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

Montana
Car Talk
Published in Paperback by Dell (1991-03-01)
Authors: Tom Magliozzi and Ray Magliozzi
List price: $13.95
New price: $25.74
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $13.95

Average review score:

Stick with the Car Advice!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-01
I guess you either love these guys or you hate them. My wife finds them incredibly annoying when she hears them on the radio.

Myself, I love them. Their accents are not off-putting to me, and I love how they laugh together.

What I've learned over time, though, is that the 'straight' answers they provide are actually pretty authoritative. They actually know what they're talking about, based not only on their extensive formal education but also based on their hands-on work with many, many cars.

This book distills this expertise into important, relevant items you need to know. Buy it and keep it in the car - you'll be glad!

Laughed hard enough that I shouldn't have been driving!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-07
Great stories of the guys vs gals and a wonderful throw in on a college students response to a candidate college! My only complaint would be that the tape was too short only about an hour of entertainment, but a great hour!!!And if you need a good mechanic in Boston this tape has the perfect guy for you - really!!

This book should be given out along with driver's licenses
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-30
I wish I had this book ten years ago. The best $10 you can spend on your car. You should have this book if you have a new car, if you only drive your parents' car, if you have never owned a car and are about to buy one, or like me, if your car has been trouble-free and is now starting to act up. It's useful, it makes complete sense, and is very funny too. I plowed through it in about two hours. And if you think you don't know anything about cars, wait until you read what some other people have done...

Diagnostic advice mixed with humor
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-15
Click and Clack diagnosed my intermittant start-up problem in about 2 minutes, via this book.

As a result, I could talk to my mechanic more intelligently, and I knew what I was in for before I called the shop. I don't fix cars myself, but this book enabled me to be in charge of the process.

You get a great diagnostic tool, and some cheesy (but still funny) humor, all for under $15. Not a bad deal.

A Disappointing Read
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-29
This book could be half as long as it is if all the failed attempts at being funny were removed. The authors seem more concerned with trying to amuse their readers than with providing them with helpful information. While some good information exists within the book, it's buried among lame attempts at humor. I found myself being annoyed over and over again by these unfunny intrusions.

If you're looking for a lot of helpful, well-organized information on car care, I'd look elsewhere (e.g., "Lucille's Car Care", by Lucille Treganowan, which I highly recommend). And to the authors I'd say, "Either be stand up comics or authors of helpful car books, but don't try to be both!" (because you're failing miserably at it!)

Montana
Creating: A practical guide to the creative process and how to use it to create anything - a work of art, a relationship, a career or a better life.
Published in Paperback by Ballantine Books (1993-03-31)
Author: Robert Fritz
List price: $19.00
New price: $11.54
Used price: $3.87

Average review score:

I'm more lost than when I started
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-08
I have to admit, I was pretty excited to read this. However, after finishing it, I am fairly neutral to the application of Fritz' theories. I was expecting a book on methods of relieving creative block and getting into the creative mindset. While the book does accomplish this to some extent, most of it takes you through many of Fritz' anti-philosophical/self-help theories. This is fine for a book about that sort of thing, and I agree with what he says (for the most part) but I fail to make the connections he is trying so hard to show the reader. Maybe I just need time to absorb, and test his theories in real life. Oh, and if he plugged his "Technologies for Creating" workshops (registered trademark) one more time, I was going to throw the book out of my car window. Anyway, I will re-review this book after I have some time to put into practice some of his theories. Who knows, maybe there is a connection between painting a picture and the Holocaust. (see section on identity)

Pragmatic, demystification, just slightly marred
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-12
This book sets out to demystify creating, to pragmatically assist the reader in learning ideas and processes that can be applied to creating works of art, craft, business, et cetera. It's well worth reading for that pragmatic purpose. The first chapter sample, available on "look inside" on this web site, gives a good sample of Fritz' approach, uncluttered by the flaws noted in later sections of the book. He emphasized some steps and aspects of process that I wasn't so starkly aware of. I've created effective cartoons, articles, essays, songs, clothing designs, gardens, et cetera, but this book could help in becoming much more productive.

Some sections of the book launch into an attack on cultural assumptions. Bravo. Most of it was valid in supporting his approach to creating. However, I was uncomfortable with some of his extreme statements about certain disciplines and cultural traditions. He seemed to dismiss all of psychotherapy, and take some cheap shots, for instance, rather than limiting his comments to self-indulgent and deluded approaches. He overgeneralized and thus misrepresented other cultural traditions, ideas, and disciplines. For example:

"While meditation and psychotherapy may have replaced tranquilizing and recreational drugs, all of them presume you are entitled to feel good, even if you need to dull your senses and color reality to find happiness, self-love and fulfillment." p122 Fawcett edition, 1991

On the contrary, I would argue, going through a course of therapy based on Alice Miller's (sample title: Thou Shalt Not be Aware) views might allow and traumatized individual to function in life without enduring constant shaming, flashbacks, and emotional paralysis. It can be important to examine emotions, and feel good at times. Also the meditation I have personal experience of, mindfulness and insight meditation, as described by Chogyam Trungpa (sample title: Meditation in Action) and others are not about brainwashing oneself or dulling the senses. In fact, mindfulness meditation is likely to lead to some of the same insights and awareness Fritz describes in his discussion of the mind, separation, and so on. Fritz would do better if he didn't dismiss everyone else's work. Yes, it's true that people can get too focused on transient emotions and fixing the self. However, meditation and psychotherapy do still have something to offer, keeping in mind the 80/20 rule -- most of everything is crap, so buyer beware.

Ironically, right after Fritz' section on the lack of necessity to choose a right worldview, he launches into what is obviously his worldview. Oh, he has a disclaimer, and he's not dogmatic at that particular moment, but still, throughout the book, he does argue for his views of how things work, what will be if you follow his process. My suggestion: just ignore his adamant, paternalistic ranting, see through it, and go for his basic ideas, which are useful even though he has an obnoxious personality and a bit of a ham-fisted way of throwing around generalizations.

If you want to create something, this book can challenge you in a useful way.

Distinguishing Creating from Creativity
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-02
While some reviewers may have hoped for help on overcoming creative blocks, it seems they miss the point.

Robert Fritz makes a big distinction between creating and creativity. To create, you have to care about bringing something into reality that doesn't exist. As Fritz says, "Creating is in the realm of the noninevitable."

Creativity, in contrast, refers to the unusual and inventive, and Fritz argues that:

"Creating sometimes includes creativity, but most often it does not. As you master the creative process, the unusual becomes usual, and so it will seem less creative. You may be creating, then, and not have creativity. Likewise, you can have creativity but not be creating."

I had this discussion with a software engineer working on a major user interface introduction. Fritz would have him first determine what he loves enough to create, what are its qualities, and what is the "result" he wants to create. It's not about being infinitely creative, his engineers are already doing too much of that. It's about creating around a single design point versus maintaining too many open possibilities.

Another part of the book I really liked was "First Person/Third Person." Fritz makes the distinction between people who see their creations as part of their identity (meaning they are apt to "advocate a specific position") and those who remain separate from, while still passionate about, their creations (people "more apt to seek accuracy") as they encounter reality.

In "The Worldview," Fritz carries this theme further, quoting Robert Frost in saying: "The artist must not select a universal and then find particulars to fit it."

In the end, Fritz argues for pure emotion ("you want what you want") along with a rigorous process ("the creative process is made up of many steps in a particular sequence"). He believes that if you're frustrated in creating something, it's nothing more than not knowing what you want and/or inexperience in the creation process!

Getting the results you want
Helpful Votes: 39 out of 40 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-27
I bought this book because creating always felt like a white-hot, hit or miss, lightning flash, that also felt dangerous and fearful, like having to step off a cliff into thin air. Author of The Path of Least Resistance, Robert Fritz, in Creating, says thin air is good. And -- gulp -- he's right. For Fritz, creating is an ordinary and understandable skill we can learn -- and we can, he says, learn to do it better and more often. He's right about that, too. He says creating is getting the results we want in any area of our lives -- work projects, art work, career, relationships, community. It is a process with form and shape. It's not problem-solving, or reaching for the unusual, or about inventiveness or "creative ability." Anyone can do it. And he outlines nine stages of the process, from conception to living with what you create. Creating ranges far, around and through the subject, offering practical approaches and even a warm-up guide, and he deals with hindrances like the discrepancies between "Ideal-Belief-Reality" that get in the way. If this book helps you surface what he calls "invisible beliefs" that get in the way of what you want in life, it's worth three times the price. Fritz argues creating is not discovery. Some people take his seminar to discover what really matters to them, but as he says, that idea "presumes that what matters somehow already exists (p. 118)." Creating brings into existence something that did not exist before, makes something from nothing. This book is broader and deeper than the typical how-to-create book -- it doesn't talk about brainstorming or problem-solving or creativity. It describes how to become aware of the process and some of its pitfalls, and how to do it in a way that helps you get the results you want. I have no problem with a point of view that our ideas can help or hinder us in getting what we want. For those who do, this book may open their eyes.

Great ideas, though not a totally reader-friendly book!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-28
I had to give it five stars because it did such a job stimulating me with its new ideas about creating. At times it's slow to pore over. You're excited at the stuff you're learning, but the prose feels a bit tedious, so it's like being chin-deep in water and wanting to race ashore for something great. But this book's concepts, about the structure of creating, are so mind-blowing to us "creatives" that it's a must to sit and take it a swallow at a time. Fritz's challenging ideas allowed me to expand my thinking about myself, to see myself not as a writer but as a creating person (one of whose creating modes is writing). My promotion of my written materials is an act of creating. So is the plan I'm putting together for my life. Wow!

Montana
Crossing Divides: A Couple's Story of Cancer, Hope, and Hiking Montana's Continental Divide
Published in Hardcover by American Cancer Society (2002-04-01)
Author: Scott Bischke
List price: $24.95
New price: $6.85
Used price: $2.99
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Grizzly Cancer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
My heart learned from this book. I have no higher praise.

It gripped me from the first page. I just wanted to hold her and Scott in my arms. Scott's use of the grizzly bear prowling through their lives was an amazing truth and analog for the cancer.

Read this book; your heart can always use more courage.

Love on the trail; cowpies and OHV's
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-30
Shakespeare has not written a more compelling tale of love and romance than the story woven through this biographical tale of Scott and Kate's journey through her recovery from cancer and their trek along the Montana Continental Divide Trail. The book is not gushy or explicit but shouts of love while restricting its prose to a description of recovery from cancer and the 900-mile journey. No written expression better captures the feelings of neophytes to long distance hiking.

This is truly a book for 4 day backpackers who yearn to walk the distance of one of the big three North South trails, the Pacific Crest Trail, the Continental Divide Trail, and the Appalachian Trail. There are no gear lists, no suggestions for how to go the distance. There is an exciting and entrancing tale of commitment, uncertainty, fear, and satisfaction as well as a description of the Montana portion of the CDT which will alert all to its beauty, its lack of remoteness, the presence of livestock, and the amount of time spent on roads as well as the feelings concomitant to the presence of grizzlies.

The book is sectioned in a to allow the selection of either the cancer recovery or the trek, or both. Those who have been through traumatic medical conditions of their own may wish to read the trekking portion only; hikers without this experience will find Kate and Scott's commitment to her recovery truly amazing and uplifting.

A neophyte planning a long distance hike can see the problems with logistics of supply and transportation, route finding, grizzlies, and fishing as well as feel the joy of being out for an extended time. Here too is the camaraderie of the trail, trail angels and the scourge of cattle, clear cutting, and OHV's.

Any hiker thinking of their first two week or longer trip will benefit from this easy read; it is uplifting, inspiring and informative.

Healing With Love
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-21
Crossing Divides is a beautiful love story of a young couple's successful struggle through the wilderness of cancer.

Kate and Scott were a young, athletic, married couple in the prime of their lives when Kate received the diagnosis of cervical cancer. It immediately became "their" cancer.

Their love of wilderness and their desire to return to nature became the focal point of their healing process. Kate and Scott take us along on their post-treatment hike though the beauty of Montana's section of the Continental Divide while relating the story of their cancer ordeal.

I enjoyed this book and would recommend it to anyone who wants an insight into cancer and everything that relates to it. I especially liked the story because they won.

An Inspiration
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-20
This book gives hope to anyone who has had to deal with cancer. Katie and Scott fought a tremendous battle against "their recurrent cancer" and came out as the victors by always staying in control of their choices in treatment and caregivers. They researched all their options completly and came up with a plan that would work best for them in beating the odds. I say "their cancer", because Scott was there through each and every step, supporting Katie, so she was never alone. This is a love story between a couple who have great strength and determination, as shown by the parallels of their battle with cancer and the journey they took on the Continental Divide trail of Montana soon after Katie's treatments. It is also a great book for any outdoor enthusiast who loves nature and a happy ending. I thoroughly enjoyed this book!

Bischke's best!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-21
Meeting a grizzly on the trail is terrifying. So is battling cancer. Scott Bischke's creative mind connected these two fears and the result is the cleverly interwoven story Crossing Divides. This true-life tale recounts the trials and triumphs of Kate's (Scott's wife) battle and eventual victory over cancer. Their celebration takes them home to the Continental Divide for an adventurous traverse across their home state of Montana. The challenges of each journey show us the power of attitude in all endeavors. Crossing Divides is a riveting read that does not gloss over the tough parts of life - it infuses them with the hope and strength to persevere.

Montana
Doc
Published in Hardcover by The Lyons Press (1994-10-01)
Author: R. E. Losee M. D.
List price: $22.95
New price: $19.95
Used price: $2.91
Collectible price: $22.95

Average review score:

Confusing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-02
This book could have really used an editor. I assume most doctors frown on home surgery by amateurs and not every doctor can write. I often had to reread portions several times. The content was great, just some very poorly constructed sentences.

The man is as great as his book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-07
Doc Losee was my family doctor growing up in Ennis, Montana- my brother's birth is mentioned briefly in the book. He was and is the best country doctor, with brains and skill and heart and humor- a true straight shooter. I am so proud to know him and his wife Olive.

Neat doctor; good book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-03
This was an excellent book and would like to have this man as my doctor. He gave an excellent picture of what doctoring was like in a small town, what his philosophy of being a doctor is and his criticism of non doctors making doctor decisions. He is critical of law suits and the problems of liability insurance costs that he could not afford. He is down to earth and not afraid to say that mistakes can and are made. Some medical terms might slow someone not familiar with them.

A Glimpse Into The Life Of A Doctor
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-09
This is a wonderful heart filled story of what it was like being a doctor when you had very little supplies, but a whole lot of heart!! It is a book that will hold a place on honor in my library, not only because I have met the author, but mainly because it is a part of our country's heritage. Dr. Losee's stories are told so that you can picture them in your mind and see what it was like to be in that era. Some make you laugh, others make you cry. I compare his writing to that of James Harriot; both writers make you feel like you are there with them.

Wonderful memoir of what medicine used to be about.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1997-04-10
Doc Losee writes in a wonderfully refreshing style that brings the reader into an inevitable friendship with him. Medicine may never be like this again, but Doc has left a record of what is once was. The day I finished this book I wrote a letter to Doc Losee, and imagine my surprise when less than a week later, I received a personal note back from him. I have it on my wall in my study to remind me of this beautiful little book written by the Yale-educated country doctor

Montana
Finding of the Third Eye
Published in Paperback by Weiser Books (1980-06)
Author: Vera Stanley Alder
List price: $14.95
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Used price: $0.10
Collectible price: $14.95

Average review score:

Good starting point
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
This book by Vera Stanley Alder is a very good introduction to the western esoteric traditions.
It was written in the 1930's and reflects a lot of the thinking in occult /esoteric circles of that time.
The author comes from a theosophical background so readers who are already aquaintaned with this line of thinking might find themselves on familiar ground.
She ranks definetly amongst the best of the theosophical writers and has a clear and precise way of introducing the assorted subjects in this books.
None of the arrogance of some of her fellow authors of these days that tried to sign you up for their group.
Very valuable as a starting point to the occult teachings.
Although some of the ideas / information may seem a bit outdated it is still better than most modern day books out there.
She definetly knows what she is talking about.
Also check out "Shamballah" by Victoria Page and a book by the same title written by Jan v. Rijkenborgh the dutch modern day Rosecrucian.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-05
This book has really changed my outlook on life in a positive way
I think everyone with an open mind should read this book.
for me it started a whole new direction in life.a positive direction.

Mankind, Know Thyself & Vera Stanley Alder's Books!
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-13
Vera Stanley Alder is a true teacher of esoteric knowledge, and she reveals ancient wisdom that has long been suppressed. Her sequel to this book is "The Initiation of the World", and is mandatory reading also. Further recommended reading are the books- "ZELATOR" ; "KYBALLION" ; "The Transcendental Universe" ; and all of Rudolph Steiner's books (especially "An Outline of Esoteric Science"). Then, if you wish to advance further you can become a member of the Rosicrucian Society (AMORC).

She was way ahead of her time !
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-10
Vera Stanley Alder speaks about the conitued evolution of man's consciousness in a manner any one can appreciate and understand. This book was first printed in 1938 and for that time period her knowledge and depth of spiritual awareness can easily match and even outrank many of todays "new age" authors including Chopra and Heller . Vera's information is so well researched and unbiased it cannot help but allow you to free your mind to explore the vastness of the Spirit undefined by man's religons but by looking into the wisdom of the ancients . I would have loved to have met her in person. She is definitly one of the "Great Teachers" to roam the earth . I recommend this book without reservations for all brothers and sisters seeking knowledge of Life and Spirit but more importantly ...TRUTH .

To the great people at Amazon.com find all her books if you can ...they won't stay with you for long . Guaranteed .

Not much info on 'Finding the 3rd eye' but has some good tidbits
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-03
This book contains many topics grouped as chapters eg `Secrets of Sound', `Secrets of Colour', `Secrets of Breathing', `The science of numbers' and `Diet & exercise' etc. Within each of these chapters there are many topics covered. I would suggest using the `Search inside this book' feature to see more of the contents of this book. If you are new to esotericism, I'd say that this could be an interesting book to start with. Having said this though, this book does allude to some esoteric truths of great importance.

I didn't really get into the first part of the book, even though there was some interesting information. I preferred part 2 of this book (pages 127-185) as it had a greater depth and focus. Much of this book was non-specific towards what the title of the book stated i.e. `The finding of the third eye'. Chapter 13 `The third eye' (pg 127) did devote 12 pages to this subject however. I did like the chapter on `The history of the wisdom', as it gave a very interesting esoteric history and provided me with some books to source of which I was not aware of i.e. `The laws of Manu' and `Avesta'. I also loved the following from this chapter, "The greater path of the Egyptian consciousness was concentrated upon the path of attainment and the evolution of mankind" and "Book of the dead... They considered each human being as living with one goal in view, that of perfecting his character in earthly life in preparation for his journey through the `nether' world or astral planes, and his gradual process through the subtler planes to `paradise' or the heaven-world, helped by the various workers and representatives of the spiritual hierarchy" pg161. If at any point you wonder why you are here, you might want to take a closer look at this last paragraph again. If we all had this realisation and goal in mind, I'm sure the world would be a better place.

I also appreciate this book for clarifying and confirming a practice given to me by the Gnostic group I attend i.e. `The retrospection' pg 146. Having said this, I think it important to note that there are hardly any practical exercises contained in this book, especially when it comes to awakening the third eye. I would however have to agree with the review at the back of the book when it says, "She made it her task to simplify and summarise this knowledge in order to present it to others"; of this she obviously had a talent.

On the whole I liked this book even though I did not accept all the views of the author; most were good however. I was a little concerned with the book containing information that I had already obtained from other esoteric books, this was especially so regarding the first half of this book.

You can tell from this book that the author has done a good deal of research. The bibliography contains books from such great authors as H.P.Blavatsky, Alice Bailey and Gerald Massey etc. These days I find myself leaning towards authors who have had real spiritual experiences verses authors who write from second hand knowledge. This is my frustration however, an internal frustration as I make the transition from sourcing the Gnosis of others to experiencing my own.

On the whole a nice book; for greater depth I would recommend the writings of Samael Aun Weor.

Montana
Homestead
Published in Hardcover by Milkweed Editions (1995-05)
Author: Annick Smith
List price: $19.95
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Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Homestead will warm your heart & delight your mind!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-08
The author of one of my very favorite short stories, "It's Come to This," Annick Smith is a masterful writer with an amazing range. I found "Homestead" in the nature section at my bookstore, and bought it knowing that anything by A.N. would be worth reading. Don't hesitate: just send for it! To quote from Annie Dillard on the book jacket, "Here is a passionate story, beautifully told."

Homestead
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-05
The book Homestead I thought was a very good book. It had an intense written story line; the description on the setting and what the characters see is great. It was about a woman who lost her husband while her boys were still in their childhood, and then they grew and she was left all alone at home with no one to talk to her nearest neighbor was miles down the road. My book was about a family that moved from Washington to Montana because Annick's husband got a job as a professor at the UM. Her husband Dave became very ill with a disease that he wasn't going to get better from he died a few years later and she was stuck raising her boys all by herself. Her boys grew up and moved out and herself left her at home. She after a while started talking to other professors from other states and then began to travel all around she went to Alaska and went on a fishing boat with her companion Chris. My favorite part of the book was when she went back to Chicago and she was remembering how she used to walk on the beaches and how she was so comfortable with herself that the neighbors had complained to the cops and her father was told to do something about it.

Daughterhood, wifehood, motherhood, and place-making
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-05
Our book group read and loved this book. So much to think about and discuss -- a sort of female "River Runs Through It," because of its sumptuous references to occasions -- the food, the drink, the making of gatherings. The group admired Smith's extraordinary courage -- taking a young family abroad, bearing twins overseas, undertaking family life on a remote 163 acres of Montana's wildest. They loved her language: a "solitary dune girl" now "summer's white-haired child." This is an earthy, generous, candid, poetic story -- of universal appeal.

A river runs through it
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-14
Annick Smith has woven together material from a dozen or so short pieces published 1988-1994, and the result is this collage of memoir and travel writing. Settling near Missoula, Montana, in 1964, Smith was married to a university teacher and hopeful film writer, who died of heart failure, leaving her with four young sons. Adopting Montana as a home, she writes about the 163-acre "homestead" of the book's title, raising her sons and entertaining friends in a log house transported there from where it had been abandoned on a property 30 miles upriver.

Actually, a river runs through this book. It's the Big Blackfoot River, the same one that figures in Norman Mclean's story about fly fishing and family. Maclean, in fact, lives close by, and she comes to know him, eventually becoming a guiding force behind the film adaptation. (She shares credits as co-producer with fellow writer and friend Bill Kittredge, and the film's director, Robert Redford. She has also produced the film "Heartland," set in frontier Montana. Her twin sons Alec and Andrew have become filmmakers in their own right, writing and directing "The Slaughter Rule," also set in Montana.)

Smith's book meanders casually across a variety of topics. There are accounts of the Montana seasons, a local band called the Mudflaps, the work of brand inspectors, her Hungarian Jewish parents who live in Chicago, summers with her two young sisters on the Michigan shore of Lake Michigan, travels to Spain and Alaska, fishing and hiking, celebrity friends, family gatherings on holidays, Montana wildlife, the Nez Perce, and the environmental impact of mining and clear cutting.

I recommend this book to anyone with an interest in Montana, the outdoors, Western living, and a certain 1960s spirit that survives among the graying hippies who once fled into what was then the wilderness. I also recommend Gretel Ehrlich's "The Solace of Open Spaces," about a California filmmaker who visits Wyoming and decides to stay.

A cosmic breath from the Mountains...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-05
I have read and loved all of those important voices in Montana's literary world: Dick Hugo, William Kittridge, Ivan Doing...but always wondered if there was someone representing my specific experience in the modern west. Annick Smith's HOMESTEAD is still echoing off of the top of my 6' body weeks after I turned the last page. She tells of being a woman who lives in the frontier of western Montana at the end of this century. She is a mom, a wife, a lover, a naturalist, a thinker, a writer, and an artist. She may be my mother's age, but she transends the generations and seems to to hold a steady voice across my generation, too. HOMESTEAD comments on life like a friend comments on a personal thought over a good cup of coffee. Take this book to bed with you on a long winter's night and read while the house is silent & dark...

Montana
Joe Montana's Art and Magic of Quarterbacking
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (2001-03)
Authors: Joe Montana and Richard Weiner
List price: $24.55

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Montana is the maestro
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-12
Joe Montana gives fans of all ages the complete package of quarterbacking. He breaks down every little detail associated with the position. This should be the right hand textbook for anyone wanting to play QB. A beautiful photo gallery is depicted in each chapter.

Joe knows of what he writes!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-01-19
I'm admittedly certifiably crazy about football, the San Fransisco 49ers and Joe Montana. But even discounting those facts, this is one of THE best books ever written on football. Joe really KNOWS football and he and his co-writer really allow you to get INTO his head from a position underneath the center and indeed, from positions all over the field. The diagrams and Joe's explanations of all the intricacies of the game are more than worth the cost of the book, even for veteran watchers of the game. Joe is not only knowledgeable, but gracious and humorous! Having been lucky enough to talk with Joe more than once I can guarantee the truth of those three adjectives to describe him. This book was SO good I sent a copy to my friends in Germany who are also 49er fans (one really LIKES diagrams and one really LIKES Jerry Rice!) I sincerely hope Joe writes MORE books in future. Merfuff

This is not an instructional text
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-19
Like many of the current crop of younger football coaches, I grew up in a 1980's that was dominated at the NFL level by the West Coast Offense and the San Francisco 49ers. One of the quarterbacks of that amazing dynasty was Joe Montana, and he was very, very good at what he did.

Unfortunately, the book he authored really doesn't go in depth on how he achieved that success. Very little of the player's mechanics are covered. There is no discussion of proper arm motion when passing. There is no discussion of hip angling, receiver progression or other mechanics of function within a football play.

This book is largely a series of anecdotes about Joe's career, rather than a specific list of skills and drills for young quarterbacks. His stories are interesting, but meaningless to the coach looking to improve his players.

I strongly recommend another book by another Super Bowl winning quarterback. "Phil Simms on Passing: Fundamentals of Throwing the Football" is actually ABOUT the mechanics of throwing the ball. All the little tidbits that have been ignored by the miserable execution of the modern NFL are listed.

For example: Phil Simms discusses the importance of keeping the elbows pinned to the sides when dropping back. With both hands on the ball, this reduces the risk of a fumble if sacked by surprise from behind. The year he discovered this he dropped his fumbles from 11 the prior year to three. I was so impressed that I began using that technique with my high school program immediately; our quarterbacks have not fumbled in five years.

Phil Simms also covers the adaptation of the West Coast Offense as a precision passing attack-- so precise in fact, that he was taught, "to hit the receiver on the number away from the defender, so the receiver would know which way to turn to avoid the tackle and could gain extra yardage." These are the tips that should have been in Joe Montana's book, and were not.

Joe Montana's book barely covers the three and five step drops, ignores handoffs and faking, and brushes over roll out passing and throwing on the run. By contrast, Phil Simms's book covers one step, three step, five step, seven step, roll outs, throwing on the run, avoiding the sack, how to avoid the interception, how to throw the intentional incomplete to avoid the sack, reading the zones, reading man-to-man coverage, receiver progressions, securing the football, mechanics of a proper handoff, proper pitching/tossing, proper faking, and several other aspects of playing quarterback.

Joe Montana's book is a good read for the fan with an interest in his career, or the dad that wants to play catch with his son and maybe avoid creating bad habits by teaching incorrect mechanics, but it just doesn't have the depth that it should. For a coach with a serious agenda of improving his football team, I just can't recommend it. Look for Phil Simms's book instead. You'll get much more out of it.

~D.

learning from the best...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-07
this book is awsome. Joe Montana, probably one of the greatest QBs ever shares his tips and secrets with the readers. Montana discusses everything from certain exercises to do, how to gain more accuracy, what's kinds of defenses there are, how you should grip the football, the different passing patters, and how he used to prepare during the week for an up and coming game. he goes through his mental preparation and what he's thinking in the first quarter, the second quarter, the adjustments at the half, the third, and then the 4th quarter.
Montana also preaches unity and team. he never places himself above his teamates and always credits the people around him for his success. his offensive line, his running backs, coaches, wide recievers, and his parents.

good book for any kid interested in becoming a QB or for anyone who just needs a little inspiration.

A great purchase for football fans at any level.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1997-11-06
As a football fan, and more specifically a Joe Montana fan, this book has it all. Not only do I understand more about the game, I also have a deeper admiration for those who suit up at the quarterback position. Joe puts you on the sideline, in the huddle, and at the line of scrimmage. He's both informative and inspirational, and leaves little doubt as to why he's considered the greatest quarterback of all time. You'll learn a lot of instructional advice on how to play quarterback from Joe, but the book also puts you inside Joe's head during his many magic moments.Gordon Shumway (GMVN@aol.com) New Jersey

Montana
Justice
Published in Hardcover by Milkweed Editions (1995-02)
Author: Larry Watson
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Peace, happiness and justice are inseparable...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-10
We must never forget that each one of us holds the key in making this world a better place to live in. It is in fact our moral obligation to be active in not only looking at our self-interest but in doing what is right for all of us. Our own happiness in inseparable from the happiness of others around us and that is the essence of life. Only by walking on the path of justice and with a strong urge to seek the truth can we get there. And we must not let any one stand in the way since history will then judge us all as being as much accountable as those who block our way...

Montana 1899-1937 . . .
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-27
This is a series of seven interconnected short stories that's also a prequel to the author's novel "Montana 1948." Set in the far northeastern corner of Montana, across the state line from North Dakota and just south of the Canadian border, these stories cover four brief decades from the area's first settling in the late nineteenth century to the mid-1930s. Appearing in all of them are members of the Hayden family, chiefly father Julian and son Wesley, who are each employed as the county's sheriff. Both are intelligent, somewhat difficult men, as we see them through the eyes of other characters.

Watson writes with a gentle hand, often with greater sympathy for the women he writes about, while admiring the take-charge qualities in the men who share their lives - qualities that can easily tilt into character flaws. That delicate balance is reflected in a scene at a Thanksgiving dinner in which Wesley's father and older brother behave too familiarly with a young female guest. It appears again as Wesley's wife sees her husband rough up an Indian who won't leave a bar, while being unwilling or unable to hold his newborn son. This ambiguity makes Watson's stories fascinating, touching on character traits central to the mythology of the American West, and the contradictions at the heart of "civilizing" the land and the people - indigenous or otherwise - who have made it their home. Well written and well observed, with thoughtful insight into memorable characters.

Justice
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-24
All of the characters have a defined personality. You know where they came from, what they feel and can get a sense of why they act the way they do. I think it's a wonderful idea to write a preface just to describe the characters. Now in the book he can get right to the point of the story.

Fill out your Watson library with this one
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-09
It is probably a tribute to Montana, 1948 that this prequel is entirely unnecessary, but Justice still seems to add little to the story. I think Montana, 1948 is superb, but could have done without this prequel. Still, if read on the heels of reading its sequel, this little addition does not disappoint.

Read this book!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-01
One of the best regional books I have read. Watson is an extremely skilled author with the ability to vividly evoke a time or place, seemingly effortlessly. 'Outside the Jurisdiction' is probably the best story in the book. Watson depicts the harsh and brutal life many westerners lived in the early part of the twentieth century. I can't recommend this book highly enough.

Montana
The Last Buffalo Hunter: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by (2001-03-31)
Author: Jake Mosher
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Montana comes alive
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-24
I found this book to be very visual and exciting! The first time meeting Cole, the grandfather is a funny and exciting scene; you are almost in the truck riding the bumpy ride with them. The scene seems disturbing, yet intriguing at the same time; then you find out the truth-which I cannot give away here- and you have to laugh out loud with relief and amusement at yourself for being disturbed! I have been to Montana just once, and every scenic word takes me back again. I have been some of the places Kyle is going-the continental divide- and I wish to go where I have not been such as the wonderful rivers described. I wonder if I may have even seen the house the Grandfather lives in. I must caution readers though: If you do not have a wonderful sense of humor which will allow you to laugh out loud, do not wish to meet a man alive with a love for the wild outdoors, do not wish to learn in a most enjoyable manner you won't even realize how much knowledge you gained until you find yourself describing elk to others, do not wish to be young again, then this is not the book for you. If you wish to see Montana without the ride on the Greyhound, to learn things you didn't know or might not have noticed, then this book will suit you well. I wonder if maybe this book isn't about the author, Jake Mosher? The only thing I know is that I look forward to his next book and as far as this one, I know I am reading it very slowly-and perhaps many times- for I want to savor every bit, and stay in Montana as long as I can!

The Mosher Genes Have Flowered
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-06
I absolutely loved this book.
The son of the renowned raconteur of the Northeast Kingdom, Howard Mosher and his wife Phyllis, first time novelist Jake Mosher has planted his boot heels high in the wilds of Mantana and stomped himself a foothold. The Last Buffalo Hunter tells the sory of 14 year-old Kyle Richards and his wild and wooly coming of age during a summer spent with his proud and profane grandfather, Cole, in the Big Sky country of Montana. Cole is a rugged logger and former broncobuster, as quick to throw a punch, as he is to pull a gun. Womanizing, whiskey drinking, Kyle's grandpa is a profane throwback to an era that has all but faded away, but ruggedly holds on like the last traces of ice along a high mountain trail in summer.
A wonderful cast of characters ramble through the book, including a cute young Indian girl who has cast her eye on a bewildered Kyle. Hucksters, dudes, unreformed Indians, and a barroom of hard drinking, hard loving men and women, hoisting shots together in drunken, fight filled nights. In the background lurks the long running fued with millionaire developer Bruce Tipton and his herd of buffalo that surround Cole Richards home. Encroaching daily, smothering him, and his stubborn view of what's really right and wrong, building to a showdown that seems as inevitable as so-called progress and development.
A journal Kyle finds of his great-grandfather's arduous journey from Kansas City to Montana in 1862 flows like a winding mountain stream through this book occasionally. The dusty journal brings to life the terrible ordeal of moving west, and gives this marvelous book a mystical quality at times. A mystical quality as ominous as the howling of the ghostly black wolf that seems to know every step Kyle takes high in the mountains at night, and the yellow hate-filled stare of the fenced-in buffallo bull, Splinter Horn. Jake Mosher wites about the West, it's history, it's people, and it's scenery with a skill well beyond his young years. The Mosher genes are truly flowering.
As I reluctantly turned the last page of this book, I sighed contentedly, but sad that it was over. I had been in the hands of a master stryteller, a craftsman of words. I knew that Kyle's summer in Montan would remain fondly in my memory as much as it would by the young grandson of Cole Richards.

Wonderful first novel, wonderful novel period!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-11
The Last Buffalo Hunter is the first book I've read in many, many years that is set in a "real" Montana. There isn't any of the glossed-over Hollywood imagery that so often accompanies anything to do with Montana these days. This novel is about the raw, hard sides of life not just in the west but everywhere else. It's sharp, compelling, and through a set of well-developed, unique characters tells a gripping story of love, loss, adventure and understanding. It weaves legend into contemporary life, using touches of magic realism without becoming a fantasy. It left me feeling haunted and at the same time satisfied. There is no doubt that The Last Buffalo Hunter is a remarkable accomplishment, more so because it is the writer's first novel. I am anxiously awaiting a second book from Jake Mosher and a third, fourth, fifth, ect. This is one read you won't regret!

Jake Mosher is a 5 star writer!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-02
Jake Mosher is the best young fiction writer in the country. He will go far with his writing.

This book left me wondering only how it got published.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-24

Trust me. I'm being kind with the 3 Star review.

This is a book that began strong. The writing is vivid. The characters are familiar and, and the setting is seductive. For the first 50 to 100 pages, I thought I was going to thoroughly enjoy this story (hence the third star), but that was before I realized that the author had no idea where it was going.

To say that the main characters in this book are cliché gives new meaning and intensity to the word cliché. The characters quickly degenerated from being interesting to being ridiculous.

A 14 year old boy is sent by his otherwise responsible parents by bus from their home in upstate New York to visit his Grandfather in Montana for the summer. If you've ever had a 14 year old boy you know that this in itself is suspect. He reaches Montana and is finally met by his Grandfather WHO IS John Wayne in the role of Rooster Cockburn. Following in the footsteps of all good Grandpas, Cole (Rooster) teaches the boy to fly fish the local rivers, drink beer and whisky, have sex with the Indians, and shoot at the local police when they come to arrest him for the destruction of another man's property. No kidding.

To his credit as a Grandpa, Cole/Rooster also passes on a bit of family history to the boy (which he never saw fit to share with his own son for no good reason, in the form of a leather-bound diary, written by the boy's Great Great Grandfather. The diary was written as this pioneer made his way West, alone, during the 1860s to settle in Montana. This character is both cliché and not believable. He IS Robert Redford in the role of Jeremiah Johnson ("Liver Eatin' Johnston), complete with the character of Bear Claw Chris Lapp, who saves him before he dies from exposure. He later becomes Kevin Kostner in the role of "Dances With Wolves", complete with his tribal bride and the Medicine Man who predicts the extermination of the Indian people by the oncoming hordes of whites. I kid you not. But this character is also not believable because even as he is dying of exhaustion, sunburn, and starvation and is brought down to such a condition that travel means pulling himself across the prairie by his fingertips, he stops to write in his journal with the proficiency of a literary master. GIMME A BREAK! Even his horse had died of thirst at this point.

This book is chock full of good Indians who have been abused by the evil white man and of course most of these Indians have incredible mystical powers. What else? Heck, I was engaged to an Apache girl for years and if she had any mystical powers she surely never let me see them. I guess she was the exception to that rule.

The book was complete with the old western scene of the cowboy who dies, gets up and dies again, and then does it again and again ad nauseum too. At one point, Grandpa Cole, who fis always near death from having inhaled too much coal dust in his younger years, rips the oxygen tubes out of his nose while he is dying in the hospital, is carried out of the hospital so that he can man a canoe and shoot the most dangerous rapids in Montana and he dies in the canoe with his head under water, only to resurface at the end of the ride strong of body and of voice, and immediately go jogging through the woods!

But it was the last few pages of the book that really took the cake. At this point, Grandpa Rooster Cockburn Cole grabs an old Sharps rifle and heads on to a neighbor's property intent upon killing the neighbor's entire herd of bison, which he does. The last Bison left standing is ol' Splinter Horn, the biggest, meanest bull this side o' Hell. The bull charges, Cole squeezes the trigger on the Sharps, the old rifle, which had belonged to his "Dances with Wolves" Grandfather, explodes in his hands, sending the bullet into the bison. But before the Bison dies, Cole/Rooster is transformed into, of ALL literary characters, Captain Ahab, as he rides off into the woods on Splinter Horn / Moby Dick's horns, never to be seen again.

Again, three stars is generous. Bear in mind that I did not deduct points for one of the worst editing jobs I have ever encountered in a published book. The book is full of typos, like the one on page 202, 6th line down: "...and handed my his razor,..." and the one on page 235, 23rd line down: "...to shot dozens of imaginary arrows at me". At the end, the publisher tells us about the fancy type setting job he did for the book, which led me to wonder if he was too busy setting type to have someone check the book for annoying typographical errors.

If you want to read a much better book of this type, check out Vardis Fischer's "Mountain Man".

Sorry, but if this book will teach its reader anything it is that you too can get a novel published.

Montana
Montana Man
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Mira (1995-10-01)
Author: Barbara Delinsky
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WELL WORTH THE READ -----
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
I gave it a 5 star rating just because of the excellent writing for this type of story.
Definitely a romance!
It was a twist to find the man [hero] in trouble and in need of a rescue.

Quist at 40 years old has had a number of women in his life time. No marriage can tempt him. Yet he falls under the spell of Lily and her five week old daughter, Nicole.
Of course a lot of it has to due with Lily nursing her baby and her tender loving care and truthfulness.

Lily Danzinger at 29 years old has decided to take her newborn baby and leave Hartford because her ex-husband's brother, Michael is determined to make her his mistress.

Jarrod has already kicked Lily out when he found out she was pregnant. But so was his girl-friend. What a jerk!

Well the snow storm [or was it a blizzard]and a stalled car and a four mile trek through the woods threw Lily and Quist [did you ever find out his last name?] together in a desparate effort at survival.

Then hormones and mating get the best of them and they just carry on.
Quist is in a frustrating search for his half-sister whom he has never met but thinks she must be just like their mother. His mother had left him when he was very young, she was 17 when she had him. So stems his issues with women, mostly distrust.

Excellent plot - two lonely characters until about the very end when Quist takes Lily and Nikki to Montana with him after meeting with nineteen year old Jennifer who also was on the run from trouble.

Definitely Recommend -- probably a keeper for most readers. Enjoy!

a passionate and compelling desire
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 1997-12-22
A passionate, compelling desire between Quist and Lily. I was so sorry the story ended that I immediately re-read several sections over and over. Quist is a dream man.

Just the right guy to have in a blizzard.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-05
Back Cover description: Lily Danziger wanted more. With a newborn daughter and only herself to rely on, she was running from the shallow life she'd been living. Circumstances had changed and now she wanted more security than money could buy. Without looking back, she was heading to safety and a new start--until a blizzard stopped her and she had to ask a stranger for help. He came with a Stetson, a gruff voice and an even gruffer manner, but he was their only chance for survival in the snowbound car. He led them to a temporary refuge, then offered her permanent security. It was everything she needed, but would it leave her wanting more?

Fine story, and like the other reviewers, I was sorry it ended. Lily has chosen her child over less important things, and Quist is looking for sister. He finds love. Nice, strong development of the characters and the author's description of the blizzard will make you feel the cold too. The scene at the end where she gets the cowboy D.J to stand near her when her ex-brother-in-law shows up was great. She has learned that she doesn't have to shoulder everything herself--she can get help.

Refreshing that you can pick up a hitchhiker and be safe
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-27
It was really nice to read that someone picked up a hitchhiker and was safe. Not only was she safe, but she also fell in love with him. I feel like the last reviewer--I did not want it to end. I really enjoyed this book.

Very enjoyable romantic read.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-16
Quist and Lily meet under the worst of circumstances. Lily, fleeing her old life in her car, with her young baby in tow, panics when she finds herself lost in a snowstorm. At wit's end, she finds Quist thumbing a ride, his car in a ditch. Knowing she and her baby can't survive being stranded in this awful storm, she makes a rash decision to trust this stranger, give him a ride, and pray that he can help. Quist is, at first, prickly and sullen, but soon finds himself in the role of reluctant protector of Lily and her baby. Safety is found in a (miraculously well-furnished) cabin, but the three of them are stuck there until they can get help. The rest is romantic history. Very enjoyable and satisfying read.


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