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

Kentucky
Historic Photos of Lexington (Historic Photos.)
Published in Hardcover by Turner Pub Co (2006-06-30)
Author: W. Gay Reading
List price: $39.95
New price: $29.99
Used price: $45.25

Average review score:

Flying off the Shelves!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-29
As a bookseller, this book has been a wonderful addition to my inventory. I am having trouble keeping it in stock as it is flying off the shelves and I am shipping them out constantly via internet sales. I have had nothing but positive comments from my customers and the quality of the book is far superior to any other title I have seen on Lexington history.

The photos and layout are beautifully done and the large size makes this book a wonderful addition to any library or coffee table and the perfect gift for anyone who has ties to Lexington or just loves historic photos.

HISTORIC PHOTOS OF LEXINGTON
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-28
This is a big, beautifully done, entertaining, hard-bound book with a dustjacket. I thought it was interesting that the previous review was comparing this book to a smaller paperback type book, which is like comparing apples to oranges. Could there be sour grapes involved in that last review? Historic Photos of Lexington looks beautiful on my coffee table & everyone who has looked through it has commented on what a great book it is & asked where I got it. So, judge the book for yourself & don't take the opinion of folks who apparently have nothing better to do with their time than sit around, anonomously knit-picking the good intentioned work of others.

A Beautiful Book, and the best quality on Lexington
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-29
Of the historic photo books on Lexington, this book is the highest quality reproduction. The book has one photo to a 10 x 10 page which is very helpful. It is hardcover and the paper is heavy. It is a very interesting selection of photos and is not the same repeat photos that have been published before. Some of the scenes like the gentlemen on the rail in Chenosa Park (p. 23) and Police Station on Water Street (p. 62) are facinating because you can see the people.

I personally know the people who worked on this book and was surprised to see the one very negative review on this site. Free speech is a wonderful thing, however the reviewer who suggests that the book by Mr. House and Ms. Carter is superior, should really note that they are completely different in their purpose. One is a small paperback, the Historic Photos of Lexington here is a big coffee table type book. Each has it's purpose but to call one universally superior is one dimensional. The book reviewed here has the advantage of the size of photos. That makes the photos easier to see and appreciate. Some of the other negative commentsseem a bit nitpickish and misunderstand the purpose of this book. In fact the critism is so extreme it makes me wonder if the negative reviewer has some relationship with the authors of the book she is promoting over this work. If so that should be disclosed.

When this book is looked at in its entireity, it is a beautiful work and one to be thankful for. Again I do have a bias because I know the people who worked on it, and how hard they worked on it. I think their work is to be appreciated. I believe that the more books on Lexington history the better. It gives people more choices. This book is about the beauty of the photos and photos are a visual medium and this book does that better than any other out there.

A MAJOR disappointment
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
It was exciting to discover this new photo book at a local book store. I have several pictorial books documenting the history and growth of Lexington Kentucky, my birthplace and home for most of my life and was so happy to be able to add one more.

This book however was such a major disappointment, particularly considering the price. The quality is just not between the covers.

Nearly well over 60% of the photographs contained in the book are from the Lafayette Studio Collection owed by the University of Kentucky Libraries. Those photos, as well as a multitude of others, are all contained in a far superior publication entitled 'Images of America Lafayette's Lexington' by Thomas M. House and Lisa B. Carter, which is available here on Amazon for $15.59.

The Lafayette Studio Collection was photographed by Lafayette Studios doing business in Lexington from the mid 1920s to the late 1950s. The House/Carter book not only contains the same and more of these wonderful documentary images, but the captions are much more detailed, giving not only specific addresses of the locations, but designating the direction of point of view of the photograph. This is wonderful for current residents of the city who are too young or too new to the area to recognize landmarks or for readers who might visit Lexington in the future to explore her present and delve into her past.

Mr. Reading's book, while short on information in the captions, also contains multiple mis-captioned photographs. One glaring example is the final page of the book which he has captioned 'Looking across courthouse lawn onto Main Street, mid 1940's'. The date seems accurate given the automobiles shown and the fact that the Strand Theater shown in the photograph was a first-run theater and the marquee indicates the film showing to be 'And Then There Were None' starring Barry Fitzgerald, which was in fact released in 1945. Unfortunately, little else in the caption is accurate. The photo was shot from the Harrison Street Viaduct across the lawn of the Union Station, which opened in 1907 and was demolished in 1960. The photo is looking from the southeast side of Main Street toward the northwest. The Court House, which is on the northwest side of Main Street, is partially visible in the far distance. Interestingly, on page 187, just a few pages prior to this photo, there is another image from the same direction documenting the same scenery and in one of the few instances where Reading gave a direction he captioned that same street scene showing the same theater marquee with the same film listed as 'Looking west down Main Street from Union Station' which is accurate. Since this could be a cropped shot from the larger photo described above (except for the automobiles), it appears he not only didn't research the book initially, he apparently failed to proofread his own publication, since it is clear from these two similar photographs only 11 pages apart that one caption had to be incorrect.

Another photo on page 48 is captioned 'Greyhound Bus station, mid 20th century'. Again, the time appears to be correct, or nearly so, based on the automobiles. However, the building shown is the city bus station (Lexington Cab Company) located on the Northwest corner of Loudon Avenue and Limestone Street. The Greyhound Bus station was located on Main Street in 1934 (with the terminal on Walnut Street), with a new station being built that same year on Main Street, and a subsequent new Greyhound Station being built on Short Street in 1948. While Mr. Reading's cation does not indicate the street location of the incorrectly identified 'Greyhound Station' pictured, one only has to have resided in the city for a short while to recognize the geographic area, still recognizable today.

Mr. Reading is a native of Lexington, of an exact age which is unknown to me; however, I believe he is old enough that he should recognize the areas in the two particular photos by site with no research whatsoever. That is indeed why I selected those two errors for elaboration. Also, please be aware that none of the photos mentioned above are in the Lafayette Collection, but are rather from another collection held by the Transylvania College.

There are several instances of poor proofing in Reading's book as well. For instance on page 42, a caption reads 'Jot 'em Down country store interior at Iron Work Pike and Russell Cave Road, 1944'. Any native of Lexington would know that the pike mentioned is Iron WorkS (with an S) Pike. (Note: This area was one location used in 'Dreamer', the recent film starring Dakota Fanning and Kurt Russell. Much of Lexington's beautiful rural area was used in the film). On page 105, Loudon Avenue was spelled 'Loudoun' with the extra 'U'. Again, any native would be aware of this error. These may be small errors (and there are others), still, when one is documenting history, accuracy cannot be over-emphasized.

Finally, each section of the book is prefaced by a single page of text detailing the broad changes occurring in Lexington during the years documented by the subsequent photos. I found the sentence structure, as well as the actual content, to be juvenile, non-instructional, and annoying is its lack in any real information.

In the preface, the publisher, Todd Bottorff, states: 'The goal in publishing this work is to provide broader access to a set of extraordinary photographs'; unfortunately, nearly all the photographs have been printed in two other publications, and to be redundant, with much more detail about the history they entail. For that reason, as well as for the poor grammatical structure of the text and the inattention to detail and resulting inaccuracies, I found this book to be a major disappointment all around and regretted having made the purchase. It is not going to be a 'revered' volume in my growing library of Lexington history.

Do yourself a favor and purchase the House/Carter book outlined above and get the real flavor and truth of the growth of Lexington in photographs identified with accuracy and stunning detail. Then you can use the balance of the difference in price to purchase a copy of 'The Squire's Sketches of Lexington' by J. Winston Coleman, Jr'. This book is filled with well documented photos from the Transylvania College Collection of historical images and overflowing with interesting, accurate, and amazingly detailed text about the history and growth of the beautiful city of Lexington, KY.

Kentucky
Keeper of the Doves
Published in Audio CD by Listening Library (Audio) (2005-12-13)
Author: Betsy Byars
List price: $22.00
New price: $13.12
Used price: $5.98

Average review score:

Good Start
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-11
I think this book has a good start but I also think that the dad overeacted when he found out that Amen was a girl!!

Keeper of the Doves
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-11
The book is very different than any book I have ever read. It is about a girl who has three sisters when she is born and her dad really wants a son. All of the children's names have to start with an A. So her name is Amen. She was the fifth one born after her older sister died after 9 days of living. Her and her sisters are all scared of their neighbor Mr. Tominski, a mysterious man that saved their father from death. Mr. Tominski is the keeper of the doves behind an old church. There are some sad parts. But I would still recommend this book any day.

keeper of the doves
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-15
Keeper of the doves is a tear wiping book if you don't like tear wiping books I dont recomend you read this but lots of people say it is good!! So take a stab at it!! It is about a girl whos dad wanted her to have name like amen her mother said that is not a girls name her father left them and her mother whispered to her will call u amie!! I hated the book though I thought it was booring.

The best book you will ever read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-10
I loved this book!
This book is about Amie and a man named Mr Tominski. He had doves in a nearby chapel. He trained his doves. This story is placed in 1899 in Kentuky. One day Amie meets Mr Tominski in the grave yard. Amie has a camera. Mr Tominski talks in German. He was pointing at himself. Amie said do you want me to take a picture of you? Mr Tominski shook his head. Amie took 2 pictures of Mr Tominski. This book is about differences. I recommend this book to anybody!!!

Kentucky
Kentucky's Land of the Arches
Published in Paperback by Pucelle Press (1986-06)
Author: Robert H. Ruchhoft
List price: $11.95
Used price: $6.52

Average review score:

Teriffic guide to this area
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-25
I have used this guide religiously as a backpacker from the late '80s through the '90s. I found the detailed trail descriptions very accurate if not exactly easy to follow. The hiker will benefit from taking the time to interpret some of the trail markings as some other reviewers have noted - overall I have found that the descritions are quite accurate once they have been hiked, though somewhat confusing during the actual hike. I cannot comment on the accuracy of current signage and other markings that may change over the course of a few years, as I haven't been to the gorge in about 10 years, though I look forward to taking my daughter once she is old enough to be up for the trip.

One "must see" for the area is camping for a night on top of "Turtle-Back Arch". This arch is near the Rock Bridge area and is accessible from the Swift Creek Trail by following the author's detiled instructions. Some fairly challenging scampering up rock faces is needed to get up on top of the arch but the effort is well worth it. There are a few areas to camp up on top of the arch. They offer spectacular views of the surrounding area and offer the only arch-top campsite area I am aware of in the red river gorge area. If you continue up the arch you can get back to solid ground to forage for wood and to explore. This has to be my all-time favorite campsite.

Invaluable to back country hikers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-13
As the above review states, although very detailed, the author seems to jump around when describing trail directions etc. Be very cautious and read completely through trail descriptions before making a decision. Watch for massive drop offs (very hard to see sometimes in the thick woods) and copperheads.

This book is a treasure map to the riches of Gorge!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-27
Overall, I rate the book 4 stars. It is the only detailed book I can find concering this incredibly fascinating area. The author provides a good summarization of the history of this area as well as a basic explanation for the geologic formations one will see when hiking the Gorge. The sections covering hiking trails are invaluable to anyone who wants to really see what the Gorge has to offer!

The only critique I have is that the author seems to jump around somewhat in providing trail directions. A straight forward reading of some sections leaves one lost as to which trail the author is speaking of. It would appear that the author is so familiar with area, having hiked the trails many times himself, that he assumes much of the reader. Beyond this I would HIGHLY recommend the book to anyone serious about hiking the gorge and obtaining the most satisfaction from his/her efforts. I would only comment that I disagree with the author's assumptions concerning causes for the geologic formations. I believe the entire Gorge area attests to the factuality of the Biblical Flood! The swirling texture of many of the rock formations coupled with the existence of rock caves and land bridges points strongly to the aftermath of flood conditions. Thanks for listening!

The only DETAILED trail guide I've found of the Gorge!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-16
If you've ever asked for directions in a small town, you know how easy it is to get lost even though you've followed the route suggested to the last detail. Inevitably the farmer assumed you would follow the road as it split to the right or forgot to mention that the sign is no longer there. Such it is with Ruchhoft's "Kentucky's Land of the Arches." While the trail guides are generally correct, many times one is left meandering through the woods, looking for that sign that is no longer there. This is a great guide to direct you to trail heads and to familiarize hikers with the beauty of the Red River Gorge, but sometimes leaves the reader lost before even beginning to hike the trail. This book is a "must read" for any avid hiker of the Gorge, but falls short of being the type of trail guide needed so desperately for the RRG. I tried to rate this book as if it weren't the only RRG trail guide on the market.

Kentucky
Modern Medea: A Family Story of Slavery and Child-Murder from the Old South
Published in Hardcover by Hill & Wang Pub (1998-10)
Author: Steven Weisenburger
List price: $25.00
New price: $3.40
Used price: $0.28
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Modern Medea, modern mistakes
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-20
The first chapter is about the Gaines family, how is it Mr. Weisenburger can make so many mistakes and no one seems to notice. Did he use newspaper articles of the day for his chapters having to do with the trial? If he can take a 12 page letter from Sept. 14, 1852 and change the names of those in the letter how can we believe he could get the rest of the story right ? The Gaines family genealogy chart is wrong and possibly gotten off any one of the internet genealogy websites.
He constantly refers to a "teenage or young" Archibald, this Archibald was 25 years old ! And this Archibald was the oldest child of John Pollard Gaines.
He gets the dates wrong to so many things you have to wonder what else is wrong ?
This book may have been more accurate if the author had consulted with descendants of the Gaines, Bedinger or Marshall families, which he did not.
Mr. Weisenburger's bio at the University of Kentucky states "Steven is a fanatical researcher of primary sources." With so many errors, I do not see that...

A true story of slavery and infanticide
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-16
In February 1857, slave Margaret Garner fled from her master Archibald Gaines's Kentucky plantation. She, her husband Robert, his parents, and their four children crossed the frozen Ohio River in Cincinnati, hiding out in the cabin of one of Margaret's cousins, a free black. Gaines quickly trailed them to the cabin, and, in one quick moment, Margaret picked up a knife and killed one of her children, not wanting any of them to go back into slavery.

In "Modern Medea," author Steven Weisenburger uses court documents, newspaper stories and other sources from the time to examine this almost-forgotten trail that challenged the 1850 Fugitive Slave Law. We follow along with the entire trial, seeing all the tricks that both defense and prosecution lawyers used to either bring a quick end to proceedings or to protract them in order to keep the Garners on free soil. The trail also gives us an interesting look into politics, the pro-slavery mindset, abolitionism view, and the media perception and bias of the time.

What I found most interesting about this book is that the trial to determine whether or not the Garner's were still the property of Archibald Gaines took precedent over the charge of infanticide. The outcome would have a profound effect not only on state's rights but would spark a tiny flame leading up to the American Civil War. And even after the trial was concluded, the media, poets such as Elizabeth Barret Browning, and other authors used the events to add fuel to the ever-growing debate on slavery.

But, it still remains a little-known trial, falling into the dust of history in part due to public "whitening" of the events and to the events of the Dred Scott decision almost a year later. Yet author Toni Morrison helped to revive interest in this trial by modeling one of the characters in her novel "Beloved" after the ghost of Margaret's slain daughter, Mary.

The book sometimes reads more like a college text and asks many questions that are never answered. But the amount of information surrounding the trial and concerning the battle of state's rights versus federal law make this a great book to read.

The story behind (or beside) Morrison's Beloved
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-12
Weisenburger, with a meticulous eye and a careful hand, vividly retells the story of Margaret Garner, whose case (or rather, one account of whose case) was the seed from which Toni Morrison grew the central stalk of her novel Beloved. It is not exactly facts that he gives us -- Weisenburger is too careful a critic, too aware of the complex nature of the historical record -- but around what facts can be found, he has written a novel of his own, one which richly complements Morrison's though-experiment with the historical legacy of slavery.

Garner's case, though little recalled today, was far better known in its day than many readers of Morrison's novel may realize. The best-known lawyers and abolitionists of the day argued Garner's case, and newspapers across the country reported the story. The most fascinating aspect of the story is the account of the competing legal and rhetorical strategies used to try to free Garner -- or, if she could not be freed, to give her the greatest possible symbolic value for the cause.

Garner's act -- killing one of her children rather than allowing het to be returned to slavery -- placed her between two contrary legal systems. Within the slavery system, and the Federally- administered Fugitive Slave Act, Garner was a piece of property to be returned. Yet within Ohio law, as a person accused of murder, she was subject to persecution for her crime as a human being. Her lawyer, paradoxically, had to persuade a judge to issue a writ for her arrest for murder, in order to prevent her from being returned to Kentucky as a slave -- it was in fact her one hope.

Weisenburger details how, in the end, this defense too failed, partly due to the complicity of certain Ohio officials with the Kentucky counterparts, and partly due to the inaction of then-governor of Ohio Salmon Chase. The actual tale of Margaret Garner, strangely enough, is even more tragic than that of Morrison's Sethe. Margaret was shipped off to cotton-belt slavery with relatives of her Kentucky owner, losing a second child to a streamboat accident en route, and evenrually died a horrible death from typhoid fever.

I'd recommend this book to anyone engaged by Morrison's novel, or by the recent film -- not as 'the fact behind the fiction,' but instead as a vital counterpoint, an *other* story of Margaret Garner, a woman who stood at the razor's edge of on of American history's most brutal junctures.

Interesting story, well written
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-31
Very well done indeed. I am impressed that an English professor could turn in such good work as an historian and cover the courtroom battles with the skill of an experienced lawyer. A well told story of an obscure, but very revealing, chapter in the period just before the Civil War.

Minor criticisms: Too much is devoted to courtroom battles at the expense of describing daily slave life. As the author is a professor at a late 20th Century American university, he feels it necessary from time to time to wave his little red PC book in the air and shout slogans: Slavery was evil! Racism is not nice! Well, duh. None of this adds to the book and all of it detracts from the book.

Still, this is a good read. Buy it; you won't be disappointed. (By the way, I have never read Toni Morrison's "Beloved"; one doesn't need to in order to enjoy this book.)

Kentucky
The Nazi Impact on a German Village
Published in Paperback by University Press of Kentucky (2004-11-19)
Authors: Walter Rinderle and Bernard Norling
List price: $25.00
New price: $25.00
Used price: $28.67

Average review score:

Garbage
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-17
This a poor attempt at writing. The history is accurate but the writing is under developed. Unexciting, uncreative, and unskilled. Two thumbs down Rinderle.

God and Politics in Oberschopfheim
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-16
Walter Rinderle (Vincennes University) and Bernard Norling (Notre Dame) have written one of the most conscientious possible reconstructions of life in a small Catholic town of 2,800 gnarled and busy souls before, during and after the period of Nazi power (1933-1945). The town is Oberschopfheim located in southwest Baden and the joint authors depict all aspects of the daily life, toil and vital interests of the town's citizens.

The book is based on the Oberschopfheim archives which "contained copies of correspondence sent and received and detailed information about such matters as agriculture, local government, the manifold endeavors and concerns of the church, the distribution of welfare, community discord, and the activities of the politice. The pastor, village officials, and ordinary citizens alike were generously cooperative." (p. 3) It is one of the most level-headed books about the whole period.

Here, for example, you have an account of the town's voting patterns in one of the elections. "The ingrained political responses of Oberschopfheimers likewise offered little to comfort the Nazis. In many German villages, both Catholic and Protestant, clerical influence on the voting habits of church members was so effective that it was sometimes positively embarrassing, producing results that approached in predictability those in post-1945 Communist states. In most elections in the 1920s only about half of the eligible voters in Oberschopfheim had bothered to go to the polls. Of those more than 80 percent routinely obeyed the pastor and voted for the Center (Catholic) party, thereby earning for themselves the sobriquet, "black nest of reaction." (pp. 95-96).

Here is another. "Contemporary Anglo-Saxon, especially American, writer frequently distort the history of people who live under any authoritarian regime because they assume that democracy is the natural, normal form of government anywhere, that the mass of `normal' people everywhere admire and desire it, and that any deviation from it is some sort of civil disease of `problem' requiring diagnosis. If one begins merely by noting the historical record-that some form of absolutism has been the usual mode of government at most times and places and that democratic experiments have generally been short-lived historically-then fascism does not appears to be a social sickness but only another variant of authoritarianism. At once, all sorts of human conduct in Nazi Germany and elsewhere becomes demystified. By focusing relentlessly on the most bizarre features of Nazi ideology and the most base cruelties of Nazi practice it is easy to forget that for the ordinary nonpolitical person day-to-day life in some authoritarian society does not differ markedly from that in a democracy. One must be wary of exchanging political opinions with others, to be sure, and a prudent individual should not attract attention to himself. One should also be careful to obey the law, since authoritarian regimes are usually less lenient to transgressors than are democracies. But these are not especially onerous restrictions to most conventional, nonideological persons. Even under the most strident despotism more of the time of judges and courts is spent dealing with taxes, licenses, applications, civil lawsuits, thievery, public drunkenness, brawling, and marital discord than with the persecution or enslavement of political dissidents." (pp. 133-134) Highly recommended.

A wonderful description of the village of my ancestors.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-24
I purchased this particular book, since the entire book talks about the village my ancestors lived in. They left in 1853 to emigrate to America. No one in my family has been able to ever find any information regarding this village.

This book is simply a delight for me to read. Opening a window to the past: finding how my ancestors lived; their beautiful surroundings; with very interesting information how Oberschopfheim came into being; with it's developments through out the centuries.

I am also interested very much in WWII history. It is a very interesting to see how the Nazi's influenced such a small village. This question has always been in my mind, and now I have an insight into the WWII atmosphere, created by the Nazi's.

Since I have been searhing for information on Oberschopfheim, the discovery of this book has been an answer to a prayer for me. Once, I was about to give up with my search, but now I feel like a have a real understanding of the passage of time in the village. I am so grateful for such a wonderful book!!!

Either way, if your approach is getting information of this particular village, or for an insight into the impact of the Nazi's, this is a wonderfully written book.

My thanks go out to Mr Rinderle, and Mr. Norling!

An informative history of the village where I am born
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-13
I have read this book from a very personal view. Many events and persons that are described in the book I have heard from my parents. Many Informations of the history of my home-village I've heard the first time. Unfortunately the book is written in English. The content of the book merits also readers who are not able to read the book in English.

Kentucky
The Strange Case of Jonathan Swift and the Real Long John Silver
Published in Hardcover by Acclaim Press (2007-09-15)
Author: Robert A. Prather
List price: $24.95
New price: $24.95
Used price: $19.59

Average review score:

Ripping Yarn
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-08
This book reads like fiction, but keeps coming back to facts, people and actual places. Overall a great read with never a dull moment. The author's care for history is apparent - as is his love a a good story.

Swift Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-02
Mr. Prather puts a new twist on an old Kentucky legend. His investigation introduces us to the enigmatic Mr. Swift who is an international trader, an ambassador, a freemason of considerable standing, a merchant with connections extending to President George Washington and perhaps--a homicidal miner. Throw in a secret code by Robert Louis Stephenson and you have a gripping historical mystery. Did I mention a lost silver mine.....?

Wonderful Slice of History and Mystery
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-20
For those who like their History with a bit of mystery this book is for you. Not only is this tale highly readable, it is well researched and entertaining. The probable connections with Robert Louis Stevenson's Long John Silver and Jonathan Swift make for a stimulating debate. I would definitely recommend this book not just for History buffs, but also fans of Robert Louis Stevenson, and treasure seekers alike.

The strange case of Jonathan Swift
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-04
Mostly a waste of time - filled with anecdotal "facts" and assumptions. About as meaningful as Pres Lincoln's secretary was named Kennedy and Pres. Kennedy's secretary was named Lincoln. I have assigned my copy to the weekly collection recycling service.

Kentucky
Submarine Commander: A Story of World War II and Korea
Published in Paperback by University Press of Kentucky (2000-03-02)
Author: Paul R. Schratz
List price: $19.95
New price: $5.01
Used price: $4.40
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

A Very Enjoyable Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-16
While not the most action-packed of submarine narratives, this is perhaps one of the best written of the bunch, and I found it hard to put down. In addition to the WWII patrols, descriptions of the snorkeling mechanism and procedures were interesting, as were the Korean War patrols.

This was a forgetable memoir.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-03
I'm amazed this book was ever published. The writer,Paul Schratz, was given command of a sub after WW2 and saw very little action as a ships officer during the war. The book rambles on mostly about what he ate for dinner every night in ports around the Pacific, he seems to have spent most of his time in port. He also goes out of his way to try to impress you with his capacity to drink and act somewhat irresponsibly. I can't believe I actually read the whole book it left me feeling a little embarrassed for the poor guys that had to serve with him. He must be an amazing guy,sub commander, concert violinist.high diver,scratch golfer,great tennis player,rum smuggler,scientist,gourmet,an all around party guy and a wonderful dad. What a book.

Deceptive tactics.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-18
Many naval officers write well, pehaps because they write many reports carefully to those who read carefully. This book is well written. Schratz's report on his corner of WWII and the occupation of Japan is worth reading. His take on the torpedo problem--and the solution he implemented at the edge of his orders--is unique. His report on certain incidents of command and loyalty add to those extant. His explanation on the possible cause of the Tonkin Gulf incident is worth the price of the book. This officer has understanding and insight. He's committed to making a contribution and leaving a legacy. But he doesn't express this directly, and this raises character as an issue. As a naval officer, he's efficient, effective, innovative and exacting. He knows that healthy organizations have fun, including shipboard organizations, so he plays hard, but doesn't let play stand in the way of work and is uncompromisingly severe on those who do. He knows the difference between a wartime navy and a peacetime navy, between bureaucratic tactics that get one promoted and what happens if one tries to use them in battle. He knows better than to use the same plan twice. His conscience makes him uncomfortable when action puts him on the wrong side of his values or when justice and regulations conflict. Basically, he favors thinking and acting "outside the box" whenever the box keeps him from carrying out his mission, broadly defined. He presents himself as a black sheep for doing so; and yet, read carefully, each of his forays into apparent undisciplined self-indulgence have the effect of producing pride, increasing morale, bonding shipmates together, and ultimately placing his superiors in a good light. What's odd is that he doesn't take credit for these as willful achievements, but invites us to treat them as unruly and undisciplined, as if initiative and command were antithetical. It's possible that he's unaware of his own character, but unlikely. What we have here is a man who doesn't want others to know who the inner man is and is willing to derogate himself so as to put others on the wrong track, all except those who love him for himself rather than for his role, to which he refuses to succumb--avoiding numbness. Far from being untypical of naval officers--whom he sees as conformist, he is typical of certain kind of non-conforming officer that American naval tradition produces in abundance: daring, resourceful, unwilling to let protocol inhibit effectiveness or survival, willing to work hard and play hard, willing to cut the Gordian Knot with pleasure. My guess is that, under his flash and feathers, the gentleman is as shy as a violinist. He'd be interesting to meet. If I'm right, he's already read enough comments about his book to wonder, out loud, whether anyone who commits memoirs to paper is a fool . . . while taking secret comfort in the fact that no one has found him out. Well, almost no one.

A great personal description of wartime in subs
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-18
Unlike the official histories of subs, which come directly from the patrol reports and talk almost exclusively about the captain, this book focuses on the personal side of life on a WWII diesel boat. The author was just a little too junior to be in command at the outbreak of war. He shows what it was like to be on a boat where the CO failed, and what people did to keep the boat going. His discussion of the people side of operating as well as his postwar experience in Japan is more forthright and blunt than many accounts. It doesn't hurt that the author is a "cowboy" CO--I remember seeing pictures of things he did when I was at school and an almost panicky reaction in the more sober and composed officers when confronted with outrageous up angles or special forces operations. The book is similar to "Baa Baa Black Sheep" in tone without the sad outcome that Pappy Boyington had to go through.
I bought this book after reading it in the submarine's library. My CO has the book. Some junior officers bought the book. We like it. CAPT Ned Beach wrote a nice blurb on it. Some subs have it in their professional reading libraries.
You may like it too.

Kentucky
The Mighty Eighth in WWII : A Memoir
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2000-08-17)
Author: J. Kemp McLaughlin
List price: $25.00
New price: $15.00
Used price: $8.29
Collectible price: $49.95

Average review score:

What a great book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-11
I totally disagree with the "Reader" who posted a very negative review about this book. As the author of over 1,000 magazine articles and eight books -- the last two about flying -- and a former U.S.Navy fighter pilot, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I tip my hat to Brig.Gen.J.Kemp McLaughlin for doing such a fine job in detailing his WWII experiences. I particularly like the detailed index, the short chapters, the easy reading of non-complex sentences, and the use of common words. His recall of names and places, and his personal comments about specific people, made you feel like you were in his place, living the frightening and stressful skies in combat on some of the most dangerous B-17 missions... Furthermore, this is a good example of a book that can be written without the use of crude or vulgar language. I've tried to locate the author to call him, but have not been able to find his e-mail or phone number. General, if you read this, please call me at (818)346-7024 (Los Angeles area). My call sign, by the way, is "Crash"; I earned it!

Truly America's Greatest Generation
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-16
The General's accounts of what young men experienced during the war are awe-inspiring. To think of the sacrifices that were made in the skies above Europe in the early days of the war makes one wonder if today's young Americans could do the same.

For those that are aviation buffs, the book goes into detail about the logistics involved and the archaic and rudementary navigational aides of time and the virtual absense of air traffic control. It is truly a miracle that several hundred bombers could take off and get into formation and proceed to the target by primarily using pyrotechnics.

A must read!

Beware!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-30
J. Kemp, Brig. Gen., USAFR McLaughlin's experiences in WWII were truly epic; however, the lack of detail in his written account and his modesty in revealing his contributions and bravery during the AIR Bombing Campaign over Europe understates and limits the reader's ability to better comprehend the conflict. I would rate this book as "One Star" for older readers, but I think younger readers (7th, 8th and 9th Grade) may find the book a helpful primer. If you are a serious reader of WWII History avoid this book.

Kentucky
Borrowed Children
Published in School & Library Binding by Rebound by Sagebrush (1999-10)
Author: George Ella Lyon
List price: $19.85
New price: $12.56
Used price: $7.36

Average review score:

Borrowed Children- or Depression in the Hills
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-28
This book starts out with Mandy and her sisters talking about trees. Thay live in Kentucky and all that, so ya know Her brothers hated ham so they ate at the hotel.

this is a very good book for you to read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-19
I believe the book the Borrowed Children by Geogre Ella Lyon was interesting to read because it was a book to read that will help you make a choice between family, and school. And also the cause and the effect behind your decision. The set was belivable, and you could tell if you just look at it. Mandy is trying to express herself, and trying to go back to school. Yes it made sense. Because Mandy stop going to school to help family, out because her mother nearly died giving birth to William(her brother). Mandy is a good way of getting a teen to think about what will be the cause and the effect of their choice. I think that any body between the ages of 7 and up could read this book.

Borrowed Children
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-24
Mandy is twelve years old,and she has to take care of her two younger sisters,nine-year-old Anna and five-year-old Helen.Her
two older brothers,Ben and David,are 14 and 16.One day they have a new baby brother,Willie.Mandy's mother is tired from Willie's birth and really weak.So Mandy had to keep the house running with David and Ben.And she gets to escape all this work by going to her grandparents' house for two weeks in Memphis as a christmas present from her presents.

Kentucky
Cruising Guide from Lake Michigan to Kentucky Lake: The Heartland Rivers Route
Published in Paperback by Pelican Publishing Company (2002-02)
Author: Rick Rhodes
List price: $32.95
New price: $19.59
Used price: $19.59

Average review score:

Excellent cruising guide
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-27
Rick Rhodes' book takes you on a cruise of the great rivers with all of the vital information needed to transit them safely. He provides marina names and facts about their facilities that you need on a trip of this nature. We will have it on our chart table when we go for our river trip.

very useful
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-23
Although I do not have a boat, I saw this book at a library and it has what I would consider very useful information, such as maps, distances, channels and phone numbers for bridge tenders, where to dock your boat, what's available when you dock, amount of turbulence in the locks, height of bridges in the up and down positions, and a whole lot more. It is written as a downstream narrative.

Don't waste your time
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-21
My husband & I wanted to run the IL. river from Grafton to Liverpool in our boat. So we bought this book. Before we received it, we put our boat in at Liverpool, mile 128 & went down to mile 97.5 Brownsville. The book doesn't mention anything about the Marina in Havana where you can get gas & eat. It doesn't mention Bath at all where they have a bar on the river & you can get food & drinks. It says you can get gas in Brownsville, but you can't! They have food & thats it! Those are enough mistakes for us to decide to send the book back. It cannot be reliable. Unless you want to get stuck out on the river without gas, I would not buy this book!


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