Montana Books


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Montana
Along Montana & Idaho's Continental Divide Trail (The Continental Divide Trail Series)
Published in Paperback by Westcliffe Publishers (2000-10)
Author: Lynna Howard
List price: $4.98
New price: $58.71
Used price: $3.09
Collectible price: $11.00

Average review score:

Majestic Scenery
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-10
Having been raised near the Continental Divide and spending summer vacations on Red Rock Pass and the CD, the photos in this book bring a flood of memories. Leland stood where I rode horses and hiked as a child and where summer vacations are spent as an adult. Having stood on the same hillside Leland took the magnificient sunset photograph of Montana's Centennial Valley for the book's cover page, I have truely seen in life the magnificient colors and majestic scenery presented by Leland Howard's photography. The written text by Lynna Howard is as well done with thorough detail of all the areas they hiked and all her special humor especially telling about hiking and camping in a "Grizzly Bear Recovery Area" and the humorous tales sprinkled through several pages about two Llamas Popeye and Pogo. Hiking on to the Lemhi Range and viewing Borah Peak the highest peak in Idaho in the Lost River Range was a view more than fifty miles. Lemhi Pass brings lots of Lewis and Clark history and the Sacajawea Memorial Camp. Through Chief Joseph Pass there are tales of snow in July, a vanashing CD trail, and Lynna's tough job of modeling at Little Lake. By early October there is snowfall and ice on Twin Lakes. Lynna gives a short history lesson about Big Hole National Battlefield and the Nez Perce Chief Joseph, how he fought to save his people from the U.S. Army, after he, Chief Joseph had so helped guide Lewis and Clark. The glacier carved peaks are truely rugged, nearly inaccessable areas in the Anaconda-Pintler Wilderness Area. The reader learns about "Trodes" and proposed routes for the CDT, and the discomforts and dangers of Hypothermia. And then there are the dangers of Lynna hiking off by herself and finding lots of bear scat and a wolf mistaken for Leland's pet dog Tempest. Rogers Pass to Marias Pass brings humor of grizzly stories, camping in Bear Creek Corridor, and the depth of description of scenery and surroundings near Bighorn Lake. The Bob Marshall Wilderness is an area of grizzlies, deep sucking bogs, Ruffed Grouse, deer, mountain goats, coyotes, and extreme geological formations with thorough explainations by Lynna of what has happened the last 175 million years. The hikers are assisted by mule trains, cowboys, and there is a lost soul found. On to the Canadian Border--what can I say--simply God's Country, glaciers, water falls, more grizzlies. By late September it can be snowy and bitter cold in Glacier with the park service trail crews removing seasonial bridges from waterways. Always most welcome along the CDT was the support crew and "Mom's Mobile Wilderness Cafe". "Along Montana and Idaho Continental Divide Trail" is a magnificient publication of Photographic Art for the dedicated hikers like Leland and Lynna as well as arm chair hikers who simply want to dream.

No ordinary coffee table book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-02
This wonderful book by Lynna and Leland Howard is a far cry from the usual coffee table photography book. The humorous, personable writing style of the author had me laughing all the way through the trail hiking story, which is woven amongst the incredible photographs. As magestic and awe-inspiring as the Divide Trail is, Lynna and Leland bring it within reach and touch upon the realism of the hike. The mountainside conifers under snow and the miles of wildflowers that stretch along the ranges will make you sigh with wonder, while the stories of Pogo the llama, and the list of clever bear tips will split your seams. You will savor every photograph and read every word. Highly recommended!

Montana
Anaconda Montana : Copper Smelting Boomtown on the Western Frontier
Published in Paperback by Swann Publishing (1997-06-01)
Author: Patrick F. Morris
List price: $16.95
New price: $25.00

Average review score:

Exceedingly good book on the history of Anaconda & the Comp.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-31
Seems very factual and concise about the early history of the town, Marcus Daly the man and the Anaconda company. Very interesting and I am sure that everyone will enjoy reading it. Very good insight into the area history.

Supurb View of Anaconda's Unique History
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-24
Patrick Morris has written an exceptional book detailing Anaconda's unique history. He captures the flavor of a city whose birth was sculpted by the great dreams of pioneer capitalists (those famous warring copper kings) and very hard-working pioneering men and women. To read this history of a town built upon a copper smelting industry, as documented through the prism of Anaconda perspectives--and not just as another sideline adjunct to Butte's storied copper mining--is a long overdue pleasure. This is a very readable book that speaks to Anaconda's importance to the copper mining and smelting industry in Montana.

Montana
Angels of Grace
Published in Paperback by The Crossroad Publishing Company (1998-09-10)
Author: Anselm Gruen
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.98
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Average review score:

Grace you life with these angels
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-12
Fr. Grun personalizes 50 attributes of God and enables the reader to grasp them and take them along on life's journey. The simple format makes this a book to keep handy for daily reference.

Just GREAT
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-24
This book is absolutely amazing. It is a must for everybody who wishes to live in harmony with his/her own personality as well as with friends, coworkers, neighbours, relatives etc. I highly recommend it! Steffen

Montana
Another Place, Another Time: The Reincarnation of Crazy Horse
Published in Paperback by Coramar Books (2006-04-01)
Author: C.D. Montana
List price: $12.95
New price: $9.77
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A fascinating and well-written memoir
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-04
Reincarnation is one of the bedrock concepts of Metaphysical Studies. The idea of birth, death, and rebirth is the foundational belief systems of millions of people around the world. Although born in Melbourne, Australia, C. D. Montana feels that she has a lifelong connection to the Lakota Indians which led her to explore her own past lives and her relationship with the spirit world. The result of her inquiries and studies is "Another Place, Another Time: The Reincarnation Of Crazy Horse". Now in an expanded and updated second edition, this extraordinary account of the spiritual world includes Montana's close relationship with her spirit guide Maryanne. It was through the aid of her spirit guide (and many other spirits) that enabled Montana to uncover amazing proofs of her past life as the Native American warrior leader Crazy Horse. "Another Place, Another Time" is a fascinating and well-written memoir that will prove of special interest to students of Metaphysical Studies in general, and direct spirit world guidance in particular.

A Spiritual Journey Through Time & Space
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-15
ANOTHER PLACE, ANOTHER TIME is C.D. Montana's autobiographical account of a challenging yet inspirational period in her life as she became aware of her deep connection with Crazy Horse of the Oglala Sioux tribe. Montana's story begins in Australia, where she was born and raised, and finds its way across an ocean and all the way to South Dakota and Wyoming, as her conversations with her spirit guide led her to more fully explore memories of past lifetimes, particularly a past life as an Oglala Sioux.

My favorite part of this book is the 'final words' chapter which provides answers to many long-standing questions about Crazy Horse. What makes Montana's story especially powerful is how candidly she describes some of the heartbreaking personal hardships she underwent at the same time as she was experiencing remarkable miraculous insights and signs from her past life. While some readers may be concerned about an Australian woman being the reincarnation of Crazy Horse, I find Montana's down-to-Earth presentation both honest and refreshing, with immense value to anyone interested in the Sioux, Crazy Horse, and the subject of reincarnation.

Montana
Arnica: The Remedy that Should be in Every Home (Health in the Home Series)
Published in Paperback by Random House UK (1996-01-01)
Author: Phyllis Speight
List price: $7.95
New price: $3.81
Used price: $1.85

Average review score:

The Unknown Wonder Herb
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-09
I have use this drug/herb for years. It is will known is foreign countries like France and Panama. Excellent for bruises and blows. Speeds recovery period after surgery. Minimized swelling after surgery and trauma. I have had this book for years. I own the last printing in 1992. A must have medical remedy book.

Arnica the new miracle!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-29
I think this book is long time coming and very informative. Arnica is awesome and needs to be talked about more!

Awesome job! About time!

Montana
The Art of Country Grain Elevators (Working Lives Series)
Published in Paperback by Bottom Dog Press (2006-02-07)
Author: Jon Volkmer
List price: $14.00
New price: $30.09

Average review score:

A great book of poetry about what it means to be a son
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-15
This is a great book of images and poetry, ostensibly detailing the life of the midwestern farmer-- but, so much more than that, the son/father chronicle that works its way into every page. If you can read the introduction to this book without shedding a tear, please give your father a call and try to rediscover what's missing.

Volkmer has an uncanny instinct to capture more than just "the thing" (which, I think, all too oftens characterizes contemporary poetry, writers reticent to comment), but rather the psychological and emotional context for things-- not just things in time, but moments in time. And what makes this book particularly tragic is the obvious honesty that these moments cannot be, can never be, replayed.

The pictures work much the same way, but the words pull this work up from tired (but important) Time-Life photos of dust bowl hardships to the heart of soul of the relationships among man, son, machine and survival.

Bravo!

Extraordinary blend of poetry and photography
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-06
Two artists work from their hearts -- a photographer with an obvious love for the meanings and visual power of grain elevators, the other a poet whose graceful, plainspoken words brings to life the smells, the sweat, and the sentiments of the plains spirit.

Okay, that's too hokey by half, but this is a grand book. The poetry is great -- even the poet's foreword is a pleasure to read -- and the photographs show the beauty and variability, even personalities, of the tallest things on the prairies. Easily worth the price, for anyone who has a soft spot in their heart for these grand structures.

Montana
The Art of Non-war
Published in Paperback by Shangra-la Mission (2007-10-29)
Author: Kim Michaels
List price: $14.99
New price: $14.99
Used price: $9.99

Average review score:

Clear, concise and thought provoking
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-15
From start to finish this book was a pleasure to read.

If you have had enough of war on this planet, and you're wondering what you can do, or if it is even possible to eliminate war, then this book is a must read. Einstein once famously said "The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them." And therein lies the key.

War truly cannot be overcome while we still look at the world through the same pair of goggles through which we've been looking at it until now. We can try to create artificial bridges, artificial truces, artificial peace. But that peace will never last as long as we still hold on to a world view where there are divisions between people, between races, between religions, between nations and ultimately even divisions in ourselves.

So the key to achieving a lasting peace on this beautiful planet of ours is not just by trying to create political talks and truces and agreements, but in dealing with the issue from a higher level, by changing the way we look at the world, at other people and ourselves.

And in that respect this book is a fantastic guide that will open your eyes to different ways of looking at the world, so that you can start to clean out the goggles that have been muddied with dirt, until you are finally ready to take the goggles off altogether and see things clearly.

Lasting peace truly is achievable, and it is achievable in only one way and that is to remove the beam from our eyes, which is the consciousness of war and division.

War has finally met its match
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-27
War has finally met its match. Yet, when you read this book you
understand that even this is an illusion as ultimately nothing
can be opposed the to the matchless forces of peace.

This should be the handbook for all who are committed to
overcoming war on this planet. Yet, the teachings in this book
are beyond the anti-war movement - as inherent in that idea is a
struggle against war by those who are opposed to it.

This is the definitive proactive guide to producing peace in
yourself and peace on the planet. Not by fighting against war
but by uniting with the forces of peace within and without. It
provides incomparable insight to how we can actually love our
neighbors as our self and turn the other cheek in all
situations.

Never has such profound wisdom been presented with such clarity
and simplicity. This book is written for all walks of life.

The only prerequisites for this book are a very simple: an open mind
and an willingness to look outside of the boxes that have kept
mankind in the grips of war for thousands of years.

If you are tired of war on this planet and are yearning for
peace then this is your book. For the more we internalize its
message, the closer we will be to actually realizing what many
would call the impossilbe dream: peace on earth and good will to
all.

Montana
As I Remember Vol. ll (As I Remember...)
Published in Paperback by Farcountry Press (2006-11-01)
Author: Gladys M. Kauffman
List price: $15.00
New price: $9.69
Used price: $7.49

Average review score:

Great Memories!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-28
This is an incredible book that tells pioneer stories in their own words. The interviews capture the sense of community from the pioneer era as well as a wide range of other emotions. I felt like I had gone back in time. I highly recommend this book to any lover of history anywhere!

Amazing Stories
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-17
Longhorn Cattle to Homesteads. The interviews in this book capture the era in an extraordinary and colorful way. It makes you laugh and cry and wonder at the spirit of those early pioneers. This is truly an amazing book!

Montana
Badlands Child
Published in Paperback by Touch of Light Press (2001-11-01)
Author: Philip J. Burgess
List price: $19.95
New price: $18.89
Used price: $2.95

Average review score:

Poet pens pictures of pain, love
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-18
By VICTORIA TILNEY McDONOUGH for the Missoulian

Reading Philip Burgess' poems is like looking at old black-and-white photographs, the sharp grays and whites sun-faded with time, and yet the clarity of the faces and images so revealing that at times you have to look away.

"Badlands Child," Burgess' collection of poems, is full of ache. Though the poems take us from rural Montana to Vietnam, across the United States, over oceans and deserts and mountains to Spain, Morocco and Normandy, and then finally back to Montana, there is a common denominator of heartbroken lives, of silent observation and numbness, of hollow loneliness. And yet, there are moments of love and appreciation so ripe that all of that pain seems justifiable, redeemed somehow, the human condition as it is meant to be.

In "Weather Report From Home," the pull between away and home is like bare skin against cold metal - it is familiar, familiar yet wholly uninvited. Sewn together with big, loopy stitches, there is guilt and sadness, regret, relief:

Curious, that when you hear the old man
loud and hollow over the party line
tell of three days rain after a long dry spell,
even though you've been thirty years gone
from that lean, dusty place
you still feel the extravagant wetness
of those first few raindrops on a sun-tender forearm.

Far from Montana, "Saigon Whore" is told from the point of view of the title character, not of the soldier. She wonders and speaks, her questions perhaps not too far from those of the soldier:

I cannot see my life before me, I cannot see love.
I come into the bar where Mick Jagger sings
of dissatisfaction and I search each soldier's heart
for stars with which to create a necklace,
a constellation of a man and woman planting rice
beneath a sky of silent blue.

Burgess' collection is enriched with a small spattering of old photographs, the majority of which are from the Burgess family archives dating back to the Civil War. Each is beautiful and stark, reinforcing the images we have read of a dance below a "guillotine moon," fence posts guarding "the border of what's left of a man's spring dreams," an old Chevrolet truck resting "in the powdery cleavage of the hills," a stag with "three legs frozen in failed leap," and the sister, in the lounge of a mental hospital, who "sways like a metronome, arms trembling across her emaciated chest." These photographs, dropped seemingly effortlessly within the text, are like poems themselves - you squint, searching for signs, for truths, for a reason why when you know there are none.

The poem "L.A. Coyote" leaves us hearing the haunting cry of this desert creature, and perhaps seeing ourselves in the reflection of his unblinking eyes:

The L.A. coyote learns to find grace in alienation,
to bless betrayal through slightly bared teeth,
and to relish the chilly decay that rides on winds
blown through the nooks and crannies of worn cadavers.

The coyote learns that all passions are temporary,
that water can be tasted only as you die of thirst,
and that true warmth is never without cold.

Burgess was raised on an isolated ranch in eastern Montana. Currently, he lives and works in Missoula.

Montana poetry lassoes reader
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-05
First a disclaimer.

I know nothing about poetry. In fact, as a general rule, I'd rather read an environmental impact statement or a brief in a federal tax case than try to decipher the higher meaning hidden behind the words and phrases of the most gifted poets.

That's why I was amazed by a book of poetry mailed to me recently from Touch of Light Publishing, a Missoula company specializing in works peculiar to Montana.

Without much interest - more out of a sense of obligation to at least take a look - I opened Philip J. Burgess' Badlands Child, a collection of 80 biographical poems.

From the opening offering, "The Caretaker," I was hooked. It may have been that the imagery was so familiar - the long expanses of near-desert that stretch north and south along Highway 2 on Montana's northern tier, groves of Russian olives planted as windbreaks generations ago and the railroad when it was still the Great Northern.

According to biographical material sent with the book, Burgess grew up on an isolated Eastern Montana ranch along the Missouri, and, as with anyone who takes landscape seriously, it left its mark in all that came after.

Even the powerful impressions left by his tour in Vietnam and on his subsequent wanderings around the world are tainted by the dust of a Montana childhood. (...)

(...)

The poet lives in Missoula now, where he spent 13 years advocating for and counseling veterans. The poetry collection represents 20 years of work, a lifetime of watching the chips fall where they may.

Montana
Before Barbed Wire: L. A. Huffman, Photographer on Horseback
Published in Hardcover by Henry Holt & Company (1956)
Author: Mark H. & W. R. Felton Brown
List price:
Used price: $7.93
Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

Rare photographs and colorful stories of western pioneers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-23
Mark H. Brown and W. R. Felton wrote two well-researched accounts of the photographs of Laton Alton Huffman (1854-1931): "The Frontier Years" in 1955 and "Before Barbed Wire" in 1956. Both books are delightful reading, providing rare insights into the stories behind Huffman's superb photos and the daily life of old west pioneers before the arrival of railroads and wire fences.

The books contain rare and fascinating visual documentation of the American west. The earlier book, "The Frontier Years," focuses on the soldiers, Indians, buffalo hunters and early inhabitants of eastern Montana. The second book, "Before Barbed Wire," is probably the single best collection of photos capturing life of life of early ranchers on the open range. With the "eye of an artist and the perspective of a historian," Huffman accurately preserved the American west of an earlier time.

Huffman came to Montana Territory in December, 1878, as post-photographer at Fort Keogh, near the current Miles City. This military fort was established two years earlier in 1876, after the stunning Indian annihilation of all of Custer's troops at the Battle of the Little Big Horn. From this primitive headquarters, General Nelson Miles lead the final campaigns against the Sioux and Northern Cheyenne Indians.

Huffman started photographing the soldiers, the buffalo hunters, and soon the gamblers, the drinkers, the bounty hunters and others in and near Milestown. Huffman became friends with area Indians, and his clear and well composed Indian portraits rank among the very best in American history. Huffman's interest expanded to include area ranchers and their homes and environment.

His early photographs were taken with a bulky, home-built camera that used fragile glass plate negatives. Huffman's preservation of the early years of frontier life reflected his love for the rugged inhabitants and their land.

Authors Felton and Brown visited Miles City, Montana, in the winter of 1950-51 and had photographer Jack Coffrin print pictures from Huffman's negatives. These photographs later became the illustrations for "The Frontier Years" and "Before Barbed Wire." Each book contains stories of a bygone era documented by 125 superb photographs. Note: The quality of the photographs is a wee bit sharper in the original volumes published by Henry Holt than in the reprint editions from Bramhall House.

Rare photographs & colorful stories of western pioneers!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-30
Mark H. Brown and W. R. Felton wrote two well-researched accounts of the photographs of Laton Alton Huffman (1854-1931): "The Frontier Years" in 1955 and "Before Barbed Wire" in 1956. Both books are delightful reading, providing rare insights into the stories behind Huffman's superb photos and the daily life of old west pioneers before the arrival of railroads and wire fences.

The books contain rare and fascinating visual documentation of the American west. The earlier book, "The Frontier Years," focuses on the soldiers, Indians, buffalo hunters and early inhabitants of eastern Montana. The second book, "Before Barbed Wire," is probably the single best collection of photos capturing life of life of early ranchers on the open range. With the "eye of an artist and the perspective of a historian," Huffman accurately preserved the American west of an earlier time.

Huffman came to Montana Territory in December, 1878, as post-photographer at Fort Keogh, near the current Miles City. This military fort was established two years earlier in 1876, after the stunning Indian annihilation of all of Custer's troops at the Battle of the Little Big Horn. From this primitive headquarters, General Nelson Miles lead the final campaigns against the Sioux and Northern Cheyenne Indians.

Huffman started photographing the soldiers, the buffalo hunters, and soon the gamblers, the drinkers, the bounty hunters and others in and near Milestown. Huffman became friends with area Indians, and his clear and well composed Indian portraits rank among the very best in American history. Huffman's interest expanded to include area ranchers and their homes and environment.

His early photographs were taken with a bulky, home-built camera that used fragile glass plate negatives. Huffman's preservation of the early years of frontier life reflected his love for the rugged inhabitants and their land.

Authors Felton and Brown visited Miles City, Montana, in the winter of 1950-51 and had photographer Jack Coffrin print pictures from Huffman's negatives. These photographs later became the illustrations for "The Frontier Years" and "Before Barbed Wire." Each book contains stories of a bygone era documented by 125 superb photographs. Note: The quality of the photographs is a wee bit sharper in the original volumes published by Henry Holt than in the reprint editions from Bramhall House.


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