Oklahoma Books
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A True ComfortReview Date: 2008-06-04
A book for anyone who loves someone who has or has had cancerReview Date: 2008-04-19
Inspiring, Moving and ultimately charmingReview Date: 2008-03-30

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The story of Annie Miner Peterson's remarkable lifeReview Date: 2006-06-04
Forgotten TribesReview Date: 2005-06-04
Great Title, Fascinating StoryReview Date: 2001-12-03

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Collectible price: $24.95

Wonderful second novel!Review Date: 2005-02-21
A Fabulous Oklahoma Mystery!!!Review Date: 2003-12-19
The book concludes with a very clever twist concerning Billy Ray's identity. Do you want to know how good this book is? I had to ration the pages, only 50 per day because I wanted it to last. This is a must read.
strong amateur sleuth taleReview Date: 2003-11-26
When Billy Ray Patterson shows up in town after walking out on Thelma twenty-eight years ago, she immediately takes him back. Three days later she confides to Chantalene that the man in her house is not her husband. A concerned Chantalene investigates. While returning home with evidence, a car deliberately runs at her. She is knocked out. When she comes to, the evidence is gone and so is Thelma. While the man who was supposed to be Billy Ray is dead with a bullet in his body someone has kidnapped Thelma and wants the stolen money from a casino robbery over two decades ago in exchange for the kidnap victim. Chantalene doesn't have a clue where the money is or who is holding Thelma.
The heroine of SONG OF THE BONES is a brave and independent woman who will put her own life in danger to save her friend. M.K. Preston is a talented writer who makes a backwater town in rural Oklahoma seem so real, readers will feel they have visited Tetumka. The protagonist marches to her own drummer but endears herself to the audience who sees her as a colorful friend turning this amateur sleuth tale into must reading.
Harriet Klausner

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An excellent book for college coursesReview Date: 2004-04-19
Great reading!Review Date: 2001-12-14
Must have for anyone interested in Ancient EgyptReview Date: 1998-03-28

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An important book for Mono culture.Review Date: 2003-11-04
By, not about, an IndianReview Date: 1999-10-10
This book is rich with detail about a Calif. Indian family.Review Date: 1998-09-14

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The Washita--Pulled From the Little Big Horn's ShadowReview Date: 2004-09-09
Often, when students of the Indian Wars discuss the Washita, it is in terms of viewing it as a "test case" for what Custer was probably trying to achieve at the Little Big Horn eight years later. While that approach has strong merits, it tends to lessen the importance of this battle. This book does allude to Custer and the Little Big Horn but mainly treats the Washita in the full context of the situation on the southern plains from 1867-1869, therefore helping us see this as the historical event that it was in its own right.
Excellent photos included, especially was intrigued by an image that I have not encounterd before, that of Sgt. Major Walter Kennedy (killed at the Washita) when he was a Confederate army officer from Virginia. Despite what old Hollywood movies like to portray, there were actually very few cases of Confederate officers becoming either enlisted men or non-coms in the US Regular Army after the Civil War. For someone interested in the fascinatiing personalities of the 7th Cavalry, there is much here: the tensions between Custer and Benteen, the controversial death of Major Elliott, the death of Captain Lewis Hamilton, (grandson of Alexander Hamilton), the wounding of Barnitz, etc. Greene also engages in a detailed examination of whether the Washita should be termed a "massacre" or a "battle." Much food for thought here, even though many readers (like myself) may respecfully disagree with some of what he says.
From the standpoint of visiting the battlefield, this book contains an ten page appendix that provides very detailed descriptions of what took place at each spot on a numbered map that appears earlier in the book. This map key, as well as this entire book, is indispensible for anyone planning to visit the battlefield, in person and/or through books.
"Washita" Proves Jerry Greene Is One Of Our Best Historians Review Date: 2005-02-21
"Washita" begins in Colorado with Greene reciting the story of the Sand Creek Massacre, November 29, 1864, along with its causes and aftermath. We learn how Black Kettle escaped only to die almost four years to the day, November 27, 1868 under similar circumstances at the Washita.
Greene writes with firm yet smooth determination in recounting a complicated story of Indian/White depredations, by both groups, beside the old roads, ranches, and rivers of the American West. There is nothing politically correct in Greene's story - it is a brutally honest and most unprejudiced book written about this dark period of the Indian Wars.
By the time Custer and 11 companies of the 7th Cavalry leave Camp Supply, heading towards the Washita River, on November 23, 1868 Greene has laid out all the reasons why in a succinct but clear interpretation. I love the way Greene writes his stories - he doesn't waste any time. Greene would make a great screenwriter - he draws a clear picture in our mind through his words, the picture is sharp, focused; the plot and the characters, with the different pieces, all come together allowing the viewer (reader) to follow the storyline completely without question.
Greene's story about the Battle of the Washita is told in two parts - the first part is from the army's perspective while part two is told from Indian accounts. If I may use film as an analogy again, "Washita" is somewhat like Akira Kurosawa's 1950 film, "Rashomon" which tells the story of a murder from four eyewitness accounts with each account being somewhat different from each other. One might think that Greene relating the story of the battle this way would make it confusing, however, that is the farthest from the truth.
Greene provides evidence confirming the number of soldier's killed and even the count for Indian dead. He also provides conclusive evidence as to who in Custer's command killed many of the non-combatants - it was mostly the Osage scouts; even after Custer ordered his troops to prevent, "the killing of any but the fighting strength of the village..." before the battle began.
Greene delivers a detailed analysis of the demise of Major Elliott and 17 of his men against Cheyennes, Kiowas, Arapahos, and Kiowa-Apaches - warriors that entered the battle from the downriver villages. Elliott and his troops were cut-off from the main village and the rest of the 7th -- surrounded, outnumbered, and outgunned they reluctantly let go of the horses, lay down in the tall grass in a circle facing outward and gave it their best shot to the last man.
If you are prone to not review endnotes of a book, I highly recommend that you do read those that Greene provides. You will find pertinent information -- all most interesting about the battle. You don't want to miss any of the action! It is in the endnotes where you will learn that Custer had his soldiers retrieve two ponies from the village herd, before all the horses were killed, for each Indian woman prisoner to use on their trip back north.
From the opening of the battle when Custer orders the soldier's dogs killed to ensure silence, to the vexation of the warriors watching hundreds of ponies killed, Greene's account of the Battle of the Washita is told better than all others preceding him. I think it will be a long time before someone else can even possibly come close.
Jerome Greene has just completed the definitive account of the administrative history of the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument. It is currently in review at the National Park Service and will be published soon.
Controversial Subject: Custer and the Cheyenne Review Date: 2005-03-26

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"Those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it"Review Date: 2007-03-19
A great book from a great teacher!Review Date: 2004-01-06
Since then I have purchased several copies and gave them to friends who have become history teachers. However, the book helped me to understand not only Vietnam, but war in general. My father and several uncles served in nam, and I hardly knew a thing about the 'conflict' or what they went through until I read this wonderful book. I gained a new respect for my father and all those who served. When my father finally asked me about it (my interest in the book) it opened the discussion between he and I about his time spent in the war and the effects it had. Those conversations were some of the best times I was able to spend with my father.
Thank you, Mr. McCloud once again for your effort and I hope more people will be encouraged to read the responses to this question from some of Americas greatest leaders, and heroes. I rate it a strong buy. If you don't have it in your collection, then your collection isn't complete.
Masterful WorkReview Date: 2000-08-14

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A Page Turner Beautifully WrittenReview Date: 2002-05-14
With an adroit insightfulness into the human condition that takes the reader aback more than a few times, author Linda S. Bingham offers up a panoply of suspects, each more interesting and compelling in their complexity than the last. She teases you with them shamelessly, no doubt taking great personal pleasure as you erroneously think you've finally got the twists and turns figured out, and then realize that you don't at all, and will in fact do nothing else in your life until the last page of this delightful mystery is read.
But "Dr. Charley" is not the last victim. A pattern of violence emerges, albeit one that makes little sense to the authorities, who are, of course, always a couple of steps behind Elinor. She is forced to set out to solve the crimes herself, becoming a potential target in the process. Naturally, each new discovery, each nuance, brings the killer a little bit closer to Elinor's own backyard.
And just wait until you learn What the Librarian Heard!
Bingham sprinkles in a bit of intrigue and betrayal to keep the pace moving nicely. By the time she gets to the ending, you are hungry for it, but at the same time decidedly morose that the book is done. Her personal writing style is replete with examples of a unique rustic charm that is appropriate to the characters and plot, but never tiresome. For it is so obvious that she is first and foremost a writer, in the purest sense of the craft. It's a rare joy to read an exceptionally good yarn that is also just so very well written.
It's beyond me why mystery readers would ever try and satisfy themselves with [other author]when they could instead feast on Linda S. Bingham.
Great fun!Review Date: 2001-11-29
IT KEEPS YOU GUESSING UNTIL THE LAST EXQUISITE TWISTReview Date: 2002-05-17
Johns Valley, Oklahoma is the lush setting for this character cozy (if you dare attempt labeling) with its Kiamichi mountains "standing guard over their valley like a big-headed sphinx cradling the town with its paws, and tucked into a labyrinth of rich bottom land valleys."
Elinor Woodward and Dot Hardwick, the two spry librarians, will immediately endear themselves to readers with their keen curiosity, wit and kind wisdom that only come from being nearly seventy years old.
Rose and Horace Chandler, Dr. Charley, Leonard Tenkiller, Kate and Shelby Jacks, DeWayne Ratliff and Rusty the dog--are a terrific cast of secondary characters. Linda Bingham takes ordinary people and makes them extraordinary and compelling. She molds the mundane into the magnificent. As the story goes...a small town's library shares quarters with the police station, and the library patrons hear more than they should from time to time. When librarian, Elinor Woodward, hears a police dispatch about a string of violent murders she makes a connection between them and a lost child.
"Librarian" will entertain, yet force self-reflection. You will hold dearly onto each character in the book which will remind you of characters in your own life. Just when you think you have this lush mystery with a hook figured out--you don't. It twists and turns until the very last pages. It was such a pleasure to read.

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AnabasisReview Date: 2006-11-02
An Excellent Book for Self StudyReview Date: 2000-09-19
Ultimate Student EditionReview Date: 2002-11-19
And of course, if you're looking to brush up on your Greek without the aid of a classroom and instructor, this edition is a great choice. Not only does it have the advantages enumerated above, but the Anabasis itself is relatively easy and clear Greek with a historical rather than philosophical vocabulary.
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The Yard RoseReview Date: 2002-08-26
"The Yard Rose" roots run deepReview Date: 2002-08-29
The Yard RoseReview Date: 2001-03-30
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