Montana Books


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

Montana
Montana Blue
Published in Mass Market Paperback by HQN Books (2005-08-01)
Author: Genell Dellin
List price: $5.99
Used price: $2.58

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Montana Blue
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-18
I've read all of the Montana books and loved them all. Please write another series come this next year.

Great Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-28
I liked it! Interesting story in a beautiful setting. Fascinating and funny to "listen in" on the main (male) charactor thinking to himself. This was the first book of Dellin's that I have read - I will definately read more.

Montana Blue
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-11
I LOVED this book! It will catch your attention right from the very first page. It has an excellent unusual story line about a man, newly released from prison, who seeks revenge on an absent father who never helped the family. Seeking revenge is not so unusual, but this plot is set in an unusual setting with fascinating characters and unexpected twists. It has an element of romance (nice), a mystery with a who-done-it puzzle to be solved, and just the right mix of good guys and bad guys. This is a good writer with the talent to make a story MOST enjoyable. And the great news is that it continues with the next book: A Piece of The Sky.

Captivating
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-28
A very well written book that is hard to put down. You just can't wait to see what the next chapter holds in store. A story that keeps you believing in the real meaning of "love"

EXCELLENT CONT. WESTERN ROMANCE!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-06
I admire Genell Dellin in some of her historical Indian romances but she certainly excells in contemporary western romance! I was riveted to this story about a broken man (half Indian) coming to terms with his demons.Then finding love with a woman.I highly recomend it and also her other book in this series (Montana Gold).

Montana
A Choice to Cherish: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Broadman & Holman Publishers (2000-10-28)
Author: Alan Maki
List price: $14.99
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Collectible price: $87.49

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One of my all-time favorite books!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-11
This story is simply one of the best I have read. It is a book that has mini stories that all tie into the main story so it's easy to read in chunks and the ending is so very satisfying. I have read it more than once and have bought several for gifts. Just can't say enough good things about this book. It's fantastic!

AWESOME Book!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-22
I used to work at a Christian bookstore. A man came in one day and bought 5 copies of this book that he was giving to friends. I asked about the book and he said it was a must read. So, I bought a copy, read it, and boy was he right. The story reaches out and grabs you, and pulls you right into it. I try to read this story every year during the Christmas season. The book is a smooth read and is excellently written. A big THANK YOU to Alan Maki for this great story

Just outstanding!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-16
I've read a string of short novels lately and this one was the best of the bunch (and if you look at my other reviews, you'll see I've read some good ones!).

It's refreshing to have poignant Christian fiction written by a man. The two main characters in this story are also men. Most Christian fiction seems to be aimed at women, unfortunately, so this was freshing. Another reviewer mentioned that he was going to purchase copies of this book for high school graduation gifts, and I think that's an excellent idea!

The story begins when almost 20-year-old Alan reluctantly agrees to spend a week caring for his dying grandfather in a small town in the mountains of Montana. There has been some distance between Alan's father and his grandfather, and during Alan's stay, he learns the reasons for this through a series of 8 stories his grandfather has written, to go along with 8 gifts that are under the tree. Grandpa has told Alan he can choose one as his Christmas gift.

Maki's depiction of these characters is outstanding. You really know these characters. It's wonderful to see the young man in the story grow in compassion through this book. Their relationship is precious. This book isn't predictable or sugar-sweet. It's just perfect and I highly recommend it. Don't wait til next Christmas - read it now - and while you're at it, get in some early Christmas shopping and buy a few copies for friends and family!

You might want to check out my other reviews of Christian books and music!

A Choice to Cherish
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-07
I was loaned this book to read a year ago and then determined I would buy some this year for high school graduation gifts. That is what I am doing now! Reading this little novel is just like you are there living every moment of it.

IMPACT ON MY FAMILY
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-03
The simple, but very poignant, story of this grandson and grandfather made the rounds of many of my family members and stirred up wonderful conversations that had a lot of meaning for some struggling with bitterness and forgiveness issues. Thanks so much, Alan Maki, for writing this book!

Montana
Tough trip through paradise, 1878-1879
Published in Unknown Binding by Ballantine Books (1974)
Author: Andrew Garcia
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Used price: $28.87

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One of the 10 best "documentaries" I have ever read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-22
I had read this book some 40 years ago and thought it was great! Recently I purchased it on Amazon and read it again; even better the second time around. Provides fascinating insight to a time of historical importance to the American West.

awesome
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-27
I read this book many years ago and then lost my copy of it, so I ordered another one on Amazon. This is the most moving book I have ever read. If you're into non-fiction westerns, this is the book for you. I found the first half a tad slow but the second half was fantastic. To this day, when I think about it, it almost brings tears to my eyes. The story was written from the memoirs of Andrew Garcia, a scout for Custer and tells of his adventures traveling through the west with his native american wives. I loaned this book to a friend and he shares my enthusiasm for it.

Tough Trip Through Paradise
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-23
I purchased this book for my husband. He enjoyed it and passed it on to other readers.

AS CLOSE AS I'LL GET TO KNOWING HOW THE WEST REALLY WAS
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-14
Stepping Off the Edge: Learning & Living Spiritual Practice
This book's handwritten manuscript was found in a dynamite box in its author's Montana cabin after his death at age 88. Garcia was an original Western settler, arriving in Montana in 1878, one year after the famous Nez Perce Chief Joseph's surrender. If you want authentic Old West, here it is. Garcia tells it like he saw it, favoring neither Native Americans or Europeans. He marries three Indian women (sequentially) and leaves his past world behind. This book has romance, beauty, humor, deadly adventure. Danger. Thrillers come nowhere near this true story. Most of all, Andrew Garcia's soul shines through his writing. What a dear, good man. I wish I could have met him.

'Tough Trip' has the ring of truth
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-31
A Spanish-Texan quits his job wrangling for the Army in Montana to set out trapping and trading with the Indians. His stories - full of grandeur, intrigue, death and romance - never cease to have a ring of truth.
In Garcia's accounts he is never the hero, but rather the hapless greenhorn who escapes by the skin of his teeth and a generous apportionment of luck.
Written in true trapper/trader/rancher dialect, this book is a joy to read and a pity to finish. I love his insights and Tom Sawyer wisdom, self deprecation, and observations about life with the Indians (and life with whites).

Montana
Fire and Brimstone: The North Butte Mining Disaster of 1917
Published in Hardcover by Hyperion (2006-08-08)
Author: Michael Punke
List price: $29.95
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Used price: $1.92
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"Butte's villains are more villainous, its heroes more heroic, its wealth more extravagant, its poverty more grinding"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
Fire and Brimstone is not just about the fire that broke out in the Granite Mountain mine in Butte, Montana on June 8, 1917 and the death of 163 miners, it is also about the mining industry of Montana and its sociopolitical impact on the state in general and the town of Butte in particular. Punke's coverage of Burton K. Wheeler towards the end of the book veers away from the main storyline and is the reason for the dropped star.

The story begins with an accident involving a 1,200 foot, 3-ton cable that would lead to the fire. Like the Cherry Mine (Illinois) disaster covered in the book Trapped by Karen Tintori, there is a story of men attempting to return to the fire-engulfed mine to rescue doomed miners only to be caught in a cage when the hoist signals stopped working (pg. 13). This story is not near as heroic and horrifying as Tintori's, however.

The book skips to give background information on the Montana "Copper Kings" William Clark and Marcus Daly during the latter half of the 19th century later to be joined in competition by Fritz Heinze. The background showed to what extent political corruption shaped the mining industry in Montana controlled by the Anaconda and, later, Standard Amalgamated Oil.

By far, the best part of the book covers the efforts to survive by two separate groups of miners. Each group was organized by a savvy, confident man of strong personality. The group that is more detailed is the one led by a young nipper Manus Duggan. Although he did not have a commanding position in the mine, he understood what was needed for survival and oversaw the careful construction of a bulkhead and the continuous rotation of the other 28 miners in his group to circulate the air. Another group of ten miners was led by shift boss J.D. Moore. Both leaders faced down and prevented challenges to their authority as well as attempts by the other miners to escape the bulkhead too soon. Many of these miners owed their lives to those two men.

The story of the trapped miners was so intriguing it was maddening when the book reverted to more background information. Once the fire and its aftermath was covered, the book shifted focus to the labor union situation in Butte (the AFL vs. the IWW), the brutal demise of IWW executive chairman Frank Little, and quite a bit of information on Senator Burton K. Wheeler (D. A. during the tragedy and the ugly situation brought on by the competing labor unions) who was an important player in FDR's administration. These sidelines (especially the labor unions) have a relation to the Butte mining disaster, of course, but as the book moves into the 1930s and 1940s, the tragedy seems to be left behind save for when Wheeler referenced it in one of his writings. Parts read like a brief history of WWII, over a generation removed from the mining tragedy. Then it is revealed that the Granite Mt./Speculator mines had been closed all that time (since 1923).

The book ends with an update on the town of Butte that makes one wonder why people still live there. There is four pages of photographs included with a few relating directly to the mining disaster. There is only one picture of a miner (a doctored newspaper photo of Duggan) which was disappointing but I guess that's probably the only one that exists or is available.

Butte Mining History told from the Miners Perspective
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
My grandfather died in the Butte mines decades after the Speculator/Granite Mountain disasters. This is an excellent book interweaving the story of the worst hard rock mining disaster to occur in the US with the story of Butte at its apex. I could not put this down as I quickly turned the pages to learn the fate of Manus Duggan. Read Glasscock's War of the Copper Kings for more details regarding Clark, Daly and Heinze.

Quite the page turner
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-28
I agree with what the other reviewers have said. I'd like to add that I picked this book up on a whim from the library and could not put it down. While it is a heartbreaking page turner, it is also reads like a love letter to a hardscrabble city. The book jacket says that Punke currently lives in Montana. I am not sure if he is a Butte native, but he has served the city well within the pages of this enthralling read.

Recommended
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
If you have any ties to Montana, or like history. This is a great telling of the events that happened at this time.
An enjoyable book.

Compelling Read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-12
Michael Punke has an incredible ability to make the story jump off the page. Too many non-fiction writers are turgid; Punke is anything but. I highly recommend it.

Montana
Fisheries of mountain lakes in the Crazy Mountains: Annual report for 1990
Published in Unknown Binding by Fisheries Division, Montana Dept. of Fish, Wildlife and Parks (1991)
Author: Bradley B Shepard
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Average review score:

You can trust in the power of Jesus Christ
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-08
Our book study just completed Miracles Do Happen. It was incredible to see God open hearts and minds to Jesus' healing power. It's written in a simple style but it packs a punch in terms of presenting the Gospel. The son of a friend of our group was diagnosed with a recurrence of a brain tumor, and just like in the book, Sister Briege showed up in our town and was able to pray with him and his family. His prognosis is now quite favorable, praise God. If you want to hear the story of how Jesus still cares about His people, how Jesus is still in the healing business and you need a reason to have hope in Christ, this book is the best choice I've ever seen.

Powerful book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-14
This is a great inspiration to me, though I am not catholic.
Her words are uplifting and healing.

Great Testomony of the Power of Faith
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-07
"Miracles Do Happen" is an excellent testimony to the power of faith. Briege Mckenna developed sever arthritis as a young adult, which confined her to a wheel chair. When attending a Catholic Charismatic prayer services, she was miraculously healed. Allegedly, she received a private revelation, in which God asked her to be a healer to others. She debated whether the message was really from God, as she was a member of a contemplative community, but after a period of discernment and a series of signs, she lost all doubt.

"Miracles do Happen" is an autobiography of Sr. Briege's healing ministry. She prays for people and many have been healed of spiritual and physical pains and diseases. The book is full of stories and photos of people, whom she has encountered during her journey and many of whom were healed by prayers. It is easy to be skeptical of spiritual healers today, but unlike many charlatans in the field, Sr. Briege does not accept money or promote products or methodology for financial gains. The book is great for renewing faith in prayer, and offers much guidance and learning to discern God's voice in your life through prayer. Sr.Briege herself spends an estimated two-three hours in prayer each day, and write about the types of Christian spiritual practices which have been spiritually edifying for her.

This is a simple book about the role that prayer and faith has played in her life, and in the lives of others whom she has had the fortune to know, during her religious life and is not bogged down in theological explanations or issues related to debatable doctrines. It is written simply as an intimate conversation, as often is the case of works from saints, and when one reads it one has to wonder if they are living in a very special life time of a woman who might be recognized as a saint in the future.

Wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-13
This is a wonderful book. We often need to remind ourselves about the present of our Lord Jesus Christ in our daily lives, and Sr. McKenna has done a wonderful job of doing so. Buy, read and believe...

This is a life changing book! And a healing one
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-23
This is the story of how Sister Breige McKenna became a healer of human bodies and human souls. She herself had a instantaneous healing from Rhematoid Arthritis. Because of this book I sought out her phone number and upon hearing a healing prayer over the phone, I was healed spiritually. I have never been the same and I thank God for it! Buy this, you won't regret it!!!

Montana
Photographing Montana 1894-1928: The Life and Work of Evelyn Cameron
Published in Hardcover by Mountain Press Publishing Company (2000-12-01)
Author: Donna M. Lucey
List price: $60.00
New price: $43.80
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Average review score:

A Worthy Life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-12
All Evelyn Cameron wanted was to be able to say she had lived a worthy life. By the end of her life, she thought she had not achieved that goal, but this book proves otherwise.

I was fascinated by Evelyn's life, especially the hardships she endured, trying to make a living off the dry summer land and the bitter winter cold in eastern Montana, with a husband who barely lifted a finger to help her work the ranch.

It was Evelyn, a woman brought up to live a leisure life in England, who milked cows, churned butter, did laundry by hand, plowed fields, tended a huge garden, dug coal, patched openings between slats in the house, painted walls, butchered livestock, broke horses, autopsied her own animals trying to discover what caused their deaths, and even stitched her own wound when she accidentally cut herself with an ax. She went on Fall hunting trips to provide meat to last through Montana's extreme winters. While her husband hunted, it was left to Evelyn to skin and dress the meat. She accompanied her husband while he researched Montana's birds, often waiting for hours for the perfect photographic shot from dangerously high rocky outgrowths.

She rode horses for miles to sell her vegetables and to photograph other farmers, cowboys, and sheep herders far afield. Her neighbors counted on her when they wanted a photo to send to family, but Evelyn was also the person everyone called on when they were in need. She was a no-nonsense woman who learned to eke out a living in the worst of conditions. (After a month of such hard work, I would have been on the train back east.)

Yet Evelyn not only worked like a horse all day, she found time to read and keep a detailed diary every day. She listed chores she had completed, how long it took to churn and how much butter resulted, every penny earned and spent, copied every letter she sent ---creating an invaluable record of her life. Some of her details were also invaluable to her ---figuring exactly how much coal was used one year so that she could estimate how much to dig for the next winter. When she became interested in photography, her detailed records of lighting conditions and exposure times helped improve her craft.

Her photographs create a comprehensive record of her life and the times in which she lived. Considering she had to carry heavy camera equipment and fragile glass plates in unbearable heat (or cold) on horseback, deal with dust on the plates and guess at exposure times, her photos are remarkable.

I would recommend this book for anyone interested in photography, women, or frontier life. (You could give this book to your teenager the next time s/he complains about doing a few chores around the house.)

(I learned about Photographing Montana by reading Bad Land by Jonathan Raban. Raban found photographing Montana extremely difficult, thus he admired Cameron's photographs that much more for his own failures.)

Record of a time long passed . . .
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-18
The main feature of this book is its 150 photographs taken by photographer Evelyn Cameron in eastern Montana during the years of its earliest settlement, first by ranchers in the late 19th century and then by streams of homesteaders in the early decades of the 20th century. In the latter regard, it is an excellent companion to Jonathan Raban's "Bad Land." Most amazing is the vast range of photographs, including family portraits, group shots of cowboys, threshers, and sheep shearers, ranch buildings, open prairie, wild life, store fronts, wild horses, herds of sheep and cattle, badlands, social gatherings, and farm equipment.

We get glimpses into the lives of the wealthy and the dirt poor. None of the photographs were shot in a studio, and taken together they represent a broad sweep of frontier life across a handful of decades. The text provides a detailed life of the photographer herself, a remarkably spirited and self-sufficient English woman who has left us this marvelous and revealing record of a time long passed.

Captivating
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-03
This book, by Time-Life books editor Donna Lucey, has some very interesting photographs of Montana, taken about halfway between the Lewis and Clark expedition of two hundred years ago and today. Yes, the early 1900s were right in the middle of Evelyn Cameron's career.

Cameron, nee Flower, was one tough and talented lady. She moved to Montana with her husband Ewen, going there initially in 1889, on a hunting trip for their honeymoon. I found the stories and pictures of life in Montana fascinating. Much of the book deals with the growth of Terry, a town in the eastern part of the state, on the Yellowstone river.

At the time, the Kodak camera was the instrument of choice for most American photographers, however Cameron did much of her work with a 5x7 Graflex. There are dozens of her photos in this book.

Although Cameron died in 1928, Lucey was lucky enough to obtain many of Cameron's photos from one of Cameron's friends, Janet Williams, who was 95 years old by the time Lucey met her in August of 1979.

In 2002, PBS began shooting a documentary about Cameron, and it was released last year. It includes over 200 of Cameron's photos (over 100 of which are not in this book), and it won four regional Emmy awards. It was the first high-definition documentary for Montana PBS.

I recommend this book.

Photographing Montana
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-10
This work is a treasure. Evelyn Cameron and her husband, born into English society, established a ranch in eastern Montana early in the development of that part of the west. A need for additional income and a love of photography lead Evelyn to produce a large number of high quality photographs. Those photographs represent a historical archive of enormous value. The photos show the people of the time, how they made a living, and the tools that they used. My personal favorite is a photo Evelyn took of herself in her kitchen; she sent it to relatives in England to show them her life on the Montana frontier. It was a life of hardship, but also of achievement. The quality of Cameron's work is the equal of other great western photographers of the era, such as Jackson or Huffman, and it records a side of life not represented by anyone else. There is a balance in this book between text and reproduced photographs. It is a biography of Evelyn Cameron, including excerpts from her journals, as well as an exhibition of her photographs. A museum and gallery in Terry, Montana, is a repository of Evelyn Cameron's work and the total number of photographs is several times what this book is able to present. One hopes that other volumes of Cameron's photos will be published in the near future.

Photographing Montana, 1894-1928
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-07
I live in the area of the photographer's subjects, and totally enjoyed the book and its' subject. The photographs, along with Evelyn Cameron's diary accounts of daily happenings, gave a captivating decription of what many of our homesteading ancestors endured. This is very enjoyable reading for anyone.

Montana
This Calder Sky
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Pr (1982-12)
Author: Janet Dailey
List price: $15.95
Used price: $0.81

Average review score:

This Calder Sky
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-14
When you pick up a Janet Dailey book, you know it will be a good read.
I have thoroughly enjoyed all the books in the Calder saga.

A Calder's word was law
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-15
The great Calder empire stretched across the Montana plains as far as the eye could see. Everyone knew a Calder's word was law and that one day Chase Calder would carry the family name to new glories. But for handsome, arrogant Chase Calder there was also beautiful Maggie O'Rourke, who came to him in innocence and stirred in him a deep, insistent longing.

(...)

An old favorite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-04
I read this book way, way back in 1981 when it was originally released. (I was in the 8th grade but very precocious!) I don't remember all the details, but I know I loved it and have read every book about the Calders Janet Dailey has put out since. This one, the first one, is still the best! The romance between Chase and Maggie sizzled, and the suspense/adventure part of the book was really good, too. This book starts a long series of books about the great Calder family, and I recommend reading them all.

The Best of the Calder sagas
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-18
Out of all the Calder books this is probably the most touching romance and least sappy cliche story. Chase Calder and Maggie O'Rourke are believable as young paramours and later as mature adults reunited through their son, Ty.

The book was written in 1981 but Dailey did a great job in keeping it contemporary and evergreen. For those who have read all the other Calder books, it seems to start in 1968 and end in 1983, but as you go along the events could happen now or in the '90's. The only clue that this was a somewhat period romance is that their are no references to the Internet and more modern technology devices. One does get the sense that Montana is a wild teritory where cowboy values stand the test of time. If you're into rance romances and western sky settings, this is the one Calder book that you shouldn't miss. I grew up near the Montana border before heading East and the descriptions of many scenes in the plains are accurate and do evoke that western feel.

The story begisn with Chase Calder, the 22-year-old heir to a cattle fortune. Warning - vegetarians you won't be too thrilled with all the references to beef. Chase Calder first notices 15-year-old Maggie after she throw an Irish temper tantrum at him after falling off a horse. Statutory assault charges aside .... that is the beginning of a western style Romeo & Juliet tale. Hidden meetings, sneaking out at night, all sorts of romantic getaway with Chase the cowboy.

The romance gets threatened with Maggie's jealous father begins stealing Calder cattle and selling them on the black market. Tragedy happens when Chase's father discovers that O'Rourke is the cattle thief and in old style Western Justice ... hangs him and makes it look like a suicide. Maggie and her brother see the whole thing and Chase loses Maggie and their son when she runs away to Los Angeles pregnant.

Maggie forges a new life for herself in California. She changes her name to Elizabeth. Tells her aunt that the baby's father was dead, and eventually marries a wealthy worldly doctor who raises Ty as his own. Fate brings her back to Chase after her husband Phillip dies and Ty discovers that his real father is Chase Calder. Now 15, Ty runs away to Montana to confront Chase. It works and Maggie and Chase are drawn into each others' lives full of fury and resurrected passion.

The drama takes on an intrigue when a jealous farm and confidante of Chase tries to steal the Calder Ranch. Chase, Maggie, and Ty bond together to save the Triple C and pave the way for the sequel ... Calder Born, Calder Bred.



Calders Sky Writing Review
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-29
I gave "This Calders Sky" five stars, because I believe it is one of the best books I have read in a long time. I am not much of one for reading, but when I started reading this book, I was finished by the next day. I could not put it down. From the beginning of the book it gets you hooked. I have always said that if I am unable to really get into a book by the first three or four pages, then I will probably not stick with it.
This book is a love story, but more. It is based in Montana, and two seperate families. The Calder family, and the O'Rourke family. Maggie, is a young, innocent, and inexperienced in some ways, young lady. Chase, on the other hand, is not much older, but you get the feeling that he is more experienced in the ways of the world. In the town they live, the Chase family is the name everyone knows.
Maggie and Chase, in certain ways, are two totally opposite people. They both are set in their own ways, but they are madly in love with each other. Of course, they have times when you would think that it is the end of their life together, but it always turns out for the best.
Maggie is experiencing love, hate, trust, and intimacy, and she must decide whether to stay with the man she really loves, or leave and never turn back. There are family issues that are standing in their way of happiness. Chase is attempting to take it slow, as Maggie is experiencing love and being intimate. As the love grows between them, you can feel the passion growing as well. Just as you think nothing can come between Maggie and Chase, problems between the families develop, and it causes pain and hate to develop. Chase really loves Maggie, but it seems as though they are fighting their emotions for one another. Maggie and Chase eventually end up in the same house together, but the way they act towards each other, you would think it was a battlefield. Chase and Maggie eventually give in to their emotions. Chase, Maggie, and their son finally bond as a family should. They face the world together as a family. Maggie and Chase were meant to be together, and after all of the heartache and pain they went through, their love ended up being strong enough to pull them through.
I can honestly say that I would recommend this book to anyone. There are continuing books beyond this one, but I have not had a chance to read them yet. If they are anything like this one, I know I will like them.

Montana
Bicoastal Babe
Published in Paperback by NAL Trade (2006-06-06)
Author: Cynthia Langston
List price: $12.95
New price: $0.01
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Average review score:

Prada meets sex in the city
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-26
I enjoyed this book. It is a good light hearted chick lit novel. Lindsey Miller was a great character. She started out without a direction in her career and love life. Her boss Liz was demanding and very direct. Liz did give Lindsey a great opportunity to start in a new career and excel. What a dream! Lindsey always had a great network of friends that helped her get a job and navigate her relationships with men. Carmen was a great friend but, I wonder what happened with her and the baseball cap guy. Lindsey's relationship with Victor in NY was similar to Carrie and Mr. Big(sex in the city). Victor was rich, elusive and fun. Danny in CA was the vast opposite(Adian from sex in the city). He was laid back, sincere and loving. The ending left you wondering and I liked the idea of not knowing. Maybe there will be a sequel!!!

Captures both coasts perfectly
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-29
I went to college in Los Angeles and worked in Manhattan. Ms. Langston's portrayals
of these cities are accurate, astute and thoroughly enjoyable.

In the first chapter alone, there's plenty of evidence to prove that Ms. Langston is an outstanding writer. The novel has a classically-structured conflict, as the heroine must choose between two eligible bachelors. There are many funny, yet truthful moments along the way. More importantly, the story never veers into trite or implausible territory.

This book is perfect reading for the beach, the plane, or anywhere else.

One of the Best!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-08
If you are like me and have read just about everything out but are still searching for a book that is original and fun - this is it! It is well written and uses a story line that you haven't read a million times.
Cynthia brings her characters to life and describes both LA and New York in vivid detail. You will not get bored reading this book. In fact, you won't want it to end. Luckily, she has left enough story and developed the characters in a way, readers will just beg for a sequel - or a series!
SO - BUY THIS BOOK TODAY!!! It's one of the best!
and if you don't want to read it - I'm sure it will be made into a movie - it is that good!

Hysterically funny & very insightful
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-24
This may honestly be the funniest book I have ever read. I found myself laughing OUT LOUD on almost every single page -- which is not an easy feat to be accomplished! And not only is it funny, but it is incredibly insightful about human nature as well. Langston has concocted such a lifelike character in Lindsey Miller -- you find yourself nodding along on every page, saying to yourself, "Yep, I totally get her. That is so true. That's exactly how I would be thinking." Lindsey Miller reminds me a lot of Bridget Jones -- clumsy, unsure of herself, but underneath it all is really one tough smart cookie. This book is super-fast reading: you can blaze through this fun-to-read book in just a couple of days. I loved every page of it, and am hoping for a sequel!

Surprisingly Funny
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-04
I never thought I would ever find myself reading a chick-lit book. I even gave up on the movie Bridget Jones. But I was honored when Ms. Langston asked me to read her ARC. I figured I could stomach through it and give her a few words of encouragement on her first book. I didn't expect to really enjoy it, but I was pretty impressed by the whole thing, and is a wonderful first effort from Langston.

This is the story of Lindsey who lands a job as a trend identifier who jet sets between LA and New York. She finds a love interest in each city, struggles to make it in her job, and keep up her separate lives on both coasts. I think the story line is average and in itself not terribly exciting. But, what makes this story good is that Langston likes to pontificate questions and problems in life and love that plague Lindsey throughout the book. It's these ramblings that bring life to the story and where the humor really comes into play. These bits of prose really showcase the writer Langston is destined to become.

Obviously, this book is the first in what could become a series of Lindsey's continuing struggles in love and job on two coasts. Her first effort is well done, yet leaves room for her to grow. I look forward to seeing more from Langston in the coming years and to see how her writing matures. She's a good writer now, and will continue to improve.

Montana
Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge: The Book of Mnemonic Devices
Published in Paperback by Perigee Trade (2007-06-21)
Author: Rod L. Evans
List price: $10.95
New price: $1.00
Used price: $1.00

Average review score:

A confidence builder!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-21
Memory is a fickle friend for me -- a vital piece of info often seems just beyond timely recall. Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge is a great antidote for that lost, wandering, out-of-control queasiness that so often visits in those moments of weak memory.

The mnemonics catalogued here are encyclopedic - a great start on specific things to remember, in a long list of 45 useful categories from astronomy to zoology. For me the most useful categories are cooking, geopolitics, math, music, religion, and time & calendars (I'm constantly using "thirty days hath September, April, June & November...). Though I won't be using the psychology aids much, they sure offer an interesting, concise glimpse into human behavior and some of its disorders!

But just as important as the catalog is the broad view of how to remember things. With the perspective from this book on the many types of mnemonic (memory-aiding) tools available, I can construct my own mnemonics for the things I will learn tomorrow, or that are discovered or invented next month. Highly recommended.

Very Helpful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-20
This book is by far the most comprehensive collection of mnemonic devices I've ever seen. I regularly use the spelling section and find the geography, history, and math sections quite useful. The great thing about this book is that it will be useful from first grade through grad school. Finally, the bibligraphy and the list of online sources will be useful to both teachers and students.

This book put a little sugar in my bowl...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-09
What I truly love about this book is the comprehensiveness. It covers more than two dozen subjects, including large sections on math and spelling. The spelling section contains about 1000 mnemonics for the 1000 most frequently misspelled English words(200 more mnemonics than the classic book "Demonic Mnemonic"- which is also excellent).
From a teacher's standpoint, the math, history, geography, and spelling sections will be of great value for any student. What is more, some of the material is sophisticated enough for the Miller Analogies Test (MAT), a graduate admission test of vocabulary and cultural literacy.
It was amazing how quickly I warmed up to this book, and I am not surprised that it's been endorsed by not only two Scrabble champs, but also Brad Rutter (the guy who beat Ken Jennings and everybody else in Jeopardy's Ultimate Tournament of Champions).
Heaps of praise go to Rod Evans, and because the book is both entertaining and inexpensive, I see it making a great gift book as well.

What a Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-15
What a great book! Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge (The Book of Mnemonic Devices) will come in very handy in my 7th grade classroom. I always try to find new ways to help my students with their study skills - this book will be tremendously helpful with that task. I especially find the Spelling section to be an excellent array of mnemonics to assist them with the difficult task of remembering how to correctly spell the most common misspelled words - myself included. Thank You Dr. Evans!

Dawn L. Clark
Midlothian, VA

Fascinating and practical
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-05
I have spent hours meandering through this maze of mnemonic devices, and yet I find a new and clever one each time I look. There is something for everyone to enable us to remember things we never thought we would.

The section on Spanish verbs will surely come in handy. I particularly like the mathematical and technical sections. After Dr. Evans's book, how can one remain content recalling the speed of light so imprecisely as 300 megameters per second?!

I consume with relish every one of this prolific author's books that I can get my hands on, and I encourage others to do the same. This book contains gems for persons of every age group, occupation, and avocation.

Montana
Miranda and Starlight (The Starlight Books, 1) (The Starlight Series, 6)
Published in Paperback by Raven Pub (2003-12)
Author: Janet Muirhead Hill
List price: $12.00
New price: $12.00
Used price: $0.60

Average review score:

A Heartwarming Adventure for the Young Reader
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-09
"Miranda and Starlight" is the first in a series of six books featuring Miranda and Starlight. In this exciting adventure, for young readers, Janet Murihead Hill has captured something of the young reader's insecurity, fear, and pride. Miranda and Chris find it difficult to communicate openly with their parents.

Miranda desperately wants a horse. Chris needs to learn to ride his. Intricate plot twists bring them together in a complicated web of lies, and deceit. Through the events that unfold Miranda and Chris learn lessons in the importance of honesty, responsibility, courage, and trust.

Hill's writing is powerful and inspiring. Illustrations by Pat Lehmkuhl bring another important dimension to the story. Her pen and ink drawings are strong as they create and identify the settings and the characters in the story. She also has the amazing ability to depict the emotions the characters are feeling through facial expressions and body language.

This is a story for the young reader as well as an excellent read aloud story for delightful, cherished family nights at home.

Wonderful new horse series
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-29
MIRANDA AND STARLIGHT SERIES OF SIX BOOKS BY JANET MUIRHEAD HILL, ILLUSTRATED BY PAT LEHMKUHL is an absolutely delightful new horse book series. Written for upper elementary and young teens, the books will fascinate adults as well. I couldn't put them down! Ten year old Miranda, the orphaned product of a broken home, vanished father and wild mother, lives with her grandparents on their farm. She loves horses and dreams of owning one, but believes it could never be possible. The first book introduces the beautiful horse of her dreams and how she becomes attached to it through lying and mischief, for which she gets into trouble. Being the new girl in her classroom, she is shunned by the "in crowd" and develops a troubled friendship with the lonely Laurie, a mulatto who feels like a misfit, and Chris, the "fat boy" in the class. Their escapades and trials capture your mind and heart. Every young person will adore this series!

Three wishes revealed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-23
Reviewed by April Sullivan for Reader Views (5/06)
"Miranda and Starlight" is the first book in a series of six called the Starlight Series that features a 10 year old girl and her horse. Miranda Stevens is a sweet, but feisty young girl who is living with her grandparents in Montana while her single mother in Los Angeles is trying to make it as an actress. Embarrassed by her untraditional upbringing, Miranda finds it hard to make friends. She is shunned by the "Magnificent Four" as she calls the close-knit pack of girls in her class. And she is constantly tormented by bully Chris Bergman.

If Miranda could have three wishes, they would be for a friend, a real family, and a horse of her very own. On the first day of fifth grade, at least one of those wishes comes true when she meets the new girl, Laurie Langley. She also meets the horse of her dreams that day when bully Chris dares her to ride a horse they see in the pasture next to the school. Miranda, gets in trouble, but falls in love with the black horse she names Starlight for the white star on his forelock.

This fast-paced adventure is great for young readers being introduced to chapter books. A few interspersed illustrations help young minds form an impression of the events being described. And the fact that this is a series leaves the reader wanting to know more and encourages them to pick up the next book.

This story brought back memories of myself as a young girl with a horse. The author accurately describes the responsibility and love needed to care for a horse. She not only portrays the fun of riding, but the hard work of cleaning stalls and grooming the horses.

I look forward to the rest of the series to find out how Miranda's relationship evolves not only with the horse, but all of the other people in her life. Since she has started to help Chris with riding lessons, they seem to be becoming friends. She learns the price she pays when lying to adults, especially her grandparents. And the most difficult relationship of all is with her mother, who wants her to come live with her in California, at the same time that Miranda is finally getting some of her wishes to come true in Montana.

Writers Notes 2004 Book Award Winner
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-28
This is more than a mere horse story. It is a journey of courage and consequences for younger juvenile readers. My own children will read this story.

Rebuttal to the reviewer in Massachusetts
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-24
From a reviewer's viewpoint, and as a person who enjoys reading, this is a wonderful story for young readers.

My opinion on this story is much different than the critic in Massachusetts gave. I felt drawn into the story and was impressed with the perspective shown. This is a story that shows what can happen when children lie and also how to tell the truth. I believe there are a lot more parents out there who are like the boy's parents than most would like to believe. Hopefully there are more out there who are like Miranda's Grandparents who show love and understanding when dealing with Miranda's situations. I enjoyed this book even though I'm an adult. I would reccommend this book to any child who can read. It may show them reading is fun when the story is fascinating like this one.


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