Maine Books


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

Maine
Moving to Maine, Updated and Expanded 2nd Edition: The Essential Guide to Get You There and What You Need to Know to Stay
Published in Paperback by Down East Books (2007-07-25)
Author: Victoria Doudera
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.00
Used price: $8.31

Average review score:

Really cool book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-08
I bought this book for my sister-in-law before she moved to Maine. We all skimmed through it and aquired lots of new information. I am sure that she will glean very valuable information as she starts her life in the great state of Maine.

Very Helpful
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-19
I found this book to be extremely helpful and it had answers to many questions I had about Maine. The information was very through and covered all bases. The author addressed taxes, renting, housing, shopping, schools, and other important information. I really enjoyed this book.

A Book For Relocators That Non-Relocators Can Also Enjoy
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
MOVING TO MAINE is a great book for relocators that non-relocators can also enjoy. It describes the school systems, weather, housing, and other necessities that people moving there need to know, but it also describes, shopping, cultural, and dining experiences that a vacationer can take advantage of. Whether you're actually relocating to Maine, going on vacation there, or are simply interested in travel books, you should own this book.

Maine
Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier Fakery
Published in Hardcover by Da Capo Press (2008-01-28)
Author: Jim Motavalli
List price: $26.95
New price: $5.81
Used price: $0.10
Collectible price: $26.95

Average review score:

A Wonderful Picture of the Public Space in the Early 20th Century
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
Motavalli has created a wonderful interpretive picture of the media and public reactions to a great story in early 20th Century America. He puts the reader in the period, but brings us in contact with our ancestors and shows that we haven't progressed in terms of our love for the spectacular stunt! Joseph Knowles exploits thrilled the nation longing for a free show. Not unlike the infamous OJ low speed chase that captivated us a while back.

A good story, a wonderful interpretation and a great read!Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier Fakery

A Stitch in Time
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
Never have I read a more fascinating account of salesmenship in America. As a nation the US prides itself on our frontier heritage,the quest for individuality & independence,& the pursuit of an ideal existence in harmony with nature, & making a few bucks along the way. This is a true American story !
This book Kept Me In Stitches !!!

The Fabulous, Forgotten Nature Man
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-04
We are often told that our nation, especially our menfolk, are getting soft, that we don't have the ruggedness of our forebears, that we spend too much time in our cities and not enough back to the land, and that as a result we are losing some moral anchor which used to hold us in good stead. The trouble is that we have been told this for at least a hundred years, probably further back than that, and the message has not changed much, although it is a message that is enthusiastically boosted by many. Our coddled and citified society went faddishly berserk in 1913 for a man who simply went into the woods of Maine, vowing to stay there for two months on his own, unassisted by any technology. Joseph Knowles was a sensation at the time, now forgotten. His astonishing story is the subject of _Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier Fakery_ (Da Capo Press) by Jim Motavalli. The author, a journalist who writes on environmental themes, has picked from obscurity a wonderful subject, not just Knowles but also the anxiety we tend to have that we are out of touch with natural life.

Knowles was all of 43 years old when he went into the woods. He had been a sailor, trapper, and scout, but what he wanted to be was an artist. He had some untutored skill in painting, and was making sketches and paintings in Boston for a decade when he got the idea (perhaps in a dream) to go support himself in the woods. The _Boston Post_, always ready for a circulation gimmick, was ready to back him. "Can Knowles Live Two Months as a Cave Man?" came the headlines, and though the paper hyped the event, people were sincerely interested in the man-against-the-wilderness theme. Knowles was photographed and interviewed, and given a physical exam before trotting off to the woods in nothing but a g-string. When he emerged from the woods two months later, he had lost weight, but he was no longer naked, wearing birch sandals and the skin of a bear he had trapped and killed. He had caught the national spirit; he was viewed as a hero, awing crowds wherever he went. The bitter rival of the _Post_, the Hearst-owned _Boston Sunday American_, got onto the Knowles bandwagon by debunking it. Knowles, according to the revision, had spent two months in a log cabin with food (and even female companionship) delivered to him. Knowles had a couple of other wilderness trips, and then went on the lecture circuit and wrote a back-to-nature book about his experiences as the "Nature Man". The last third of _Naked in the Woods_ has mostly to do with his painting career; he did commissioned murals and small-scale calendar art.

Knowles died in 1942. His artwork is still collected by some, and the Ilwaco Heritage Museum had a retrospective last year. We still have the Nature Man with us, in the form of "Survivor"-type television shows. Going wilderness is the show for Bear Grylls, who has starred in the British program _Man vs. Wild_, and who last year underwent a Knowles-type debunking for spending his nights in cozy hotels rather than in the wild where he was assumed to be keeping himself. Motavalli has a wonderful time with this story, and presents it in all its humorous aspects, but finds something serious in what Knowles had to tell us then and now: "He may have been at least partly a fraud, but he was nonetheless successful in communicating a powerful and useful message to an anxiety-stricken age."

Maine
Never Count Crow: love and loss in Kennebunk, Maine
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2006-12-05)
Author: Cynthia, Fraser Graves
List price: $12.95
New price: $7.55
Used price: $2.94

Average review score:

Coffee with a friend
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-17
Reading this book is like having coffee with a sagacious friend who is relating the experience of losing a spouse. One truly cannot put it down once started. Brave emotions are so eloquently expressed by Graves in her writing.

A Deeply Affecting Spiritual Journey
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-20
The author brings us effortlessly along on her personal journey of love, life and death; generously sharing her private thoughts and spiritual experiences along the way. I was mesmerized by the drama and pathos of this heartfelt and beautifully written story. The poetry provides respite and further insight, a gift--much to learn and ponder here.

A Beautiful Soul
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-19
A most touching and poignant story, sensitively written with compassion and insight. Difficult, but necessary, lessons for us all to learn in the face of personal loss. A beautiful work by a beautiful soul.

Maine
Our Point of View: Fourteen Years at a Maine Lighthouse
Published in Hardcover by Down East Books (2007-05-25)
Author: Thomas Szelog
List price: $24.95
New price: $15.38
Used price: $11.91

Average review score:

volunteer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-23
Great pictures of a Maine Lighthouse taken by someone who lived next to the structure for many years.

Our Point of View: Fourteen Years at a Maine Lighthouse
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-08
(From Tena Wallace) This book is absolutely amazing and that descriptive word doesn't even compare to the reality of the pictures and entries of your book. I don't think I have EVER read something and felt the emotion like I did with these entries. To read and feel the sandess, heartache, the joy and excitement along with the horror is the most amazing reader experience.
This book makes a great gift, it's not a one time read, it is a book to be enjoyed over and over!

A joy to read and a 'must' for anyone who has ever wondered what it would be like to live in a lighthouse in our day and age.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-03
In 1987, Thomas and Lee Szelog were two lighthouse enthusiasts who visited a series of Main shoreline beacons for their second date. Two years later (and now married) they moved into the lightkeeper's house at the Marshall Point Lighthouse in Port Clyde, Maine. Tom kept a journal, as did Lee. Tom is also an award-winning photographer. Drawing from those journals and Tom's gift for photography, the wrote and illustrated "Our Point Of View: Fourteen Years At A Maine Lighthouse" in which they share their experiences, excitement, and pleasures of living at a lighthouse in every season and through all manner of weather. They even celebrate the gulls, cormorants, whales, seals who turn up at their door, as well as the people meeting and marrying in the shadow of their lighthouse beacon. Simply put, "Our Point Of View" is a joy to read and a 'must' for anyone who has ever wondered what it would be like to live in a lighthouse in our day and age.

Maine
A Penny for a Hundred
Published in Hardcover by Down East Books (1996-10)
Author: Ethel Pochocki
List price: $14.95
New price: $84.11
Used price: $7.28

Average review score:

Evocative and reminiscent of an earlier time
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-17
Charmingly written by Ethel Pochocki, A Penny For A Hundred is an engaging story for young readers about a nine-year-old girl growing up in America in 1944. When German prisoners-of-war are brought in to help harvest a potato crop, she befriends one of them in this gentle tale of compassion and hope for the future. Very highly recommended reading, A Penny For A Hundred is illustrated in soft colors by Mary Beth Owens that are evocative and reminiscent of an earlier time.

This is an excellent book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-20
This book is a wonderful book which shows that not all POW's were bad during WWII. The book shows the warm heart of a child who befriends a POW...This is an excellent book!

Young Girl Learns How Cultures Mix in Charming Maine Story
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-15
Maine's Aroostook County is a special place. Some would say it's America "uncut diamond" for culture, history, sense of place, family and heritage. This distinctive culture was even more pronounced before the advent of television during World War II. A Penny for a Hundred is a charming story based upon a historical account of how World War II German prisoners of war were temporarily settled in this rural area of Maine. Author Ethel Pochocki teaches readers about the nature of forgiveness. This is a marvelous lesson for today's young people who hear about so much violence throughout the world today. Pictures are by Mary Beth Owens. There's also a neat surprise at the end, a recipe for German Stollen. Terrific Holiday gift for children and adults as well.

Maine
Pirate Shirt Dot Com
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2006-12-04)
Author: Shannon M. Risk
List price: $19.95
New price: $18.46
Used price: $21.94

Average review score:

Humorous and heart warming
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-19
What an entertaining book! Believable, down-to-earth characters with real-world problems. The story is balanced with humor, strength and a positive outlook. I couldn't put it down.

Pirate Shirt Dot Com
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-18
My take on this book is that it can easily be made into a screenplay. I can see this story on the big screen. The Hammond sisters & their friend, Gabby, run a romantic adventure dating service, with their own love stories unfolding along the way. Toss in a hunky pirate for comic relief. Definitely, the makings of a good date movie. Pirate Shirt Dot Com held my interest from cover to cover.

Fun reading!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-29
I happened to get this title as a Christmas present and, though I am not usually a fan of romance novels, I decided to give it a shot. What a fun surprise! Witty, delightful, and sexy, this book simultaneously evokes romance novel archetypes and pokes a little fun at them at well. I hope there is a sequel!

Maine
A Rocky Path
Published in Kindle Edition by Xlibris (2008-04-11)
Author: Lauralynn Elliott
List price: $6.99
New price: $5.59

Average review score:

Bravo!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-22
In the literary genre' of romantic mysteries this is certainly a winner. "A Rocky Path" does an excellent job of combining both a gentle yet torrid love story with a thrilling and creative plot line. With lot's of metaphysical pizzazz and characters that you will come to love, this book is a wonderful addition to its class. I will wait eagerly for the next book by author Lauralynn Elliott.

A Rocky Path Reviewed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
A Rocky Path is a delightful read by a new author. Ms. Elliot tells of new beginnings for Emily Adams in Maine. A new job, new surroundings, and a new interest find Emily with more complications than any one person should handle. Throw in the forbidden love of a mysterious man to the mix and Emily's life almost goes on tilt.
Ms. Elliot writes a love story with complications and background to keep the reader interested and turning pages to see how many new twists her subject gets to face. Her description of Maine, the house, and Emily's surroundings place the reader in the center of the action and keep them reading for the finish. I am looking forward to the next book from this author.

Great story!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
This is a really great book from a new author. There are quite a few surprises revealed that you wouldn't think would be in the story (not goint to spoil it for you here, you'll have to read it)! I hope to read more by this author soon.

Maine
Saving the Lamb
Published in Paperback by Finishing Line Press (2007)
Author: BG THURSTON
List price:
New price: $12.00
Used price: $8.00

Average review score:

A special read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-16
I recently met bg Thurston at a sheep show and we had a delightful visit together. Shepardesses we are! She shared this book of poems with me and as I thumbed through the pages I fell on one poem "My Mother's Stroke". I dashed the words and I knew I'd traveled this poem with her. Bg's poems are poignant, forthright, real, spiked with light. A lovely addition to anyone's collection and it has a wonderful bookmark included!

vivid portrayals of daily life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-29
I received this book as a gift and it has been one of those rare gifts that I continue to enjoy and use. BG Thurston paints such vivid pictures of life, birth and nature that you feel as though you are standing next to her in her yard or kitchen. I highly recommend this work.

wonderfully ethereal!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-24
The poems in bg Thurston's 'Saving the Lamb' all possess a beautiful resonance between human nature and the Natural World through a delicate dialogue between the two realms; the rhythm of daily life set forth in the form of simple routines and a patient relationship with Nature are transformed into a mantra that reveals glimpses into the subtleties of our humanity. I enjoyed this book immensely, as there is a warmth to Thurston's writing which openly invites the reader into a mutual journey of self-illumunation and enlightenment with the author through the reflections cast from her life's imagery. Highly recommended!

Maine
The Seed Is Mine: The Life of Kas Maine, a South African Sharecropper 1894-1985
Published in Hardcover by Hill & Wang Pub (1996-02)
Author: Charles Van Onselen
List price: $35.00
New price: $12.99
Used price: $2.59
Collectible price: $35.00

Average review score:

A celebration of a "real" life
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1997-06-18
I was fascinated throughout. Sounds and looks "dry" when you see it on the shelf, but so full of juicy bits that make his life very real. You cheer for him when he manages to think his way around the obstacles that apartheid and his own nature put in his way and you are continually forced to confront the "What would I have done here?" question.



Yes, it is long. But when you are through you want to know still more. What has happened to the rest of the family since the book was published? What was the effect of those years of scrutiny on their "real" lives?



I stared at the pictures and studied the faces. I have been selectively pushing the book on all the thoughtful people I know. It wakes up your brain.

Learn more from one man's life than from any history book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-02
The daily life of Kas Maine over 90 odd years on the high veldt of South Africa says more about the history of that part of the world than all the history books and newspaper articles and military actions that could ever be recounted. I felt as though I myself had lived those same 90 years, breathed the dust, lost my crops, driven my livestock from farm to farm trying to find sharecropping work, put up and taken down my corregated metal shack, been hounded by bureaucrats, maintained my dignity and kept my family together against incredible odds. Although the place names and indigenous family names were difficult and their abundance presumed some familiarity with South Africa, I learned to visualize rather than pronounce them, and they became like one of Kas's stony fields in the story and I liked the "rough footing." A unique experience in book form.

A gripping look at an ordinary man.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1997-11-07
I have been taking my time with this book, savouring it while I can. The rhythms of the prose and the world it describes are so seductive, that I have often found myself reading "just a few more pages" at 3AM despite having to get up for work the next day. If you wish to have a sense of what life in rural South Africa was like over the past century, I can't think of a better book (or any other book for that matter). Kas was an exceptionally gifted farmer, a traditional herbalist and healer, and a patriarch who struggled against the almost impossible odds of being a black man in South Africa. As the insanity of apartheid took hold, he and his family were forced to move from place to place, his dreams of agricultural success and land ownership gradually eroding. Yet the book also portrays the rich, multicultural environment of the Transvaal, the varied relationships between Blacks, Boers, Englishmen, Jews and Asians; the shift from a paternalistic but, in many ways more egalitarian society to a racist police state. Kas is a complex man: wise, cruel, patient, tender, pragmatic, apolitical, opportunist, and honourable. The portrayals of his relationships with his ever expanding family are as complex and engaging as one could wish from a fine novel. Van Onselen makes no apologies for him: he simply gives us the man and, above all his humanity. Perhaps his greatest achievement with this book is in bridging the gap between the Western reader and an illiterate African farmer, in underlining our human commonalities rather than our differences. Despite occasional passages that are a tad purple, the author's prose is clear and flowing. He manages to make the ebb and flow of the seasons with their triumphs, tragedies, and ignominies absolutely gripping. I never thought that I could be enthralled by descriptions of the complexities of plowing and harvesting, or the purchase of agricultural equipment, but I was. No it's not too long as the reviewer in the New York Times claimed. In fact one often wishes that one could know more about this extraordinary yet very ordinary man.

Maine
The Summer of Cecily
Published in Hardcover by Bunker Hill Publishing (2004-05-25)
Author: Nan Lincoln
List price: $18.95
New price: $7.67
Used price: $0.46
Collectible price: $18.95

Average review score:

A wonderful story!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-30
Nan Lincoln's real-life story of finding a young seal is both heart-warming and informative; interspersing a history and background of Mount Desert Island amongst the story of Cecily. A very intersting and all-around wonderful book.

What if you had a seal on your sofa? A real seal!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-02
Nan Lincoln's story of the summer she spent raising (with the permission of the authorities) an abandoned seal pup is the most endearing story I think I've ever read. Her tale of her struggles to get it to eat, swimming with it, riding around with a seal in the car, carting Cecily to the shore in a wheel barrow, then, finally, successfully integrating it back into nature is destined to be a classic. Ms. Lincoln has a wonderfully readable prose style and the story is absolutely unique. I can't imagine anyone not being delighted with it. A friend called it "a little jewel."

This is not a children's book, although it contains both photographs and sketches of her amazing experience and will be enjoyed by all ages. The youngest children won't be interested in her bits of history about Mount Desert Island, I suspect. Mom or Dad can skip those parts when reading out loud.

This should be a movie. Where's Michael Eisner when we need him

The Summer of Cecily_ the best book of the summer!!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-27
You're on a beach- the tide is coming in- you see an abandoned seal pup halfway under a rock. What would you do? When Nan Lincoln sees the pup on the beach in the early summer of 1976 she feels like she should adopt it, six hours later she decided to and she did. She named the pup Cecily. She keeps Cecily for the summer and finds ways to make her life as similar as it would be to the life of other pups. Cecily has an attitude that is expressed by Nan (in English not seal language) and is very funny to read about. In the first chapter however Nan mostly writes about the setting and her family which is also explained in chapter 2. Soon the book heats up and she finds Cecily and you are brought along on the ride of your life as you go through the summer with Cecily, Nan, and Nan's family. Each chapter brings a new laugh to the scene.
Nan has a unique writing style that is very descriptive and specific. She has written a very unique book that would be perfect for a 4th Grade read-aloud or an independent reading book for other grades as well as 4th Grade. Her writing style is also sometimes straying to short sub-topics of the story to help you understand other parts of the story. All in all I would give this book 5 star rating.

-- Caroline Miller


Books-Under-Review-->Health-->Addictions-->Substance Abuse-->Support Groups-->Narcotics Anonymous-->United States-->Maine-->14
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