Georgia Books
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Una apreciaciónReview Date: 2004-12-22
A stunning literary experienceReview Date: 2003-03-22

Used price: $29.29

Good value, solid referenceReview Date: 2008-01-20
The color scheme and labeling is easy to navigate at a glance, which is critical. This is a book. You have to flip pages a lot if your trip goes off the page, but that is necessary if you need this amount of detail in a map.
The one-time cost was less than my monthly mobile phone charges for using Google Maps Mobile if I was getting lost a lot that month!
Now it makes a solid backup to my GPS. No batteries required. You may even customize it using any writing utensil and writing anything you want, wherever you want, for quick reference. The pages are also 100 percent compatible with sticky tabs.
Atkanta Street GuideReview Date: 2007-10-01

Fascinating Little Known HistoryReview Date: 2008-04-08
The story is fiction because it revolves around some Americans who supposedly found themselves in von Lettow's army. But the historical setting and many of the characters and events are real.
When WWI broke out, the small number of German troops in German East Africa (now Tanzania) rallied and trained the local tribes and the resident German farmers into a guerilla force to resist the much larger British army to the north in Kenya. The book details some of the tactics used, as well some remarkable inventiveness.
Paul von Lettow, the commander, had an ensemble of talent in his army's baggage train that proved very handy. There was a German fellow named Ersatz who invented a lot of things out of local ingredients. (Because the Royal Navy pretty much owned the seas, there was no resupply for the German soldiers in Africa.) Everyone knows what "ersatz" means now - but this campaign is where the concept got its name!
Like a medieval army, this one had no formal logistical support. It relied on many camp followers, including women and children, to keep the army fed and supplied. Many of these womens' efforts and what life was like for them in the field are described.
One incredible tale told of an Imperial Navy vessel marooned in the Rufiji Delta. Some of the German farmers had domesticated African elephants, and used then to haul guns off the ship up the slopes of Kilmanjaro to shoot at the British army. It sounds highly implausible, but Stevenson gives evidence for many of the points in his story at the end of the book.
This is one of those books where you learn a lot while reading a great story. Stevenson claims that von Lettow knew that the Germans couldn't hold East Africa, and that he felt he was just laying the groundwork for an African country free from future British rule. Whether this is true or historical revisionism I don't know, but the Tanzanian people did build a statue honoring von Lettow in Arusha several years later.
"Ghosts of Africa" is a great title, as it refers to an incredible story that not many people know - at least in the USA. It is the reverse of "the African Queen" - and far more interesting!
An incredible adventure based on a true storyReview Date: 1999-03-25

Used price: $116.59

This Is Why There Is A Bridge and TunnelReview Date: 2006-04-22
THE Most Interesting and Intelligent Writing About MusicReview Date: 2006-03-14

Used price: $0.52

Remarkable Roasting RecipesReview Date: 2000-01-10
Great recipes for every day and for occasionsReview Date: 2001-03-17

Used price: $5.19

A fine work by a fine man. Worth the read!Review Date: 1998-06-20
Such an action is typical of Harold Clarke's character. He is an immaculate man of decency, a true southern gentleman. I will defer the fact that he knew my grandfather and cares greatly for my father and even me. The fact is that he is a hero of Georgia's often troubled judicial history, and I love him greatly.
His book is most worthy of being read. I can promise anyone who reads it that you will appreciate Chief Justice Clarke's simple upbringing and his rise to destiny.
- Jeff Berry
A pleasant trip into the past.Review Date: 1997-11-02

Used price: $35.90

Wonderful Photographs!Review Date: 2006-04-24
Hugh T. Harrington
author of: "Civil War Milledgeville, Tales From the Confederate Capital of Georgia," "Remembering Milledgeville, Historic Tales From Georgia's Antebellum Capital" and "More Milledgeville Memories."
Remembering Georgia's ConfederatesReview Date: 2005-09-27
Good work for the younger reader who wants to know more about Georgia's Confederate heritage but also for the serious researcher.

Used price: $17.99

Intriguing and entertaining!Review Date: 2005-10-22
Absolutely awesome storiesReview Date: 2005-07-27


Useful beyond eating concernsReview Date: 2008-01-22
Great Book.Review Date: 2008-01-31

Used price: $6.45

One of the best books I've read this year!Review Date: 2001-06-06
wonderful natural history of the Waccamaw RiverReview Date: 2000-11-22
This sentiment and the chance discovery of Nathaniel Holmes Bishop's The Voyage of the Paper Canoe (1878), detailing a canoe trip down the East Coast which included a side trip on the Waccamaw River, were the twin impulses that lead Burroughs to return to his native Horry County, SC and make his own trip down the Waccamaw. Burroughs, a professor at Bowdoin, published a terrific collection of essays Billy Watson's Croker Sack in 1991 (it even made Mr. Doggett's Suggested Summer Reading List for Students) and this book is every bit as good.
Whether he's detailing the history of the county, the river and his own family or relating his encounters with the river's unique residents or describing the wildlife he encounters, Burroughs has a sharp eye, a sympathetic ear and a silver tongue. Here is his description of one bird he meets:
Yesterday a red-shouldered hawk had called the day to order, and got its business underway. Today it was a pileated woodpecker: a staccato drum-burst against a hollow tree, then the bird itself. It flew across in front of me, with its peculiar alternation of flap, swoop, and collapse, and its last swoop fetched it up against the trunk of a cypress. It clung there a moment, cocked and primed, a perfectly congruous mixture of Woody Woodpecker, frock-coated nineteenth-century deacon and pterodactyl. Then it gave the tree an abrupt, jackhammer strafing, rolled out its lordly call, and swooped away, leaving the day to its own devices.
If you've ever seen one, you know that a pileated woodpecker has never been described better and if you haven't you must almost feel that now you have.
This is a wonderful bucolic look at the history and nature of the Waccamaw, which will leave you wishing that you too had such a place coursing through your blood.
GRADE: A
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