Massachusetts Books
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This Does exist!Review Date: 2008-09-24
Used price: $4.78
Collectible price: $14.95

WONDERFUL!Review Date: 2000-02-23

A Detailed and Well-Written StudyReview Date: 2001-01-30
For even more statistical and personal detail on the migration to New England, see Roger Thompson, Mobility and Migration: East Anglian Founders of New England, 1629-1640. See also David Hackett Fischer, Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America, which examines the transference of four different regional cultures of England to four different regions of America. Fischer studies Puritan Massachusetts as the seedbed of one such regional American culture. On the Puritans, consult any number of books on the subject by Edmund S. Morgan.

Used price: $0.01

An inviting, warm story of changing family relationshipsReview Date: 2002-11-15

Index of Pioneers that moved to the West from Massachusetts.Review Date: 2008-10-18
Used price: $14.88

From CHOICE (Nov. 1996)Review Date: 1998-10-25

Used price: $4.83

Clear, useful, detailed and durable mapReview Date: 1998-12-31

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Brilliant storytellingReview Date: 2003-08-05
A new resident at the halfway house is very worrisome for the stuff because transsexual Lynn Ingram spent most of her four year sentence for second degree manslaughter in isolation for her own protection. Only a few days after coming to Horizon House, she is brutally attacked and left on the street to die. She lapses into a coma with the only person who has a clue to the perpetrator is Suzanne and she isn't talking even when she is attacked and almost killed.
This is a very gritty, take no prisoners (no pun intended) thriller that gives readers a glimpse into the lives of people who live in the shadow of society. INSIDE OUT is not a pretty book but it isn't meant to be. It is a glimpse into a portion of humanity that most people would like to ignore but are unable to do so, sort of like having a rehab next door. People like the protagonist who believes in rehabilitation and serves as a role model that leaves the audience with hope for the future of humanity.
Harriet Klausner


great INNOVATION, compact. Review Date: 2007-01-27
Also It is one of the easiest guide to use.
It is not the most complete and detailed guide. But the info really DOESN'T suck, (filled with junk)->like most of the very detailed &complete one. Yes, it got guide to restaurants, entertainment, places to stay etc,etc.
And yes the price is at the top end of guides that are considered a compact guide.

Used price: $82.84

A welcome addition to library history and library science shelves.Review Date: 2007-11-04
Institutions of Reading: The Social Life of Libraries in the United States is an anthology of essays by learned authors concerning the evolution of the modern institution of the library, from the late eighteenth century to the modern digital era. Individual essays include "Subscription Libraries and Commercial Circulating Libraries in Colonial Philadelphia and New York", "Faith in Reading: Public Libraries, Liberalism, and the Civil Religion", "Women Writers and Their Libraries in the 1920s", "Scarcity or Abundance? Preserving the Past in a Digital Era", and many more. An astute and scholarly exploration of what composes a library and how libraries have affected modern culture, and a welcome addition to library history and library science shelves.
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Okay. Somebody sent me a copy. (A generous soul, no doubt.)
This is a manuscript. 38 pages. Seems well researched and sourced. It takes us through early Rutland, MA vital records, probate and property deeds.
Nothing on County Tyrone, Ireland though. The mention of Tyrone is from John McIntyre's gravestone inscription.
You won't find this compilation having an ISBN nor LOC number. It does seem to have an ASIN: B0006RG0Q0
It is a family genealogy. One worth adding to your family collection.
The family line goes down the line of John McIntyre's son, Thomas. Thomas' son, James who married "Tirzah King" in Cummington, MA. James line goes into Ohio, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana.
There is mention of the Cummington marriages.
Those of us familiar with Cummington as related to our McIntyre folk in Niagara and Palmyra, New York will be very happy to get a copy of Jean McIntyre Netherton's work.
It is wonderful.
Christian McIntyre is missing. Her baptismal record is on page 63 of "Vital Records of Rutland, Massachusetts, To the End of the Year 1849" She was another child of John McIntyre's.