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

California
The Silk Road: Two Thousand Years in the Heart of Asia
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (2003-10-06)
Author: Frances Wood
List price: $34.95
New price: $16.00
Used price: $15.97

Average review score:

A great history of the Silk Road!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-12
A wonderful read of Asian history along the famous trade route. The art and photographs are beautiful and the author's style is easy to read. Not your typical, dry history read.

excellent book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-29
This book is full of interesting facts and it takes you in a cultural voyage the whole time. I found it easy to read, informative and engaging.

VERY INFORMATIVE, BEAUTIFUL READ. I LEARNED MUCH FROM THIS ONE!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-04
The Silk Road, by Frances Wood is a wonderfully detailed account of the history of what is probably the most famous "road" in history. Of course we soon learn that this "road" is actually a series of roads running here and there through many countries and many cultures. I must admit that when I first received this book, I had a sinking feeling. It appeared to be just another coffee table book. It certainly looked and felt like one. How wrong I was. Just goes to show you indeed cannot judge a book by its cover nor by its shape. I cannot remember reading a book, in particular on this subject, which was so filled with wonderful facts and obscure bits of knowledge. What was even nicer was the fact that it is so well written and so well researched. Also, unlike many of the books on this subject, it is not Eurocentric by any means. Most of the story of this famous trade route took place in the far and Middle East and this is where the author places the majority of emphasis.

While the author certainly touches on the types of goods which were carried along this route, and does address the economic aspect of trade in this part of the world over the past several thousand years, the majority of this work focuses on the various civilization, many of them completely lost, and on the travels of quite a number of important, but seldom heard of travelers and traders. This is NOT a rehash of all the old tales of Marco Polo, who, thank goodness, was not mentioned all that much. The study of Marco is interesting and enjoyable, but to learn the truth of these days and times, his writings are probably not the most accurate. Besides, if you want to learn of Marco and his family, there are certainly enough other books out there that more than cover the subject.

Now before I continue, the reader should take note. As the author fully admits, this is a very complicated work, made even more so by the spelling of place names and the various rise and fall of numerous civilizations. I must admit that at many times I was completely clueless as to where, who and when the author was referring to. This is not the author's fault, it is mine. I had no idea just how ignorant I was of the geography of the area concerned, and how ignorant of the history of that area. If you do not know what and where Zhou, Xiongnu, Yarkland, Loulan, Zhibin, Parthis, Chang'an, Qin, Gaozong, Dunhuang, Xuanzang, and several hundred other locations are, then you will be in big trouble like I was. Many of these place names are further complicated because of name changes over hundreds of years and by numerous different spellings of the same place. There is obviously a large gap in my education. I had the same problem with names of various tribes and the names of people. Even maps are not that much help, as many of the places mentioned in the author's narrative simply no longer exist. Actually and surprisingly, this did not distract from the overall work all that much. And, when you think about it, what better way of learning these previously unknown facts, than the study of a work such as this? The reader should not be put off by this...consider it a learning challenge and experience!

The author is quite outspoken and quite critical during the last part of the book when addressing "The Great Game" and the role the major European powers had in raping, exploiting and destroying traces of these wonderful and lost civilizations. She is also quite harsh in her assessment as to the role of religion is destroying irreplaceable artifacts in the name of one God or another, even addressing the recent atrocities carried out by the Taliban in Afghanistan against religions shrines and the almost complete destruction of museums, all in the name of religion. While I dearly love having access to some of these pieces of history in our own museums, I must admit that we were as guilty as the next is literally stealing from these countries. On the other hand, one wonders if some of these priceless artifacts would still exist in this world had they not been removed from their original source. Food for thought here!

This is a very readable, scholarly work and the many, many pictures, photographs and reproductions make it an absolute pleasure to the eye. This is one of those books that if you read it for the art work alone, you will enjoy and will learn. If you choose to read only one book covering this fascinating subject, then this is the one you should probably choose.

the best book about "the" silk road
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
This is the best of all the many books I've read about "the" silk road, since I have been visiting Gansu province, China, for the past ten years. It is very informative, as well as beautifully illustrated and engagingly written. Wood adeptly covers the subject from varied perspectives: historical, geographical, cultural, artistic, political,etc. Superb!

Photogenic Silk roads
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
Just for the photos alone, this book is worth purchasing. In addition, it provides a fascinating overview of the history of the various cultures, religions, trade products, explorers and adventurers who have made the words "silk road" evocative of a mythical and exotic time and place.

California
Take My Hand (The Sierra Jensen Series #12)
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (1999-06)
Author: Robin Jones Gunn
List price: $15.60

Average review score:

the last of Sierra?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-08
To be honest, I was a little disappointed in this book. Not because of anything that's inherently wrong with it, but because of the way it seemed to shut the door on Sierra, who is my favorite out of all Robin Jones Gunn's characters. The ending is really quite conclusive, even though it's a beginning of sorts. The problem, I think, stems from Sierra's complicated feelings and ties with Paul which began in the very first book of the series. The climax of the series, of course, is the culmination of that relationship. It seems pretty certain that the two are destined to be together forever, if not as soulmates, as best friends. For the book to end the way it does (c'mon, did we ever doubt that she and Paul would have a heart-to-heart?) makes everything too final for me.

Aside from that, though, this book is excellent. It's sort of light, but it teaches good lessons about relationships, jumping to conclusions, and consequences. I have good memories from reading this series. I think that you, if you give the Sierra series a chance, will end up defending and applauding her like I did.

excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-08
I thought this was a really great book, but will there be more of Sierra? I really liked this book and i hope Mrs. Gunn will do a college series also!

A Wonderful Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-07
This book was one of my favorites that Robin has written! I was litterally sitting on the edge of my seat, waiting to see what would happen next. I would reccomend for anyone who loves romance and excitement to read this book!

one of the best of the sierra books!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-22
this is one of the best sierra jensen books that there is... i loved this one and it is soo cool cuz it tells you more about what's happening with todd and christy and katie too... i hope this series continues past twelve... either that or a new series starts up that also intertwines with this one and the christy miller series!!!!

Mrs.Gunn don't ever stop writing
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-20
I really injoyed this book exsepcialy about Tawin and Jermey are getting married. And Sierra and Paul. But there was in this one when I thought Paul was a poop. When Serria jumped to conclusions and accused him of getting his old girlfriend pregnant. But it was a surprise for me. Through the rest of the chapters till the truth came out I hated Paul. But everything worked out. And Christy and Tood I'd never thought. Well Mrs.Gunn don't stop wrighting. Go into making these movies too. I'd watch em . Keep doing what you're doing Mrs.Gunn.

California
Top Trails Sacramento: Exploring Valley, Foothills, and Mountains in the Sacramento Region (The Top Trails)
Published in Paperback by Wilderness Press (2007-11-15)
Author: Steven L. Evans
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.13
Used price: $9.94

Average review score:

good book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
Great book for getting outdoors. Taken 4 trails since the book arrived and the author described the trails perfectly. Buy the book and take a hike taday. Recommended!

Sacramento trails
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
Great book! Well written and accurate descriptions of the trails. Highly recommended for anyone looking to hike in the Sacramento valley - even those with kids and/or pets.

A top pick for any California library
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-07
Any who would explore the valleys or mountains of California's state capital region must have TOP TRAILS SACRAMENTO: MUST-DO HIKES FOR EVERYONE in their collection. It covers opportunities both urban and rural and joins others in the 'must do' trips series, comes from a Sacramento resident and hiker, and reveals both major routes and lesser-known regions. With its trail feature charts documenting wildlife, scenic vistas and trails and its details on weekend getaways and maps, TOP TRAILS SACRAMENTO offers up key getaways for all and is a top pick for any California library, especially those closer to Sacramento.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Learned a lot about some "hidden gem" hikes
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-24
The details in this book helped me find some hidden natural gems just an hour or so from my home in the busy suburbs, and provided much interesting historical, geological and biological background to enrich the experience. Clear directions and trail descriptions made planning and navigating much easier. The amateur photos that I took on these hikes are like postcards - mountains, hills, streams, flowers, and incredible trees. The natural beauty and grandeur that I encountered on these hikes got me through some troubled times, and provided soothing reminders that nature's beautiful rhythms still go on despite our best efforts to interfere with them. I'm giving this book as a gift to all my central CA nature-loving friends.

Top Trails is Top Notch
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-27
I've used many hiking books over the years, but Steve Evans' Top Trails Sacramento is by far the most user friendly. The book gives you good directions to each trailhead and a realisitic assessment of difficulty. Best of all, you feel like you have the author along with you, pointing out interesting tidbits and things to watch for along the way. The maps and trail directions are also easy to follow.

California
Twilight of the Mammoths: Ice Age Extinctions and the Rewilding of America (Organisms and Environments)
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (2005-11-07)
Author: Paul S. Martin
List price: $45.00
New price: $38.25
Used price: $11.00

Average review score:

Not light reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
Well written and interesting, but not light reading for the average reader without a background in anthropology. Still, you will probably learn a lot, if you skip over the latin.

Great for Understanding Ice Age Mega Fauna Extinctions
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-12
This book is an excellent, reasoned discourse on the evidence chain and the theories behind why large mammals in North America went extinct all at the same time - about 12,500 years ago. Before I read this book I had heard of the popular theories of why the north american megafauna went extinct, but had not heard which theory was most likely. Martin makes clear that the overkill theory has the greatest logical and evidentiary support.

it's important in science to keep an open mind about causes. Recently, more work has been done on an ash layer in the geologic record that suggests a great fire or possible comet explosion that may have occurred around the time of the megafauna extinctions in north america. I can believe that such an event had a contributing impact. After reading this book though, there is no question in my mind that n. american megafauna would have survived even a great fire or comet blast so long as they were not also subject to human induced causes.

The other great theories for ice age mammal extinction are referred to as 'overill', for disease-related explanations, and 'overchill', for cold climate explanations. Martin skillfully and convincingly refutes these theories for their unsound logic and lack of evidence.

It is clear to me now that the reason for this debate between overkill, overill, and overchill persists only because the evidentiary chain is not clearly in favor enough of any one of the 3. But the preponderance of evidence, and the soundest reasoning, favors overkill by at least a 10-1 compared to overill or overchill. I would expect future archaeological and paleontological discoveries to add to the evidence supporting overkill.

One final note: I am now a huge supporter of the Pleistocene park concept, and am hopeful that humans are able to rescue the remaining African and Asian megafauna from extinction with park reserves in Siberia and the Americas. I can envision now a park in Texas with asian elephants replacing mammoths, African or Asian lions once again bringing the lost American lion back to life, camels returning to their evolutionary American origins, wild horse herds, introduced threatened African or Asian ungulate species to stand in for their recently extinct American cousins, cheetahs returning, and even threatened tigers getting a second life as the replacement for now-extinct scimitar and saber tooth cats. I leave it to a zoologist to figure out how to replace a giant ground sloth, or even a Shasta ground sloth.

Other pleistocene park possibilities exist in other parts of the world. South america could easily see a return of elephants. The remaining ancestor of the short faced bear, which is the South American spectacled bear, is itself threatened and could use a reserve somewhere else in the world.

Enjoy this book!

Twilight of the Mammoths
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-09
Paul Martin makes a strong arguement for human caused extinctions of ice-age mammals including the mammoths through human overkill hunting behavior. Insted of presenting an idea without support, Martin provides extensive documentation to support his position. However, as intriguing as his ideas about human involvement in the loss of ice-age and post ice-age mammals are, it is difficult to believe that humans spread to every nook and cranny of north, central and south America causing the extinction of every large mammal grouping present. Questions also arise regarding the type of animal they might have hunted versus other available animals. Why would early humans decide to hunt to extinction the giant bison when smaller and presumably less dangerous bison were available? Why would they possibly hunt the American lion, sabertooth tiger or dire wolves when there was, according to Martin, a wealth of animals available for food, skins and bone? Obviously, something happened toward the end of the last advance of continental ice sheets and the early peopling of the Americas, but I do not believe overkill is the sole cause of the disappearance of large mammals of the Americas. A combination of factors including human most likely is the cause of their loss.

Thought-provoking arguments and speculation
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-02
This is one of those books that may jolt the conventional wisdom implanted in your brain, especially if you are an environmentalist. First the negative...I thought the first 5 chapters, about one-half, of this book to be a bit boring, telling me more about sloth dung than I really wanted to know. But then the book picked up -- way up -- in interest.

The true "natural" environment of the United States, in Martin's view, existed 13,000 years ago before man got here and that it has been out of balance since. Martin comes down strong on the side that human beings were responsible for the extinction of many large mammals in the Americas about 13,000 years ago and his argument is persuasive. He also makes a strong case that human beings have lived in the Americas for little more than 13,000 years. This is a hot-button issue among archaeologists, but Martin's point is: if the Indians were here more than 13,000 years ago where are the signs of their presence? Not many, if any, have been found in a hundred years of looking.

His most interesting point and new to me was his proposals to re-people (wrong word, maybe "re-animate"?) the New World with representatives of the large mammals that became extinct. For example, why is that our government is trying to kill off the burros and wild horses in national parks? Horses originated in the Americas; they became extinct about 13,000 years ago. Why not allow them to reestablish themselves as a native species?

And then he really gets off on a speculative tangent, "rewilding America." Camels and Llamas lived in the United States until 13,000 thousand years ago; why not reintroduce them as native, wild species. Similarly rhinocerous, elephant, lion, tiger and other mammal species. To be sure the species of the mammals that became extinct are not exactly the same species that now live -- but close enough, in his opinion. An Asian elephant, he says, is closer genetically to extinct mammoths than it is to the African elephant.

Smallchief

A hypothesis is just that...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-17
Twilight Of The Mammoths by Paul S. Martin is a book I wanted to read because I wanted to see what the author had to say about the overkill idea. That Ice Age extinctions were caused by human invasion of the New World and not by germs and sudden change in the climate.
I have to say he did a good job not only of explaining and defending his hypothesis but at pointing out the weak points in the other theories of how the mass extinctions of the megamammals came about. The book is a solid read but somewhat dry. Lots of data on kill sites, pollen, climate changes and lots of dung.
He also takes a few chapters to talk about the idea rewilding the New World. In some ways that has already been going on so we may wish to take a controlling hand in the process.
Published in 2005 the information is up-to-date and hard to argue with. But who knows what will be discovered in the years to come?

California
Two Badges: The Lives of Mona Ruiz
Published in Hardcover by Arte Publico Press (1997-09)
Authors: Mona Ruiz and Geoff Boucher
List price: $11.50
New price: $7.95
Used price: $2.65

Average review score:

A beautiful second act
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
Mona Ruiz is an inspiration, someone both young men and women can relate to, who sees herself and the world she lives in as honestly as possible. This book, written with reporter Greg Boucher, is actually the best written and most fairminded I have read about the gang lifestyle and someone who overcame great obstacles to turn her life around, ultimately using her former life as a gang banger to her advantage as a fine policewoman. I admire her and am happy for her as she continues to try to make her old barrio a better place. As a middle/high school librarian in a school with a number of students who are fascinated by gangs, I am delighted to have found this book and will recommend it to ALL our students. Be safe, Mona.

inspirational
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-21
i began to read this book finally. after years of disregarding it i decided to give it a glance. being related to many of the people in this book it gave me a bit of insight and took me back to the time that they all grew up. for that i am grateful. however at times the writer exhausts the dramatics. I don't know Mona personally, but if this book mirrors your life than my hat goes off to you. it is very inspirational and am glad to hear that it is being read in schools.

Loved it!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-08
This is a really good book to have a teenages read, I read it just because and I liked it so much that I gave it to my little sister to read who then passed it on to her friends.

A great book by a great author!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-16
This book was required when I took one of my college classes. After reading it I knew why. The book offers an inside look into the life of a young woman, hispanic and in a gang. She struggles with many obstacles and in the end pulls herself through. The book is not only inspirational but it is also a demonstration of triumph in spite of obstacles! I give it Five stars and hope that more people can get to reading this book. Maybe instead of requiring it as a college course they should offer it in Junior high's and High Schools. This is the kind of book that should be read.

Need more.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-17
I am an English teacher at Santa Ana Valley High School, in Santa Ana, CA. Ms Ruiz spoke at Valley several years ago. Her presentation was as memorable as her book, "Two Badges." I bought three copies the day of her presentation, I have since bought ten more. My students love the book. Young men and young women, alike. They relate, and it is such a strong story with a postive, true life ending. Unfortunately, or fortunately (depending on your view) these books do not make it back to my room after being checked out. I am down to three copies. In a way I am happy, in that I know the books are in contiuous use, they are getting passed around to friends. Cool. It is just that I can not afford to buy a bunch more books for my kids this fall.

California
Up and Down California in 1860-1864: The Journal of William H. Brewer (Library Reprint)
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (1975-01-03)
Author: William H. Brewer
List price: $24.95
New price: $7.24
Used price: $3.00

Average review score:

If you like California??
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-16
Walking though California is great! What a way to spend the Civil War!
This book is loaded with virginal observations of the state and some of the effects that the gold rush had on the environment.

great book of history
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-09
This book came in great shape. It is a very good book of very early california history. It's well put together for the fourth edition. I have thoroughly enjoyed the bookd

cool find
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-11
nice to read the words of a man long dead who lived in a young America.
great read, lots of details on california's transformation period

Fascinating and easy read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-20
I loved this book, and have started giving copies as gifts. The synopsis explains well what it is, so I won't go into that. But the style is both easy and intelligent, an easy yet rewarding read. Brewer's writing sounds like you're sitting down to a cup of coffee with this guy as he tells you these great stories (not 'tall tales' though.)

I also loved the format, since it is a collection of letters. It allowed me to pick up the book and read 1 page or 20 pages depending on how much time I had, where I was etc. It's Ok to put it down for a week or more, but then you can jump right back in.

It is a 'long' book, but there's no compulsion to read it straight through, you can meander through this book over days, weeks or months, or 'real-time' in years even, that's how his family and friends experienced it.

If you live anywhere in California where Brewer went, or if you've visited there, it is fascinating to hear his descriptions of the places from 150 years before.

I can't rave enough about this book!

A Riveting Glimpse of the California That Was
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-01
I bought this book last summer in Lee Vining CA while on a trip through the Eastern Sierra and after reading it found myself looking at California with new eyes.
One reviewer said that even those who are not Californians will enjoy this book. True enough, but I think that the reader who has a detailed knowledge of the geography of the state will come away from Up And Down California In 1860-1864 with a much greater appreciation for Brewer's accomplishments. I know California very well, and as I read along, I could picture nearly every place Brewer described in my mind's eye because I had been at those places myself.
This book is a riveting and thoroughly absorbing glimpse of the California that was. Brewer's style is informative, entertaining, and not bogged down by political correctness. He calls things as he sees them and gives the reader not only a physical description of his journeys with all their pleasures and hardships, but also a good look at the way people lived and rubbed along with one another in what was then a brave new world. His journeys covered most of the state save the Mojave/Colorado deserts, the San Diego area, the extreme Northeast, and the area between what is now Healdsburg and Eureka. Some of the places he does go are remote still today, such as the area of the New Idria mines in present San Benito County and the still wild Southern Sierra along the upper reaches of the Kern River.
I recommend Brewer's journal to all who have an abiding love for the diverse state that is California. After reading it, you will see the state with new eyes every time you take a road trip along its byways.

California
Veiled Sentiments: Honor and Poetry in a Bedouin Society
Published in Hardcover by Univ of California Pr (1986-12)
Author: Lila Abu-Lughod
List price: $45.00
Used price: $15.14
Collectible price: $45.00

Average review score:

The Meaning of the Craft of Ethnography
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-04


What is most interesting about this book -- which centers on the poetry of the Bedouin tribe of Awlad Ali -- is not the poetry per se, but that it gives an insider's view of the craft of Ethnography. It shows, through the eyes of a skilled ethnographer, and almost by indirection and in reverse order, how meaning is attached to cultures by the people who live in them.

By peeling back the skin of the Awlad Ali culture - one of the nomadic tribes that once hovered around the edge of the Western Egyptian Desert -- we learn, not just "the ways" of this and similar Nomadic tribes, but more generally, the steps needed to attach meaning to the onion called culture. This analysis reveals, layer-by-layer, the structure and texture of the Awlad Ali worldview. It also reveals the various ideologies that supported its construction.

The Awlad Ali tribe is a society based on blood kinship, on honor, and on a kind of fierce tribal autonomy and independence. And however abstract these categories may seem, and however much they may seem settled at birth, they are in fact constantly being re-negotiated in the tribe's everyday efforts to survive: "lived deeds" in the Awlad Ali culture always trump ascribed status and words. The culture has especially derogatory names and references to those who talk, but fail to act.

Moreover, cultural meaning and societal rules remain close to the ground: that is, closely attached to survival needs. Ascribed status - that is patrilineal genealogy, maleness, etc. definitely have a pride of place in the culture, but these do not settle the matter of status once and for all: What one does with these is the final arbiter of ones position and status within the tribe.

As an American peeping into another culture, what I learned in a somewhat painfully indirect way is that most of rest of the world - even primitive tribes -- still speak and relate to each other in the language of humanity: poetry, songs, prayer, proverbs, folklore, tales, myths, etc. To them, these are not mere cultural trinkets, ornamentations and affectations, to be tossed about during holidays, or to be commercialized and then tossed aside, or just the colorful tools used to promote a particular kind of politics or political organization, but they are the real meat of human discourse. They serve as the actual conduits through which deep human feelings are conveyed and transmitted.

As a backdrop to our own culture, there are at least two lessons to be learned (indirectly and in relief) from this book:

(1) That it is possible to construct a cultural worldview (a complete cosmology of meaning) entirely without the need for a category called "race" or without reference to the idea of a "religion." The author, who was Christian and a partly-white female, lived in the home of the tribe she was studying for two years, which was nominally Muslim, but with all of the many intersecting categories of meaning: race and religion, were never mentioned to her or ever played a role in tribal discourse.

(2) That we Americans live in a social world that is bereft of normal meaningful human attachments and discourse. In comparison to the Awlad Ali tribe, we live in a world of greatly diminished humanity in which racism, acquisition of things, commodification and consumerization of those things, rationalizations and political spin, false piety, rationing of intangibles qualities, knee-jerk bipartisanism, sublimated hatred, and artistic shallowness, are substitutes for real meaning.

Is this all just an inevitable part of modernity? It is difficult to know, but we must be grateful to this author for showing us with great skill that there are other images of, and paths to meaningfulness.

Ten Stars

a good read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-14
the book is written by an american woman with mideastern roots -- she provides great insight into the traditionals of the bedouin and arab worlds. I read this before I went to Egypt and it provided great foundation for understanding the culture of the town and village. I like her writing style -- she makes anthopological analysis interesting by explaining in the context of her interactions with the bedouins.

Evocative ethnography
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-17
I agree with the other reviewers. It was the best ethnography I can remember reading. What struck a chord with me was her description and explanation of the women's submission to the men, that the submissiveness was valuable only when it was voluntarily given. The idea of women being submissive to men is not only Islamic, but exists also in Christianity.

Tremendous Insight
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-25
Lila Abu Lughod, an Arab American woman, lived among the Awlad Ali tribes of the North West of Egypt for two years. Veiled Sentiments is the book she wrote on the lives and poetry of Awlad Ali. Abu Lughod field work was clearly not carried out from a "superior" stance; she sympathized with her subjects and dealt with them as equal human beings rather than inferior specimen or cultures. Abu Lughod attitude, intelligence, training and tremendous analystical ability helped her in developing great insight and understanding of this fascinating culture.

Abu Lughod analysis of concepts such as "hishma" was truly incisive and shed a great deal of light on the nature of modesty between women and men and amongst men and women. The analysis seems to explain behaviors and norms witnessed elsewhere in Egypt and indeed other parts of the Middle East.

An important thesis of Abu Lughod is that the Awlad Ali people often communicated in very conservative and modest way directly through words; they only said what was proper and fitted the norms. Yet a second mode of communication far more true and expressive was found in their little songs or poems.

Abu Lughod discussed gender relation amongst Awlad Ali at length and the relationship between women and the families of their husbands and the society at large. I really enjoyed this book and would highly recommend it. For an excellent work on veiling and gender issues, I would recommend Leila Ahmed's Women & Gender in Islam.

A Tool for Understanding
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-04
"Veiled Sentiments" is academic. It is the outcome of the author's living in a Bedouin community in northern Egypt (the Western Desert) for two years, a feat of no mean proportions.

Lila Abu-Lughod came to a deep understanding of such aspects of the culture as blood ties, veiling and poetry not only because of her talent and training but also because she has ties to that culture. She calls academics like herself "halfies" because they belong both "inside and outside the communities they write about." She realizes that such a situation benefits them in terms of gathering knowledge within close cultures.

The veiling of women (or rather women's veiling of themselves) is an important topic because of recent events including world politics and of the ongoing research in feminism. It is also important because it is so often misunderstood and so difficult to understand even when it is explained.

After reading Abu-Lughod's renowned (in the world of academics) book, "Veiled Sentiments," I think I have a better handle on veiling than I ever would have had otherwise. It was not easy to absorb the concepts that surround it. That it took ΒΌ of a 315 page book to do it (a conservative estimate) is a testament to the intricacies of and the psychological motivations behind this cultural /religious practice.

Learning more about veiling alone made this study one well worth reading. But the surprise for both the reader, and-as explained by Ms. Abu-Lughod-the author herself is the discovery of this culture's use of poetry. To take it one step further, the insight into how societies in general (at least ours and that of the Bedouins) similarly use their poetry and relate to it.

Abu-Lughod finds that poetry is used somewhat differently among women in the Awlad ` Ali tribes than it is used by men. Because I am writing my own book of poetry called "Skyscapes: A Woman's View," I was especially interested in this aspect of "Sentiments;" it also was, by the author's own admission, an amazing and important cultural discovery. A group of women in China have their own secret language apart from the men; now this anthropologist brings to our attention how the poetry and veiling customs of these women reveal their emotions and are rooted in the traditions of a society in which they live quite separately from men.

Though this book is not meant for mainstream readers, I hope that many who have no ties to anthropology will make an effort to read it. I believe that women will find it especially interesting but men will also find pertinent information for today's political climate within its pages. No amount of travel could impart the depth of understanding of this culture, and-by extension-similar cultures that this book does.

(Carolyn Howard-Johnson is the author of "This is the Place..." )

California
Watcher in the Woods (Dreamhouse Kings Series, Book 2)
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Nelson (2008-05-06)
Author: Robert Liparulo
List price: $14.99
New price: $7.49
Used price: $10.50

Average review score:

4 1/2 Stars...This Should Not Be Allowed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-01
Okay, this guy named Robert Liparulo decides he can write thrillers. He gives us some great page-turners, then thinks that qualifies him to write YA books, as well. I figure I'll give the series a try, and I speed through book one, "House of Dark Shadows."

Well, this pesky Liparulo fellow leaves me hanging, so I pick up book two right away--which I rarely do when reading through a series--and I race to the end of that one even quicker. Yeah, this writer's that good.

Starting where book one left off, "Watcher in the Woods" churns through more adventures, more conflicts (with police, Civil War soldiers, and WWII tanks), and troubles between the King family members. We also meet a mysterious stranger, who tends to spy on the Kings from the neighboring woods. The Kings have moved into an old home, but find themselves caught in a whirlpool of portals into history. They've lost something very important, and they must figure out how to get this precious thing back without losing their trust in each other.

Although I, just like the story's teenaged Xander, got impatient with the family's plodding approach toward their problem, I began to understand the father's reasoning. Maybe Liparulo just had me tied into too many knots to believe that anyone could approach something so emotional so logically. Either way, "Watcher in the Woods" sucked me along in a few short readings, and left me hanging once again in anticipation for book three, "Gatekeepers."

Phaw! And that Liparulo guy thought he could write YA books. I'll have to keep reading these things until I can prove him wrong.

WATCH OUT WORLD!!! "Our Friend Bob" Has a Few Surprises
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-20
Sometimes when you know, you know! Right? Like when I first read Robert Liparulo's "Comes a Horseman," I KNEW I'd found a new favorite. You know, forget the fact that he had "Germ" and "Deadfall," along with a couple Young Adult books on the way. I was pretty certain I'd found another author to put near the top of my list. I think he's that good! Ted Dekker endorsed the first 2 books of this series, "Dreamhouse Kings," and Liparulo is creeping right up to Dekker. That's because he's almost as good! That's saying a lot right there. So, how about it? Are you ready for adventure with the King family? And by the way, don't even think about setting a cruise control, the setting is all or nothing!!

If you met the Kings, Xander, David, Toria, along with the mom and dad, you realize that they have a lot going on. Especially with this new house. And in book #2, Mom is missing, and Xander will stop at nothing to find her. And David is just as committed. But somebody else is just as committed, and he's always lurking in the shadows. And right when they meet this stranger, Dad immediately doesn't like him. Adventure, madness and mayhem is the name of this game, but it's really no game to the Kings. But if it is a game, then they have to play along to the rest of the world to assure others that everything is just fine. Does that sound like an adventure you'd be interested in?

Robert Liparulo has caught the attention of many, and he's shocked a lot of people with great writing! Tess Gerritsen, Michael Palmer, James Rollins, Steve Berry, all those authors are bestsellers, and they ALL give Liparulo a seal of approval. I give him nothing but the best, because he IS one of the best today! That's no surprise to me. But the world better watch out, because Liparulo has a ball rolling. And that ball is just rolling faster and gaining amazing speed!! AWESOME!

Another fast read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-26
This story picks up as if it's just the next chapter of "House of Dark Shadows." That's good, if you had "Watcher in the Woods" handy, because you're going to want to go from one to the next asap. That's also the drawback, when you finish "Watcher" you're even more so going to want the next installment - and it comes out in January 2009. Write faster, Bob! Just kidding, I'm sure he's doing everything he can to keep us going.

I have come to really enjoy this family - they bond and grow together throughout this book, and they way they pull together seems to be the antithesis of the disfunctional family we all read about.

The adventures in this book become more recognizable by period and character, and I really look forward to the next 2-3 books as I'm sure you will if you buy these books.

This Series just keeps getting Better!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
I couldnt wait to read this after reading the first book and was not disappointed in the least. This is another great book for adults as well as the YA crowd. The king family lives in a house with strange rooms that change and take you to different times. This time someone strange is watching the family and wants to run them out to get the house for themselves. Will they be able to figure out what to do before another family member goes missing. Again a must for fans of liparulo and for suspense fans in general. Also go to [...] to enter a contest where robert liparulo might use your idea in a future book in the series.

Oh No, Not the End? I Have to Wait !?!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-07

Watcher in the Woods is the continuing story of the King family.

David King, 12-years-old is facing huge traumas while attempting to keep the outside world from destroying his chance of happiness.

Grasping hold of the King family legacy of bravery, David dives into the unknown to save his family at great cost to himself.

From the first word to the final "not the end" I cheered and cringed for the Kings.

I hope the next book releases very soon. This is book two in the series I'm going to recommend regardless of age or gender. I'd also love to see it turned into a movie.

Easily frightened readers might struggle with the intensity, otherwise, this is a powerful story well told.

California
Welcome to the USA: A humorous photostory describing an immigrant's journey through California, Seattle, and Nashville
Published in Paperback by CreateSpace (2008-04-08)
Author: Kalpanik S.
List price: $13.08
New price: $13.08

Average review score:

Artful, Creative and Witty
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-22
Kalpanik blends art, craft and wit into a narrative which teaches us lessons we did not know we know.

Wonderful book! Funny, and yet very thoughtful
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-15
This book combines elements from good humor, a memoir, a scenic travelogue, a touching love story, science fiction and philosophy.

Whether you ever wondered about meaning of it all, or you want to read something light amusing, or want to see places like Seattle, San Diego, and Nashville from the eyes of the writer, or vicariously live the life of a
student at University of California, this book is for you!

The author, purportedly an Artificial Imagination computer program simulating a life/career journey through the Hi Tech and yet very scenic world of California and Washington (Settle) is witty still though down to earth and funny! The book is written in a very conversational style, as if you are reading a letter from a close friend!!

Good book, nice clean humor, makes you crack up!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-15
Great book, love it! It's hilarious! I could not stop giggling, I cracked up page after page. Really Nice!

And so many nice photographs. I felt I was traveling with the author, no, I was him, feeling his ambitions, his surprise, excitement and pain. And what a brave soul! He (yes, despite its claims to have been written by an AI program, this book is written by a loving, feeling, breathing human for sure!)--He is able to maintain his sense of humor even as he moves from one place to another, faces one set back after another! He always comes back!

Wow! What a story!!

Great book, transcends genres to combine humor, photo-travelogue, a moving love story, memoirs, philosophy and a touch of Sci-Fi
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-15
This book transcends genres -- it's a good collection of memoirs, entertaining style, nice splash of humor, an extremely detailed travelogue with beautiful photographs, a good description of technology, a touch of Science Fiction (since it is purportedly written by a Artificial Imagination program) and suffused with philosophical musing and last but not the least, a moving love story.

Even though it's obviously written by a Technologist, the book is very human. It is primarily about the immigrant experience, but Kalpanik is extremely observant and has an eye to look for the unusual, notice what stands out and build humorous side of people, places and his own life.

Wonderful! I am specially moved by his bitter-sweet love story at the beginning.

Very engaging, light and entertaining!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19

California
The Wentworths
Published in Hardcover by Overlook Hardcover (2008-03-13)
Author: Katie Arnoldi
List price: $23.95
New price: $5.98
Used price: $5.97

Average review score:

A Definite MUST for your Book List!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
Even though I finished reading "The Wentworths," I'm still laughing! Kate Arnoldi's creative, well-written satire is a brilliant insider's peek at the lives of the extremely wealthy and depraved.

While each of the characters has his/her own quirks - Mr. Wentworth's philandering with women more than half his age and alcoholism; Mrs. Wentworth's narcissism and innocence-in-bliss naievete; Conrad Wentworth's misogyny and potential murderous rage coupled with his superiority complex; Becca Wentworth's drug use, anorexia and control complex from failing to live up to her mother's expectations; her husband Paul's passiveness; Little Joey's Kleptomania; Monica's drug use and hatred towards her mother; and Norman Wentworth's Peter Pan Syndrome, drug use, and oddball behavior - they are incredibly life-like and it is easy to feel empathy, especially since each of their stories are autobiographical at times.

The book is written from varying perspectives which enables the author to show-off her ability to write from many different "voices" -she is truly a gifted novelist. Additionally, the author teeters the fine line between the downright funny and the depressingly sad in such a way that the result is uplifting and the reader laughs at the family, while managing to feel empathetic towards them, which is an incredibly difficult result to achieve.

I am looking forward to readiner more from this highly talented writer and recommend this book for everyone!

Even Better than Chemical Pink
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-23
Katie Arnoldi is one of my favorite writers. In "The Wentworths" she tops her impressive debut with an even better, more complex and more deftly handled narrative (and this is from someone who loved "Chemical Pink.").

Her ability to juggle POV and keep the story riveting, no matter who the focal character is makes this a memorable, wonderfully done novel, both story and craft wise. Katie Arnoldi is one of the best writers working today. Her prose has the effortless lapidary precision of Joan Didion when Didion is on her game. You should get this book. I'm going to re-read it and I can't wait for the next one.

Good summer holiday read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-20
The Wentworth's is a great book for lying on the beach and passing the time. It has short chapters, so you can just take a few moments and enjoy a quick passage and not get interrupted in the middle. It is a little too short and ends abruptly. I was left wanting to hear the next chapter in the Wentworth's lives.

Quick, funny and so L.A.!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-19
A well written story weaving the voices (and craziness) of many different characters.Fun and weird at the same time. Easy to get into and easy to identify with at least one of the Wentworths. Enjoy!

Ouch, that's funny
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-18
It's been way too long since Katie Arnoldi gave us "Chemical Pink," but I have to say it was worth the wait. With "The Wentworths," Arnoldi widens her lens to take in much more of contemporary LA than in her first novel (and just for a little extra fun, drags along the odious Charles Worthington - apparently recovered from his inglorious fate at the end of "Chemical Pink" - and gives him a cameo). We get to peek into lots of (totally) dark and (wildly) hilarious corners of SoCal, thanks to the wanderings of the vast and depraved Wentworth family. (What do they have? Everything!! What do they want? More!!) If you've lived here long enough - and I'm just a tad ashamed to admit that I have - you're bound to know people who remind you of each member of the cast. But I doubt that you've imagined them as fully or as sharply as Arnoldi has, or could tell their stories with as much wicked delight. I've just finished "The Wentworths" - in one extended sitting - and would like to write a much longer and more laudatory review, but instead I must one-click a copy of "America's 50 Greatest Small Towns," then phone the movers. Bravo, Katie.


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