room, he was a dynamic and forceful leader who used the powers of his office vigorously and deftly to shape the policies being implemented (e.g., his successful extrication of the United States from the quagmire of the Korean War and his restraint in avoiding intervention in other conflicts such as the Hungarian uprising and the Suez crisis).

The work is divided into a Preface and ten subsequent chapters: "Duty and Ambition" traces the slow but steady evolution of Eisenhower from military man to presidential candidate, to elected office holder and his apprenticeship at learning how to play political hardball; "Organizing the Presidency" examines the transition difficulties that occurred between the outgoing Truman administration and Ike's incoming administration, and his efforts at organizing a post-New Deal Fair Deal cabinet; "President, Party, and Congress" analyzes Eisenhower's contentious relationship with the congressional leadership of both political parties over the economy and other domestic issues; "Waging Cold War" looks at Eisenhower's efforts to create a foreign policy that would effectively keep the free world secure and neutralize communist aggression through the use of military strength that would not overburden the American economy; "Personal Victories" focuses on Eisenhower surviving his heart attack and being reelected, as well as foreign policy resolutions especially in Hungary and the Suez; "The Hazards of Deliberate Speed" examines Eisenhower's decisive actions to enforce federal authority and public order over state resistance in Little Rock; "The Erosion of Consensus" analyzes the beginning of the loss of popular support for the Eisenhower administration, the Adams-Goldfine Scandal, and the subsequent return to majority power of the Democrats in
Congress during the midterm elections of 1958; "Intervention and Diplomacy" examines ~ Eisenhower administration foreign policy after the death of Secretary of State Dulles; "Beyond his Grasp" looks at Eisenhower's efforts to holds the line on defense spending, even as the U-2 crisis sabotaged any possibility for Soviet-American detente during his administration; "Epilogue" briefly examines the manner that Eisenhower spent his post-presidential years.

According to Pach and Richardson, Eisenhower hoped to contain the reckless spending of the Truman administration, yet he was able to balance the budget only three times and ran up what was then the largest peacetime deficit in American history-$12 billion in fiscal 1959. The
authors also believe that Eisenhower deserves equal credit for holding the line on defense spending, resisting the perils of the garrison state, and keeping much of the New Deal and its programs weakened and amended, but intact.

As a graduate student in philosophy and history, I recommended this book for anyone interested in American history, foreign policy, Cold War history.

Kansas
The Presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (American Presidency Series)
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kansas (2000-04-27)
Author: George McJimsey
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Average review score:

The best book about Franklin Roosevelt I have read
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-12
A wonderful book in which Franklin D. Roosevelt emerges as a pragmatic and astute politician who manages the government with coordinating regional interests. The book conveys Roosevelt's adaptability to use federalism-a division of power between the federal government and local autonomy or grass roots movements-while implementing a massive restructuring of government to alleviate the Depression. Although Roosevelt had much help from advisers, he enforced the New Deal to reform banking, the Agricultural Adjustment Act to aid farmers, the unconstitutional National Recovery Administration, the Public Works Administration, the National Labor Relations Board and many others. Additionally, the author uses the term pluralism to describe Roosevelt's networking of various interest groups in an attempt to coalesce a coherent fiscal policy. Moreover, this book recognizes that competing interests sometimes precluded a successful outcome for New Deal legislation. Nonetheless, the author gives F.D.R. praise for his cautious approach in conducting foreign affairs and, especially, the United States' entry in World War II. The chapter about Eleanor Roosevelt gives the reader a glimpse into her humanitarian concerns for women and African Americans. The excellent bibliography adds a detailed essay about finding out more on this complex historical figure. This book made me feel as if I actually experienced the years during F.D.R.'s presidency and the outstanding writing added to my reading enjoyment.

Kansas
The Presidency of James Earl Carter, Jr.
Published in Paperback by University Press of Kansas (1993-03)
Author: Burton I. Kaufman
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Average review score:

Carter as he was, mostly failure but some major successes
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-28
Several years ago, a young co-worker asked me about Jimmy Carter and my response was that he was a much better ex-president than he was a president. His subsequent work in areas such as Habitat for Humanity as well as international relations has been excellent. He has served as a goodwill ambassador, election monitor and has negotiated several international agreements that favored the United States. He has also continued to be a champion of human rights causes throughout the world.
Contrasting his success after his presidency with his performance while in office demonstrates the reasons why his presidency is generally assigned a mediocre grade. His idealism in championing human rights was the most obvious example of the truism that idealism may help get you elected, but it gets in the way of governing effectively. In the age of the cold war and international tensions, a cold, heartless pragmatism seems to be the only thing that works.
I found Kaufman's explanations of the Carter presidency to be the most even-handed and honest that I have read. Carter made many mistakes, had some made for him and in other cases was just the victim of circumstances. Nevertheless, he did have some striking successes, the two most notable being the Camp David accords between Israel and Egypt and the treaty relinquishing the Panama canal. In these events, Carter showed how much potential he really had as a president. I remember when the networks pre-empted their regular programming as Carter, Sadat and Begin came back from Camp David with the agreement in hand. It was a stunning achievement and it amazed the world. The magic of that moment is captured in the book, as well as the subsequent problems that continue to plague the region. Despite all the violence in the area of Palestine and Lebanon in the years since the accords were signed, the fact that Israel and Egypt still continue to have formal relations and are at peace show how sturdy those agreements are.
As someone who lived through those years and followed the Carter presidency in great detail, reading this book brought back a great deal of memories. Without attempting to boast, I do have an excellent memory, and the recounting of the events are all exactly as I remember them.
The author closes with a very important and often overlooked point. Carter's presidency is considered a failure, and yet he refused to negotiate away anything in order to release the hostages in Iran. Reagan's presidency is considered a success and yet he attempted a bribe for the release of the hostages in Lebanon by selling armaments to Iran. There is no doubt that on that point, Carter bests Reagan.
I would like to close this review with a personal point. Yes, Carter's pushing of human rights did create problems. But, when you consider that some of those whose rights were being violated, Walesa in Poland and Havel in the Czech Republic, rose to the leadership of their nations, perhaps he was just ahead of his time.


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