South America Books


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

South America
The Impact of the Haitian Revolution in the Atlantic World (The Carolina Lowcountry and the Atlantic World)
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (2002-01)
Author:
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Great Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-21
This is a great book about the Haitian Revolution it is different essay about this revolution impact on other nations in the Atlantic World. It not only gives various historians thoughts and ideas but a more rounder view of what this revolution really did for the atlantic world.

A Good Starting Point
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-07
Like most of the recent work of David Geggus, this book provides a good frame work and introduction for a much-needed academic study of the Haitian Revolution and it's world-wide impact.

South America
In Rosa's Mexico
Published in Hardcover by Knopf Books for Young Readers (1996-10-08)
Author: Campbell Geeslin
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In Rosa's Mexico
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-28
We came across this book at the local library and loved it because it incorporated some Spanish words within the stories! My daughter looks for it everytime we go to the library! She loves it and loves to practice filling in the Spanish word when we read the story together... she is only 3 right now! I highly recommend this book for some great short stories with an introduction to bilingualism!

This book soars!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-18
These three simple stories are beautifully written glimpses into the day to day life of a little Mexican girl named Rosa. Magical things happen in her world and the paintings that accompany the text bring that magic to life and give it texture. Oh sure, the book teaches about responsibility and sharing, the importance of helping others and telling the truth, but it doesn't preach. It is a lovely book that my 3 year old never tires of. As a bonus, there are about 20 simple spanish words to enhance the experience. A first-rate keeper and a first-rate gift!

South America
In Search of Another Country: Mississippi and the Conservative Counterrevolution (Politics and Society in Twentieth Century America)
Published in Hardcover by Princeton University Press (2007-03-12)
Author: Joseph Crespino
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Tying Civil Rights to the rise of Conservatism
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
In current historical scholarship, the rise of modern Conservatism is one of the "hot topics" that is being explored. Historians have evaluated the rise of Conservatism in the South previously (see Matthew Lassiter's book "The Silent Majority", for example), but I am unaware of other attempts to link the Civil Rights Movement and the rise of Modern Conservatism as Joseph Crespino has done in this fine work.

Crespino chose to evaluate Mississippi, which has historically been known as a bastion for inequality and the home of many Civil Rights activities, in the context of political change. He has done so quite skillfully; his arguments demonstrate that Civil Rights and Conservatism are (at least in Mississippi) inextricably linked.

I found the chapter on school integration/segregation and the fights with the IRS to be the most intriguing in the book - this demonstrates Crespino's ability to evaluate multiple sources (government regulations, tax law, and public education) and weave together a compelling narrative explaining how these are related.

I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in either the rise of modern Conservatism or the outgrowth of the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi.

Important contribution to history of race and politics
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-30
Joe Crespino's _In Search of Another Country: Mississippi and the Conservative Counterrevolution_ is concerned with understanding two phenomena--white southern resistance to the civil rights movement (as manifested in the state of Mississippi) and the resurgence of conservatism in the last two decades of the twentieth century--and the ways the two phenomena are linked. Existing scholarship has studied each of these issues, as Crespnio notes, and has offered hypotheses to explain the role of white conservative Mississippians in the national Republican triumphs of the 1980s, for instance. One such explanation (the southern strategy thesis) has held, to put it simply, that terms like "states' rights" became coded ways of invoking "segregation today...segregation tomorrow...segregation forever." But such a thesis ignores the complex ways that southerners earnestly initiated a suspicious stance toward a big federal government fueled by taxation and overinvolved in the lives of individuals.

Such suspicion was intimately linked, for instance, to "schools founded by Christian parents trying to provide a holistic religious orientation for their child's education" (13). It's not that religious schools didn't serve the purpose of segregating wealthier white kids from poorer black kids, but they did serve the purpose of educating white conservative children in a Christian context, a purpose white conservatives believed in and espoused whether they gave thought to the segregationist purposes or not. The point is not to defend conservative whites against racism, however, nor even to evaluate their motivations--but rather to understand the motivations in all their nuances. To ignore the conviction of these white conservatives is to simplify both the reality of conservative history and to limit the ways one might imagine addressing racist education policies.

Indeed, the importance of Crespino's intervention is to complicate scholarship on the conservative white South so that we don't continue thinking of places like Mississippi as singularly egregious in their racism and conservatism--a habit of thinking that would have us overlook the more invidious and subtle forms of national racism and conservatism. And just why should we care about Mississippi? Precisely, Crespino says, because historians and social scientists have traditionally considered it non-representative of the nation--which, Crespino shows, isn't quite the case. Indeed, Mississippi's more overtly hateful politics is, in an important sense, simply the flip side of what Crespino calls American conservatives' ambivalence "about the principle of equality in modern politics" (10)--that is, the flip side of what have become legitimate forms of exclusion and enforced inequality.

In the end, Crespino's book offers copious and convincing evidence in support of his argument. Not only that, it does so with elegant prose. This is an important contribution to scholarship on the history of race and politics, and one suspects it will become necessary reading for those who expect to advance this disciplinary conversation.

South America
In Search of Western Oregon
Published in Paperback by Caxton Press (1991-02-01)
Author: Ralph Friedman
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Must-have for locals
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-28
People from other states should settle for something thin, like Scenic Driving Oregon, but for natives who are looking to explore deeper, who have wondered what's up that pigpath, this is the very best. Too bad he didn't do Eastern Oregon in the same manner.

Love-Song To A State
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-27
Ralph Friedman hitchhiked his way to Oregon in 1933 as a 16-year-old. He spent the next six decades or so lovingly chronicling the unique people and places of his adopted state.

"In Search of Western Oregon" is really a culmination of his life's work. Yes, it's structured as a travel guide; but it's also much more. Friedman covers the well-known sites and history, but his clear emphasis is on the forgotten faces and places that are such an essential part of the Beaver State. Many of the photographs in this book are by Friedman's wife, Phoebe, his partner in both life and work.

Friedman's earlier "Oregon For The Curious," also still in print, offers a similar, but less comprehensive, treatment of both halves of the state. Separately, or together, they provide a unique overview of this diverse, beautiful, often still wild state, and the people who have attempted to find a life in harmony with it. It's wonderful for the armchair traveler and invaluable for anyone who has the desire and opportunity to travel off the beaten path.

South America
In the Shade of the Nispero Tree
Published in Hardcover by Orchard Books (NY) (1999-04)
Author: Carmen T. Bernier-Grand
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Beautiful Perspective
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-22
This book gives a beautiful and rarely seen perspective of Puerto Rican life and its people. It is a good addition to any library(...)

In the Shade of the Nispero Tree
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-19
This family oriented historical is set in Puerto Rico amongst 4th grade girlfriends. A well read perspective on cliques, class division and affluent society in another country! An excellent book and will be of interest to the 5th through the 8th grades, including parents and teachers. Highly recommended reading.

South America
The Incas: New Perspectives
Published in Paperback by W. W. Norton (2008-09-29)
Author: Gordon F. McEwan
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Concise and Complete
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-04
Hooray for Gordon McEwan and his fine book, "The Incas!" He tells us about the Inca and their cultural heritage in down-to-earth, easy-to-read language. McEwan covers the subject in 201 concise pages that provide a level of depth and breadth that should appeal to scholars, but contain enough background to orient someone new to the topic.

McEwan's extensive glossary is a terrific reference piece, and the index is very complete. Probably what I like the most about "The Incas," however, it its careful, scientific approach; the information is dependably well researched and devoid of speculation.

I would recommend "The Inca" to anyone interested in the Inca Empire, arm-chair travellers, and persons planning to travel to any part of the former Inca Empire, including Machu Picchu. The book will double your understanding, and consequently, your enjoyment, of the Inca culture.



Review by Greg Hobbs of The Incas
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-06
Review of Gordon F. McEwan, The Incas, New Perspectives (ABC-CLIO, Inc, Santa Barbara 2006).

By Justice Greg Hobbs, Colorado Supreme Court, Denver.

Here's a book about the Incas written by a scholar who has spent twenty-six years working with Peruvian archeologists in the Cusco Valley to unearth the secrets of Pikillacta and Chokepukio.
The archeology of these two sites reveals a two-thousand year history of the Andean people's adaptation to a stunning and often harsh environment.
The Incas built their civilization on the cultural foundations of the Wari, Tiwanaku, and Pukara civilizations of the Lake Titcaca region, dating back as early as 200 B.C.
As McEwan documented in a 2002 National Geographic article, the Wari (500-1100 A.D.) operated Pikillacta as a ceremonial and administrative center. (Virginia Morell, "Empires Across The Andes," National Geographic at 123 (June 2002)).
At Pikillacta, you can see portions of the aqueduct the Wari built to convey water a great distance from the surrounding mountains. You can also see beehive-looking structures in which the Wari housed mummies of Andean ancestors. The nearby Chokepukio excavations have revealed a temple containing burials and artifacts documenting Inca religious rituals.
McEwan's important highly readable book about the Incas explains that the Andean people revered their ancestors. In life, the mummies had been political authorities. Their preservation was important to the continuation of land tenure and water rights in local communities. "Mummified ancestors were believed to bridge the gap between the natural and supernatural worlds . . . The mummy's most important function was to intervene in the spirit world in order to maintain the flow and abundance of water."
The Incas believed that springs and rivers harbored living spirits. They spread the ashes of fine-woven cloth and llamas upon the waters as a sacrifice. They built magnificent ceremonial and drinking water fountains at such places as Tipon (high above the Cusco Valley) and Machu Picchu (high above the Urubamba River). They harnessed stream and spring water for irrigation on ingeniously-constructed terraces that still hang in seemingly impossible ravines and mountain sides like Tipon, Moray, Pisac, and Machu Picchu.
The Incas built many granaries to feed the people in times of scarcity. These were carefully situated on slopes in dry areas with good drainage. They contained dried corn, quinoa, freeze-dried potatoes, beans, other vegetables, and seeds. The Incas also built large storehouses for holding cloth, tents, agricultural tools, and weapons. "The capacity of the storage system was staggering . . . Careful records were kept on the knotted cords of the quipu that could tell an Inca official at any time exactly how much of what commodity was stored in each of the storehouses."
When a new region was incorporated into the Inca empire, its lands were carefully surveyed and catalogued. The lands were divided into three sections, one part in service to the state religion, one part for the emperor, and the remaining part for sustenance of the local population. Herds of llamas and alpacas, and the pasturage for them, were also divided into thirds on the same basis.
The Incas exacted a labor tax for producing food and cloth and building the roads, agricultural terraces, water systems, palaces, temples, and administrative centers. Great care was taken to equally distribute the labor tax burden. Only a few men were taken out of each administrative unit for labor elsewhere. By keeping sufficient labor at home, the administrative units of the empire "could maintain agricultural output and not disrupt the economy. . . The underlying ideology was that of a reciprocal exchange. The state provided for the worker in exchange for the labor the worker gave the state."
McEwan explains that, when the ruling Inca died, his lands were reserved to him as a separate estate maintained by a cadre of attendants. This meant that the new Inca had to conquer more lands to obtain wealth for himself. As the empire expanded, those who were the greatest warriors among the ruling class became the Inca in succession. They often spent long periods of time on the frontier away from the capitol of Cusco. This led to unrest and rival factions that played directly into the Spanish conquest.
This book is highly readable because McEwan progresses from an overview of Inca civilization into chapters that deal with the environmental setting; historical setting; origins, growth and decline of Inca civilization; economic structure of the Inca state; social organization and structure; political structure; religion and ideology; material culture; and intellectual accomplishments.
The chapters contain many interesting subheadings, photographs, and illustrations. McEwan carefully cites the bibliography of Andean cultural research with endnotes to the chapters. He finishes the book with an assessment of major controversies and future directions in Inca studies.
McEwan knows from on-the-ground work what he writes about. In 2002, he was kind enough to lead me through the Pikillacta and Chokepukio sites. At the invitation of the Peruvian crew he hires from the local community, I witnessed a pago. On page 144 of his book, there's a photograph of a shaman preparing the about-to-be-burned offering to Pachamama (mother earth). The bundle I saw burned contained a lama fetus, an octopus tentacle, grain, candy, cookies, bits of yarn, coca leaves, and sea shells. I will never forget the sight and smell of smoke from this offering curling into the highlands.
As McEwan so aptly relates in this book, the Andean people still revere the earth, the mountains, the waters, and the sky.

South America
Insiders' Guide to North Carolina's Outer Banks, 24th (Insiders' Guide Series)
Published in Paperback by Insiders' Guide (2003-06-01)
Authors: Molly Perkins Harrison and Diane Buccheri
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INSIDERS GUIDE TO NORTH CAROLINA'S OUTER BANKS
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-07
Excellent. We use it each time we go...the pages are worn...recommendations on places to stay, dining, etc. have been right on target. I know that using this book helped introduce us to the Outer Banks in such a way that our experience kept us coming back. Thank you Insiders' Guides for wonderful publications.

What an indispensable guide!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-26
I was too long in purchasing a guide to the Outer Banks. I'd been going for years so what was there that I could learn? Certainly I'd learned all there was to learn in my visits. What was left? This book proved that the answer was plenty!

Even if you purchase this book to discover new restaurants, you won't be disappointed. I learned that there were restaurants off the beaten track, on roads that I thought had led nowhere, which actually curled around to an island and to a wonderfully intimate and wonderful restaurant. I learned what restaurants specialized in gourmet, which needed reservations, sometimes a year in advance, and which catered just to family.

Also, where could I take my pooch? Which beaches would accomodate us during the summer? Where were tennis courts and other facilities? Where were nature walks? What's to see where?

The pages have become dog-eared. Notes have been scrawled in the margins. This book has become indispenable for us, and I'm certain that if you are a visitor to the Outer Banks, it probably will be indispensable to you as well.

South America
Intelligence and the War in Bosnia: 1992-1995 (Perspectives on Intelligence History)
Published in Paperback by Lit Verlag (2003-04-01)
Author: Cees Wiebes
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Unique Blend of Lessons Learned and Tutorial on Intelligence
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-24


This is a superb publication. An American, who would never have received the kind of direct official support provided to the author by the government of The Netherlands, could not have written it.

This is the only book that I know of that fully integrates deliberate studies of UN intelligence; Western and NATO intelligence (which the author correctly notes does not exist); Dutch intelligence; and belligerent party intelligence.

Several recurring themes of lasting value emerged from my reading of this book:

1) The UN is dangerously devoid of intelligence qua decision-support. The culture of the UN leadership, the UN bureaucracy, and the UN delegates is one that places a higher priority on the semblance--the mockery--of lip service to open sources and legal methods, while sacrificing the lives of UN forces in the field. One cannot read this book, and its superb documentation of how UN Force Commander after UN Force Commander pleaded for intelligence support, only to be told no by the staff in New York, without becoming very angry. This book makes it perfectly clear that the UN leadership failed the Croats, the Serbs, and the international peacekeepers, in every possible way. Toward the end of the book the author also focuses on the UN as a source for the belligerents, i.e. UN incapacity for operational security and secure communications in fact makes it a primary source for belligerents seeking to kill one another.

2) The West failed in Bosnia in part because it became over-reliant on technical intelligence (which it could not process or analyze with sufficient speed and reliability), and did not have adequate numbers of competent clandestine Human Intelligence (HUMINT) or even ground-truth observers in the region. A contributing source of failure was the evidently deliberate decision on the part of the Clinton White House to downplay the conflict and to withhold such intelligence warning as they did have from the UN, in the misplaced belief that sharing such information would interfere with the peace process. Tens of thousands died because of Clinton White House irresponsibility.

3) Intelligence "liaison" or structured sharing across national boundaries, was an ungodly mess made worse by the inherent biases and rose-colored glasses worn by the Americans and the British on one side, and the French and the Germans on the other. "Wishful thinking" by policy makers interfered with proper assessments of the relative condition and intentions of the various belligerents.

4) The CIA clandestine endeavor was split, with one Station operating out of Sarajevo and another out of Zagreb, and no overall coordination or integration of sources and reports.

5) Civil Affairs (CA) as a military occupational specialty is blown forever by CIA Directorate of Operations (DO) abuses, most without the permission of the U.S. European theater commander. CIA/DO managers should be disciplined for this breach of internal US government protocols.

6) The Dutch were not ready to field a major operational or tactical intelligence support architecture, and in-fighting among various elements prevented the various analysts from making the most of what little they could glean from varied sources. The same was actually true of all Western intelligence communities--all had other priorities and too few resources [although language deficiencies are not emphasized by the author, one presumed a grotesque lack of required competencies across the Croat and Serb dialects as well as Yugoslavian, Turkish, and Arabic]. In the view of a senior officer whose quotations close Chapter 3, heads should be rolling for dereliction of duty--although the subject refers only to the Dutch, the reviewer would add US and British heads as well.

7) The book excels--is remarkable and perhaps unique--for its discussion of the secret arms supplies--not only the routes, the providers, the landing zone delivery means--but the active violation by the US of the embargo, and the active role of US Special Forces in violating the embargo without a covert action "finding", and hence also in violation of US law. Other nations were equally at fault. It is clear from the book that the UN needs not only operational and tactical intelligence for the specific area of operations, but an extended intelligence and operational capability sufficient to *interdict* incoming arms to the belligerents. This book may well be the single best reference on this topic.

8) The sections of the book on signals and imagery intelligence are a work of art, combining historical scholarship with original research and a very fine tutorial aspect. The listing of the 11 disadvantages of SIGINT (pages 224-228) is the finest I have ever seen. The bottom line in both instances is: too much collection, too little processing and analysis. The author uses a remarkable quote from a former Director of the National Security Agency to make this point: good news is that we can exploit a million messages a day; bad news is that we don't know which million out of the billions we capture to do... Also interesting is the detailed accounting of belligerent party competencies in SIGINT and IMINT, to include the use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles and advanced methods.

9) The book ends with two notes that I choose to emphasize, although the author makes many valuable observations in his conclusions that I will not repeat here: first, support to UN operations was the *fifth* priority for Western intelligence, coming after force protection, after ground truth observation, after support for air targeting, and after support for NATO ground troop planning; and second, Doctors Without Borders, a non-governmental organization, was the *only* entity to get true validated warning of the Srebrenica genocide.

The index is terrible-names only. Properly indexing the book for references to all intelligence sources and methods as well as events and practices, would make it 2X to 3X more valuable as a basic reference.

This book is highly recommended and a "must have" for every national security and international affairs library, and for every professional interested in peacekeeping intelligence.

From my perspective.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-14
I am about to study European History at college and have wanted to know more about the background to the war in Bosnia for some time. I have found many authors to be very heavy going but I was recommended Wiebes by a friend. The approach that the author has taken gives a refreshing perspective told using fascinating research and collection methods.

It's hard to believe that such a catalogue of errors could have been allowed to take place and one wonders what a different place the world would have been if those who thought they knew better had actually done better.

I believe that the author has actually invested deep personal emotion in this cause and that shone through the awful detail to me as a reader.

I enjoyed the way that open source intelligence was utilised to provide such global depth. I understand that the author may be speaking at an intelligence conference in DC next year and I will try my best to be there. (Poor student!)

See also http://www.balkanpeace.org.

South America
Investing in Latin America
Published in Hardcover by Ft Energy (1997-05)
Author: Oscar Freudenthal
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Non-biased analysis of investment practicalities
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-07
Investing in Latin America has never been easy, and has burnt fingers for Europeans and American investors for over a century. The 400 million residents deserve a future and want to become partners in the global economy. They are not fully understood by the international financial community. This book helps investors, or prospective investors on the practicalities of Latin America.

It could be argued that the book is too structured and that the country-by-country analysis deserves a longer common chapter. Nevertheless, the intrincancies of Latin American markets are pleasantly organized and adequately presented. A good book for pragmatic investors.

The best book on Latin American investment I've seen
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-07
The author describes each distinctive Latin American country and its investment environment in a clear and concise way. The region has always been complex in its political landscape and uneven economic rule of the law. The trends and local limitations need to be fully understood, in order to develop an effective investment strategy in the region, and this book offers substance. Latin America is probably one of the least-understood regions in modern finance. Apparently adequate, foreign-based risk considerations have misled investors: either concentrating funds in a few operations in Brazil, Argentina, Mexico and Chile, or not taking full advantage of the real opportunities in the whole set of countries, industries and realities. The misunderstanding has led to the destruction of efforts to advance towards mature democracy in some of these countries. Finally someone who bridges the link between Latin America and modern financial markets.

South America
Isla Negra
Published in Paperback by White Pine Press (2000-11-01)
Author: Pablo Neruda
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Average review score:

brilliant
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-13
there are not enough words for this book. enticing and mesmerizing, Neruda remains to me one of the greatest lovers of life. An acute observer of surroundings, a revolutionary, a lover, a man of the world and of the senses. this book is a whirlwind of poetical autobiographical moments and what a wonder it is. recommended to be read quietly and in an atmosphere undisturbed.

a masterpiece.

Great stuff. Why is it not available?
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-25
I just purchased this book of poetry. Wonderful stuff! Exquisite translation. Why is it no longer available? I keep this in the same place as my collection of Elliot poems. But these are warmer, deeply personal reflections of a life. It is like walking through a man's memories while he tells you what each one meant to him.


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