Vermont Books
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A concise resource - detailed and informative.Review Date: 1999-07-09
The Most Comprehensive Wedding Guide AvailableReview Date: 2000-01-09
Limited ResourcesReview Date: 2000-08-22
Vermont Wedding Advertising GuideReview Date: 1999-12-22
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Great GiftReview Date: 2000-05-21
Yes it happened hereReview Date: 2000-05-28
It affected many Vermonters...Review Date: 2003-10-14
All the families I know in the area have stories - about why they learned to use violin or guitar to celebrate (if you drummed, the police were called, and you were likely to end up in jail), about the mysterious lack of children in some families, about who was locked up, who disappeared, and even mysterious "miscarriages" after visiting the doctor. This book documents some of these stories.
It continues today - we are Indian enough to be discriminated against, but not Indian enough to be recognized as such by the governments of Vermont or the United States, to get what few benefits might be gained from being Indian, or for the surviving victims of the Vermont Eugenics Survey to be recompensed in any way for the pain and suffering they've been through.
Ms. Gallagher, thank you for telling Vermonters the truth about their past racism. I just wish someone would write a good book about how Vermonters still express their racism in subtle ways.

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Get on with it already!Review Date: 2008-05-20
Prince sets out to tell a story that needs to be told, because we tend to over-romanticize the American Civil War. Her tale is about the late 1864 Confederate raid on St. Albans, Vermont, which was part of a larger rebel plan to conduct guerilla warfare in the northwestern states. The goal was in part retribution for the hard war conducted in the south by the likes of Sheridan, Sherman, and Grant, and in part an attempt to break the morale of northerners and force their leaders to the negotiation table. This kind of warfare, which ignored distinctions between combatants and noncombatants, was much more prevalent in the Civil War than we typically hear.
The problem is that Prince doesn't seem to want to tell it. She spends an inordinate amount of time writing about topics that only relate tangentially--e.g., Vermont in the Civil War, the "burning" campaign of Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley--and leaves herself only about 100 pages to tell the story of the actual St. Alban's raid. After awhile, I found myself impatiently flipping pages in search of the point of it all. I was amazed to discover that I'd flipped through well over half the book before I found it.
A disappointment. As Francis Bacon said, some books are to be devoured, others are to be skimmed. This is definitely a skimmer.
Judah P. Benjamin was very good............Review Date: 2007-10-14
Those who study the Civil War are aware that the Confederacy had clandestine operations run thru Canada all during the conflict. Though officially neutral, Canada was home to many Southern sympathizers who could be counted upon to give safe passage to smugglers, spies, etc. I sure would have liked to meet Sarah Slater.... In 1864, Jacob Thompson and Clement C. Clay were sent north with "instructions". Just what they were told by Jeff Davis, Judah Benjamin, and War Secretary James Seddon will, of course, never be known; that is the nature of secret operations. The commissioners, with the help of George Sanders and others, commenced plans for an operation with several objectives:
[1] To gain a measure of retribution for the actions of war-criminal Phil Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley.
[2] To raise badly needed money.
[3] To make the Yankees say "ouch", and, maybe, open a new front of the war. Northerners had been fighting on our soil for three years. They weren't fighting for their own freedom [which was never threatened], but to take away ours. Maybe if THEIR land was invaded.....
An invasion was planned....twenty one escaped POW's, led by Lt. Bennett Young, a 21 year old native of Kentucky who had ridden with John Hunt Morgan infiltrated St. Albans, Vermont. On October 19, 1864, they sprung their trap, robbed all three banks in town, and escaped to Canada. They were captured, "jailed" [in a luxury hotel], tried twice, and released twice. All of the plotters, and raiders, lived out their days...Bennett Young was a highly respected citizen who lived till 1919. Though other raids were rumored, none ever took place. Still, objectives [2] and [3] were met...the fear on the northern border lasted long after the war....
Mrs. Prince is a very nice lady who has written a very fine book. She and I differ, however, when it comes to the Lincoln Assassination. She offers speculation that the murder of Dishonest Abe was an offical Confederate operation. Of course, no proof is offered; there isn't any, because it wasn't. The worst that can be said is that Mr. Benjamin had people working for him who had rogues for friends and relatives. We've all "known somebody who knew somebody" when it comes to something. John Surratt worked for Mr. Benjamin...his mother was guilty...he knew Booth...BUT, John Surratt was acquitted. Dr. Mudd was guilty in the Lincoln plot; he may have been involved in the "Doctors Line" of spies. But there is no hint that he knew any high official. Sarah Slater worked for Mr. Benjamin...she knew Booth, and others, but....nothing. To call the murder a Confederate operation implies the involvement of Jefferson Davis, plus at least ONE of a very small group; Benjamin, Seddon, Stephens, Cooper, Bragg, Breckinridge,...that's about it for something this big. I'll boil it down to two points, and I'll be brash enough to claim to be an expert on Mr. Benjamin:
[1] IF it were an official plot, Benjamin would have run it. There's no evidence that he did, and he was good at keeping secrets, BUT, he wouldn't have dared without orders from Jeff.
[2] Davis would have NEVER traded Lincoln for Andrew Johnson. He may have had no love for Abe, but he respected his intelligence and ability. He despised, and had no respect for, Johnson.
Assassination aside, this is an excellent book, that I heartily recommend. Plenty of background, even if some of it is speculation. We will never PROVE what Jacob Thompson discussed with Davis and Benjamin. If I disagree with the author on a side issue, I can still state that you will enjoy reading about a rather obscure aspect of the Civil War.
Not enough for a historyReview Date: 2006-09-30
The basic plan for the St. Albans raid is for a number of men to establish themselves in the town. Quickly, take control. Rob the banks. Set fire to a number of buildings and escape. "Neutral" Canada provides both the jumping off point and refuge after the raid. The raiders would take advantage of the undefended border, lack of military age men and the general absence of modern weapons in the United States. Working with these assumptions, a small number of men could cower a much larger group with a show of force. The raiders expected to be on their way within an hour, well before organized opposition could start.
Things went very much as planned. A group of about 20 CSA soldiers crossed the border, established themselves in the town and attacked on October 19, 1864. They robbed three banks, killed one resident and wounded a couple of others. The rain soaked buildings refuse to burn and one raider is wounded during the escape. The Canadian authorities refused requests for extradition, while treating the raiders as heroes. The United Sates added this to the list of grievances against the British Empire and the normalization of relations begun in the years prior to the war suffered.
This is a fertile field and one that has seen little work. We need books covering these subjects to give us a better understanding of the international aspects of the war and the impact on Washington's decision-making. Cathryn Prince writes well, the feel of the narration is more of a novel than a history. This style makes a readable and interesting story but I find it detracting from the idea that this is a serious history. An abundance of quotes without footnotes contributed to this feeling. The quotes are in the endnotes, listed by page and the first few words. The book contains a good Bibliography and index. The Epilogue contains the much of the same information you have read and contributes little. A standard set of photographs of the main characters completes the book. Both the author and publisher did not feel that a map of the town is necessary. I found this disturbing having no idea of the location of banks, hotels and the town green. These locations are important to the story and a map would have aided my understanding of the raid.
The book starts with an overview of Vermont's contribution to the war, a history of the town and background of many participants. This consumes a little over half of the text, leaving just under one hundred pages for the raid and aftermath. I found this very disappointing wanting a detailed history of the raid, trials and international tensions. In its' place, I was treated to a glimpse between the curtains but not the full detailed view I wanted. While it is not the book I wanted, this is not a bad book. It is a good introduction and a very entertaining read.
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He only co-wrote the book...Review Date: 2000-08-29
EntertainmentReview Date: 2005-09-07
Good presentation of sightings and evidence in New York StateReview Date: 2005-06-27
Aside from a short jaunt into UFO territory, where the authors propose a connection between UFOs and Bigfoot based on coincidental sightings, the book is a good reference and documentation of Bigfoot sightings and accounts. The book also offers an examination of Native American legend about large hominids in the New York area.
In all the book documents over 140 cases, extending from the Watertown area to Long Island, and areas of western Vermont. Monsters of the Northwoods makes a solid case supporting the possible existence of the creatures known as Bigfoot.

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More, please!Review Date: 2007-11-19
There are others........Review Date: 2003-09-20
Amc Quiet Water Canoe GuideReview Date: 2000-06-10

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The revolution within the RevolutionReview Date: 1998-11-07
Author is suspectReview Date: 2003-03-10
A very fine and stimulating bookReview Date: 2002-07-15
Great stuff.

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Good referenceReview Date: 2005-08-09
Useful informationReview Date: 2004-08-12
Not to much info here...Review Date: 2002-04-20

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This book Review Date: 2006-05-16
Where the Great Hawk FliesReview Date: 2005-10-20
Back and Forth Structure Reveals More Than Straight NarrationReview Date: 2006-12-28
In several new books for young readers, the narrative vantage point has been very decisively shifted to place native characters in the point-of-view position, in the center of events instead of serving as "colorful" parts of the scenery. I've recently read aloud to our daughter Lillian two new young adult novels with Native American themes, Louise Erdrich's The Game of Silence (HarperCollins, 2005) and Liza Ketchum's Where the Great Hawk Flies (Clarion/Houghton-Mifflin, 2005).
Liza Ketchum, author of Where the Great Hawk Flies, also traces her ancestry to Native American forebears. Ketchum, who has written fourteen books for young readers, is the great-great-great-great-great granddaughter of the Pequot midwife Margery Daigo (or Dogerill) and her husband, Joseph Griswold, who lived near Randolph, Vermont, during the eighteenth century. Ketchum's novel takes place in a small (and quite fragile) Connecticut River-valley community still in upheaval as a result of a so-called Indian Raid in 1780, when British soldiers and Caughnawaga warriors from Quebec burned houses and crops in Royalton, Vermont, and killed or captured a number of villagers.
Ketchum's new novel begins in 1782, two years after that raid, when the War of Independence has ended and Vermont is still a separate republic.
Alternating chapters between point-of-view characters -- Daniel, son of a white father and Pequot mother, and a white boy, Hiram -- Ketchum's novel enacts a confrontation between cultures, demonstrating the wariness and even outright racist hostility between Euro-American and native townsfolk on the New England frontier.
This back and forth structure is exceedingly successful in dramatizing a basic truth: different people can see and feel the same events in entirely different ways. My twelve-year-old reading companion noticed that early on we both winced when we came to a Hiram chapter, as his hatred of his "dirty Injun" Daniel is so vehement, a result of terrible fear. Lillian said that although at first she really disliked Hiram and found what he said about the Pequots to be lies, later she was especially happy because she'd seen his thinking change from the inside. The book concludes with a hard-earned reconciliation, more visceral and powerful because shown from more than one vantage point.
Like Erdrich, Ketchum draws upon her native characters' traditional language, which as she acknowledges in a note the 1638 Treaty of Hartford (Connecticut) made illegal for Pequots to speak. While no longer used as widely today as Erdrich's Ojibwe, the miraculous survival of ancient Pequot at all is a testament to the importance of stories in carrying languages through time and through social and cultural upheaval.
Lillian pointed out that both books combine "small stories" about everyday childhood incidents, like learning to make a canoe or build a wigwam, or bickering between siblings and neighbor kids, with the "big stories" of war, eviction from homelands, and deadly epidemics. She wondered if a novel for adults would include those small stories, and if it did, whether the everyday parts would relate to kids.
We enjoyed our conversations about why these are superb books for her at this time in her life.
I must admit that I don't understand how young adult books are categorized in terms of age ranges, as these two novels are suggested for middle school readers, whereas they seem in no way stylistically or thematically too "juvenile" for high schoolers. Indeed I'd readily use either novel with my community college students.
Ketchum's book offers fresh, vivid, engaging instruction in the hard lessons of history, teaching via the tactile pleasures of narrative instead of by lecturing or hectoring. In conveying the lives of children, Ketchum gives us new ways of understanding our origins in the past and the huge challenges that face us now as a nation of parts, rarely a unanimous whole.


Mobil Travel Guide 2000 - NortheastReview Date: 2000-05-27
Mobile GuideReview Date: 2000-07-03

Runs out of steamReview Date: 2004-07-14
Mather must have had a phenomenal amount of inner strength, strength to feed, house, and clothe her growing brood. She quickly learned how hospitable Vermonters can be as neighbors, how they accepted Mike's differences without passing judgment on her or her other children. Of course, some people could still be hard to live with, like the neighbor who couldn't be bothered to fence to his cows properly, but most were fine characters.
As I read this book, I found myself drawn deeper and deeper into Mather's tragic story, and her heroic struggle. For chapter after chapter, I could not put the book down. Then, suddenly, Mather seemed to run out of steam as Vermont farm life began to define her experience, and the story began to drag. Towards the end of the book, she devotes almost an entire chapter to the detailed history of a 1950s town politics debacle over school expansion. By this point, it seemed almost as though she were clutching at any material she could to fill out the book to monograph size. On another level, however, bringing out the importance of town politics certainly demonstrates how her priorities changed once she had settled in. She was no longer focused so much on the day-to-day details of survival; she was in the slow lane at last.
Home at LastReview Date: 2001-07-02
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