Minnesota Books
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Great fun, but the characters are starting to get too old for my 6-year-oldReview Date: 2008-11-14
An Innocent and Charming ReadReview Date: 2007-09-30
one of my favorite B-T booksReview Date: 2006-06-29
Where the first two BT books were almost little collections of stories, from Big Hill on, there are larger themes to them. Betsy's writing and her uncle, Keith Warrington, are tied up together along with her friendship with Mrs. Poppy in this story, giving a great purpose to the book.
Betsy-Tacy fansReview Date: 2005-10-27
The Best Girls Book SeriesReview Date: 2005-02-07
Betsy Tacy Go Downtown is a sweet book and colorfully paints a picture of a simpler, gentler time. These books have stood the test of time and are a wonderful read for all ages. I read them out loud to my daughter when she was 4, over 17 years ago. She enjoyed them and I am sure most people will.

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Very enjoyable read from a number of perspectivesReview Date: 2008-02-22
However, as a high school coach, what I found even more valuable were the qualities and characteristics needed to build and maintain a successful program. Rosengren's brings to life a number of ethical questions that coaches face concerning winning, loyalty, and relationships making this a must read for anyone interested in coaching.
The Inside StoryReview Date: 2008-01-08
Humor, History, Controversy (orginally posted, Jan 1 2004) Review Date: 2007-10-13
But these aren't the reasons I selected the book in the first place. No, I picked up Blades of Glory because I'm a hockey fan (of all levels) and a hockey player; I selected the book because I have lived in Minnesota and have coached hockey (and other sports). I didn't know I'd learn so much about things I thought I knew about, and I didn't realize I'd get more than just a fleeting glimpse of the big hockey picture.
There is a wide variety of hockey books sitting on the virtual shelves at Amazon.com: NHL autobiographies, training manuals and minor league misadventures. I have read many of these books. I'll continue to read them--and will enjoy them for what they are. But these other books won't likely be laced with the same doses of humanity and history as Blades of Glory.
Great book - loved itReview Date: 2007-08-15
High school hockey in the Lake Conference is a very big deal. I knew as much from the time I was a Mite and my dad took me to watch our community's team play. Yes it is competitive. Yes there is a win-at-all-cost mentality that draws fire from many - including some of those that have reviewed the book for this site. You can be the judge of whether that is good, bad, or neither.
We (and I'm including pretty much every male hockey player in my community) all wanted to suit up for Varsity very badly. We wouldn't have wanted it so much if it weren't as competitive, as important. Like professional sports, successes are a great source of civic pride.
Blades of Glory takes you inside this world for one sometimes glorious, sometimes frustrating season. Indiana basketball, Texas football, Minnesota hockey. This isn't participatory high school athletics in obscure sports at some random school. Rosengren does a very good job of capturing the emotions. He also weaves in enough tales to make stabs at social commentary without coming across as preachy.
My only knock against the book is that he opts for an effect that takes things out of their chronological sequence in order to emphasize certain emotions and certain points. (Example - wait until you read about the Jefferson Jaguars GIRLS hockey team late in the book. We hear about how some of the boy players are dating girls that play on the team throughout the book... their successful season is covered late, almost as an afterthought. Another example - much is written about a parent's critical letter to the community paper in the early 90s about Saterdalen's overzealous competitive drive. Context on the source is provided at the very end. I'm not sure why that was held back as some sort of finale.)
Anyone that thinks they'd like this book will. A great work.
Don't Believe Everything You Read Review Date: 2005-08-16
Among Rosengren's goofs:
1) Larry "Pops" Ross never coached at UW-River Falls, as Rosengren claims.
2) Scott Stevens never went head-hunting for Eric Lindros, which led to Lindros' sixth concussion. I watched that game, and Stevens hit Lindros with a legal shoulder check delivered at chest level. Lindros came across the blue line with his head down and he paid for it. There was no malicious intent on Stevens' part, as Rosengren implied.
3) The United States Hockey League (USHL) is not a "beer league" filled with goonery as some of the Jefferson players in the narrative state. Rosengren later slips in subjective evidence to reinforce the notion that the USHL is a thug-filled, bottom-end league. He's way off: The USHL is a top-tier Junior A league with many talented players that end up playing collegiate hockey and beyond.
Here's proof: Blake Wheeler, who played with the USHL's Green Bay Gamblers in 2004-05, was taken fifth overall by the Phoenix Coyotes in the 2004 NHL draft. A bloke named Gretzky runs that outfit. In the NHL's 2005 draft, 26 USHL players were selected by NHL teams.
Must be some beer league. I don't know of any beer leagues that have teams that draw more than 100,000 paying fans a season.
Moving on, I had trouble keeping Rosengren's five hockey-playing characters straight. Perhaps that's on me.
Give Rosengren credit for exposing the drug use among the Bloomington Jefferson players and head coach Saterdalen's erie obliviousness to drug use by his players. I liked the way Rosengren neatly worked in Minnesota hockey history, assuming the new history I read was accurate.
As for Minnesota hockey parents, he nailed the worst ones dead one. I coached youth puck in Minnesota for two decades. While most hockey parents in Minnesota are wonderful people who put the game in perspective, there are the toxic few who only see their investment (child) and nothing else. Some of the Jefferson parents demonstrate what psychologists call "achievement by proxy." It's grossly unfair to any young player.
I sometime suspect that we hockey fans are so glad to have anything in print about our sport that we become giddy with joy reading it. This is an average hockey book that fires some of its factual content wide of the net.
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Great BookReview Date: 2003-11-03
Small town life...Review Date: 2006-09-20
Although I have read quite a few good novels this past year I think Jon Hassler's Grand Opening has been my favorite despite the fact there was really nothing spectacular in the style of writing. There was something very real about this book. It's the perfect portrayal of how certain individuals will just never be accepted into small town life. I have grown up in small towns all my life and have experienced this treatment because my family was never one for participating in small-town politics. It also didn't help matters that my mom was a "big city girl" from Minneapolis, MN. It's hard to be accepted in a small town unless you were born there, but really...even the people who are born there rarely make the cut themselves.
This book is full of bad things happening to good people. It's also full of good people having not-so-good thoughts and being hard on themselves for it. The beauty of Catholic guilt is well reflected in the character of Brendan.
The book had me split the entire time; I loved it for it's realism, yet I hated it because it wasn't an escape for me. People generally read to escape from the issues of daily life, yet this book paralleled the small town behavior I have viewed my entire life.
An Engrossing Look At Small Town LifeReview Date: 2006-05-09
Hassler has a gift for creating good characters and he presents a slice of life in this novel that is both pleasant and dark. There are conflicts throughout the book, both large and small. Hassler does not immediately throw the reader into controversy as some writers do. Instead he brings the reader into the town itself and sets the reader on firm ground, and then the conflicts and tensions begin. It's almost as if we're being transported back to 1944 and we've moved to Plum. Hassler also doe a good job at creating a small Midwestern town at the end of World War II, keeping the historical circumstances in mind while not allowing World War II to envelope the entire story.
This book will be enjoyed by many of Jon Hassler's fans, and is a great introduction to the works of an enjoyable writer.
1940s Small Town LifeReview Date: 2005-12-16
"Staggerford (also by Hassler)," "Grand Opening", and "Passing through Paradise" by John Schreiber make a great trio of Minnesota novels. All are highly recommended.
Thought-provoking and moving novelReview Date: 2002-10-01

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My Last SighReview Date: 2008-01-24
The spirit of a creative manReview Date: 2005-12-05
A beautiful little bookReview Date: 2003-09-16
No One ElseReview Date: 2002-06-04
Nevermind the moniker "filmmaker" when talking about don Luis; he is an artist's artist. With his autobio, he only confirms what an equally supreme being he was. I miss him. However, encounter this book and become lit by life itself.
Gracias, Don LuisReview Date: 2001-11-22
Though he disclaims literary talent, Bunuel turns out to be a wonderful writer, and the book is stuffed with piquant anecdotes and elegant observations. I'm afraid to quote examples, because this review would go on forever. Suffice to say that, if you could choose to live any person's life, Bunuel's would be a hard choice to beat, just for the adventure and entertainment value. This may be my favorite book written by a filmmaker.

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Eyes ove the AtlanticReview Date: 2006-11-10
way then to read something he wrote. He is a good writer and his character comes through. It is also very
enterntaining and down to the practically of having real substance of history in the book. I am greatful to have read it and attained a glimps of a cherished individual in our aviation history.
good history of Spirit's flightReview Date: 2003-06-20
Strong, clear, accurate, sometimes poetic writingReview Date: 2004-12-28
The writing of the actual flight is exhaustive, and sprinkled with autobiographical anecdotes to give context and color. His accounts of growing up on a Minnesota farm surely add to the American mythos of self-determination. And his days spent learning to fly through barnstorming and the Army are notable for being enchanting, yet completely straightforward and accurate.
Lindbergh says accuracy is one of his major aims. This adds to the substance of the book, since he examines his mistakes at least as much as his successes. The writing sometimes waxes poetic, as when he says "The dull blade of skill is sharpened on the stone of experience."
Overall, this is a valuable book on many levels. For the historical record of a groundbreaking flight. For the description of the early days of flight, and the adventure and pioneering spirit it embodied. And for the tale of a man who conceived a great project, found the friendly cooperation of others to help him achieve it, worked through many obstacles and setbacks to prepare for it, and then finally executed it well, despite his own human imperfections and mistakes along the way.
An Enthralling SagaReview Date: 2006-04-03
But, then again, Lindbergh was a risk taker. He put his life on the line with his Paris flight and succeeded gloriously. He does the same thing here, in the literary world, winning the Pulitzer prize.
We should all stop to reflect a moment on how great a coup this was. And how improbable. Lindbergh published this book in the decade following his ill-fated attempt to prevent America's entry into World War II. In many ways his star had fallen with the American public, politically and otherwise. Yet, he was able to resurrect himself through this first-hand story of his great experimental flight. You can't keep a good man (or woman) down.
My favorite part of this book is the section where he refers to his metaphysical experiences during his flight over the Atlantic. He recounts these experiences in more depth in Autobiography of Values, but it is here that they first see the light of day.
This is an enthralling saga of a great moment in the history of aviation, told by the flier himself. It is a unique contribution to world literature, and as such, scarcely needs me to recommend it. Yet, I do so, unreservedly.
Richard Salva--author of Soul Journey from Lincoln to Lindbergh [UNABRIDGED]
InspiringReview Date: 2004-02-03
The flight inspired my father, 14 years old and living on a farm in Wisconsin in 1927, to become a graduate aerospace engineer, and later to work on the design of the P-38, X-15, and the Apollo capsule, among others, many of which he could not even tell me about. It had similar effects and results for thousands of others.
This book is well written and documents not only the flight, but the life of Lindbergh, and the logistics of pulling off this incredible event. After reading this book, I came to the opinion that the planning and logistics (including fundraising and sponsorship) may have been more difficult than the actual flight. We owe much for this leap forward to a group of individuals from St. Louis, who told Lindbergh, "you worry about the design, building, and flying of the aircraft, we will take care of the money". Reading about this portion of the effort alone, provides much food for thought about current corporate management and government projects. A case study in delegation! I found this book interesting, fascinating, well written, and inspiring. The event and the book are timeless. Reading it makes you realize the difference one person can make when perseverance is applied in a large dose.

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5 Stars as a running/marathon bookReview Date: 2007-02-12
I go with the genre it belongs too; and too, I'd say those who have had substance abuse/alcohol problems would find it inspiring too; cause Dick became addicted to pain killers; and did some things; that were indeed wrong.
It's a good book for athletes, cause Dick's body did start to break down some; even away from his being prone to some bad accidents. It makes me ponder, we hear about so many athletes who later end up being not in the best shape because of their sports career, say like Larry Bird. It makes you think, it's great to run that great Boston Marathon in '82; but is it worth it in the long run.
I agree, the book may have minor blemishes, might be choppy in parts in the latter half of the book, but it shouldn't keep anyone from reading it, indeed, some of this could have been expanded on.
It's a good book, kind of for your couples too; I mean, I admire his wife, Maureen, for staying with Dick; for her care, love and also standing up to him some.
I definitely, would like to read "Duel in the Sun" to continue reading on Mr. Beardsley, really, along with his rival at the Boston Marathon, Alberto Salazar and along with "Pre" Prefontaine himself; there certainly is more to read on these famous track runners from America.
As Dean Karnazes' book UltraMarathon Man is getting to be compulsory reading for Greeks (but not only them of course), I think Minnesotans and those from the surrounding areas should read this one, especially if they are interested in the sport.
Beardsley reminds me a bit of the great American cyclist from the turn of the century (meaning near 1900) Major Taylor, in that his glory descended into lows.
After going through this book, I am still contemplating parts of it and how we and history will see Dick, but I definitely would wish him and his family the best. Some parts of it, really are astonishing; and it is astonishing as a whole. He certainly has given a lot to the Marathon.
MotivationalReview Date: 2007-01-24
Dick Beardsley's bookReview Date: 2007-01-10
Dick Beardsley FansReview Date: 2006-11-06
Run Tall and Stay StrongReview Date: 2004-03-30

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Wolf's RainReview Date: 2005-06-18
Man is the real killer.Review Date: 2005-01-10
After that, the book switches to its true form...a book with captivating text and even better photos of wolves, taken ina areas where they are very elusive and have lots of foliage to be hidden among.
Jim Brandenburg, a very well-known wildlife photographer and the author of multiple wolf books, even goes far enough to explain his first encounter with wolves and how he felt at that time. The book is highly educational, but also very touching.
Overall, the book has great text with even greater photographs, and is definitely a good read. The high price, however, is quite a problem. But if you like wolves, and if you're willing to pay the price, definitely buy this book. It's excellent.
We are the Wolf!Review Date: 2002-12-21
wonderful book for wolf loversReview Date: 2001-06-23
I'm really excited to read this book!Review Date: 2001-01-05


A small town struggles to rebuild after a devastating fireReview Date: 2007-08-04
Nora is a seamstress, trying to hem a dress in daylight that seems to grow dimmer as the minutes pass. It isn't until the family horse begins to scream that she and her daughter, Ellie, run outside. What they see is a firestorm consuming the countryside and the small town of Hinckley. Their only escape route is the set of railroad tracks that runs east of their farm, tracks that the Number Four train is currently on. The train signals escape, but will Meri be fast enough to outrun the flames?
Farmer Josef Strom flees with his wife and infant daughter. As the flames close in, they race to the safety of the town's gravel pit. But disaster rolls out of the flames and Josef is forced to make a decision not conceived of in his worse nightmares.
But for some, the fire is a stroke of good fortune. Lars Jenson can't believe his luck. He's managed to identify two bodies as his wife and daughter. The fire consumed them and the secrets they held over him. Now he is free to live his life as he sees fit-a wealthy businessman and pillar of the community.
But not all of the survivors return to the town. One stays hidden in the hills, disfigured by the burns that killed so many others. This lonely soul longs for community, but stays hidden out of fear. Rumors begin to circulate through town about the ghost living in the hills. The words filter back, piling pain upon pain.
As the survivors struggle to rebuild, they find they can't move forward until the ghosts of their respective pasts are put to rest. Raw emotion threatens to consume the town, just like the maelstrom of September.
Praise for Veil of FireReview Date: 2007-07-27
This is one of those rare stories which has you caring for the characters on a very personal level. After the fire, you'll feel as though you have a vested interest in watching how they rebuild both the town and their lives. The dialogue of the hermit in particular is prosaic and melancholy and you will be flipping pages madly to discover the ghost's identity. Overall, the novel addresses the theme of past mistakes and the search for redemption. I don't hesitate in saying this is one of the best books I've read this year, and the only other current author who has had me as consumed with the lives of his characters has been Khaled Hosseini.
Outstanding novel- I feel like I've discovered a gem of a writer who's work transcends the Christian Fiction label.
Engulfing Historical SuspenseReview Date: 2007-07-27
I met Marlo Schalesky through Shoutlife. Intrigued by the blurb for Veil of Fire, I went to her website and discovered I could read chapter one. I did. And I rushed right out to find the book so I could finish the story.
I must say I'm not a fan of historical fiction. I find it difficult to relate to stories that delve into settings, customs and such that I'm unfamiliar with. However, this story caught my attention because it seemed to have a little mystery and suspense to it. This story, though set in a historical time period and speculating on what might have been so and what was, reads more like a suspense novel than anything else. I went into it expecting chapter one to be about the fire and the remaining pages to be about the aftermath. I got more than I bargained for. The first four chapters cover the fire and the townsfolk attempting to escape. Some succeed, others fail. This section was some of the most intense reading I've done in a long time. I could smell the smoke and hear the flames. The fear of the characters was palpable. I experienced it all with them. This is the mark of a great writer.
The remaining story takes you on several paths. That of a little girl orphaned by the fire. A woman grief-stricken over the loss of her own daughter. A businessman who essentially owns the town. His no account son. A farmer whose only tangible of his lost wife is his infant daughter.
And the hermit in the hills. We see inside the mind and heart of this character. Learn their struggles, meditate on their questions, consider possible answers along with them. All the while having no idea who this person is until the last possible moment. Marlo tosses out so many possibilities to reader as to the identity of this person. I personally was so torn by the possibilities that I could not make up my mind. And yet, it stared me in the face the whole time. Like any good story should.
This was my first historical read. If there are others like it out there, I can assure you I'll be reading more.
An Amazing ReadReview Date: 2008-08-09
A compelling read!Review Date: 2008-05-19
What a spellbinding book! I was hooked right away and read right through to the end, breathless, savoring the excitement with each page. A VEIL OF FIRE has it all: great story, heartfelt, tender moments, real characters, the thrill of the chase, quiet beauty, and truth. I loved that it was based on a real event in history. Marlo's fine writing and historical accuracy made this a memorable read. Looking forward to my next Marlo novel! Well done.


Amazing. This book moved me.Review Date: 2008-08-31
CaptivatingReview Date: 2007-12-15
Wow.Review Date: 2006-10-24
Great book!!Review Date: 2006-08-12
A breath of fresh airReview Date: 2005-05-27

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An Excellent Biography of an Amazing Woman!Review Date: 2005-11-21
The Original Goth Girl!Review Date: 2005-01-04
Clearly Fabulous!Review Date: 2004-11-29
Casati Raves On!Review Date: 2004-10-27
"This meticulously researched and completely updated biography vividly details Luisa Casati's extravagant life...Fashionistas, art history buffs, aficionados of Belle Époque and Jazz Age culture-and general readers-will be pleased."-Lorraine Thompson (Primo Magazine)
Elegance Supreme!Review Date: 2005-04-14
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One note for moms of younger children: the characters may age beyond the interests of your children. At least, this is true for me. For instance, in this book, around p. 120, there's a discussion of whether Santa exists. It's a wonderful passage, except that in my house, we don't doubt Santa and we certainly don't want to introduce any doubts. While I was reading the book the other night, I had to skip over the Santa section - I was just glad it was me reading and not a guest reader, like Grandma, who probably would have read right through.
In the next books, Betsy and Tacy seem to get (I haven't read them) more interested in boys, etc., so I don't think my daughter will be able to relate. We'll take a break from this otherwise excellent series after we finish Betsy and Tacy Go Downtown.