Michigan Books
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Michigan Books sorted by
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The Adventures of Dalbert Juan : Playing Hide & Seek
Published in Hardcover by Rhette Enterprises, Inc. (2000-08-01)
List price: $12.95
New price: $12.50
Used price: $10.94
Used price: $10.94
Average review score: 

Excellent Story for Preschool Children
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-03
Review Date: 2001-04-03
My four-year-old grandson and I read this book together and he absolutely loved it. This is a wholesome story that inspires the imagination of young children. I found that reading the Adventures of Dalbert Juan allowed my grandson to ask very real questions about his own life and to make comparisons with events that happen to him in preschool and in life with other children. We have gone on to read all the other books by Laurie Bury. I definately recommend it to families and feel that this set of books should be in every kindergarten and preschool.

Africa & Africans in Antiquity
Published in Hardcover by Michigan State University Press (2000-09)
List price: $49.95
Average review score: 

An informative compilation of ten scholarly essays
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-13
Review Date: 2001-12-13
Africa & Africans In Antiquity is a fascinating and informative compilation of ten scholarly essays surveying and showcasing historical research and archaeology currently underway in Egypt, North Africa, the Sudan, and the horn of Africa. The contributors take issue with Afrocentric scholars with regard to the racial makeup of the Egyptian populations of antiquity. What emerges is the picture of a region that was an ethnic and cultural mosaic populated by Phoenicians, Berbers, Greeks, Egyptians, and Nubians. Africa & Africans In Antiquity is an impressive and very highly recommended contribution to Egyptology, archaeology, and antiquarian studies.

African Americans in Michigan
Published in Paperback by Michigan State University Press (2001-06)
List price: $11.95
New price: $1.60
Used price: $1.44
Used price: $1.44
Average review score: 

A Balanced and Knowledgable Portrayal
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-11
Review Date: 2001-04-11
African Americans is a superb and balanced portrayal of the history and current situation of African Americans in Michigan. The book is well written, objective and extremely well researched. The solutions proposed are realistic and well thougt. The analysis is logical, presented well and understandable. This is the best book I have read concerning African Americans.

AFRICAN MASTER DETROIT INST PB
Published in Paperback by Smithsonian (1995-09-17)
List price: $36.95
New price: $10.99
Used price: $6.17
Used price: $6.17
Average review score: 

Excellent overview of African art
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-19
Review Date: 2004-09-19
This book is well worth the cost! Like most titles published by the Smithsonian Institution Press, it is both pleasing to the eye and rich with background information on the various regions represented. For the African art collector, this book is invaluable due to the clarity of the photographs presented and the dating and description of each object. While it is not the finest book I have in my collection, I would highly recommend it to anyone who is seeking an additional work to expand and enhance their African art library as well as their knowledge of African artifacts.
Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect
Published in Paperback by University of Michigan Press (1974-03-15)
List price: $4.95
Used price: $4.40
Average review score: 

Good intro into Gullah research
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-22
Review Date: 2003-11-22
This book is the foundation of the research of the Gullah dialect as a serious subject. Being an Afrcan-American himself. Dr. Turner won the confidence of Sea Island Gullah speakers in the 1930s and won their confidence in providing a window to their lives and folkways. The result was this book, which was probably the first that did not patronize Gullah speakers as being backward and ignorant as some (sadly) still do today.
The central section of this book, which deals with linguistic similarities between West Africans and Gullah speakers, is primarily for linguists. But the chapters on Dr. Turner's acquaintance with the Gullah speakers anmd his collection of their tales of slavery, religion, and life expereinces make for interesting reading for the layman. Overall, a great window into a subject that had long suffered from mockery and ridicule. It shows the Gullah speakers in their pride and dignity.

After Music (Made in Michigan Writers) (Made in Michigan Writers)
Published in Paperback by Wayne State Univ Pr (2008-01-29)
List price: $15.95
New price: $15.95
Used price: $598.78
Used price: $598.78
Average review score: 

A deftly composed anthology
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
Review Date: 2008-05-05
Prolific and veteran poet Conrad Hillberry is back with another deftly composed anthology. "After Music" is filled with meditations on anything and everything from conflicted Mexican priests, exhausted and depressed grocery store clerks, and so much more. Five sections create the book, separated by theme - Sweet Grease, How the Juices Leap, Steering by Pheromones, One Match Flaring, and Bird with Downcast Beak. "After-Music" is highly recommended as a book poetry lovers with relish and deserves a place on every community library poetry shelf. Christmas Night: Let Midnight gather up the wind/and the cry of tires on bitter snow/Let midnight call the cold dogs home,/sleet in their fur - last one can blow//the streetlights out. If children sleep/after the day's unfoldings, the wheel/of gifts and griefs, may their breathing/ease the strange hollowness we feel.//Let the midnight draw whoever's left/to the grate where a burnt-out log unrolls/low mutterings of smoke until/a small fire wakes in its crib of coals.

After the Smoke Clears: Struggling to Get By in Rustbelt America
Published in Paperback by University of Pittsburgh Press (2006-03-28)
List price: $21.95
New price: $16.05
Used price: $14.00
Used price: $14.00
Average review score: 

The rise and fall of the steel and mining industry
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-08
Review Date: 2002-11-08
After The Smoke Clears: Struggling To Get By in Rustbelt America by Steve Mellon (a journalist and staff photographer for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) is an informed and moving chronicle of the rise and fall of the steel and mining industry in America. A tale of the communities surrounding the employment bounty of the steel mills, and the struggle to survive when the closure of this employment bounty left a void in people's ability to support themselves, After The Smoke Clears is a compelling and highly recommended saga of twentieth-century American history enhanced with black-and-white photography.
After Wounded Knee: Correspondence of Major and Surgeon John Vance Lauderdale While Serving With the Army Occupying the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, 1890-1891
Published in Hardcover by Michigan State University Press (1995-11)
List price: $39.95
New price: $30.87
Used price: $27.50
Used price: $27.50
Average review score: 

Interesting and detailed account of life in the 1890s midwest frontier
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-04
Review Date: 2006-12-04
Major and Surgeon John Vance Lauderdale provides a detailed and interesting account of life in the 1890s in the Dakota territories. For anyone interested in the Laura Ingalls Wilder era of history, this book is a "must read."
The Age of Attila: Fifth-Century Byzantium and the Barbarians
Published in Paperback by University of Michigan Press (1960-10-15)
List price: $4.95
Used price: $4.51
Average review score: 

Ian Myles Slater: Another Old Stand-by
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-22
Review Date: 2005-04-22
Now into its fourth decade, C.D. Gordon's collection of translations from ancient sources concerning the Huns in Europe, interspersed with modern narrative and interpretation, remains an almost indispensable introduction to its subject. The limits of "The Age of Attila" (1960) become clearer with repeated use, but it was never intended as a profound contribution to historical literature. It covers one of the more dramatic aspects of the "Barbarian Invasions" that marked the final stages of the Roman Empire in the West, and the final shift of imperial power to Constantinople (Byzantium) in the East, offering a good selection of the surviving narratives of the events.
Although "The Age of Attila: Fifth-Century Byzantium and the Barbarians" does not contain all of the relevant ancient sources (mostly fragments surviving in later works), it has most of them, gathered in one place, and set in context with each other and with relatively recent ideas about the period. For one major source, Priscus' narrative of an embassy to the Huns, it gave the first complete English translation of all of the surviving fragments. Such direct translations are offered in italics, often mixed with Gordon's own observations in roman type, or, in the case of brief fragments, dropped into his narrative as illustrations and examples. This provides a unified reading experience, instead of a mere collection of disjointed extracts. (Appendix A gives the dates and sources of fragments, and the pages where the translations appear, and Appendix B describes the Historians themselves.) Technical problems with texts are confined to the Notes, and the glossary of "Geographical Names" deals with the special problems they present.
The coverage is selective, since the focus is kept on the Huns, not the Roman Empire, or the other "Barbarian" tribes, during Attila's lifetime; however, as pointed out in the Foreword by Arthur E.R. Boak, it does cover the major political events of the period, as the Huns were involved with most of them, one way or another.
I was delighted to find a copy of the 1966 Ann Arbor paperback reprint shortly after discovering the book, and there have been later reprintings in hard cover, some fairly recent. Although there is a huge literature on the subject, surprisingly few books in English deal with the Huns as their primary focus. A more up-to-date work of similar scope is certainly desirable; but Gordon's work can't be faulted for it. And in that light the lack of a detailed, but ever-more-obsolete, bibliography is less important. The narrative is sometimes confusing, because the sources are less than reliable, and the events chaotic, but Gordon manages to keep the main lines clear, while indicating some of the problems.
Beyond the matter of the collapse of Rome, and the rise of the Barbarian kingdoms, is the long after-life of these events in song and story. Those interested in the Nibelungs and the Volsungs, and the Dietrich von Bern cycle, prominent in medieval German and Scandinavian literatures, will find here many of the original events and personages, among the Burgundians, Goths, and Huns, and some less familiar peoples. (Dietrich is based mainly on the later Theodoric the Great "of Verona", but in medieval legend his story has been confused with that of his father Theudomir, an actual contemporary of Attila, among other anachronisms.)
I read Gordon's treatment with pleasure, and considerable profit, in about 1970. At that date, as when it appeared, E.A. Thompson's "A History of Attila and the Huns" (1948) was the main alternative, and it often gave quotations in the original Greek and Latin, so Gordon was at minimum an essential aide for most readers. (In its 1996 revised incarnation as "The Huns" in the "Peoples of Europe" Series, with an interesting Afterword by Peter Heather, such passages are translated, following Thompson's [d. 1994] instructions.) Thompson tended to favor materialist views of history, which sometimes fits a little oddly with how little we actually know of the economy of the Huns. Indeed, he presented them as almost entirely predatory, lacking such skills as metal-working, and even weaving, although it is hard to imagine Eurasian nomads without cloth. Gordon doesn't address such issues, beyond the goods the Huns demanded as tribute.
The serious student of the nomadic peoples will want to go on to the material, literary, and linguistic evidence painstakingly assessed in "The World of the Huns: Studies in their History and Culture" (1973) by Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen (1894-1969). This somewhat ponderous work had to be edited from the author's unfinished manuscript, despite his assurances to the publisher, shortly before his death, that it was all but completed. It is filled with otherwise difficult-to-find information, has a copious bibliography, and 75 illustrations. Many common identifications of the Huns with other peoples are mentioned only to be dismissed; in the 1940s Maenchen-Helfen had already disproved the accepted equation with the Hsiung-nu, enemies of Han Dynasty China when the Roman Empire was young. (Their name was probably pronounced something like "Hong" at the time, so the equation looks plausible, but has other difficulties.) Although out of print, "World of the Huns" was a book club selection, and used copies seem to be readily available.
It is a marked contrast to Gordon's more novice-friendly approach, but Maenchen-Helfen briefly mentions Gordon's book with respect, if not always agreement, unlike any number of more ambitious works which he is at pains to refute. Frankly, given the limitations on languages I can read, I can't imagine understanding Maenchen-Helfen's references to the sources *without* Gordon.
Those who find Thompson's interpretation of the decline of Rome and the nature of Barbarian economies too Marxist may enjoy Maenchen-Helfen's sniping at his, and Soviet (mainly Stalinist-era), readings of their history. In Eastern Bloc histories, as in older Slavophile views, the Huns were generally rather identified with the image of the Mongols, monsters to be hated for oppressing the Slavs -- except in Hungary, of course, where there was a tradition (not linguistically sound) of ethnic identification, or the rare instances when the Huns were allowed to be freedom-loving opponents of the wicked Imperialists ... . A more general difficulty in assimilating pastoral nomads to Soviet versions of Marxist ideology was also involved. But the Huns have had a variety of modern political "meanings" (see Maenchen-Helfen's "Fragments from the Author's Preface").
A comparison of Gordon, or any of these modern versions, with the comparable chapters of Gibbon's eighteenth-century vision of "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" may be left as an exercise for the curious. And if you are still confused by the USA Network's 2001 cable television movie "Attila," it is likely that any of these books will help replace its fictional problems with genuine historical ones.
[Addendum: Those seriously interested in the history of the Roman Empire during this period, beyond the Huns and other "barbarian" peoples, or those who need to consult the actual texts, will find all the extant fragments of Gordon's major sources in R. C. Blockley, "Fragmentary Classicising Historians of the Later Roman Empire: Eunapius, Olympiodorus, Priscus and Malchus" (volumes one and two; Francis Cairns, Liverpool 1981 and 1983). This includes notes and a new translation. Unfortunately, the material assigned to an important compiler, John of Antioch, also used by Gordon, is not available in complete form in English, and excerpts like his are based on an edition about 150 years old. However, a new critical edition, with an Italian translation, has recently appeared, edited by Umberto Roberto, "Ioannis Antiocheni Fragmenta Ex Historia Chronica" (Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, 2005). Between them, they cover almost all of the classical texts translated in "The Age of Attila." (Both books are listed by Amazon.)]
[With thanks to Alan Cameron's review in the on-line 'Bryn Mawr Classical Review," July 2006 [BMCR 2006.07.37], for information on Roberto's edition, and reminding me of Blockley's volumes, which I haven't seen in at least ten years, and couldn't identify by memory.]
Although "The Age of Attila: Fifth-Century Byzantium and the Barbarians" does not contain all of the relevant ancient sources (mostly fragments surviving in later works), it has most of them, gathered in one place, and set in context with each other and with relatively recent ideas about the period. For one major source, Priscus' narrative of an embassy to the Huns, it gave the first complete English translation of all of the surviving fragments. Such direct translations are offered in italics, often mixed with Gordon's own observations in roman type, or, in the case of brief fragments, dropped into his narrative as illustrations and examples. This provides a unified reading experience, instead of a mere collection of disjointed extracts. (Appendix A gives the dates and sources of fragments, and the pages where the translations appear, and Appendix B describes the Historians themselves.) Technical problems with texts are confined to the Notes, and the glossary of "Geographical Names" deals with the special problems they present.
The coverage is selective, since the focus is kept on the Huns, not the Roman Empire, or the other "Barbarian" tribes, during Attila's lifetime; however, as pointed out in the Foreword by Arthur E.R. Boak, it does cover the major political events of the period, as the Huns were involved with most of them, one way or another.
I was delighted to find a copy of the 1966 Ann Arbor paperback reprint shortly after discovering the book, and there have been later reprintings in hard cover, some fairly recent. Although there is a huge literature on the subject, surprisingly few books in English deal with the Huns as their primary focus. A more up-to-date work of similar scope is certainly desirable; but Gordon's work can't be faulted for it. And in that light the lack of a detailed, but ever-more-obsolete, bibliography is less important. The narrative is sometimes confusing, because the sources are less than reliable, and the events chaotic, but Gordon manages to keep the main lines clear, while indicating some of the problems.
Beyond the matter of the collapse of Rome, and the rise of the Barbarian kingdoms, is the long after-life of these events in song and story. Those interested in the Nibelungs and the Volsungs, and the Dietrich von Bern cycle, prominent in medieval German and Scandinavian literatures, will find here many of the original events and personages, among the Burgundians, Goths, and Huns, and some less familiar peoples. (Dietrich is based mainly on the later Theodoric the Great "of Verona", but in medieval legend his story has been confused with that of his father Theudomir, an actual contemporary of Attila, among other anachronisms.)
I read Gordon's treatment with pleasure, and considerable profit, in about 1970. At that date, as when it appeared, E.A. Thompson's "A History of Attila and the Huns" (1948) was the main alternative, and it often gave quotations in the original Greek and Latin, so Gordon was at minimum an essential aide for most readers. (In its 1996 revised incarnation as "The Huns" in the "Peoples of Europe" Series, with an interesting Afterword by Peter Heather, such passages are translated, following Thompson's [d. 1994] instructions.) Thompson tended to favor materialist views of history, which sometimes fits a little oddly with how little we actually know of the economy of the Huns. Indeed, he presented them as almost entirely predatory, lacking such skills as metal-working, and even weaving, although it is hard to imagine Eurasian nomads without cloth. Gordon doesn't address such issues, beyond the goods the Huns demanded as tribute.
The serious student of the nomadic peoples will want to go on to the material, literary, and linguistic evidence painstakingly assessed in "The World of the Huns: Studies in their History and Culture" (1973) by Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen (1894-1969). This somewhat ponderous work had to be edited from the author's unfinished manuscript, despite his assurances to the publisher, shortly before his death, that it was all but completed. It is filled with otherwise difficult-to-find information, has a copious bibliography, and 75 illustrations. Many common identifications of the Huns with other peoples are mentioned only to be dismissed; in the 1940s Maenchen-Helfen had already disproved the accepted equation with the Hsiung-nu, enemies of Han Dynasty China when the Roman Empire was young. (Their name was probably pronounced something like "Hong" at the time, so the equation looks plausible, but has other difficulties.) Although out of print, "World of the Huns" was a book club selection, and used copies seem to be readily available.
It is a marked contrast to Gordon's more novice-friendly approach, but Maenchen-Helfen briefly mentions Gordon's book with respect, if not always agreement, unlike any number of more ambitious works which he is at pains to refute. Frankly, given the limitations on languages I can read, I can't imagine understanding Maenchen-Helfen's references to the sources *without* Gordon.
Those who find Thompson's interpretation of the decline of Rome and the nature of Barbarian economies too Marxist may enjoy Maenchen-Helfen's sniping at his, and Soviet (mainly Stalinist-era), readings of their history. In Eastern Bloc histories, as in older Slavophile views, the Huns were generally rather identified with the image of the Mongols, monsters to be hated for oppressing the Slavs -- except in Hungary, of course, where there was a tradition (not linguistically sound) of ethnic identification, or the rare instances when the Huns were allowed to be freedom-loving opponents of the wicked Imperialists ... . A more general difficulty in assimilating pastoral nomads to Soviet versions of Marxist ideology was also involved. But the Huns have had a variety of modern political "meanings" (see Maenchen-Helfen's "Fragments from the Author's Preface").
A comparison of Gordon, or any of these modern versions, with the comparable chapters of Gibbon's eighteenth-century vision of "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" may be left as an exercise for the curious. And if you are still confused by the USA Network's 2001 cable television movie "Attila," it is likely that any of these books will help replace its fictional problems with genuine historical ones.
[Addendum: Those seriously interested in the history of the Roman Empire during this period, beyond the Huns and other "barbarian" peoples, or those who need to consult the actual texts, will find all the extant fragments of Gordon's major sources in R. C. Blockley, "Fragmentary Classicising Historians of the Later Roman Empire: Eunapius, Olympiodorus, Priscus and Malchus" (volumes one and two; Francis Cairns, Liverpool 1981 and 1983). This includes notes and a new translation. Unfortunately, the material assigned to an important compiler, John of Antioch, also used by Gordon, is not available in complete form in English, and excerpts like his are based on an edition about 150 years old. However, a new critical edition, with an Italian translation, has recently appeared, edited by Umberto Roberto, "Ioannis Antiocheni Fragmenta Ex Historia Chronica" (Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, 2005). Between them, they cover almost all of the classical texts translated in "The Age of Attila." (Both books are listed by Amazon.)]
[With thanks to Alan Cameron's review in the on-line 'Bryn Mawr Classical Review," July 2006 [BMCR 2006.07.37], for information on Roberto's edition, and reminding me of Blockley's volumes, which I haven't seen in at least ten years, and couldn't identify by memory.]
Albert Kahn: Builder of Detroit (Detroit Biography Series for Young Readers)
Published in Hardcover by Wayne State University Press (2002-07)
List price: $27.95
New price: $23.76
Used price: $54.24
Used price: $54.24
Average review score: 

Good gift idea for young aspiring architects
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-12
Review Date: 2004-01-12
I bought this as a present for my nephew, along with a field trip of downtown Detroit, where we spend an afternoon spotting Albert Kahn buildings. He loved it and continues to reread this book! It has the right amount of history, a good story and explains basic architectural terms.
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