Missouri Books
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Good introduction to Missouri fly fishingReview Date: 1997-08-03
They showed me the Show-Me State's trout fishingReview Date: 2003-06-04
Missouri Trout fishing will be overlooked no more!Review Date: 1999-09-26
A great book even if you aren't from Missouri.Review Date: 1999-06-23
An excellent guide for fly fishing in Missouri.Review Date: 1998-04-16
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Kagan Knows WomenReview Date: 1999-09-06
great book for a reading groupReview Date: 1998-05-24
4 friends love 1 dead man in their own wayReview Date: 1997-04-23
Not a bad idea, but...Review Date: 2002-11-28
I thought the plot was well conceived. In "The Girls," we get to know four women, who have been friends for decades, through the death of one man, Pete Chickery. One of "The Girls" was married to Pete, but all of them had a relationship of one type or another with him. After he is killed, the story of who Pete was, what he meant to each of them, and their relationships with one another come into focus. While this core group intrigued me, the peripheral characters - children, parents, housekeepers, etc., really gummed up the works for me. The story was simple, but the more characters that I was intoduced to, the more my interest waned.
I also didn't particularly care for the structure of the first three "chapters," when each character was speaking directly to another person to whom we had not been introduced. Yet, when we finally meet that person, she is simply a part of the story, and not the omniscient presence that I was prepared to meet. Perhaps the reason that the story failed to "flow" for me, was due to that fact that once I became accustomed to one voice, it changed dramatically into another, then another. It never had the rythym that it needed to keep me turning pages.
Once started, I couldn't stopReview Date: 1999-02-05

An effective tool for learning a difficult languageReview Date: 1999-01-14
Good book, but only if you are VERY DEDICATED and FOCUSED on learning PolishReview Date: 2007-01-10
Wonderful bookReview Date: 2000-06-21
not the best for beginning self studyReview Date: 2001-11-21
Not wanting to give up, I contacted the Yale Center for Language Study which, according to the book, has a set of tapes you can obtain. After a long and drawn out request that took a month (and maybe would have even taken longer if it hadn't been for a friend in Yale who physically went up to the center to get the tapes and post it for me) I listened to the tapes and found they were actually drills to Volume II (the classroon drill book). Which meant they were useful but not as useful as I had hoped.
I think this book, if you stuck with it, maybe could be a brillant course. I'm going to try it some more. The fact that it has no pictures and is not 'fun' makes it less appealing for me than other self study courses. After surveying a bunch, I think the Pimsleur tapes - expensive as they are - were the best in getting me started.
The best out there!Review Date: 2000-08-17
Each chapter begins with a large number of mini-dialogues one sentence in length. For example, "Co to jest? To jest pioro." Translations are included with each example, of course. The earlier chapters then proceed with sections describing spelling and phonological rules of the Polish language. Following that is my personal favorite section, grammar! Grammar is explained in a way that may perhaps be a little unclear in the beginning, but as your familiarity with the language improves, it WILL become clear quickly.
Nearly every topic you could want to learn about is covered by Mr. Schenker in this book, including noun and pronoun usage, verb inflection, verbal particles, prepositions, dependent clauses, conditional phrases, and so on. I don't think I would be exaggerating to say that you could pick up this book with no knowledge of Polish whatsoever, and with a reasonable effort become quite capable of conversing, reading, and writing in Polish.
Whether you're looking for a starting point or have studied some and want to improve, this is an invaluable resource.
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In Pursuit of a DreamReview Date: 2003-03-22
Great Book!Review Date: 2004-04-06
Great History Mystery!!!Review Date: 2001-06-20
More Adventure Than MysteryReview Date: 2001-08-12
This "history mystery" is more about Orphelia's adventures on the road than it is a mystery. Still, some interesting questions are raised and answered in the course of this book. It also has the more general virtues of all the books in this series: it is a good snapshot of life in a historical time and place removed from the present day, it has some worthwhile things to say about life in general, and it features a good leading character that most kids will identify with.
We (my daughter and I) rate this, and the entire series, a solid four stars. If you look at our reviews of other books in this series, you may see five stars on them. We tried to change that after reasoning that, if the Harry Potter books rated five stars, then these (being not THAT good -- few others in this genre are) rated four, but we didn't succeed. With four stars, though, "history mysteries" are still good reading and we still recommend them. If you haven't read any, give 'em a try.
A girl's adventures with a traveling mintrel show in 1904.Review Date: 2001-02-20

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An even darker look into a dark era for the country's historyReview Date: 2008-08-10
An Enjoyable Boy's Eye View of Stalin's Absurd RepublicReview Date: 2008-07-29
Konstantin begins his story with the events that shattered a happy childhood, and led his family to wander the Soviet Empire. He ends the book with his arrival in the United States, where he will eventually become quite successful. In choosing not to write about the later years, he forces us to meditate on the plight of refugees everywhere. Success is simply escape, freedom, the opportunity to grow up in a reasonable place. By not updating us to the current world, he keeps the past alive, and we are left with the sense that life in a free land is indeed an open book.
--Dr.Greg Hampikian, co-author of Exit to Freedom
Kirkus Reviews ravesReview Date: 2008-06-21
A boy's-eye view of life during wartime-first the Soviet Union's vicious internal struggles under Stalin and then its horrific ordeal after the Germans invaded in 1941.
Konstantin begins his memoir in dramatic fashion, recalling the night of April 17, 1938, when his father was taken away by the Soviet secret police and never seen again in their little town in the Ukraine. The early passages of the book do a fine job of explaining the climate in which such an incident could occur; Konstantin describes an Orwellian regime full of furtive police activities, mysterious disappearances and a terrorized populace.
What makes Konstantin's recollections so captivating is his ability to effectively divide the text between small details vividly rendered, such as a trip to the movie theater, and the larger story of a global political and military struggle. Despite the upheavals that roiled his childhood, the author somehow managed to get a decent education; he refers frequently to inspirational teachers and to devouring books ranging from The Grapes of Wrath to Das Kapital. But these moments of enlightenment in Konstantin's young life were tempered by the unbearable wartime conditions; often, as he left school for the day, he saw corpses piled high on wagons to be carted away.
His mother married a Polish refugee in 1944, and they were able to return with him to Poland in 1945, happy to escape the "cursed" Soviet Union. But the Soviets soon consolidated their grip on Poland, and the family fled west, finally winding up in a UN refugee camp in Germany. As a displaced person, Konstantin qualified for free tuition at a local university, and after three more years of struggle was finally able to emigrateto "the land of my dreams"-America. Uneven, but full of engaging details about a tumultuous period in world history.
Surviving a RED BOYHOODReview Date: 2008-06-15
A Red Boyhood/Growing up under StalinReview Date: 2008-05-08
Anatole Konstantin's life is a triumph over incredible pain and suffering during the Stalin era. This is a must-read.

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Champion of the Permanent ThingsReview Date: 2004-05-29
As I've said before, Kirk tends to be a rather opaque writer. Kirk rarely presented definitive plans to solve specific problems. Instead he offered a general approach to society based on respect for tradition and some general "canons" of conservative thought. For this reason, Kirks opposed libertarianism. Besides libertarianism being wrong on certain issues, libertarianism represents an "ideology" -- a preplanned approach to society which (to that extent) is similar to socialism. As someone once said, certain political systems offer the "One Big Solution" to the "One Big Problem." To Kirk, society's problems are more complex.
The best part of this book concerns the chapter on "moral imagination," which plays a central role in Kirk's thoughts. McDonald also highlights the influence of Irving Babbit and Paul Elmer More on Kirk. There is also an excellent discussion of Kirk and the Natural Law. I enjoyed the brief discussion outlining the differences between the Old Right (writers such as Kirk and Nisbet), paleoconservatism, and neoconservatism.
The Roots of American ConservatismReview Date: 2004-05-26
McDonald's book, "Russell Kirk and the Age of Ideology," attempts to rescue Kirk from those who might distort Kirk's ideas or who might not understand his approach. The author begins with personal anecdotes about the time he spent studying at Kirk's home in Mecosta, Michigan. Some of these stories explain a lot about Kirk's relation to the public. He was a very shy man who often stuttered in conversation. Although he was not a master in speech, he was indeed a master with the pen. McDonald explains that Kirk worked for hours each day writing on his typewriter. Sometimes when asked a question about a particular subject, Kirk would silently point to a book, figuring that McDonald could figure out the answer on his own.
Kirk explained that Conservatism in its modern sense did not exist before 1790 when Burke published "Reflections on the Revolution in France." The French Revolution was based, for the most part, on abstract ideas divorced from historical development, and wished to overthrow the order of things in the form of a new world, supposedly replacing the old world of custom, tradition, prejudice, and local connections. It appears that Burke's critique attenuated the British impulse to copy the French Revolution, which would soon drown Europe in horrible bloodshed. Abstract ideas that are a priori or posteriori, without prudent consideration of fact and circumstance are opposed to conservative principles.
In the second chapter, McDonald explains the moral basis of conservatism. To understand Kirk's approach, one must understand the concept of ethical dualism and the "inner check." To explain in detail, McDonald refers to Irving Babbitt, Paul Elmer More, and Folke Leander, because Kirk was not a philosopher in a technical sense, and thus there is some philosophical imprecision in Kirk's writings. One must understand in this context, man's Lower Self and Higher Self. The Lower Self is prone to evil: selfish arbitrary and socially destructive behavior. This is in opposition to man's Higher Self: that which pulls us in the direction of our true humanity or our ultimate spiritual purpose, McDonald explains.
Kirk emphasized the importance of the moral imagination to provide an inner check on our destructive natures. Great literature, religion, parents, and teachers would hopefully fertilize the moral imagination. When a person would come to a choice between his higher noble nature and his destructive lower nature, hopefully, this wealth of imagination imparted into him would point him in the proper direction, instead of him choosing the easy path or the path for the thrill of the moment. He might recall the Ten Commandments, or the honor of his mother or any other such things that provide for the moral imagination. Actually, Kirk, on a technical point departed from strict Natural Law, as might not be obvious to the casual reader. In this connection with the Moral Imagination, Kirk emphasized the quality of the will over reason in making the choice of the higher over the lower. But, overall, Kirk's thoughts are compatible and complimentary with Natural Law.
Kirk emphasized the importance of culture before politics. One could not just pass a law and hope to make things less decadent or debased. If one wanted to renew society, one should focus upon the religious institutions; strengthen the families - or what is left of the families - and work for an education of virtue instead of an education for the bureaucracy or corporation. One should brighten up his own little corner of the country. After the culture understood the virtues properly, then the society could be renewed. But a society void of virtue produces men incapable of understanding their situation and it would be futile to simply pass abstract laws since there would be no order in the people's souls in the first place.
An important concept to understand about the recent degradation of our culture is deracination. A deracinated person is one who is cut off from his roots. During mass industrialization and urbanization, people abandoned the farms and the local communities of which they were an integral part, and went to the big cities. Upon arrival, they were simply one person among other similarly interchangeable parts, as Eli Whitney had done to their machines that drew them from the country and villages. Thrown among unknown people and cutoff from their traditions, they could not pass on their traditions to the next generation. The next generation was thus rootless, usually ignorant or contemptuous of religion, and distained the traditions of their elders and became decadent.
When we depart from the inherited customs of moral imagination, and attempt to remake society anew from scratch based on an abstract principle, we have the problem of ideology. Ideology distorts the images and the visions of the moral imagination and leads many astray on destructive paths. For to have this imagination with the power to check out lower selves, if the images and visions therein are abstract and distorted, our choices and our will, will be diseased and we will be lead astray from the true path.
With Kirk, tradition is also paramount. The trials and errors of our ancestors have been encapsulated into custom, prejudice, and prescription. This wealth of knowledge is ignored at our peril since there is not enough time in one's life to accumulate such knowledge gained over centuries.
McDonald supplies humorous anecdotes in the process of writing this book, which might have taken longer than he expected. He mentions that his wife would occasionally ask him, "When are you going to finish the damn book?"
The Permanent ThingsReview Date: 2004-05-25
The book covers the depth and breath of Kirk's thought. The author focuses on the key points that formed the infrastructure for the conservative movement that has transformed American politics over the past fifty years.
More than a biography, this is a detailed exegesis of the work of a lifetime. The greatest strength is the author's detailed summary of the points that formed Dr. Kirk's intellectual construct, which revolved around tradition and the moral immagination. Rejecting ideology, Kirk's conservatism is a prism through which the issues of the day may be seen in true perspective. It was his opinion that moral and ethical truths, the permanent things, formed the basis of the political, economic and social institutions that comprise our culture and support civilization as we know it. Without the moral imagination, we are doomed to follow the latest fads and fashions in a continuing degeneration, mistaking mere change for reform and inprovemnt. The end result is the end of civilization as we know it and the dawn fo a new dark age.
Of equal imortance is the carefull explanation of the differances that exist between Kirk's thought and recent developments in the conservative program, especially since first achieving power in the early 1980's. The reader who thinks he/she knows what conservatism is all about will be in for some interesting surprises.
I strongly recommend this book to anyone who has a healthy intellectual curiousity about contemporary polics, philosophy and the world of the mind. Reading this work you will learn to appreciate the importance of the conservative vision, the moral imagination and the permanent things.
This is a survival manual for our cultural future.
New Light on the Old SchoolReview Date: 2004-07-14
Kirk, who died in 1994, is best known as the author of "The Conservative Mind" (1953), a book which galvanized young thinkers -- McDonald was one of them -- disaffected with the prevailing political culture of America. "The Conservative Mind" appeared at a time when received wisdom about conservatives in politics hadn't evolved since 1861, when John Stuart Mill pegged them as "the stupid party." American political scholars seriously argued in print that political conservatism was not a philosophical position but a mental maladjustment.
Kirk was a "traditionalist." He believed that an objective universal moral order exists, and that it ought to be defended from ideologues of the left and right. He disliked unbridled free-market capitalism (which fuels "the dream of avarice"), and he believed the state has a constructive role to play. He believed that traditional patterns and institutions -- "the permanent things" -- preserve order, and they are the best foundation of a political system that can offer real freedom rather than mere anarchy.
"Strictly speaking, conservatism is not a political system, but rather a way of looking at the civil social order," Kirk wrote. It is not a sharply defined program or an ideology -- a word Kirk loathed, it seems. As a result, even sympathetic critics lamented Kirk's "lack of philosophical precision." McDonald has made great progress, in this book, in stripping down Kirk's vast and diverse body of writing to reveal its philosophical framework.
Kirk's critics considered him anti-rational because he rejected the Enlightenment's fetish for reason as humanity's best guide. Like Burke, he saw reason unguided by tradition as a path to bloody Jacobinism. But McDonald rescues Kirk from this charge by emphasizing the concept Kirk used to balance reason: an elusive quality he called "moral imagination." Kirk held that "ethical and normative truths are often best conveyed through a symbolic veil, as found, for example, in the medium of great poetry, rather than by the means of discursive explication."
Kirk could call T.S. Eliot friend. His belief in the power of myth and literary tradition makes one think not of Republican politicians but rather of Harold Bloom or Joseph Campbell. Literature "is the breath of society," Kirk wrote, "transmitting to successive rising generations, century upon century, a body of ethical principles and critical standards and imaginative creations that constitutes a kind of collective intellect of humanity, the formalized wisdom of our ancestors." No wonder Kirk's writings through the years especially have sparked the imagination of young minds.
McDonald works to keep his subject elevated above contemporary politics, but it is difficult to read the book without applying Kirk's thought to modern problems as you go. For instance, with a tight election looming, in an age when a few thousand votes in New Mexico can decide the presidency, some Republicans fret about the potential Libertarian threat to President Bush. It was Kirk who sounded the warning that conservatives and libertarians were not natural allies. In fact, as he knew, liberals and libertarians have more in common than the Latin root of their names, and more in common with one another than with conservatives.
How does a conservative know he is not a reactionary? Absent ideology, how does he know which changes to embrace, which to accept conditionally, which to resist? He must know that even the most conservative institution (such as the Catholic Church, to which Kirk was a convert) was at one time looked upon as a dangerous innovation. "Life is always presenting us with new possibilities, and hence our applications of the good must be constantly adjusted to emerging circumstances," McDonald writes. "The ethically ordered society is realized by the creative acts of successive generations of virtuous people striving to apply universal standards of the good to concrete situations. In this process, as traditions are preserved and renewed, society maintains a healthy balance between the twin necessities of change and preservation."
McDonald's connection with Elizabethtown College, the great center of Anabaptist studies, may have made him think when he wrote this passage, as I did when reading it, of the Amish.
A Thought-Provoking Look at the Roots of ConservatismReview Date: 2004-03-29
If you believe yourself to be a conservative, this book will reveal to you the extent to which modern conservatives have strayed from the principles laid down by this pioneer of American conservatives. If you are of a different philosophical bent, McDonald's book will cause you to reflect on your political orientation based on Kirk's deeply intuitive understanding of law and its effect on culture.
A must read for any political junkie who wants to examine the philosophical underpinnings of a political movement that began after WWII and remains a strong, if compromised, force in politics today.

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A courageous, outstanding book.Review Date: 1998-07-30
My favoriteReview Date: 2001-06-15
Good, but tries to cram too much into one story.Review Date: 1999-09-07
One of the best Trixie Belden Mysteries.Review Date: 1999-08-26
An intriging, mysterious book.Review Date: 1998-12-07

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My review for this bookReview Date: 2007-04-03
-McKenzie
A Voice From The BorderReview Date: 2004-04-23
In Palma Smith Hill's A Voice From the Border, Margaret and Lucy experience hard times during the Civil War when their dad goes out to fight. One day she writes in her journal about this. She wants to fight also. Her dad set off to war in 1860. A few years later, Margaret visits her father. He is still alive. But one day something bad happens. She walks into her house and sees her daddy's boots lying on the floor. These are bad times for her. Something happy was missing from her life, her dad.
This story is for girls and boys because there isn't much talk about girl stuff. There is a lot of dying in this book. I recommend this book for kids 11-18 because there is a couple of bad words and a little violence. In conclusion, I really recommend this book for children 11-18.
An interesting, romantic Civil War novelReview Date: 2001-08-11
"A Voice From The Border" is about fifteen year old Reeves, whose father joins the Confederate side during the war. Reeves' neighbors are divided over the war, and even she is not entirely sure. Reeves' eleven year old sister, Lucy becomes friends with a staunchly pro-Union woman, Mrs. Brown, much to her family's distress. Reeves herself falls in love with Percy, a charming young Union officer.
Reeves' story is interwoven with quotes from writers such as Keats, George Eliot and Shakespeare and military dispatches. While "A Voice From The Border" starts out a bit slow and confusing, it gets much better later on as Reeves struggles with an increasingly difficult life. The only thing that's regrettable is that the romance between Reeves and Percy never really develops, though that is for a purpose. It's a very different take on a popular subject.
AwesomeReview Date: 2000-10-14
A Voice From the BorderReview Date: 2000-07-05

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outstandingReview Date: 2008-09-06
it seems to be historicaly well researched and complete -
and deals with the issue of Lewis' illness with tact and compassion.
i bought this for my grandchildren - who are of the Clark family -
the book is of excellant print and binding quality -
It is rich in well presented, informative illustrations -
The stable side of the Lewis and Clark expeditionReview Date: 2007-10-06
Looking for Lewis and ClarkReview Date: 2007-02-07
as well as a fresh narrative of the Lewis and Clark explorations. Foley
renders Clark in a sympathetic light, even when accounting for his often
harsh treatment of African-Americans and Native Americans. A well-researched and well-written book.
A Fine Biography of the "Other" Co-Commander of the Lewis and Clark ExpeditionReview Date: 2006-01-22
This book is an exceptionally well researched and written life of Clark, whose career, at least in its later stages, outstripped that of Meriwether Lewis. It is must reading for anyone interested in the Lewis and Clark Expedition and the settlement of the trans-Mississippi West. It replaces as the central work on the subject the biography written by Jerome O. Steffen, "William Clark: Jeffersonian Man on the Frontier" (University of Oklahoma Press, 1977).
The first comprehensive biography of Clark's entire lifeReview Date: 2004-10-10


can't wait for the next book in this seriesReview Date: 2000-08-11
McCall's SonReview Date: 2003-03-14
Wings of the Hawk-Charles WestReview Date: 2000-10-08
WINGS ARE A LITTLE HARD TO BELIEVE AT FIRST!!!!Review Date: 2002-06-06
Very good, but slightly flawed....Review Date: 2000-10-12
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