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

Maine
Gifts from the Sea
Published in Hardcover by Knopf Books for Young Readers (2003-06-10)
Author: Natalie Kinsey-Warnock
List price: $14.95
New price: $2.25
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Beautiful story...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-29
Such a beautiful story of a little girl. Both boys and girls in my class enjoyed this book. Nominated for Massachusetts Children's Book Award for 2006-07.

Shannon's Book Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-22
I read a good book titled Gifts form the Sea by Natalie Kinsey-Warnock. It is a realistic fiction book set in the 1850's of the coast of Maine at a lighthouse on Devil's Rock.
The main characters in this story were Quila, Papa and Cecelia (Celia for short). Quila and Papa Mackinnon take care of Cecelia who they found in between two mattresses tied together. Cecelia means "a gift from the sea" so this name fits her perfectly. Quila is really sad, because her mother had just died, so Cecelia seems to fill in the hole that was left by Quila's mom. Two years later, the sea brings another gift but this one may tear a hole in Quila's heart and new family.
My favorite part of the book was when Quila helped heal a bird that had crashed into they're lighthouse. This was my favorite part because it shows how much Quila really cares about nature, and other living things.
I really liked this book because everything was connected in the story, and this made it easy to understand.
I would recommend this book to people who like the ocean and like good connections. I would recommend this book to people of all ages because it really was an enjoyable book.

Maye's Gifts from the Sea Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-20
I read a great Nutmeg book called Gifts From the Sea, by Natalie Kinsey-Warnock. The story takes place at a lighthouse on Devils Rock near Maine.

Gifts From the Sea is about a girl named Aquila Jane MacKinnon who is 12 years old and lives in the Devils Rock lighthouse with her father. Aquila had a mom who had just recently died and was still in mourning. When a baby is found in the sea they name her Cecelia, it means a gift from the sea.

The problem occurs when a lady came to Devils rock to mourn for her sister who had a boat crash 2 years ago. That was when Cecelia was found. Aquila and her father struggle to tell the woman the truth about Cecelia. But when they do.....

My favorite part of the story is when the author explains how much the baby lifts their hearts and help them to not be to sad about Aquila's mother. This part just shows how much fun babies can be, and how much work they can be.

I like this book and would give it 5 stars even though it was kind of an easy read, but it was still a wonderful book. I would recommend this to all young readers, from 3rd grade to 5th grade. Anybody can read it, but if you are older, it might be a little easy.

Gifts from the Sea
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-20
I read a fantastic book titled Gifts from the Sea, by Natalie Kinsey-Warnock. It's a sorrowful book that takes place in 1854-1856 on an island in Maine.
This book is about a twelve-year-old girl named Quila MacKinnon, who lives with her father and mother on Devils Rock. Her father is the lighthouse keeper so they live in the lighthouse, and can't leave it unattended. One day, Quila's mother gets very sick, but the father can't get help for he's not allowed to leave his job. After the death of Quila's mother, Quila is left with doing all the work, and her father, who has now lost his love, will never play another note on his fiddle again.
Quila's life is very lonely until one day after a huge storm Quila finds two mattresses strapped together wash up on shore, and inside a baby! This baby changes her and her fathers' life dramatically, and heals their broken hearts from the past. They name her Cecelia meaning "A gift from the sea", but call her Celia for short.
The main problem occurs in this book when two years later the sea brings another gift of a family member of Celia's, which may take Celia away. Quila has to find a way to stop this member of taking her only happiness.
I found this book very sad, but fulfilling too. This book moved my heart, and made me see how unlucky some people are. My favorite part of this book was when Quila's father start's playing the fiddle again. This was my favorite part because it made me feel glad that Quila's father finally stopped moping about his wife's death.
I think that Celia really grew on Quila, and helped her get by her mother's passing. I'd give this book 5 stars because it may be short, but the author did a fantastic job on making me want to read more.

Anna's Review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-20
Gifts From the Sea by Natalie Kinsey-Warnock takes place at Maine's coastline. It is set in the 1840's at Devil's Rock lighthouse.

Quila, Papa and Celia are the main characters in this book. Quila's mother just died so she is really sad and her father is very quiet. One day when Quila is exploring the beach she sees a two mattresses tied together floating on the water. In between the two mattresses is a little baby who they name Cecelia (Celia for short). Celia fills most of the hole left in Quila's heart from her mother's death. Two years after Quila found Celia the ocean brings something that could tear Quila's heart and new family apart once again.

I don't really have a favorite part in this book. One of the parts that I did like though was when Quila told Celia her favorite story so that she would go to sleep. I liked this part because the story that she told her had many details and it was very interesting.

I think that this book was okay. It was a very quick read and the start of the book wasn't very exciting. Also I think that I would much rather read a book about the story that Quila told Celia than this actual book. I would recommend this book to younger people because I think that they would enjoy it a lot more. I think one reason that I didn't like this book was because it was under my reading level.

Maine
The Maine Woods (Penguin Nature Library)
Published in Paperback by Penguin (Non-Classics) (1988-09-01)
Author: Henry David Thoreau
List price: $16.00
New price: $9.05
Used price: $2.95
Collectible price: $17.95

Average review score:

Helps understand why Maine's wildlife and forest is the way it is.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-19
These trips taken before the Civil War, Thoreau makes the journey that people dream of today. He had to be one of the first conservationists, noting that killing animals indiscrimenatly and over-harvesting the forest was a bad thing. Yet even back then he recounts seeing these practices being done. It was fun to follow his trail on the Gazetteer, and find the names of the rivers and lakes that the Indians had given them.

Not just another travelogue
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-20
Published posthumously, this volume lacks some cohesiveness as it is divided into 3 separate trips. Thoreau is a master of blending materials from different experiences into one single cohesive and consistent volume -- he did that in Walden (which gives one the feel of one year even though he lived there for about two years) and Cape Code (which gives one the feel of one long walk, even though the material is from several trips), so it makes me wonder what he could have done had he been able to finish this book in his lifetime?

That being said, it is still a great book. Thoreau's observations of nature and of Native American people are vivid, his cry for conservation profound and still resonating. There are also sparks of the dry New England humor here and there, making it a very enjoyable read. One only wishes that he had lived longer and given us more -- what if he had been to the Rockies, the desert southwest? It gives me chills just thinking about it.

In a sense this is a travelogue, but I don't think we should be too critical in judging it -- not every book has to be Walden, and there can only be one Walden after all. It is a travelogue with authentic Thoreau flavor. I would gladly take 10 more travelogues like this one if only I could.

North Country Meander
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-21
What a shame most people will never get beyond Walden...

This title is a joy and stands on its own. First up is a short piece about an early ascent of Ktaadn, followed by a longer one on the Allegash & East Branch. If you read nothing else, open it to the middle of pg 22 (& ends on 23). It will take 1 minute and enthrall you with observations and the call of the Wild Boreal North Woods as they were long before roads or even trails and certainly before the great northern paper companies cut their unending swaths through virgin lands. His reflections on the ponds and natives (the Brookies) are as intimate and priceless as the jewels themselves. His opine references to the Greeks are as relevant today as they were then or 4,000 years ago. I first came across a copy in the White House Library (at a dinner reception i could not resist seeing what comforted our leaders during long & troubled nights). It took me several years to track down a copy but it was worth the process.

Do not read this and compare it to Walden or as a some window into Thoreau, but for sheer joy of kicking off the canoe at Telos and the wonder of the north country.

Thoreau's Three Ambitious Adventures in Maine
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
"The Maine Woods" relates three separate trips Henry Thoreau made to the Mount Katahdin and Allagash Wilderness Waterway region of Maine At 29 years old in 1846, at 36 years old in 1853, and at 40 years old in 1857. In each of the stories he travels with a friend by rail, steamboat, and coach to the starting point, hires a guide, and embarks on his adventure. Even for a reader familiar with the region, it is essential to keep a map handy to follow the author in his travels. In the first trip he hires a local outfitter as a guide, and poles up the West Branch of the Penobscot River, across lakes and up streams, as close to Mt. Katahdin as he can get, then climbs to the summit of what the Indians called Ktaadn, or "highest land," and now called Mt. Katahdin. His route up the mountain approximated what we now know as the Abol trail, though with no trail to follow, his experience was very different from today's Abol daypacker. He summited on a cloudy day, and missed out on the breathtaking views, though he did get infected with the spiritual bug, and he waxes philosophical as he makes his way back down. Thoreau's enduring memory of the region is "the continuousness of the forest." Thanks to the generous 209,501 acre gift of one of Maine's Governors, Percival Baxter, that memory of Thoreau's is also likely to be yours.

By contrast, the second story is less adventurous, being a canoe-camping trip on Chesuncook and surrounding lakes. Thoreau ends the story reflecting on man's vulnerability in the wilderness, and prays that man will not become "civilized off the face of the earth." I take this trip to be fundamentally a reconnaissance for the third and most ambitious of his trips, titled "The Allagash and East Branch." He went to Maine this time intending to make the standard Allagash Wilderness Waterway trip that many of us plan and few ever make. He lets himself get talked out of it and into a considerably more difficult trip. He starts as with the Chesuncook trip, but carries on northward into Chamberlain, Eagle, Telos, and Webster Lakes, and through Webster Stream to Second Lake and Great Lake Matagamon. From there it's flat water down the East Branch of the Penobscot. The Webster Stream segment was basically a ten mile portage. Fortunately he had hired a most remarkable Indian Guide, Joe Polis. Polis took his homemade birch bark canoe down through the Webster Stream rapids alone, and Thoreau and his companion (whom he unaccountably never names), fought their way through the thick underbrush and the jumble of trees along the riverbank. In summary, he takes the West Branch upstream as far as it goes, traverses the high elevation lakes over to the headwaters of the East Branch, and completely circles the Katahdin massif in the process.

Thoreau does not consistently delight the reader with is craft; his creative spirit is intermittent. But when inspired, he rises to the task:

Referring to the logs which get hung up along the shore, waiting for a freshet to carry them down to the sawmill, he writes, "Methinks that must be where all my property lies, cast up on the rocks along some distant and unexplored stream, and waiting for an unheard of freshet to fetch it down."

And about the noises he hears at night, "When camping in such a wilderness as this, you are prepared to hear sounds from some of its inhabitants which give voice to its wildness."

And his boatmen: "...so cool, so collected, so fertile in resources are they."

And anyone who has trod through the dark, damp woods between those lakes will recognize this: "It was impossible for us to discern the Indian's trail in the elastic moss, which like a thick carpet, covered every rock and fallen tree, as well as the earth.

And while experiencing one of the Allagash's classic thunderstorms: "I thought it must be a place where the thunder loved, where the lightning practiced to keep its hand in, and it would do no harm to shatter a few pines.

Live Like a Philosopher
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-09
This screed from Thoreau is obviously not as classic as his work on Walden, but here we may be seeing the beginning of the travelogue business. Thoreau is often misrepresented (by those who haven't read his works, or have read them too many times) as a hardcore back-to-nature hermit who lived off the land and rejected civilization. One read of his Walden story disproves that stereotype, and in this work about three trips to Maine's wild country, we can surely see Thoreau's social side all the more. At the time, the Maine Woods were surely a thrilling landscape ripe for exploration and adventure, and Thoreau gives us an enjoyable travelogue of his ramblings and recreations. A bonus is great coverage of the Indians of the area, especially Thoreau's longtime traveling colleague Joe Polis. The only problem here is that Thoreau's introspective naturalist philosophy is mostly missing at this stage of his career, and he pretty much accidentally invents descriptive travel writing instead. This is still a worthy exploration if you're interested in the Maine Woods either as they were then or if you wish to explore them today. But Thoreau's classic naturalism is better found in his other works. [~doomsdayer520~]

Maine
Mash Goes to Maine
Published in Paperback by Pocket (1974-12-01)
Author: Richard hooker
List price: $1.50
Used price: $4.34
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Mash goes to maine
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-31
The Maine woods are never the same after being visited by Hawkeye and Trapper John.

What Happens After Korea...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-28
I'm a big fan of the TV series of MASH, but had not read the original book. This sequel has some funny scenes on the golf course and in the hospital. The story involves Hawkeye, now back in his home state of Maine, and his plans to reunite the 4077 MASH team there. The commentary on the local doctors and their lack of ability is scathing. The descriptions of Maine characters, behavior and speech patterns was sometimes baffling, but maybe my two summers in Maine hasn't been enough exposure to recognize the real Maine types shown in the book.
If you want Maine humor, I'd recommend The New Saturday Night at Moody's Diner by Tim Sample.

A Fantastic Book
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-31
There are a lot of "MASH goes to..." books. This is the original and one of the best. The first sequel to MASH, this novel brings the characters from the original stateside. If you've read any of the other MASH goes to books (written by Richard Hooker and William E. Butterworth, though I strongly suspect except for lending his name, Hooker had nothing to do with) and were disgusted by how tedius and down-right horrible they were, don't let them put you off this book. This, along with MASH Mania, was written by Hooker himself and is every bit as good as the Butterworth books are bad.

WHY DID THEY HAVE TO MAKE THE LOUSY SHOW INSTEAD
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 36 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-07
OF THE INEVITABLE GREAT MOVIE THAT WOULD COME FROM THIS INCREDIBLE BOOK!????

I HATE THE TV SERIES MASH!!!!!!!!!

THE MOVIE AND BOOKS ARE THE ONLY MASH!!!!!!

THERE'S A REASON WHY MASH DIRECTOR ROBERT ALTMAN HATED THE SHOW!!

anyway great read.

For once, the sequel is better
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-29
"M*A*S*H Goes to Maine" is Richard Hooker's hilarious sequel to his classic book "MASH" and, for once, the sequel is better! Living a quiet life in Maine after the Korean War, doctors "Hawkeye" Pierce, "Duke" Forrest and "Trapper John" McIntyre are at it again, trying to establish a medical hospital while fighting the snobbiest doctors in America. Funny and very relaxing, you'll love "M*A*S*H Goes to Maine".

Maine
The Reunion
Published in Paperback by (2002-02-19)
Author: Leonard Grossman
List price: $12.75
Used price: $2.27
Collectible price: $12.75

Average review score:

Oh How I Remember!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-14
Len, has put this right where we were at that time and place. You become a part of the book and feel you are reliving some of your past. Easy book to read, one to make you feel warm and fuzzy. What else can we ask of a book, but to put us right in with the author. Felt as though I was back on the team, rooting for the home team, snuggling in the back seat, dancing at the sock hops. Wonderful, Wonderful, are real visionary.

reunion review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-13
I enjoyed the book very much. I did however find it a bit slow in the beginning, because I am not a sports fan and did not understand the sports part. I did however learn about the Jewish faith and found it very interesting.

The Reunion
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-10
I enjoyed The Reunion a story and time i can relate to as i grew up in the 50s . It brought backlots of memories of a much slower and fun time . Made me laugh and made me cry and brought back memories of loves and feelings of long ago. I sincerly hope Leon writes more books for us to enjoy.

entertaining
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-05
I enjoyed the story so much . Mr. Grossman is a very talented writer.I laughed in parts and felt his sorrow.

Couldn't put it down
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-28
The Reunion was one of those stories that graps you from the start and won't let you go. Once I picked it up and started reading , couldn't put it down till I was finished. The author puts the reader right there with the characters.

Maine
Temple Stream: A Rural Odyssey
Published in Hardcover by The Dial Press (2005-07-26)
Author: Bill Roorbach
List price: $24.00
New price: $7.99
Used price: $0.49

Average review score:

Delightful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-31
Yes, this is a delightful read. Full of the nice things about living in rural Maine. It's one of the reasons why I bought a house in Temple and moved not more than a stone's throw from Temple Stream. Everyone who reads this book should come to Temple, attempt to canoe on the stream and meet the locals. That way they can know the facts and not the fiction (laughing)!

Gift for a friend
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-17
After reading this book by my neighbor and living on Temple Stream I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. Temple Stream has been apart of my life for 60+ yrs.

Backyard jewels
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-16
Like looking back at our beautiful blue planet from space, reading this book offered me a generous and moving view of a place called Temple Stream, a place I had never heard of, even after more than a half-century of living in Maine. I especially appreciate the fact that the author chose to explore his own backyard.

Traveling back through time and up and down the river and the hilly terrain around it, the author reveals a host of treasures: ephemeral plants, unusual geological formations, eccentric local characters, well-known literary figures, and his own beloveds-wife, child, and dogs. The reader feels the author's wide-ranging love and appreciation of all that he writes about, and that is perhaps the book's greatest gift. And like love, the book doesn't progress in a linear, logical fashion but rather in spirals that glow with the author's own fascination for his subjects.

This book isn't only about a stream: it's about all of us, the places we have known (but maybe not as widely and deeply as we might have!), and the ever-present web of interconnection. For the curious, for those who love history, geology, sociology, story-telling, and art--all rendered with a local spin and chock-full of everyday detail--I heartily recommend this book. After reading it, your own backyard may never look the same again.

THIS IS ONE OF THOSE WORKS I WISH HAD NOT ENDED
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-26
Temple Stream by Bill Roorbach fills just about every requirement I have for an absolutely enjoyable and delightful read. This work is one man's story, or journey, if you will, of his life near a small stream near Farmington Maine. The author is with his wife, two dogs, eventually his newborn daughter, and a collection of local characters that drift in and out of his story. This is a multilevel work and there are bits and pieces for just about everyone. I will say right now that this book was one of the more enjoyable reads I have had over the past several years and will quite likely give it further reads in the future.

The author, a teacher by profession, and his wife buy a small place near a small stream in a small town in Maine. This is the story of parts of his life while living in this rural setting. The primary focus is the stream, "Temple Stream," and his relationship, observations and adventures as he explores the environment around him and the local history. The journey the author takes covers several years and Roorbach has quite skillfully blended these years, the side trips, his encounters with the locals and family matters together to bring us a wonderful feeling of "being there." Bill Roorbach's skill as a nature writer is considerable. While not as detailed as Edwin Way Teale's work, or Allen W. Eskert's, his writing skills are certainly better, or at least equal to. By the way, I very much recommend both these authors, in particular Eskert's "Wild Season."

This book, while certainly a full story, is actually a group of essays, linked by the common factor of the stream. I am a word junkie, and the author's use of very obscure phrases, words, and his odd syntax ware a pure delight for me. To understand what the author is doing (in my opinion, and I might well be wrong), can best be accomplished by reading the poem by Theodore Enslin, The Town That Ends the Road, which the author uses to close his work. I would recommend you go to the back of the book, read the poem first, and then read the book. It will give you a better understanding of just what the author is doing with his wonderful word play.

In addition, I personally was able to make an instant connection with this writer which is always a good thing. Our lives have been quite alike in many ways, our backgrounds quite similar. I have been absolutely addicted to streams (we call them creeks here) since I was a very young boy and still am. We have a small stream that runs behind our house that I have been exploring for the past 25 years. Like the author, I spend the majority of my wonderings and poking around with my dogs, whose company I much prefer over most humans. The on the spot study of natural history has been a life long habit for me and I verge on being a fanatic as to birding. The author and I share the same attitudes in many ways, have the same outlook on life in general, and where it not for the time and geographical differences, I swear we dated the same girl in college. I found this wonderful. This is just me though. There is no doubt in my mind that if you enjoy a good read, you will enjoy this one, no matter your background.

This is a wonderful and delightful read. If you enjoy good nature writing, fresh, non-judgmental views of our environment, great word play, and interesting observations on human nature, you will most certainly enjoy this one. If this is any indication of Roorbach's skill as a writer, I plan to search out his other books.

From source to sea
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-06
Often the journey is more important than the destination, and that's the sort of journey author Bill Roorbach traveled in writing this delightful book. In 1992 Roorbach and his wife bought an old house on the banks of the Temple Stream in rural Maine. Their occupancy of the house was frequently interrupted by career needs, but they always returned to their stream-side home with joy and relief.

The Temple Stream rises from a well-hidden artesian spring (sorry, that COULD be seen as a spoiler) on Day Mountain in Avon, my town, and gathers influence on its trip through Temple to join the Sandy River in Farmington, and from there to the Kennebec River, Merrymeeting Bay, and the Gulf of Maine. In the 19th century the stream drove dozens of mills -- sawmills, gristmills, fulling mills. Products of the mills were consumed locally or shipped downstream, bringing wealth back upstream. All that industry washed away when the railroad came, providing a means for raw ingredients to be transported to central mills. Roorbach refers to this change as "the true down-trickle of economics" (p. 14).

Fascinated by the natural history of the region, Roorbach formed the intention of traveling the full length of the Temple, by canoe and on foot. He began this project in the summer of 1999 and completed it at the winter solstice in late 2000.

Temple Stream: A Rural Odyssey is the story of that quest, interspersed with his personal history, the history of the local settlements, and a Pandora's box of the rich environment around the stream. Roorbach observes the beavers and describes their impact on the stream; consults a field botanist for more detailed understanding of the flora of the region; calls on his lifelong interest in bird-watching; and grows in appreciation of our watery planet through a chance encounter with an elderly hydrologist, found barefoot in a flood pipe with her long skirt rucked up. Local characters and customs are whimsically described, some of them "composites;" I won't meet the Thoreau-quoting giant Earl Pomeroy or the mad house-sitter Mrs. Bollocks on my errands in town but their ways are familiar.

All these characters, all the small renewals of nature, even the birth of Roorbach's daughter are presented in a gentle and contemplative style and loosely marked off by solstice and equinox. There are no real denouements here, but if you've ever lost yourself for a while in a stream and wondered where it's going, this book may bring you some of the pleasure it brought me. If you have any interest in memoirs of rural life, I recommend this book to you.

Linda Bulger, 2008

Maine
Voyages: A Maine Franco-American Reader
Published in Paperback by Tilbury House Publishers (2007-09-14)
Author:
List price: $30.00
New price: $22.80
Used price: $45.31

Average review score:

a fantastic voyage
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-04
Voyage is such a wonderful representation of Franco-phones and Francophiles...it combines stories, history, and a plethora of other materials that help make up the pathwork that is Franco-America and its people. Dr. Rodrigue made sure that a large group of voices were heard in the publishing of this anthology...such an amazing read and a must for anyone interested in learning about the many facets of this culture!

Voyages: A Trip Not To Be Missed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-22
I especially enjoyed Christian Potholm's, DeAlva Stanwood Alexander Professor of Government at Bowdoin College, article on Franco-American political behavior and Ross and Judy Paradis' article on the suppression of the French language in Aroostook County.

Voyages: not just for francos.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
As a Franco-American, I think it is important for people of all nationalities to read this. This book is a great collection that shows the variances in experiences of moving to a new country. This book is a great template for future books about those who have come to America, and have struggled to find their place within a new society. As someone previously stated, it is not about whining about learning English (although it isn't the easiest language to learn), it's just a book to open the eyes of those who are ignorant to the different cultures within this society, and think that every immigrant should be treated differently. This book carries over to the present, where there are still numerous cultures coming to this country, and fighting against discrimination and hatred and working harder than most of us to provide for their families. To those who couldn't make that distinction from this great read, I am appalled.

Voyages
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
I come from a Franco-American family and it is so great to have a book that helps me to get in touch with my family heritage. This is not a book that complains about how they were forced to conform to the english language, it is a book so people can share their stories and experiences with a generation that has lost their Franco-American backgrounds. I found this book to be very interesting and it helped me to learn a lot about my family and the kind of society they lived in. As with any minority group the Franco-Americans struggles with their identity and holding on to their traditions from their homeland. I love this book and would recommend it to anyone who would love to learn more about the Franco-American culture.

Knowledge gap about the French addressed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
The history books alone will tell the INFORMED reader of the challenges the French-heritage group, often seen as a "minority," which in actuality constitutes a majority in some geographical locations, were faced with in their migration to the U.S. The knowledge gap, which this volume fills, about the French-heritage population, that in fact permeates the continent, is an important book that rounds out the untold history, stories, poetry, etc. of the Franco-American, French Canadian people. The stories of the men and women who help build and sustain the communities they immigrated to needs to be told and this book addresses that need. This is a book which can be used in the classroom as well as read in the community for summer pleasure reading! Bon Lecture!Wednesdays Child

Maine
Archangel
Published in Hardcover by Random House (1996-01-16)
Author: Paul Watkins
List price: $24.00
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The Forest of Perception
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-25
Paul Watkins has displayed a masterpiece of mystery, politics and suspense in his book Arch Angel. Set in the last remnants of the old Algonquin, Watkins takes us deep into the roots of those who populate Abenaki Junction. He tells the story from different perceptions, which allows us to see how diverse ideals lead to very different lives, and how radical actions can be when one is under great pressure. He pushes the bravery threshold of many of his characters, some of which are defending them from death at the time. Watkins is not afraid to attack the topic of clear cutting, which is under great controversy in many parts of the world. If you do not mind gore as well as passion, then read through this heart-racing book, which will keep you turning pages late into the night. Since the topics and ideals can be reached on many levels, this book is targeted at teens and adults. Watkins words will help you see light through a great canopy of trees. A must read for an open-minded person!

Amidst a forest of stories, one shines through the branches
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-20
Full of action and drama from page one through to page 287, Paul Watkins has created a novel that is perhaps the most reader friendly novel out there. A fantastic tale of mystery, violence and love set in front of a background as perplexing and intriguing as the story itself. A true must buy that is a steal at Amazon.com's low price ...

forgive and move on to his better stuff
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-13
If an author really captures our imagination and regularly delivers a superior product, then I'm willing to be patient when they try something new, even if I prefer the stuff that earned their reputation (Sharon Kay Penman's mysteries vs. her historical epics), and forgiving with efforts that don't quite hit the mark. Unfortunately, I think that this is something of a misfire for Watkins, who is pretty nearly my favorite writer.

This is his sixth novel and, like each of the previous books, it opens up a new world in a level of detail that is truly remarkable (Watkins notoriously immerses himself in the milieu of his subject before writing his books). This time the setting is the Northwoods of Maine, where mill owner Noah McKenzie has been granted logging rights to a stand of trees, the Algonquin Wilderness, in the days before it becomes a nature preserve. McKenzie is a figure of Ahab like obsession, determined to clear cut the forest where he lost a leg in a wood cutting accident years before. Arrayed against him are: the woman who owns the local environmentally conscious newspaper; an ecoterrorist named Adam Gabriel who is driven by the environmental destruction he saw in the burning oilfields of Kuwait; the foreman of his mill; and even his own wife. As Gabriel escalates his monkey wrenching tactics, McKenzie turns to a mercenary friend and soon enough there is open warfare in the woods. Lurking in the dark like a deus ex machina is a grizzled old seemingly unkillable bear that the locals call No Ears.

Now, as you can see from the myriad elements that are brought together here, there's just a little too much room for melodrama and, indeed, there are points when the story slides over the edge into unbelievability. But my real complaint is that Watkins, who is normally a more subtle author, has really stacked the moral deck. Rather than have McKenzie and Gabriel meet as idealistic moral equals, Watkins tips his hand from the get go and portrays McKenzie as a malevolent force, hell bent on destruction for it's own sake. Setting aside my own political inclination to cut the mill owner some slack, I think it would simply be a more interesting story if McKenzie were more ambiguous, if it were harder to choose sides in the explosive showdown.

But as I said, I'm willing to go a little easy on these complaints because I've liked Watkin's prior works so much and even amidst the facets I disliked, there is much to like here.

GRADE: B-

Action, suspense, character development and more
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-30
Eco-terrorism never seemed like an honest moral choice-until now (although in fairness, the young radical hero's actions are more monkey-wrenching than terrorism). Paul Watkins' suspenseful novel is at once character-and plot- driven.
Watkins' books always have a moral core, and that is particularly true of this book. This work is a morality play, with multiple comments and themes on environmental issues, the effects of war, and basic good and evil. I cannot recommend this book enough-for the life of me, I cannot fathom a recommendation of less than 5 stars.

A Real Masterpiece of THIS time!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-26
Watkins perfectly depicts the dualing emotions involved whenever money and big business come up against what is best for the long term common good. This is poetry in action. If you want a book that will eat at your conscience and one that causes you to reexamine your very value system this is it! Paul Watkins in a brilliant writer and a true asset to his generation!

Maine
Complete Conditioning For Tennis
Published in Paperback by Human Kinetics Publishers (1998-09)
Author:
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Comprehensive, too much for some readers?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
This is an excellent book for tennis conditioning. Most readers would have to pick and choose which things to employ as only the most dedicated athlete would find the time for everything. Excellent as a comprehensive survey.

Complete Conditioning for Tennis
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
Like the title states, this is a very complete and thorough conditioning book designed for the needs of the tennis player. With chapters on condition assesment, flexibility, strength, agility and others, a complete routine can be established that players of all skill levels will enjoy. I strongly recommened this book for players, or parents of, looking to compete at the highest levels. Being a 1-2 times a week player, some parts don't apply to me but will the most serious. The majority of this book can be used by players of every skill and dedication level.

Conditionning for tennis
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-10
What a book! According to me, it is the best book to help an independant player to progress by himself. The explanations are very clear, simple. And the CD is fabulous: fabulous to watch the exercices, fabulous to avoid wrong positions, wrong movements,...Thank you very much for this conditionning Bible.

Good for down time
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
Son broke a bone in his foot and was going to be off the court for about 8 weeks. We decided to utilize the time improving strength, reflex reaction time, etc. We took this book to a personal trainer who used many of the ideas during the hiatus. Results - he went back to the court with a stronger serve, stronger strokes and better endurance than he went out with. So good in fact, that he continues to work with his personal trainer in addition to his on court time.

Completely Great!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-16
All books on conditioning will get you into shape, but THIS book was the best for tennis I have ever come across. As a 4.0 level player, I was looking for a book that gave me step-by-step instructions to beef up my conditioning - while focusing on the tennis side in a big way. I leafed through this one in the bookstore, and liked what I saw. Upon reading it cover-to-cover, it was EXACTLY what I wanted, and got me excited to play again! I've never seen the in-depth, attention to detail, and one-step-at-a-time coverage this book has.

Maine
The Fields Of Home
Published in Hardcover by W W Norton & Co., Inc., NY (1953)
Author: Ralph Moody
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Wonderfully evocative
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-13
I cannot praise Ralph Moody enough. This book is so well structured and well written that it is obviously a "made" work, but that certainly doesn't make it false. It is a truthful story inasmuch as the characters speak as they should, and the times are brought alive as good writing should do.
An emotion-packed experience perfect for taking us back one hundred years. Highly recommended!

Great Book Great Author
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-24
I recommend this series as a great alternative for boys who just don't like the idea of the Little House series. It is a well written series that really keeps the young and old alike interested in the way life was 100yrs ago.

Learning to love the land
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-22
This is the chronological fifth in Ralph Moody's series of memoirs, and while I didn't enjoy it nearly as much as I have the previous titles, it definitely chronicles a major phase in his life. In 1912, at age fourteen and a half, he has repeatedly run afoul of the police chief in Medford, who seems to think he's bound for reform school, so his mother sends him to Maine to stay on her father's farm. Unfortunately she neglects to explain to her father exactly why she's doing it, and Grandfather labors under the delusion that she wants him to "make a man of him." And there Ralph's troubles begin.

Grandfather Gould is perhaps the most vivid character I've found yet in Moody's books. Past 70, he is (as his younger brother, Uncle Levi, explains to Ralph) bound by his position as a son born when his father was even older than himself (and already had a grown-up "first family") and "spoiled rotten" in consequence. "Father and the Almighty stand about shoulder to shoulder in Thomas's eyes," says Levi, "and the land they left him is holy ground." He can't see any way of doing things except the way his father taught him--the old, pre-industrial, farm-by-hand way--and as age closes in on him he has let the place go back mostly to pasture. Ralph sometimes comes close to tears at being called useless and worthless and a "tarnal fool boy," getting senseless jobs to do and being rebuked for "wastin'" or wanting to use "work-saving contraptions." Cranky, erratic, often laid low by the chronic malaria that is his legacy from a term in a Confederate prison camp, Grandfather succeeds in driving away just about everyone who cares about him, including his brother and his long-suffering housekeeper Millie. Another splendid character, as well drawn as any human in the book, is "the yella colt," an irascible buckskin work horse who's far from being a colt but apparently was never told so; to save his own hide Ralph is forced to improvise a way of teaching him who's boss, though Grandfather keeps undoing his efforts.

In this book, Moody admits for the first time how difficult it was for him to adjust to life in the East after his years in Colorado and how much he missed both the "wide open spaces" and his work with his understanding father. More than once his grandfather's ways rub him so raw that he makes plans to run away and go back to the West he loves. Yet he also experiences the innocent joys of first love, and in the end he realizes how truly alike he and Grandfather are and how Maine has a beauty of its own, and the book ends on a positive note as the two seem to reconcile, having finally agreed to try some of the boy's ideas.

Fields of Home on audio books
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-04
I have read all of the Little Britches books many times over the years, including reading them aloud. I recommend all of them heartily.
Now I have some real problems with the audio books versions. Mispronounced words! And I checked everyone I questioned, just a few listed here. Cameron Beierle, the reader, should check a dictionary.
This may seem nit picking, but I wince every time I hear one of the many mispronunciations, and I think of those who may not understand what he is saying, or worse, might think he is right.
Victuals -- it is not pronounced as it is spelled. It is vit'ls. We may mock what we consider illiterate pronunciations, but it is correctly vit'l (vittles)
Mow -- you moe - long o - the grass or the hay, but you then store the hay in the mow -- to rhyme with cow. Over and over the reader says moe.
Row -- same objection. Things grow in a roe, long o, but when you have a fight or a quarrel, you row -- again rhyming with cow. It may be a back formation from rouse, and that gives a key to how it should be pronounced.
My comments apply only to the books as read by Cameron Beierle. The books are wonderful, but I should have read them aloud myself and recorded them.

Best of the Set (so far)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-09
Having read the first several volumes of Ralph Moody's works, I didn't think they could get any "better" than they already were. "Fields of Home" is better though, although perhaps I feel that way because it struck a chord with me in where I live, in the cold northernmost part of New York State. The descriptions of the farming and other activities resonated with stories of my grandparents, my parents and my childhood experiences. The characters seem to be people I know. Awesome book in a great series of books that are appropriate for all ages (my parents love them too).

Maine
Footsteps in the Attic: More First-Hand Accounts of the Paranormal in New England
Published in Kindle Edition by New River Press (2002-10-10)
Author: Paul F. Eno
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Average review score:

a new take on the paranormal
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-08
this book strays from the inhuman, demonic from hell type of thinking. it goes into quantom physics, and the rip in time, big bang way of thinking.the only thing imight question is his photos of ghosts. ir lights give off a host of lightrefraction, dust e.t.c. all in all a good read. not for your pop ghost hunter. i book that gives one pause to think.

Mostly very interesting, but...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-05
I enjoyed most of the book and the author had some good ideas and interesting tales on the paranormal and combating negative energy. However, I could have done without the anti-liberal tirade near the end.

The writer could have gotten his point across without this sort of commentary, especially when "liberals" are more inclined to be open-minded about subjects like the paranormal and not treat the believer as is he/she is a crackpot. This was the first book I have read by Mr. Eno, but I will never read another because of these comments. If you want to sell a book or want the reader to read more, don't insult them.

excellent ghost book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-12
This book was better than faces in the window, although it was good too, This is a book I will keep in my library.

Gripping
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-03
While the stories in "Footsteps in the Attic" weren't anything shocking or amazing in most cases, I found them more believable because of it. Eno's simple, no-nonsense style presented the facts of each investigation in logically order.

I was struck by the way Eno would attempt to explain any paranormal activity in non-paranormal terms. This approach gave quiet credence to everything from his personal written accounts to the photographs in the book.

Furthermore, I enjoyed Eno's scientific approach to explaining the existence of ghosts. I found it very plausible, and supported much more strongly than previous explanations I had heard. Eno laid evidence as he saw it on the table repeatedly throughout the book, but always in what I felt were appropriate moments.

If you enjoy ghost stories, paranormal events, or even speculating on the afterlife this is the book for you.

Fascinating, unique, and plausible
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-04
I ripped through this book in a couple of sittings, and literally could not put it down. Paul Eno offers up some fascinating and, what I would call, groundbreaking theories about what exactly ghosts are, and where a lot of those strange little occurrences we have come from. His quantum mechanics approach may set any preconceived notion you have about why we see ghosts on its ear. Be prepared to consider a completely new perspective. The theories are not "dumbed-down" for those of us who have not made a study of quantum physics. They are explained in clear, thoughtful, and concise terms that any lay-person can understand.

The theories he poses go a long way in explaining the extreme and persistent déjà vu I have experienced all my life. The chapter on parasites gave me much insight into what that shadowy little wisp I had in my benign little middle-class house was, why it gained strength over the course of almost two years, and then turned not-so-nice after all. A trusted psychic told me at the time that the thing I had was not human, and that I had picked it up through Tarot cards, both of which Mr. Eno verifies with his explanations.

This is paranormal investigation at its finest. Paul Eno has set himself apart as a top-notch investigator of the paranormal. He and his team investigate, with methodical precision, each of these ghosts, poltergeists/parasites, and "tortured souls" with intellect and compassion. After reading this book, I will NEVER touch a Ouija Board again. Much information is here for the taking - highly recommended for anyone seeking an alternative explanation which is not afraid to deviate from the norm.


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