Missouri Books


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Missouri Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Missouri
A Guide to the Architecture of St. Louis
Published in Paperback by University of Missouri Press (1989-07)
Authors: Frank Peters and George McCue
List price: $29.95
New price: $19.35
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Average review score:

Severely dated, but still excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-17
St. Louis is an architectural treasure, much like many of our other rust-belt cities. Cleveland, Baltimore, and Pittsburgh also fall into this category. These cities retain much of their old classical buildings from a time when the idea of grand public architecture meant something to the eye and was a source of civic pride. St. Louis is a fine example of this idea, and a real treat for American urban architecture lovers. The book itself is quite dated, published in 1989, but the authors do an excellent job of choosing the structures they know we will want to see. All the classics are here, all with at least one photograph and a nice descriptive essay. Also, the authors have taken the time to bring us many of the most interesting old structures from the surrounding towns as well. A new addition would be a real treat.

ST. LOUIS
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-14
I remember the first time I visited St. Louis, I was expecting a run down, dirty, industrial mess, much like Detroit, so you can imagine my surprise with what I found. I loved the city, it was clean and quite beautiful, especially the area around Forest Park. This book does a fine job of capturing the St. Louis I experienced, I especially appreciated that every entry is accompanied with a requisite photo, that should be de riguer in a book of this sort. This book is divided up and it covers not just the city, but the environs, which is essential. If you have any interest in St. Louis, or quite frankly if you have any appreciation in architecture then you will not be disappointed in this wonderful book.

De facto Standard
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
This has been the reputed de facto standard for St. Louis architecture. As one who has such as an interest as a hobby, I am more than thrilled to learn from the information this book provided. My understanding is that a possible update may one day present itself...I hope so.

Good survey of the St. Louis area's architecture
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-02
This is one of the best guidebooks for a city's architecture I've seen. The entries cover not only St. Louis proper but also the entire metro area, reaching far into the suburbs in both Missouri and Illinios. Every entry has at least one photograph, a rarity for such books. The maps are clear and concise; a regional map shows where each local map is located. Also includes a number of color photographs in the introduction pages. About the only thing I would fault the book for is skipping a few of downtown's historic towers; however, the book does an excellent job of directing city explorers to St. Louis's most interesting areas.

Missouri
Hail to the Chiefs
Published in Hardcover by Sagamore Publishing (1994-08-01)
Author: Bob Gretz
List price: $19.95
New price: $1.37
Used price: $0.89

Average review score:

CHIEFS RULE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-03
THIS IS THE STORY OF THE 1993 KC CHIEFS WHO ALOMOST WON IT ALL. THE CHIEFS OF 1993 WENT OUT AND DID SOMETHING TO IMPROVE THEMSELVES BY PICKING UP 2 OF THE BEST BIG GAME PLAYERS OF THEIR TIME, MARCUS ALLEN AND JOE MONTANA. THE BOOK GOES INTO GREAT DETAIL HOW THE TEAM WAS PUT TOGETHER AND THEN GIVES A DETAILED LOOK AT HOW THEIR SEASON WENT. ALOT OF BEHIND THE SCENES INFO IS AVAILABLE IN THIS BOOK ALONG WITH SOME GREAT INTERVIEWS AND GAME BY GAME RESULTS IN MAKING THIS A MUST READ FOR ALL CHIEFS FANS.

I LOVE THIS BOOK!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-12
This book rocks my world. I love the Chiefs and the Bob Gretz's daughter Liz is really cool.

HAIL TO THE CHIEFS IS THE MOST MOTIVATIONAL BOOK I'VE READ!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-24
Hail to the Chiefs changed my life. Before I was a bum out on the streets on Moscow, now I'm a successful astronaut. Hail to the Chiefs showed me the true meaning of life. Bob Gretz is my hero. He should win the Nobel Prize for Literature this year. Buy this book, it will change your life.

THIS BOOK IS THE BEST
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-24
this book is sooo cool!!!!! bob gretz should win the noble prize!!!!! i loved it so much that i read it in a day!!! i couldn't put this book down! i would buy it if i were you!!!!!

Missouri
A history of the library, 1933-1983: The University of Kansas City, The University of Missouri-Kansas City
Published in Unknown Binding by s.n.] (1991)
Author: Philip Tompkins
List price:

Average review score:

Like Looking in a Mirror
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-25
Anyone who has ever worked in an organization has witnessed the paralysis that sets in with failure, reprimand, disappointing results or unfulfilled expectations. That recognition is palpable throughout this book. The deepening loss of power that follows seemingly small pitfalls or mediocre human interactions is extremely damaging and spreads to each and every aspect of an organization. Martin does a great job of both carving out the territory of these viral disempowerments, and of showing us how to bring greater authenticity to our work and communication to turn around these conditions. A correction in the psychological or cultural environment can be powerfully segued into an opportunity for more strategic thought and alignment of behavior with an organization's vision. Having seen so many of these cultural viruses do irreparable harm to both people and business results, the book has become a wonderful addition to an arsenal of tools that is never complete. I highly recommend The Responsibility Virus to business-people of any level of authority.

Amie Devero, Author of Powered by Principle: Using Core Values to Build World-Class Organizations

A Radical Reformulation of the Leader/Follower Dynamic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-25
Ever notice how offices (maybe even yours) are split between the doers and the idlers? Ever notice the resentment that accrues in workplaces where control freaks do everything and ne'er-do-wells do nothing? Ever wonder how such jaded office environments came to be, and whether they ever could change?

Well, step right up, dear reader, because this book decodes the phenomenon that cruelly saps the morale out of even the most capable of offices. Labelling this task imbalance as the `responsibility virus,' Roger Martin seeks to render a diagnosis and prognosis of this nefarious sickness. Martin, with the assistance of psychological and biological principles, explains how the basic `fight or flight' response leads many to assume too much or too little responsibility in times of stress. This results in a causal chain reaction where the other workers correspondingly take positions on the opposing end of the spectrum to best complement this initial game opening. As Martin ably explains, these positions are never static; over-responsible persons eventually become under-responsible, and vice versa. This is essentially a never-ending dance that may eventually destroy an entire office.

So what to do, you ask? Martin proposes four separate strategies that are designed to purge the workplace body of this virus, all of which may be used on their own or in combination with the others, depending on the state of the virus' evolution and the players' goals. These different methods all have the share the same central goal: maximizing inter-office collaboration and thereby ridding the workplace of the responsibility virus. They are all very easy-to-understand and readily adaptable to many workplaces. Martin's generous use of case examples also provides a context to identifying problems and their respective solutions.

Martin's most intriguing strategy is to redefine the nature of true leadership and, by extension, corresponding `followership.' Martin entreats the reader not to accept the canard of the `man on the horse;' the heroic, all-knowing, all-powerful leader who can jump into the fray at any given moment and single-handedly solve a vexing problem, while his minions listlessly stand by waiting for the hero to save the day. Rather, true leadership fosters collaboration; followers contribute to the best of their abilities and open lines of communication are maintained throughout the various levels of management.

In all, this is a persuasive read that is very ably argued. Although I felt the conclusion was a bit rushed (where Martin makes a u-turn from his central argument that people's actions are dictated by their governing values), readers would be hard-pressed to write the book off as unhelpful. Use it in your business life or even your personal life; the book is a powerful suppressant of the responsibility virus.

Insightful and revealing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-02
This book explains in very simple terms why some people are so driven while others just go on a cruise and the relationship between the two.
If you ever feel overwhelmed at work and often find yourself wondering why others don't pull their own weight - this book is for you.
If you feel like you could do so much more at work if only given a chance but lack the confidence or the knowledge to go for it - read this book.

How to transform a bureaucracy into a healthy organization
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-16
Roger Martin has lain down business organizations in the therapist chair, but you won't notice it because the author avoids skillfully the psychological labels currently in vogue.

If you often wonder about why you end up working more than others, why some people don't understand what you clearly state or why everybody sees what is wrong in the company and they don't do anything to fix it, this book is for you. It goes to the root of the problem, explains it plainly and offers a step by step program to solve it. The book also provides a better understanding of what's behind the Enron debacle and the government agencies mishandling of security issues before, during and after September 11.

It doesn't matter if the reader is a CEO, a manager, a professional or a secretary, he or she will find familiar faces and situations; people that could be your boss, your vice-president of sales or your managing editor. Why do we have the chance to see ourselves and others in these pages? The book is simply about human nature. It deals with the underlying emotions, culture and language that make many bureaucracies what they are: an incompetent and unfulfilled mass of otherwise intelligent, good and hard working people.

Martin explains that lack of collaboration between leadership and other parties in the organization brings an unbalanced approach to responsibility. The author describes what he calls the "heroic leader", which takes more responsibility that he or she should. Conversely, the other parties react giving up responsibility. Once the leader is unable to meet the goals, he or she sits back and takes the position of the followers. Meanwhile the frustrated followers take responsibility for their part, but because they can not attain the needed broad or bold solutions, parties induce the leader to take again more responsibilities that he or she can handle, and the infectious cycle of dependency starts again.

The mysterious Responsibility Virus is nothing more than the very human fear of failure. According to Chris Argyris, cited in the book, there are "governing values" that guide the way we interpret and deal with the world. They reside so ingrained in human nature that they apply to people across ages, cultures, economic status, and educational levels. Humans-Agyris claim--will always try to win, maintain control, avoid embarrassment and stay rational in any situation. Fear of failure triggers the governing values and they make us either take more responsibility (fight) or abdicate responsibility (flight).

Martin proposes the use of some "tools" to improve collaboration (choice structuring process), eliminate the mistrust and misunderstanding (frame experiment) and to balance capability and responsibility (responsibility ladder) among the parties in the organization. All these tools have the general objective of untying the person from the situation that requires attention and put aside the biased frame of mind from which we see the problem. Once all the parties involved in decision-making have a better perspective of the issue, they are in a position to find a middle ground between capabilities and responsibility.

It is at the end of the book, redefining leadership, when Martin describes the leader as what sociologists or psychologists would call a mature personality. According to the author, a leader should be capable of splitting responsibility through dialogue, apportioning responsibilities in keeping with capabilities, but more importantly, making apportionment discussable and subject performance to public testing. Although he doesn't mention it, you have the sense that it is the leader a significant carrier of the responsibility virus and also accountable for spreading his or her fear of failure throughout the organization.

In these times of leaders finger-pointing at each other and frustrated managers turned into audacious whistle-blowers this book is a timely required reading to understand not only organizations but the world around us.

Missouri
How did it get so small?: A Missouri boyhood, 1910-1928
Published in Unknown Binding by Prepared for publication by American & World Geographic Pub (1991)
Author: James E Murphy
List price:
Used price: $7.00

Average review score:

Must read for all soldiers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-01
This book was probably one of the most relevant, gripping and epic history books I have ever read. The numerous parallels between the Iraq war and the Boer War make it all the more powerful.
Most Brit academics are long on tangential, spurious fact and short on prose. This is were Farwell parts with his contemporaries. It can be read by the casual historian (skip some of the long sieges) or the consummate soldier, as Byron fully illustrates the flaws and strength of each protagonist at every major turning point. He does not hold back personal judgment which adds much needed context. He imbues these real characters with life allowing this to become more Epic than history book.
As an avid reader of insurgent doctrine this ranks up there with: Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife, A War Like No Other and Guerrilla Warfare (Che not Mao).
While it is a hefty read I dare you to put this down after the first couple chapters. You will not be disappointed.

Superb
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-12
Simply put, one of the greatest, most detailed and yet most readable histories, military or otherwise, to ever have been published. If you have even a passing interest in history, this book is for you. The parallels that can be drawn to our present day situation in the middle east are shocking, and this book was written quite a while ago.

Informative, enjoyable, definitive
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-22
Quite easily the best book on the topic of the second Anglo-Boer war. If there were but one book you read concerning this timely subject, it is this one. The author leads the reader on a fast-paced but thorough and enjoyable tour of the people and places involved. The intermixture of battlefield strategic and tactical decisions are interspersed with human stories of the men who carried out the orders and the political forces that fueled the conflict. A must have for the panoramic big picture with detail enough to satisfy the most avid military historian. It is a work I come back to again and again.

An excellent non-academic history of the war...
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-04
This is an absorbing, well written account of a neglected (by American readers anyway) war at the turn of the last century. Rather than being a dry academic text, Farwell's writing style serves to bring the war to life 100 years after the fact. Seamlessly mixing descriptions of tactical battlefield and operational decisions with the geo-political/strategic back drop of the war, intertwining the personal narratives of the men who were carrying out orders and executing political/military decisions (which I'd say was very "Ken Burns" if Farwell's book didn't pre-date Burns' work by almost a decade).

Coupled with other accounts of the war, like Goodbye Dolly Gray (another excellent book) written by Rayne Kruger, the average reader can understand some of the causal factors of South Africa's apartied system and gain an insight into the history of a long troubled region.

I wholeheartedly recommend this book to any reader looking for a fast-paced non-academic history of the Boer War. You won't go wrong.

Missouri
Jefferson Davis: Unconquerable Heart (Shades of Blue and Gray)
Published in Hardcover by University of Missouri Press (2000-03)
Author: Felicity Allen
List price: $42.50
New price: $29.99
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Average review score:

good biography of a good man
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-16
This is a good book to read for anyone wanting to see how a good man dealt with adversity. Allen places much emphasis upon Davis' Christian faith, and how it helped him to be the sort of man who can be worthily imitated. The book also contains a goodly amount of historical information which is not commonly known. It could have used some tighter editing, as there were a few points where I was not quite sure about whom Allen was writing, and had to go back and re-read the paragraph, but, all in all, I was both informed and edified by this book. About the review by Kirkus, I can only conclude that that reviewer is an anti-Christian, anti-Southern bigot, as he obviously had already decided about the book before reading it.

Sensitive and Comprehensive
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-10
Felicity Allen's recent biography, Jefferson Davis, Unconquerable Heart, transcends mere history. Such a sensitive and comprehensive work, therefore, may perplex the hardened historian, who is often pleased only with cold chronological facts that fit comfortably into his own predispositions. Allen's intricately documented work has the touch of a true poet who deftly and profoundly reveals not only the heart and soul of a great (and often misunderstood) American but also a way of life gone forever.

No scholar can fail to appreciate Allen's exhaustive research,, nor any layman fail to be amazed at her mass of fact and significant detail. But if fact is the body and bone of biography, truth is its revelation. And this is the outstanding accomplishment of Felicity Allen: she has recovered the heart and soul of an honorable and courageous American patriot who thought and fought and fell with his young nation.

Oxford Stroud

A True American
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-09
What Mrs. Allen succeeds so brilliantly at is showing the human side of the man. I must admit that I was no fan of Jefferson Davis in his role as the President of the CSA. However, thanks to Mrs. Allen, I was able to see him in a much different light - as an American patriot and a human being. In the passions that colour anything dealing with the War of Northern Aggression, it is sometimes difficult to remember that everyone involved had a life before that tragic conflict. I can't help but be grateful for the way in which Mrs. Allen brought that point home in her book. While I will still take issue with many of his wartime decisions, I can't help but be proud that our nation produced a man like Jefferson Davis. Thanks for the insight and the education Mrs. Allen!

Dedicated Statesman to his times!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-09
Since becoming interested in the 19th Century, and the oasis of information concerning that time period, I'm still baffled as to why the 21st Century historian cannot understand the greatness of men like Jefferson Davis. All the modern historian can do is point out cultural problems of times past (slavery: as if the South was the only place on earth that had them). After reading the standard review from Amazon, I had to chime in on this great book. I've read William J. Cooper's Jefferson Davis as well as Jefferson Davis himself. Is it not interesting that modern day Jefferson Davis antagonists' (Just read James Mcpherson's preface in 'The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government") can only talk of slavery, as if this is the only motivating factor which drove J. Davis to become a relunctant secessionist, while ignoring our own cultural problems that are far worse and grandiose in scope. Modern day/ post-modern historians cannot grasp the larger picture of history. Their worldview does not allow for such truth gazing. F. Allen does a supurb job of showing us a Davis who was triumphant, depressed,ultimately defeated, caring for Negros, and a dedicated Episcopalian who knew who his Saviour was. Many of J. Davis' associates supported gradual emancipation (Bishop Meade of Va and Bishop Leonidas Polk) as to help assimulate the Negro into society. The Northern invasion of the South precluded any such cultural assimilation to take place. Read this book- It is partisan, but isn't every historian coming to work the task of history with his/her presuppositions? F. Allen is not ashamed of this and her logical conclusions about the man and his times is as accurate as a historian can get. Cheers for independent scholars who have not abdicated the task of passing story to fellow countrymen!

Missouri
Missouri in a Suitcase
Published in Paperback by Cork Hill Press (2003-11)
Author: Nova Scott
List price: $19.95
New price: $15.50

Average review score:

Loved it!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-17
Poignant story of a brother and sister who find love and courage amidst a recent trauma they can't escape. Touching, heartfelt, sure to sting an eye or two.

It pays to be nosy...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-29
I came across a new memeber of a msn group and thought I'd take a look at her work... after reading the synopsis, I ordered the book. Fantastic! It isn't overly literary, it isn't pretentious, it's a wonderful story, plain and simple. Ms. Scott captures the emotions and personalities of her characters with such insight, you feel as though you can hear them speaking. Catagorized as a romance, it holds enough mystery to tempt a much larger audience. This is an author definitely worth keeping an eye on. Best POD book I've ever read!

Hard to fit a whole state in this case, but she does it!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-23
Missouri in a Suitcase is a great story with appeal for everyone. When Lizabeth and Tommy's father suddenly dies, they pack up and move to Colorado, leaving bad memories - and secrets - behind. But, as often happens, bad memories - and circumstances - tend to creep up on you, particularly when you least expect it. Of course, so does romance. Enter Gabe, the ruggedly handsome neighbor with a secret of his own. Mystery piles upon mystery, as Lizabeth attempts to unravel the story behind the death of her father, her little brother's emotional problems and a budding romance. This book will keep your interest well past the first few chapters! A crackling good read!

One of the best new writers to come along.....
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-06
Lizabeth Porter thinks her life has come together until the day her father dies. When her brother refuses to speak and her fiance becomes unbearable, she moves to her grandparents house in Colorado with her brother and his battered yellow suitcase in tote, looking for a new beginning. She finds more than the new beginning she hoped for when she meets Gabe, her good looking neighbor who possesses the power to help her put her life together, or tear it apart. Gabe is exactly what her brother needs to overcome the hurdles of his life, but how much does she need him? A real page-turner sure to bring out your emotional side!

Missouri
Mommy Deadest (Meg Darcy Mysteries) (Meg Darcy Mysteries)
Published in Paperback by New Victoria Publishers (2000-10-01)
Author: Jean Marcy
List price: $11.95
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Average review score:

Another winner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-01
This series just keeps getting better and better! And I do hope it continues. The relationship between Meg and Sarah is engaging and realistic. The mystery becomes secondary to me when these two are together. Meg's niece makes for a nice character to play off of, as does Patrick again. But nothing beats Darcy and Lindstrom!

Darcy and Lindstrom just get better.......
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-14
....as do the authors of this series. I enjoyed this book so much that I dug out the first two books of the series to reread. Meg and Sarah are the perfect foils for each other. If you haven't read any of this series yet, start with "Cemetery Murders" and work your way through. They are worth reading.

Another winner
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-01
This series just keeps getting better and better! And I do hope it continues. The relationship between Meg and Sarah is engaging and realistic. The mystery becomes secondary to me when these two are together. Meg's niece makes for a nice character to play off of, as does Patrick again. But nothing beats Darcy and Lindstrom!

A great series!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-31
The writing in this series just gets better! The characters are feisty and funny! . Meg and Sarah are a couple to be reckoned with and even the secondary characters are interesting. Do yourself a favour and read this series. I just hope we do not have to wait another two years for the next book. This series is a rival to J.M. Redman and Jaye Maiman for great lead characters.

Missouri
A New Religion in Mecca: Memoir of a Renegade Brewery in St. Louis
Published in Paperback by Virginia Publishing (2006-10-15)
Author: Thomas Schlafly
List price: $18.95
New price: $18.95
Used price: $15.53

Average review score:

Entertaining reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-01
Schlafly's story has something for everyone. He is a gifted story teller. A real renaisance man, he brings disparate bits of knowledge together to tell the story of his brewery and so much more. His wit reminds me of Mark Twain. Schlafly is a keen student of history and culture and it shows throughout his entertaining book. Once you start, it is hard to put it down.

Time Flies like an Arrow. Barflies like a Schafly. Time will go by FAST when you read this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
This book is tons of fun and is filled with lots of St Louis History that I was never aware of prior to reading it. It's the kind of book that is hard to put down, you can read it in one sitting, by the time you finish you feel like you know more about beer and are a personal friend of Toms! As a business major, I also found it to be a wonderful case study in all the economic good businesses can provide to a community(while turning a profit). Restoring areas that had seen better days by setting up shop and making them vibrant thriving "places to be" again is something to be admired and commended. As a beer fan, I can't speak highly enough of this book, it has piqued my interest in homebrewing and I hope to try my hand at it very soon. God Bless Tom Schlafly! I hope he can bring his "Beer the way it used to be" to the Dallas market!

A Historical Journey of the Little Beer Company that Could!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-29
After about 10 years of indulging in Tom Schlafly's products and enjoying the fine food they serve at his restaurants I was excited to see that he had written a book of his David versus Goliath journey in the St Louis beer industry. I was even more excited this Friday night to get to meet him at a book signing event and have a sip with him of his new "No. 15" brew to commemorate their 15th anniversary in St Louis.

Anyway enough of how I came into the possession of this fine book, which can be read in a matter of hours, and on with the review. Not only is Tom a great person and business man but he also has incredible writing talents. As the story unfolds and you are taken on journey of not only Schlafly's rise in the St Louis brewing arena but a historical recount of his beloved town, family, partners, and even his rivals at AB (or the Brewery as it is called in St Louis). Readers of biographies as well as many other reading genres will enjoy this great account of an American business triumph by the little beer company that could! Good luck Tom we hope to enjoy your products and wit for years to come!

"Let's go grab a beer and hang out for a while"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
This memoir is an interesting and often amusing look at the entrepreneurial spirit of someone who turned his love of beer and entertainment into a thriving business. The book is an easy read and makes you feel as though you just sat down for a couple of beers with Mr. Schlafly and you listened to his story, with lots of sidebars. It helps if you are familiar with St. Louis and the people and workings of medium sized mid-western cities.

Missouri
Ola's Wake
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (2002-03)
Author: B. J. Stone
List price: $12.95
New price: $12.95

Average review score:

UP POP A TATER!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-23
I loved Ola'Wake as it brought me back in time to my own fond memories as a child. While reading with my two daughters, we laughed and cried feeling closer to one another as we related to characters in the story.

B.J. Stone writes with so much feeling and enthusiam she touches each and everyone of us in our hearts. We arelooking forward to her next novel.

Josie introduced to great-grandma, Ola, at Ola's Wake
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-16
Ten-year-old Josie never got to know her great-grandma, Ola, when Ola lived. Josie, who lives in Texas, is disconnected from extended family. Her father left to dodge the draft during the Vietnam war. Her grandmother died. All Josie has is her mother, whom she calls Ginny. When Ola dies, Josie and Ginny travel back to the Osarks in time for Ola's wake. This travel becomes a metaphorical, as well as actual, travel back in time for both mother and daughter. Josie learns much about herself, as she is introduced to her great-grandma, Ola, during this journey from past to future.

A visit to the Ozarks
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-27
Reading this book is like visiting my Aunt Ola in the Ozarks! It's all there...the sounds, the sights, the smells, the adventurous spirit. From the overnight trip up into the mountains, to the rusty milkcan by the cabin door, to the scent of my aunt's perfume and facial powder---this brief novel registers authentic. But its greatest strength is the way it conveys her joy of life, surprisingly, in a book named for her wake. One neat by-product, for young and old, is that this adventure motivates us to think of the meaning of death and life.

It was like living adventure through 10 year old Josie.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-21
B.J. Stone did such a wonderful job keeping the story exciting and ending each chapter with intriguing thoughts that made me want to keep reading. I enjoyed the book so much! I cried and laughed at the descriptions, knowing and seeing and remembering so many things. What a deep-deep, dig into your heart and soul, moving thought B.J.'s ending phrase was! Everybody who reads it will be able to relate. I know I did....

Missouri
Old Times on the Upper Mississippi: Recollections of a Steamboat Pilot from 1854 to 1863 (Fesler-Lampert Minnesota Heritage Book Series)
Published in Paperback by University of Minnesota Press (2001-09)
Author: George Byron Merrick
List price: $16.95
New price: $11.14
Used price: $33.32

Average review score:

HISTORICAL REFERENCE AS WELL AS VERY READABLE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-25
This book is fascinating to read if you are interested in the subject. It is probably one of the most important books available if you want to learn about the men who served on the boats. Descriptions of Captains, Clerks, and Engineers, are comprehensive, as well as the activities of other members of the boat crews. I cannot think of many subjects regarding steamboating that the author did not touch upon.

Indispensable history & a good read, too
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-03
There are a number of parallels between the lives of Samuel Clemens (i.e., Mark Twain) and George Merrick. Both grew up in towns along the Mississippi River, both first worked as typesetters, and both became river pilots. And Merrick's writing is nothing to sneeze at, either.

Twain's "Life On the Mississippi" gives us a pretty full picture of steamboating from St. Louis to New Orleans. Merrick's "Old Times on the Upper Mississippi" does the same from St. Louis to the head of navigation at St. Paul, and it does so in a readable and personable style that keeps the reader interested. And there are none of the long, tangential stories like those Twain stuck into his book in order to bring it to the number of pages promised by the book agents who sold it door to door before it was published.

Long out of print (I searched for a decade for my first edition copy), "Old Times on the Upper Mississippi" is once again available. It belongs in the library of any serious student of river history.

Old Times on the Upper Mississippi: Recollections of a Steam
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-04
A mine of information about the "Golden Era" of Steamboats on the Upper Mississippi River. One of those rare books that does not leave the reader with more unanswered questions than when one started reading. With no wasted words one gets a real feeling of how it was living between 1840 and 1870 as a "Riverman". Along with Charles Edward Russell's "A-Rafting on the Mississip" I would recommend it as a base for anyone doing research on the subject. For true adventure lovers it is exciting reading in it's own right...

A great personal account!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-03
Thank goodness someone has had the good sense to reprint this classic book about steamboating on the upper Mississippi! George Merrick relates his personal experiences as a steamboat pilot during the heyday of steamboating with stories about the boats, towns, and people of the stretch of river between St. Louis and St. Paul. I grew up in that area, and found his recollections fascinating. I learned a lot about the history of the towns along the river, and about the rich tradition of steamboating. Imagine piloting a 500 ton boat down a winding, wild river in the dead of night with no headlight, moonlight, or navigation aids!! Captain Merrick tells how he did it! A must for anyone who is interested in steamboating or the history of industrial expansion to the West.


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