Connecticut Books
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a wonderful bookReview Date: 2003-03-20
A COMMUNITY COMES TOGETHERReview Date: 1999-11-21
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The first and best gardening bookReview Date: 2002-04-28
A National TreasureReview Date: 2006-06-04
In 1989, the hardcover edition of "The Perennial Gardener" was published which was so successful; a paperback edition soon followed in 1991 and remained in print for over a decade. (It is hoped that another reprint will soon be made). The book displays the enormous amount of knowledge Fred acquired during his decades of study and practical experience. His personality and dry wit shine through. He also tries very hard to explain concepts in a clear and understandable fashion. I love the perceptive and enthusiastic review by reader Susan McLaughlin (see below). Fred touched many hearts and minds of people and was one of those rare individuals who combined talent, wit, intelligence, kindness and a caring for others. Yesterday, I attended a Memorial Service at a rain-drenched Hillside Gardens. I was not at all surprised that hundreds of his neighbors and friends braved the weather to attend. All of us are privileged to have known him. Fred was indeed "a national treasure".

When he stops the rest of the world catches up.Review Date: 1996-08-03
The Science of History Meets the Art of MemoryReview Date: 1998-03-19
Starting from Braudel's call for histoire totale, through Yates, Bergson, Nora and others, Matsuda argues for the centrality of memory in history. For Matsuda, memory in education is revealed when "a child pronouncing Latin grammer manifested the living soul of the ancients by stirring up the timeless power of language," while memory and criminality evinces itself as "an atavistic criminal, a living prehistoric relic, imprinted in his body with the savage traits of his ancestors." Even the Tango, when viewed through the prism of memory history, demonstrates that " a fashionable dance [can be regarded] as both glittering entertainment and a pagan rite to the passions of the body...".
Armed with new terminology Matsuda next defines modernity and the apparent acceleration of memory and history. Technological innovations produced a cultural shift in memory and the perception of the past equal to the shift from oral to written traditions. Photographic and phonographic inventions "exteriorized" memory, challenging the perceived inviolable nature of time. In addition, technology and the new view of memory formed a novel role for history.
Positivism in history stressed the scientific approach to research and writing, empirical data, and the certainty of historical truth. The incorporation of memory into historical study invalidates the positivist formula for historians. Postmodernist histories in the same vein as Matsuda demonstrate (as he argues) that "history as a positivist or liberatory narrative gives way to a history of mnemonic traces...the past is not a truth upon which to build, but a truth sought." Viewed in such a manner, the individual images which Matsuda focuses upon each bolster his arguement for the re-historicization of memory while also standing alone as critical memory objects of the fin de siecle.
Thus the varied themes expounded upon by Matsuda, by the nature of his memory approach, fuse together to form a valued addition to the emerging field of memory history. The "constellation of memory places" charted by the author represents a step further in the evolution of this new historiography. The historian Patrick Hutton has argued that Matsuda's approach, as well as that of other memory specialists, "signifies a powerful reaffirmation of history's possibility as an art." If we accept this notion then perhaps we can also speculate on a future of hisoriography of a less dichotomous nature (battling between history as science or art) but rather a dialectical relationship--a reconciliation of science and art in the spirit of the Renaissance. For much in the same way Renaissance artists fused the new science of perspective with the aesthetics of art, history could benefit by integrating the critical and rational objectivity of science with the novel approach inherent in the art of memory.

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Great stories tell about the wonder that is Connecticut.Review Date: 1999-05-04
Wonderful stories in the tradition of Charles KuraltReview Date: 1998-09-21

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Quiet Waters with loud praisesReview Date: 2006-11-03
a great helpReview Date: 2007-11-02

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Worth waiting for!Review Date: 2008-04-23
enjoyable historical mysteryReview Date: 2008-04-02
They go to the address and find the butchered body of a woman whose face is smashed in, and her four extremities cut off. The house belongs to Ronnie Carter and a witness describes her lover as that of Michael. Marjorie and Creighton find him at his parents'' home where he proclaims his innocence. He is taken to jail. Marjorie learns that the victim's lover before Michael, Trent Taylor, is now a widower who made a fortune collecting a life insurance payout on his wife's death. Before she died, Ronnie accused Trent of poisoning his spouse; an autopsy proves his late wife had a deadly amount of arsenic in her system. Case closed except Marjorie thinks someone else has set up Trent, but her sleuthing almost gets her shot.
Since everyone in Ridgebury, Connecticut wants to get involved in the wedding, Marjorie buries herself into the investigation to avoid dealing with definitive decisions that people demand of her. Readers will feel like they are in the middle of a Tracey-Hepburn movie to include campy dialogue, misleading assumptions, and plenty of action. SHADOW WALTZ is a thoroughly enjoyable historical mystery that takes its audience dancing into a bygone era.
Harriet Klausner

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The Sikorsky LegacyReview Date: 2007-10-15
Get a life!
Good photo album of Sikorsky ProducesReview Date: 2008-01-15

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Catalogs a wonderful exhibitReview Date: 2007-02-09
Superior Art Exhibit CatalogReview Date: 2006-07-27

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Beautifully done and wonderful surprises.Review Date: 2008-01-14
Southington, CT bookReview Date: 2008-01-01

An exceptional exchange of letters...Review Date: 1998-03-26
wonderfulReview Date: 1999-06-05
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