Nevada Books
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Used price: $32.89

Long on statistics but well worth the read.Review Date: 2007-05-20

Used price: $7.50

A glimpse into the very heart of the Sierra Nevada.Review Date: 1998-11-18
Collectible price: $24.00

The First ReviewReview Date: 2005-09-25
This book does two things. One it flatly tells the story as expected from a bunch of flat writing newspaper writers. There is not much for personal stories or vivid images of what happened inside the burning building. It is not graphic or gripping by any means. But it does tell the story.
Second this is the only fire disaster book that shows the fire department in a good light. It tels a lot of stories of rescue and how the fire department actually had the opportunity to save lives.
Good for the collector but not a great read by any means.
Used price: $8.99

Riders of the Purple ProseReview Date: 2008-04-23
It's a handsome volume, but it would have benefited from a more detailed map than the dated, single inset one prefacing the book. I also wish more period illustrations had been interspersed throughout, instead of only at the start of each chapter. Also, the editorial material's very slim, a short introduction to the collection and brief notes prefacing the selections offering not much explanation or context for the entries. While these do often speak for themselves, the editors could have assisted the reader who does not know fact from fiction here.
For the truth, Lingenfelter's standard 1986 history, "Death Valley & the Amargosa," gives you in exhaustive but not exhausting detail a well-told in-depth survey; John Soennichsen's "Live! From Death Valley" entertains with a personal travelogue that captures the sense of the terrain from a modern perspective. (Both works reviewed by me on Amazon and this blog recently.) This subsequent anthology, on the other hand, revels in the rather dated, inflated and hyperbolic styles of the past. These types of stories made the impressions on those who never came within a thousand miles of the desert what it "must" have been like, in all its romance, horror, and hyperbole. Some of these impress-- the harrowingly detailed yet efficiently sketched forty-niner Manly or Brier's eloquence humbles you, when one realizes the limited formal education such men likely had, and how well they used their ability to tell a gripping first-person survival account better than any "reality" t.v concoction.
John Brier sums it up: "One tires of writing about yielding sand and impeding scrub, so effectual in stretching distance and consuming strength and time." (33) Either the teller begins to risk tedium by being honest, or conceit by being imaginative. Endless pages of despair don't hold one's attention; ghosts, skeletons, glitter, and wild Indians do. These rhetorical flourishes, set to separate elsewhere fools from money, or at least audiences from spare change for a paper, may wear down the contemporary reader, but they do provide an insight into how the popular press plays upon fads and puffs up trends. C.C. Julian (surprisingly absent from these earlier reports, but see Lingenfelter's history) and Death Valley Scotty foreshadowed Tony Robbins and Donald Trump, relentlessly and inventively selling themselves as they sold you for decades on end still more of their secrets of success. They never let you peek openly into their hoard, but these early promoters know how to keep you hoping to learn more. Much of the stock market frenzy, seller panic, and buyer lust can be seen in today's e-commerce and globalized markets no less than the semi-fictitious boasts by inside traders and secrets whispered by PR spinners over a century ago from this place that still haunts dreamers and provokes schemers.

Used price: $1.87
Collectible price: $19.99

A history of Pyramid LakeReview Date: 2008-07-07

Used price: $42.51

Great Desert HikesReview Date: 2006-12-03

A fine western novellaReview Date: 1998-11-11

A bibleReview Date: 2008-07-20
The only reason I dock this manual a star is that it--like virtually all government documents & missives--is organized & written in a convoluted, tortuous style that only other bureaucrats seem to be able to tolerate without reaction.
Don't throw out your Jepson, but this is a great addition to the professional or serious botanist's regional library.

Used price: $0.38

The Family Fun Guide to Las VegasReview Date: 2000-05-02
Thank you,


Good book...a bit dated.Review Date: 2004-07-01
Preface By William R. Eadington
Acknowledgements By Judy A. Cornelius
Sect. 1. Studies on the Mathematical Methodology of Gambling Games in Casinos
Analysis of a Gambling System By S. N. Ethier
Playing in Real Games By Thomas C. Roginski, Carlson Chambliss
Casino Card Shuffles: How Random are They? By Robert Hannum
Cardroom Theory-A Two Way Street By Donna Harris, Mason S. Malmuth
Sect. 2. Blackjack Papers
A Study of Index Rounding in Card-Counting By Ken Fuchs, Olaf Vancura
A Computer Teaches Itself to Play Blackjack By Olaf Vancura
Blackjack Subsets: Software for the Study of Blackjack, and an Application to Resplitting on Six Deck Blackjack By William G. Hawkins
Does Basic Strategy Have the Same Expectation for Each Round? By Edward O. Thorp
Sect. 3. Variations on Blackjack
A New Sidebet for Blackjack: Hedging Against Stiffs By Linda M. Woodland, Bill M. Woodland
The Quality of Blackjack Play in Australian Casinos By Michael B. Walker, Sylvana Sturevska, Duncan Turpie
Sect. 4. Kelly
The Kelly Criterion in Blackjack, Sports Betting, and the Stock Market By Edward O. Thorp
Can You Do Better than Kelly in the Short Run? By Sid Browne
Limitations on Kelly or the Ubiquitous "n "approaches" "infinity"" By John E. Leib
Sect. 5. New Games and Wagers
Blackjack: Betting the Klondike's "Free Ride" By Peter Griffin, Edward O. Thorp
An Analysis of Caribbean Stud Poker By Peter Griffin, John M. Gwynn, Jr.
Double Hand Marquez-A Derivative of Blackjack and Pai Gow By John M. Gwynn, Jr.
A Really Hard Hardway Bet By Donald E. Catlin
A Detailed Study of Pai Gow By John M. Gwynn, Jr.
Using Overall Expected Return per Dollar Risked to Determine Strategy Decisions in Gambling Games By Donald E. Catlin
Sect. 6. Mathematical Analysis of Other Casino Games
An Accurate Analysis of Video Poker By Edward Gordon
A Short Note on the Expected Duration of the Australian Game "Two-Up" By Peter Griffin
A Winning Strategy for Roulette By Jerome H. Klotz
A Statistical Characterization and Comparison of Selected Craps Money Management and Bet Selection Systems By Ken Elliott III
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