Massachusetts Books
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Used price: $23.48

Dr. Walmsley's workReview Date: 2000-06-09
Walmsley offers a whole new view of pre-revolutionary BostonReview Date: 1999-01-14

Used price: $7.46

Colorful, fun book for kids - just in time for summer vacation!Review Date: 2008-06-16
Your children will love the illustrations!Review Date: 2008-06-06
Collectible price: $75.00

A FINE, RELAXING READ Review Date: 2005-07-25
THE GLORY OF NATUREReview Date: 2005-05-08

Used price: $3.75
Collectible price: $24.95

Very well done indeedReview Date: 2008-06-12
In the eyes of history, Wright has been overshadowed by her older sister Lucretia Mott and her contemporaries Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. But her central participation in both the woman's rights and anti-slavery causes secures her a place as one of the giants of the mid-19th century. Wright believed strongly in the benefits of free expression and complete tolerance even of shocking views expressed by others. She thus anticipated many intellectual currents of the late 20th century.
This book is very much worth reading.
Interesting HistoryReview Date: 2007-01-05
I have since met James Livingston and connected with him about our relationship and I enjoy being open to a whole new aspect of my family history.

Used price: $3.50

I agree----the best editionReview Date: 2008-02-19
The best available edition by farReview Date: 2007-08-29

Used price: $2.98
Collectible price: $19.95

The BestReview Date: 2007-01-25
A questioning of lifeReview Date: 2000-09-01

Used price: $9.84

Great little fact oacked bookReview Date: 2008-07-11
The best recent walking guide to Boston's cityscape and architectureReview Date: 2007-10-18
Unique among American cities, Boston is a city with so much "made land" (i.e. landfill or artificial land) that a guide to made land essentially constitutes a guide to the city itself. Readers of Seasholes' book will find the history and buildings of familiar districts like the waterfront, Faneuil Hall, Beacon Hill, and Back Bay described as they have never been before- as constructed pieces of the Boston cityscape- as well as equally interesting (and beautiful) areas like Charlestown, the Leather District, and Bay Village that are a bit further from the tourist trail. The section on the South End, in particular, is rich in detail and provides an entirely new perspective on this urbane and diverse area of the city.
Not since the AIA Guide to Boston, published in the 1980s, has the cityscape and urban design of Boston received such an informative and entertaining treatment. Those interested in the built history of Boston, and in the city's ever-changing relationship with its waterfront and rivers, will find no better guide than Seasholes' book. Best of all are the puzzled looks you will get from passers-by as you examine a seemingly innocuous rowhouse or section of wall that once absorbed the waves of Boston Harbor or the Charles River a hundred or more years ago.
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Jack Driscoll: upinmichigan.org reviewReview Date: 2006-04-03
reviewed by David LeGault
Jack Driscoll has painted a dark, isolated landscape that his readers can not help but become engulfed in. Throughout his 1991 award winning short story collection, Wanting Only to be Heard, Driscoll manages to paint the desolate scene of northern Michigan, a region with a harsh climate matched only by the reality of its inhabitants' lives. Whether it is the cold and lonely winters or the intensity of baseball season, Driscoll has shown us that northern Michigan life can be brutal, although morbidly fascinating.
Wanting Only to be Heard primarily deals with the tense relationships between fathers and sons. Although this theme may seem limiting when you consider that there are eighteen stories in the book, Driscoll manages to keep every scenario fresh and poignant. In one story, Driscoll writes about a father's violent reaction to being stood up on a date, his son witnessing the entire scene: "I felt the whole house shake and thought then of passionate killing, my father's phrase for the quick and merciful execution of what we had raised in the sties and coops of the farm." Although the single parent and child connection is very apparent in that story, the theme is better hidden in some of the other stories-such as "The Wilderness State"-where a community college professor who is frustrated with life chooses to sleep with one of his students in the hope of getting fired. From early childhood to midlife crisis, Driscoll captures the troubles of fatherhood brilliantly.
Although the collection is fixated upon the troubles of single fatherhood, it subtly touches on many other recurring problems of northern Michigan, particularly substance abuse. Driscoll does an excellent job of capturing not only the sadness and desperation of alcoholism, but also the informality-practically acceptance-of it in the Upper Peninsula. In his story, "Wish Pennies," Driscoll writes: "'Slow down,' Howard had his last beer between his legs, and he kept straddling the broken white lines, drifting into the opposite lane." The narrator is simply concerned with the car's speed-not the drinking-when Howard drives them around, driving drunk because there's nothing better to do. As a native of the region, I caught myself relating characters like Howard to people from my own childhood: neighbors, drunk drivers from the police bulletin in the newspaper, and classmates. As regrettable as this behavior can be, it shows that Driscoll has made the alcohol in his work-whether it be in drunk driving or parental indifference to their children's experimentation-a believable and essential part of the northern Michigan story.
Growing up in the region, I have always been quick to dismiss Upper Michigan writing for its stereotypical portrayal of our lifestyle as a natural wonderland full of simple minded hunters, fishers, and miners. However, Jack Driscoll's work has captured everything about the culture-the obsession with weather, the alcoholism, the search for a better existence-in a way that was unique and, more importantly, credible. He currently lives in northern Michigan himself, and his experience with the region definitely comes out in this and his other books. Even when he does touch on the commonly used themes of Upper Michigan writing (such as hunting), as he does in "Flea to Jesus," he writes it in a way that shows us so much more, particularly poverty, escapism, and parallels to a father's life that a son would never want to follow: "'Spare none of them,' Angus McCoskey had said that first evening, and I, a disbeliever in greed, had returned in the name of Money, that newest god my father trusted would deliver me from the graceless routines of this small town, its small minded teachings."
Finally, Driscoll's stylistic voice is spot-on throughout the collection. Although he takes on many characters throughout the collection, his balance of description and action makes for a perfectly paced reading experience. Although there are some definite standouts-particularly the short story for which the collection is named-the book as a whole is joyously entertaining and painfully thought provoking. Whether you're looking for a book on northern Michigan life or an in-depth look into the pains of single parenthood and substance abuse, Wanting Only to be Heard should be your answer.
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David LeGault is from Gladstone, Michigan, and is an undergraduate in the Writing Department at Grand Valley State University.
Real stories for real peopleReview Date: 1999-05-05
Used price: $3.18

A love worth waiting forReview Date: 2008-06-06
She refused, Hallam got killed in an accident while looking over his shoulder as he cursed Emily.
Emily's family were hard core religious nuts, Tough love was the only love they knew. when they found out Emily was pregnant, they kicked her out with only the clothes she was standing in.
Emily went to a cave to live. Ryder found her and proposed marriage to her, she refused.
Sixteen years later Emily's son Josh, is getting into trouble, he wants to know who his father is.
Ryder knows, he goes to Emily and again proposals to her, this time it is for her son's sake.They Marry.
Emily learns to trust Ryder, but when she finds out he has an unusual gift he thinks she will run away screaming.
Instead she finds she remembers the times he kept her from getting hurt.
And Ryder used his gift to stop Josh from getting hurt.
Her love for him grows to match his, as it always been for her.
#4 of the SMYTHESHIRE Series -- WOWReview Date: 2003-03-02
We now learn more of Emily Sayer's life and what lead up to her becoming an outcast from her family. What a feud.
Josh learns from his mother who his father is and Ryder Gerard asks Emily, a second time, to marry him.
Emily, who has supported herself and Josh for sixteen years and is thirty three, is hard headed and independant. [Oh, these dumb women] but it makes the story work.
She does not have any love for the Gerard family but soon finds out that she at least owes them some gratitude. [puts her nose out of joint] Josh is immediately taken with his uncle and wants his mother to try to get along with his fathers' relations.
She is surprised to find out that grandpa and great-grandpa do not have any special powers but boy, wait until Josh get into trouble, a life threatening situation. Boy, was I surprised at Ryder's thoughts of the situation. Fantastic story!
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED -- of course Emily marries Ryder for Josh's sake and Josh is in for a surprise on learning a few facts that Ryder knew about her when she was younger.

Used price: $9.00

An optimistic yet critical to both sides of the debateReview Date: 2008-07-10
Can we govern ourselves?Review Date: 2008-06-03
The 1971 Attica massacre shocked the world into awareness of the pervasive violence perpetrated by state authorities in our prisons. In Massachusetts, voters pledged to prevent such slaughter from ever happening there, and the governor agreed. The reform initiative that resulted led to the prisoners at Walpole's Massachusetts Correctional Institute winning control of its day-to-day operations.
The prisoners, working with 1530 civilian volunteers, won control of the operation of a maximum-security prison. The book, authored by a prison abolitionist, reveals what can happen when there is public will for change and trust that the incarcerated can achieve it. In the months before they took over running the maximum-security facility in 1973, prisoners and outside advocates created programs that sent more prisoners home for good, reducing recidivism 23 percent and decreasing Walpole's population by 15 percent.
When guards protested the changes they saw as choking their livelihoods, finally refusing to run the prison, the prisoners stepped ably into the void--and all-out peace ensued. They shrank the prison murder rate from the highest in the country to zero. Even more significantly, they worked hard to bury racial antagonism and longstanding feuds so even "lifers" with no hope of going home could find ways to live together, learn, and grow--to regain, finally, the humanity that the system intended to squash.
Critical to the work of prison abolitionists and transitional reformists alike, this groundbreaking history offers a real-life example of a prison solution many see only as theoretical. It not only reminds us why people seek to make prisons obsolete, but also recalls a time when we were much closer to these abolitionist goals.
The history of Walpole, at its grittiest, shows that we do not need a police state to 'help' us live our lives, and that, in the final analysis, we'd be better of without the so-called 'security' measures provided by the state and the entities of enforcement which under the pretense of 'justice' enforce the inequities resulting from the disregard of human value which must be overcome if we are ever, ever to live peacefully in this world. A history and an argument which could not be more timely and appropo. Rather than trusting in the almighty dollar, or the strength of institutions, recognition of our fellow humanity seems like the best place to begin.
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