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

Nebraska
The Jugger
Published in Paperback by Mysterious Press (2002-10)
Author: Richard Stark
List price: $12.95
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Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

What's In A Name?
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-14
Joe Sheer, a fine old man, retired safecracker (jugger), has been Parker's contact man for years. Parker receives a disquieting letter from Joe and wonders if he is getting a little old for the job. Parker decides to pay him a visit, not to present a gold watch, but perhaps to help Joe along to his eternal rest. The usually overly careful Parker flies to Sagamore, Nebraska to have a hands-on visit with Joe using his clean-as-a whistle alias, Charles Willis.

Picture Smalltown U.S.A. Friendly folks, picket fences, nicely clipped lawns, tree shaded lots, porch swings, and you have Sagamore. Now picture deadly purposeful Parker strolling down the sidewalks. Neither one of them are quite ready for the other. Alas for Parker, there is no heist this time, Joe is already dead, and the local and state police are taking far too much interest in Charles Willis. Parker has to put his superb planning abilities in high gear to settle the natives, and solve the mystery of Joe's alleged buried fortune. Parker's sole interest in this is to get Charles Willis back to Miami unknown and uninvestigated.

This is a fine Parker outing where Parker is the only one in Sagamore with good sense, and with much exasperation has to lead the law to the truth. To get the job done, a few homicides happen, and a left over lady with "the eyes of a pickpocket and the mouth of a whore" helps him out. "The Jugger" is best read after you have read a couple other Parker novels for background. For all other Parker aficionados, this is choice.

great!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-01
I read that Stark thought "The Jugger" was his worst book. I disagree. I think I see where he's coming from, though. This story and book are out of character for Parker. He actually has to explain himself a couple of times and his enemies are outside of his world. So, it's a bit different from the previous books. I think, however, that this is the best plotted since the first book. I really enjoyed the novel and it could easily stand alone outside of the series. I hope "The Seventh" comes back in print soon.

...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-29
Talk about waking from a coma. The Jugger begins confusingly - good confusingly, that is - with Parker in a hotel room in a small town in Nebraska. There's a dead guy in the obituary column, an annoying guy hanging around Parker, a cop outside. Everyone knows more than the reader at this stage, but nobody really knows anything. Turns out after a few chapters that the dead guy is the titular Jugger - a locks man who knew too much about Parker. The annoying guy and the cop think the dead guy knew something else - like where his life's earnings are hidden. Parker needs to make sure no one else knows what the dead guy really knew.
The story unfolds piece by piece, and Parker responds in the only way imaginable for one of fiction's most amoral characters.
Tough, very tight.

Nebraska
Leslie A. White: Evolution and Revolution in Anthropology (Critical Studies in the History of Anthropology)
Published in Hardcover by University of Nebraska Press (2004-05-01)
Author: William J. Peace
List price: $29.95
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Average review score:

Greatly Appreciated!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-26
My gratitude to Dr. Peace for writing this biography of Leslie A. White is tremendous. I am not a professional in the social sciences, although I discovered Leslie White's writings in the early 1970's while attending college. To say they intrigued me is an understatement. On and off through my whole life I studied White's writings, and followed up on many of his sources, such as Emile Durkheim.

Not being a professional in the social sciences, and being so 'taken in' by White's theories and rhetoric, I wondered considerably about how White's writings were received in his own field, that is anthropology. In my questioning of various professors I learned that White was 'a Marxist', and left unsaid was the supposition that 'therefore - should be disregarded'. This never set well with me, as I was totally convinced of the validity of his arguements, irregardless of their ultimate intellectual source.

Basically, I read this book from cover to cover in two or three days over the Thanksgiving holiday of 2007. It answered all my questions about Leslie White. It portrays the picture of a brilliant man pursuing in single minded determination his desire to understand the human condition. I'd very highly recommend this book to anyone like myself who wishes to understand and learn about this brilliant man. Thank you very much Dr. Peace!

Fascinating biography
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-26
Author Peace has done a masterful job in exploring the work of this eccentric and complicated anthropoligist.
His work and personality are examined and startling facts sensitively revealed.
It is well written, informative and shows a true understanding of the man's personality and brillaint theories.
Well worth reading!
Kathy Boncuk

Towards ending the history of anthropology coverup
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-09
In Peace's preface he writes of anthropology's historians Geo Stocking and Dick Handler "failures to consider the political beliefs and actions" of the anthropologists they chronicle--a charge that well summarizes the central devastating shortcoming of the history of anthropology for the past 30 years. This biography goes a long ways towards suggesting how anthropologists can reintegrate politics back into their disciplinary histories. Peace builds an interesting historical account of White and establishes the deep impact of Marx and socialism on White's life and theory.

Nebraska
Louise Pound: The 19th Century Iconoclast Who Forever Changed America's Views About Women, Academics and Sports
Published in Paperback by American Legacy Historical Press (2007-11-01)
Author: Marie Krohn
List price: $18.95
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Average review score:

Humane insight into a remarkable person
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-20
The other reviews offered of this excellent biography cover much of the relevant historical details included in the book, but I wanted to add a comment or two about what I see as another strength of this biography: Krohn reveals Louise Pound's "humanity" very effectively. As the other reviewers stated, this biography is an excellent piece of scholarship and is meticulously researched. Krohn also manages to use this scholarship to reveal Louise Pound as a person - Pound's character and personality shine through the historical details of her life. Pound is revealed to the reader as a complex and fascinating person, rather than as a 2-dimensional collection of accomplishments. As I read, I felt like I was getting to know a fascinating person, and I was drawn into the story of her life. I loved the extended correspondence between Pound and her friend Ani. Even though we only "hear" Ani's letters and not Pound's replies, Krohn was somehow able to use these conversations to reveal Pound's character. This book should obviously be read by anyone interested in Louise Pound, but also by anyone interested in biographies and how well-written biographies invite us into fascinating lives using historical detail rather than fictionalizations.

Louise Pound: the 19th Century Iconoclast Who Forever Changed America's Views about Women, Academics and Sports
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-11
I just finished reading Marie Krohn's well-researched and comprehensive biography on the personal and professional lives of noted Nebraskan Louise Pound. I couldn't wait to offer my hearty "congratulations" to the author for her superb work. I was completely hooked from page one and very much enjoyed the historical tours, the biographical information not only on the Pound family, but on so many "celebrities" from Lincoln's past. Having resided in Lincoln, NE for fifteen years, many of the curiosities I had about the names on university, civic and local school buildings were clarified as I was able to connect those names with influential Nebraskans.

The retrospective of the University of Nebraska academically, socially and politically was wonderful and offered information that I am very delighted to know, particularly since I am an alumnus. I can appreciate the fact that even world class professors like Louise Pound had to endure protracted oppressions of their ideas, work, and their successes. It must have frustrated her to be renowned the world 'round, but have limited homage on the University of Nebraska campus - particularly by the colleagues within her own department! I have immense respect for Dr. Pound for many reasons, not the least of which was her perseverance at and fond commitment to the University of Nebraska.

The author was most diligent in her commitment to accurate scholarship in writing a comprehensive, clear and poignant book. Because the author's research processes were very thorough, the book's scope also included much insight into world and domestic events as they intertwined with the Pound family spanning from the post-Civil War era through the mid-1960s. This is a must read for literary aficionados, biography buffs, Nebraskans, and anyone who will appreciate thorough research coupled with a very readable writing style.

Marie Krohn has eloquently introduced the world to Louise Pound and she has provided us with the unique opportunity to learn about Nebraska from Louise Pound's point-of-view. It was a truly delightful read and it very much broadened my Nebraska horizons.


This biography will provide encouragement to today's iconoclasts who are looking for a fresh and inspiring role model
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-10
An iconoclast is defined as one who attacks and seeks to change traditional or popular ideas or institutions, and Louise Pound certainly qualifies as a 19th century iconoclast.

With a moving foreword by Dr. Robert Cochran, Marie Krohn's tribute to Louise Pound is the first comprehensive biography of this remarkable frontier woman. Pound's relative anonymity over the past half century is likely a result of the public riffs with her employer, the University of Nebraska, where her outspoken and opinionated nature disturbed administrators and resulted in their downplaying her legacy.

This meticulously researched biography offers insights into a true American pioneer. Her accomplishments reflect her resolve to achieve absolute excellence in all her endeavors, and condemn collective mediocrity, often at the expense of her relationships or career.

Whether her accomplishments were in sports (she was a world class athlete in tennis and golf), or in academia, her achievements were extraordinary by any standard. Realizing the importance of an advanced degree, she traveled to Germany to earn a Ph.D. in only one year. (Most students required two years). She collaborated with H.L. Menken, and was the first to advocate that American English should be studied separate from that spoken in Great Britain... a revolutionary idea at the time. She became an internationally recognized philologist, folklorist and pioneer in the origins or American speech.

Despite many feminists who ascribe to the theory that Louise Pound was the lesbian love interest of famed author Willa Cather, Krohn explains in convincing style that the evidence neither supports or sustains such claims.

Although scholarly in its scope, it's approach is neither stuffy or verbose. This very readable biography will provide encouragement and motivation to today's iconoclasts who are looking for a fresh and inspiring role model.

Nebraska
The Modern Cowboy
Published in Hardcover by University of Nebraska Press (1981-11-01)
Author: John R. Erickson
List price: $15.95
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Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Even Better Than 1st Edition
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-27
I loved John R. Erickson's 1981 1st end edition of this book and wondered if the 2nd edition would live up to standards set by the first edition. I was not disappointed. Erickson gives a unique insight to cowboying. The chapters "Economics and the Cowboy" and "The Cowboys Wife" are in themselves enough to make this book a unique contribution to Western American literature.

I have only one small complaint about Erickson's work. That is that he gives feedyard cowboys the short shrift. His only discussion of them is a few condensending comments in "The Last Cowboy" chapter. He says he doesn't mean to disparage them and yet turns around and does just that. A book about "THE Modern Cowboy" needs a thorough treatment of feedyard cowboys. Moreover the distinction between feedyard cowboys and ranch cowboys is largely an artificial separation that exists only in Erickson's mind. The majority of feedyard cowboys that I've worked with have worked ranches and you will find quite a few ranch cowboys on the Great Plains who have put in their time in the feedyards. However, I would not let this one oversight of Erickson's keep me from reccommending this book to anyone and everyone.

Recommended both for entertainment and personal edification
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-08
Now in its second edition, The Modern Cowboy strives to answer the query: who is the American cowboy? Where did he come from, and what is he today? Digging deep into American history, legend, and practical reality, as well as taking a solid look at the contemporary lives led today by men responsible for the welfare of cattle, The Modern Cowboy is a superb source of background material for anyone who truly wants to know more about the legendary figure who appears in so many Western novels and movies. Highly recommended both for entertainment and personal edification.

This is the best ever
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-12
I just finished reading The Modern Cowboy by John Erickson. It is a very good book about the life of the American cowboy. Erickson covers every aspect of the cowboy working on a ranch in our country. He not only covers the day to day life of the cowboy, he gives the reader a view of what is in the future for cowboys and ranching. A great book.

Nebraska
Money Mountain: The Story of Cripple Creek Gold
Published in Hardcover by University of Nebraska Press (1979-08-01)
Author: Marshall Sprague
List price: $25.00
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Average review score:

Fantastic account of the hey days of Cripple Creek, CO
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
I have read a lot of American history with the Old West being my favorite subject. I have always said that Stephen Ambrose's books about the Old West are some of my favorites that I have read over and over. I just finished reading Money Mountain by Marshall Sprague. It is now my favorite history book of the Old West. He writes so well it was hard to put down. Of course, the subject matter is unbelievable mining history. Some prior historical knowledge of the Cripple Creek Mining District in the late 1800s is very helpful to have before you read this book.

Review of Money Mountain
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-07
I was looking for a complete history of Cripple Creek from it's beginning, and I found it in this easy to read and follow book. Great details encompassing many different pioneers and stories of the area.

Historical Page Turner
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-16
I don't know where I got this book, but at whim I just picked it off my bookshelf. I was not particularly interested in Colorado, or gold mining, but this well-researched history of the Cripple Creek district was so well written, that I just couldn't put it down. This book was written 50 years ago, but Marshall Sprague's style is so crisp, so fresh, it reads like it was written yesterday. He has a real knack for chapter-ending punchlines.

There is only one "problem" with the book. It seems so contemporary, that when I read such statistics as the price of gold, and they were off by hundreds of dollars, I had to remind myself that the book was indeed a half century old. The author died in 1994. I am sorry I cannot tell him how his writing shines. I plan to read other titles of his.

Nebraska
Nebraska (Annual)
Published in Hardcover by Market Data Retrieval (1997-06)
Author:
List price: $48.00
Used price: $54.69

Average review score:

Book 2 of the Wagon's West Series
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-26
This is book 2 in the Wagon's West series.

The wagon train is now heading into new territory for them. They are on the way to Oregon and are leaving Independence, MO behind. They are also now being led by Whip Holt. They are traveling through Nebraska and continuing westward.

This is the story of their struggles against the British & Russian forces trying to keep them for making the trip as well and the environment and Native Americans.

This book is one of the 6th printing from back in the late 70's. If you are interested in the settlement of the American West this is one series that you need to revisit.

Wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-24
This is a book I keep reading again and again. It just is a terrific read. If you're interested in the history of early America, then this is THE series for you!

Forging The Oregon Trail - Outstanding Historical Fiction!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-03
"Nebraska" is Book 2 in Dana Fuller Ross' magnificent "Wagons West" series. In 1837 the United States was experiencing its first financial depression. Banks were failing, factories closing, and farms were being foreclosed. US citizens were increasingly hungry and dispossessed. Out of a population of 16 million, a quarter of a million were unemployed. People by the thousands were moving West to settle the wilderness and make a new start in life. Former US President Andrew Jackson, new President Martin Van Buren, and financier John Jacob Astor decided to assign mountainman and weathered veteran Sam Brentwood and his partner Michael "Whip" Holt to form the first wagon train of pioneers with the purpose of crossing the North American continent and settling the Oregon Territory. Imperial Russia and Great Britain were also determined to claim the Oregon Territory for themselves and planned to do everything in their countries' power to sabotage the United States' effort.

The caravan now included 500 people and their horses, oxen and prairie schooners. Having reached the frontier town of Independence, Missouri, Sam Brentwood and his new wife leave the group to open a trading depot to supply future pioneers and wagon trains. Wagon scout Whip Holt now takes over as wagonmaster and the legendary group begins to move across the Great Plains to the Rockie Mountains on the second stage of their journey. They are set upon by hostile Indians, British and Russian spies, accidents and illness, and the petty bickering that comes from interacting with the same people day after day, along with the monotony of the trail. Relationships and rivalries are formed which prove to be every bit as exciting as the journey itself.

The characters are outstanding and extremely realistic. The author vividly brings history to life in "Nebraska," as in the other books in the series. And the politics behind the settling of the West are fascinating. As one would expect, the novel is chock-full of adventure, hardship, courage, love, loss, tragedy and triumph. Many details have been taken from actual diaries and journals of early pioneers. Once you start this book you won't be able to stop until you have read all 24 novels. The next one is "Wyoming," and deals with the third leg of the trip -wintering in the Rocky Mountains and the move to Oregon. Very highly recommended!
JANA

Nebraska
Nebraska tractor tests since 1920 (Crestline agricultural series)
Published in Hardcover by Crestline Pub (1995)
Author: C. H Wendel
List price: $34.95
Used price: $125.00

Average review score:

An informative and historical book of farm tractor power.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-25
I have purchased many tractors over the last 25 years and I wish that I would have had this book all the while. The Nebraska tests evolved to provide the farmer with a standard of comparison to gauge his power requirements. Many manufactures prior to these tests boasted claims, but there was no real way to be sure. This book explains the need for this program and gives complete and comprehensive results for 'every' test. I find it a very interesting and informative authority of tractor power and reliability.

Greg's review of Nebraska Tractor Tests Since 1920
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-12
Charles H. Wendel's tireless research provides a very compelling volume of information for the farmer, collector, restorer, or enthusiast. Presented chronologically, the volume offers technical data on hundreds of makes and models, ranging from John Deere, International and Minneapolis-Moline, to lesser know and specialty tractors such as David Brown, Bates Steel Mule, and Big Bud.

Each tractor's technical information is accompanied by a photo (in some cases and actual photo of the tractor at the test lab). Data is incorporated directly into the text and the volume is very well edited.

The one book true tractor enthusiasts should not be without.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-10
The Nebraska tests were the one thing that standardized tractor ratings. This book is full of information that can be found in bits and pieces elsewhere,but is complete, from the testing lab to you,in this volume. A must have for the serious tractor hobbiest or professional. Lots of good pictures and info on even some of the rarest of tractors.

Nebraska
Not Just Any Land: A Personal and Literary Journey into the American Grasslands
Published in Hardcover by University of Nebraska Press (2004-05-01)
Author: John Price
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Average review score:

The Importance of a Name
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
As I look forward to again attending The Prairie Festival at The Land again this year, I relished reading this book. It was fascinating reading the four authors' discussions of their work and their lives as they intersect their published writing.

This book also spoke to my interest in the Operation Migration project which is leading the way for the whooping cranes to again be wild and part of the land. John Price ponders and dissects the importance of place and the meaning of home and how we can follow Wendell Berry in really knowing about the place where we live.

"Though Heat-Moon's final quest for memory is a times awkward and self-conscious, it is for him essential. If America, if the human species, is to survive, then it must work actively to rejuvenate and reconstruct geographically specific, ancestral paradigms-deep maps-that move it toward a grand harmony of people and places."

Anyone who has seen the movie "Into the Wild" will resonate with Price's description of the effects of William Trogdon's decision to write "Prairy Erth" under the name William Least Heat-Moon.

"This rejuvenation begins with the individual journey, with the singular act of self-creation represented, perhaps, by William Trogdon's decision to rejuvenate the William Least Heat-Moon name. Whatever the consequences for the larger world, it was clear to me that the "Heat-Moon self" had led Trogdon to write one of the most important books on the prairie in American literature, a book that had had a profound impact on my own commitment to place. That fact alone suggested that what Heat-Moon had written about names was true, that they have he power to shape who we become in relation to the land around us. He writes:'Many tribal Americans believe that a person turns into his name, partakes of its nature in such a way that it is a mold the possessor comes to fill. When names lose their first meaning, as they have to most Americans of European descent, that mold becomes only a handle for others to move us around with.'"

Meet the plains states, minus stereotypes
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-21
This is an excellent regional history - social, biological and natural history - of the American plains.

John Price's voice is expansive and insightful, including his family connections to various spots in the middle plains states. It also is a look at just what it will take to ground him, via nature, in life. And, as a relatively recent husband, it is also a reflection on where that grounding will take place, and the give-and-take that will be involved with his wife.

As to the specifics of life on the plains, while finding much to celebrate once stereotypes are penetrated, stereotypes still have a fair degree of truth, as do cold, hard facts.

Racism and sexism can still be found in the Midwest, for example. They may be fading away, but they haven't disappeared.

Unfortunately, what has disappeared is untainted land. Take these eye-opening stats from Price's home state of Iowa, for example.

Just one-half of 1 percent of the land is in a pre-European natural state, the worst of any of the 50 states. Even worse, it is so farm-and-ranch chemical laden that only 20 percent of it can EVER be restored to that pre-contact state, it is estimated, citing Richard Manning's "Grassland."

Can we change to something more sustainable? That question, too, gets pondered in this book, and from different angles.

===

Two caveats on matters historical and botanical.

First, the Quapaw and Caddo lived in the southern plains, not the northern ones; second, the prairie did not extend from Appalachia all the way to the Rockies -- Illinois was the one cis-Mississippian state with significant prairie.

"Where Surprises Can Live and Grow"
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-20
(from the Aug. 2004 issue of NCB News of Nebraska Center for the Book http://www.unl.edu/NCB/)

In the first sentence of the acknowledgements page, John Price states: "This is a memoir." But what follows in NOT JUST ANY LAND is not simple autobiography; it is more a combination of scholarly research, self-searching, and the time-honored method of using others' words to clarify his own thoughts about the region formerly known as prairie, what we call the Great Plains. This "memoir" is grassland exploration and ecology literature search at its best: Price cites over 65 authors in his bibliography.

Price traveled to South Dakota, Kansas and Iowa to discover what remained of the prairie, and in the process interviewed four writers whose books had spoken to him of the region. These writers - their varied views, stories and struggles - are the subjects of the four main chapters of the book: "Reaching Yarak: The Peregrinations of Dan O'Brien," "Not Just Any Land: Linda Hasselstrom at Home," "Native Dreams: William Least-Heat Moon and Chase County, Kansas," and "A Healing Home: Mary Swander's Recovery Among the Iowa Amish." Price's insightful questions and sense of humor make the book's subject highly accessible and memorable.

Great Plains enthusiasts, as well as those wanting to understand this often-overlooked region ("...where surprises can live and grow"), will delight in his extensive use of quotations from well-known writers such as Wendell Berry, Gretel Ehrlich, Wes Jackson, William Kittredge, Wallace Stegner and Terry Tempest Williams, to name just a few. Woven through the narrative in often lyrical passages is Price's own exploration of place, community, family history and an understanding of "...what it is that the land demands of us in our daily lives: the nature of responsibility."

Price, who grew up in north central Iowa, has written an important book about region that will be studied, discussed and enjoyed for years to come. He is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Nebraska-Omaha.

Nebraska
The Old North Trail: Or Life, Legends and Religion of the Blackfeet Indians
Published in Paperback by University of Nebraska Press (1977-05)
Author: Walter McClintock
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Average review score:

. . . as a culture lay dying
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
Fresh out of Yale, McClintock went to Montana in 1891 as an employee of the forest service. He ended up living with the Blackfoot tribe and learning their way of life. One elderly chief, Mad Dog, adopted him and taught him tribal culture and rituals so that someone would write them down. This book is the result.

The bison were gone and the Blackfoot economy lay in tatters. Still, McClintock's band was following his traditional seasonal movements, keeping the Sun Dance, and trying to live as they always had - - even as everyone realized that their way of life could not survive in the face of the white man.

McClintock serves as a very sympathetic scribe for the tribe. He was clearly a good listener. One Blood chief in Alberta told him that he had vowed never to speak with white men again, and yet he ended up adopting McClintock as a son. Because the tribe trusted him, he was admitted into a tribal society, invited to participate in rituals, and so forth.

Through most of the 500 pages in this book, McClintock takes a very fair-minded approach to both the Blackfoot and to white society. He often notes how tribal norms, such as sharing, are superior to the behavior of more "civilized" peoples. He takes both Christianity and tribal religions seriously.

Oddly, all this falls apart in the last chapter, where he endorses destructive policies that take away tribal land, convert the Indians to Christianity, and force assimilation on white terms. This chapter contradicts the tone of the rest of the book so deeply that I can't imagine what he was thinking when he wrote it.

Aside from that last chapter, this is a fascinating record of the tribe's traditions at the last possible moment that the tribe was still living its traditional life.

The Old North Trail is as authentic as the journal of L& C
Helpful Votes: 32 out of 36 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-25
Walter McClintock was a young man who came to the Blackfeet Country at about the turn of the century. He was a trained scientist who could use a camera and he kept careful notes. This is not a romance novel nor anthropological interpretation. McClintock was simply there and made friends well enough to be accepted. He recorded stories, rituals (also took photos), and daily incidents as well as much natural history. He was really there and he is an honest and graceful reporter.

One of the few books I still love
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-27
How could it be possible to adequately describe such a powerful -indeed, magical- account of a young man's time with the Blackfeet in the early twentieth century, a time when much of the Old Ways still lived among the Blackfeet people. I have owned or or another edition of The Old North Trail since 1970, and have ever since then been entranced by McClintock's unselfconscious limpid prose style, his descriptions of a summer snowstorm, or a grand encampment of the Blackfeet, the way Indian people in northern Montana prepared and stored food for the coming of winter, or the simple, deep, and everlastingly real relationship with a culture which was even at that late date still indescribably precious and beautiful. Both a superb travelog and a microscopically observed anthropological account of life with the Blackfeet, this book is an extended love letter to the Indian people with whom Walter McC lived. As I write this review I'm transported back to my early twenties, a California surfer just out of college, immersed in a hot deep bath, reading The Old North Trail at sunup in Inverness, Scotland, and forgetting where I was, so completely did this book cast its spell. This is one of the very, very few books with which I am still in love.

Nebraska
One Man's West
Published in Paperback by Univ of Nebraska Pr (1977)
Author: David Sievert Lavender
List price:
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Average review score:

Great intimate narrative of life in western Colorado & Utah
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1997-01-13
David Lavender is a historian whose personal account of growing up in Telluride and Ouray, Colorado is captivating. Mr Lavender documents the arrival of the 1950's "modern age" to western Colorado and Utah. During his youth, the open desert and mountain lands evolve from a setting for silver mines, lone cowboys, and vast cattle ranches into the garden of the atomic age. He documents the arrival of uranium prospectors, the departure of independent cowboy spirits, and finally, the eventual return of the nuclear boom towns to dust. It is fascinating to read him today and to see what the southern Utah desert was like 50 years ago. If you visit these areas, I recommend that you read "One Man's West" as you pass through them. It will give significance to the sight of decaying farm or mining equipment by the roadside, and fill you with appreciation for those who make an effort to preserve the wilderness. I buy this book in multiple copies and give them to my friends. It has no particular bent for environmentalism or even "wise use" in the wilderness, but gives you some historical insight. I have never met Mr. Lavender, but I admire him as an author and historian. He has authored several other books incouding and account of the Lewis and Clark expedition which, I have heard, is quite good."One Man's West" was written in the 1940's then updated in the 1950's. The New York Times published a glowing review of the book in the mid 1940's or 1950's. Its age has only helped to enhance its significance to a contemporary reader of western history.

I agree with you review...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-03
An excellent book! Ranching and mining, rich history, not to be missed.

A prolific writer
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-03
Mr. Lavender recently died (April '03)and his obituary in the Los Angeles Times prompted me to go out and buy this book. I could not put it down...just as the Times stated, Lavender is a wonderful writer who knows how to describe the west. This book has it all, mountains, mining, cowboys and history with a nice personal touch. I would recommend it highly. It is an "easy" read and one that will leave you feeling satisfied once you complete the book. I am going to search out more of Mr. Lavender's works.


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