Oregon Books


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

Oregon
Whelks to Whales: Coastal Marine Life of the Pacific Northwest
Published in Paperback by Harbour Publishing (1999-01-01)
Author:
List price: $24.95
New price: $12.47
Used price: $9.60

Average review score:

Great but not a "one stop" book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-06
This is a great book, but it isn't as complete as I would have liked. The photographs are good and you can identify quite a bit, but not everything. It is a good starting point book though because there are numerous subsections.

Excellent for Seattle
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-17
Easy to use guide, great for identifying most things by sight. Occasionally pictures could be a little misleading, but holds together in general.

Excellent all purpose criter ID book with photos
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-09
This book has been very helpful in identifing the many different creatures I have seen while diving in Washinton State's Puget Sound as well as around Vancouver Island. It is perfect for any recreational diver because while it does list Phylum and Species, it also gives the commom name and even alternate common names if applicable. Each entry also gives the Size, Range, Habitat, Description and a brief comment about the entry. The photos are clear and sometimes include photos of the fishes egg mass. This book covers the most common of the marine life that you are likely to encounter while diving in the Pacific Northwest. I take it with me when I go diving and use it after the dive to show what I saw and for others to identify what they saw. It also helps me at home latter when I want to put a name to a photo I took while diving. I whole heartedly recommend this book to anyone slightly curious as to what that thing is called they saw on that last dive.

Excellent source for scuba divers around the Pacific NW
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-07
This book is a must for any scuba diver venturing into the waters of Puget Sound, coastal British Columbia and Vancouver Island. It was a great resource during a recent 4 day diving trip to Barkley Sound on the west coast of Vancouver Island. It provided us with hours of conversation about what we had seen and what to look for next.

A Park Ranger-Naturalist's comments
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-05
This book's easy-to-use key immediately helps visitors to Olympic's coast identify dozens and dozens of marine animals and plants. We bring it on ranger-led tide pool explorations because it complements our journeys so well. Each section provides structural, behavioral, and habitat information about the type of creatures. Then, many individual species are photographed and described, including known life cycles, predator-prey relationships, and other unique aspects. The book is particularly good because it includes several marine mammals, enhancing tide pool exploration with ocean discovery. This is a wonderful aid in introducing visitors to the intertidal zone, the marine sanctuary, and the abundant life thriving within.

Oregon
Best Places Northwest, 13th edition: Restaurants, Lodgings, Touring (formerly "Northwest Best Places")
Published in Paperback by Sasquatch Books (2000-09)
Author:
List price: $19.95
New price: $4.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Not as full of information on the major cities
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-17
I purchased this book to accompany me on a roadtrip from Portland, Oregon through Seattle to Vancouver, Canada. I was mainly staying in the three major cities and was looking to find accomodations, restaurants and things to do while there. The book has a brief section on the three cities which left me wanting more information. I think if you plan on spending time in the places in between, it is a great introduction to the Northwest. However, if you are just looking for specific information on a few (in my case, 3) it was not extremely informative. It gives you the best of the best. Just not much more than that.

Still the best guidbook out there
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-05
We've been using the "Best Places" books for travel in the Northwest for a number of years, and this year's edition is further proof that this is the best guidebook series going. The information is unfailingly reliable as well as encyclopedic, and the editors' discernment shows through in all aspects: lodging, meals, touring, siteseeing, etc. Certainly the best choice for anyone visiting the area, whether a first-time visitor or a happy returnee.

Provides descriptions which offer plenty of insight
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-12
Now in its updated and expanded 13th edition, Best Places Northwest is quite simply a 'must' for any who plan on touring the Pacific Northwest: it doesn't hesitate to pick only the best of restaurants, lodgings and tour opportunities throughout Oregon, Washington and British Columbia, and provides descriptions which offer plenty of insight on why the 'best' rating is deserted. A starred rating system allows for picking the 'best of the best'.

Entire Trip Planned from this One Book
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-15
I planned an entire 11 day trip to Seattle and the San Juan Islands with this book. We stayed at an absolutely wonderful 65 room hotel right near the famous Market in Seattle, then we took the ferries (read about in the book) and stayed at a cabin on Orcas Island near the shore where we could use the canoes and explore the sea life. Then we stayed at great B&B on San Juan Island that also had a yacht you could sleep on, then another B&B on the olympic penninsula that specialied in French cooking. All theses places... were from this book! Fantastic.
The star ratings guide help you decide what's right for you and the pricing guides are accurate.

Oregon
Bugs of Washington and Oregon
Published in Paperback by Diane Pub Co (2003-10)
Author: John Acorn
List price: $17.00

Average review score:

Too broad for more than a beginner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-09
This guide is very general. It would be good for someone who is interested in general information, but not good for anyone looking for specific identification.

BUGS!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-14
This is a neat little book. My five year old son likes it alot. I didn't realize when I bought it though that it only has twenty five bugs in it. I guess the author put in his 25 favorite bugs of Oregon & Washington. It's a well written and illustrated book and I was easily able to identify several bugs around my home. I guess I will have to purchase a more complete insect book to be able to identify ever insect I see. I like the other books by the Lone Pine and have used them alot where I live. (The woods of eastern Oregon).

deserves 6 stars
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-28
really, a book on bugs? well that's what I thought too, but when I browsed through it at Powell's in Portland, I knew I had to have it. people are too free with their stars on Amazon but this book deserves 6 of them. it is a delight. not only are the illustrations great but the writing is pure and simple and done with some humor. it's clearly a labor of love. I liked this thing so much that I bought 2 copies and gave one to a friend.

A great regional reference for the insect curious
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-04
In his introduction to Bugs of Washington and Oregon, John Acorn explains how difficult it was to select 250 bugs from the 25,000 that populate the region. His criteria for choosing was 1) big, 2) colorful, 3) really hard to miss or 4) extremely wierd. This is by no means a comprehensive guide, but an excellent handbook to get you started identifying miscellaneous bugs and Acorn's example species are well chosen. In the Introduction Acorn addresses various concerns, sensitive issues, and points of interest in entomology. His views are sensitive, yet balanced--a pleasure to read. It's one of the few introductions I've read that was worth the time. The illustrations by Ian Sheldon are clear and nicely executed and Acorn's descriptions contain intriguing factoids. This is a terrific gift for the naturalist in the family.
**If you are looking to further your insect education, one of the best and most lovingly written bug books out there is For the Love of Insects and if you're looking for a beautiful picture book, try An Inordinate Fondness of Beetles.

Oregon
Burning Fence: A Western Memoir of Fatherhood
Published in Paperback by Picador (2006-08-22)
Author: Craig Lesley
List price: $14.00
New price: $5.61
Used price: $4.25

Average review score:

Good natured grit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-22
This was the perfect book for me to widen my horizons in the good old U.S. of A. (Eastern Oregon). While I don't quite feel his story was flushed out or as organized as it seems to could have been, I must attribute that as the "human ingredient". I would have to say, that for a man as mentally as strong as he (One word: Wade), Could I attribute it as cultural idiosyncrasies; That he did not ask Rudell why he left?, would it have dragged Hazel into it and therefore complicated the story too much ? (Then again, sometimes we can only own up to our own quirks) Once again I am reminded of the saying: "We get to choose our friends but not our blood relations!"

Another grand work by Craig Lesley.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-09
This is a very honest look at his life. Sometimes a look like this can be very hard but the reader gains an appreciation of such introspection.

Compelling in a tragic and real sense.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-20
I had read four of Craig's fictional books, before reading his biography, so was familiar with his real-life characters.
Like one of the reviews, I was "compelled" to finish this poignant and gut-wrenching story; bringing the book along on a Mexican cruise and visits to the doctor.
The one issue I have with this book comes I guess from being a retired Episcopal Priest. I was bothered by Craig's seeming lack of motivation to forgive his father. It seemed at times like he couldn't live without resentment. In the end, though, it's not mine to judge.
I know Craig, having taken a three week, five day a week summer course under her excellent tutelege. I must say he is a wonderful, gentle and loving man, in spite of all he has been through.
Perhaps he has forgiven his father more than he yet realizes!

Riveting Tale of Two Fatherhoods
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-15
When Rudell Lesley told his wife Hazel he had to go out for a while to look for a lost flashlight, he never returned, leaving her to raise their eight-month old son alone. The baby, christened Martin Craig Lesley, emerged with remarkable academic ability that came with a talent for remembering and processing every experience on an unusually deep level.

As I read, I marveled that the child didn't suffer a nervous breakdown or withdraw completely into fantasy. Relatives made vague, brief, derogatory comments about his father. Hazel said, "He just didn't give the slightest damn about anything." Rudell was shell-shocked from his fighting in the war. He was a backslider who poached. Trying to three-dimensionalize his father using this information began the stirrings of rage. Also Craig needed a target for his anger because his stepfather Vern was too terrifying to defy openly.

Badly injured in an accident at fifteen, Craig finally drew his father's attention. Rudell appeared with his young wife and four half-siblings. From that time until his father's death, Craig takes a spellbinding journey into the lives of his father's family and associates.

Rudell, with all his entertaining stories ("stretchers"), fails to say what would have meaning for Craig: why Rudell left, and whether he thought he made the right decision. With all of his hard physical labor as a fence builder, Rudell keeps himself and his family in squalor. Mixed into all this is Craig's adopted handicapped son Wade who burns Rudell's stack of freshly cut fence posts, believing that he's scaring off Big Foot.

If you would like to live inside the mind of a man who overcame a harrowing childhood to become a successful writer and university professor, this memoir is for you.

Oregon
Flower of the Winds
Published in Paperback by Granite Pub (2000-04-30)
Authors: Dorothy M Keddington and Dorothy Keddington
List price: $12.95
New price: $14.64
Used price: $4.69

Average review score:

Flower of the Winds
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-16
This is a great book. Cute love story and fun characters. It was a quick read, I read it in an afternoon. The love scenes are clean and sweet so I would rate it PG. You learn some about the sea and the Russian culture.

Happy Sighs all over the place. :) I LOVE this book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-04
Dorothy Keddington's books are the best! I love this one. Usually I can't read a book more than twice because I know what is going to happen. I've been reading this one several times a year for about 12 years now. I love the Russian in it, not to mention the romance, the adventure, the intrigue, and just the curl-up-by-a-fire-ness of this book. I can't choose a favorite amongst all her books, every time I read one I think it's my favorite until I read another one. I wish she would re-print The Mermaid's Purse as mine is falling apart. Read this book!

I'm in Love!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-31
Dorothy has created another hero who has won my heart. She has such a keen feeling for romance! Dorothy has filled this book with mystery and intrigue as well as love and hope for happiness. I love each of her books and this is one of her best. I can't wait for the next one!

Flower of the Winds
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-15
This is a beautifully written book. A hard to put down, must finish in one day novel. It is a wonderful tale of strangers meeting under unusual circumstances, working together and falling in love in the process. The sparks that are flying between the the characters can almost be seen. This is an intense book, that will make you wonder if they will live till the next moment or be killed by the men that will stop at nothing to keep them silent.

Oregon
Following the Nez Perce Trail
Published in Paperback by Oregon State University Press (1990-10)
Author: Cheryl Wilfong
List price: $25.95
Used price: $4.94

Average review score:

A Guide to the Ni.mípu National Historic Trail
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-06
The book was put together in an informative and easy to read way. It's a travel log, for anyone wanting to visit the Nez Perce Trail National Park, plus it gives a summarized overview of that happened. I loved the author's method of narrating the story of what happened, with easy to read maps and tables of information. Her list of references was also impressive. More detail will require further reading, but this is a starter. What is missing from her story is what this band of renegades really was. They were outlaws, shunned by their own Nez Perce Nation and what is also missing is the national impact of this unfortunate Indian outbreak had on our Country. That is why I didn't rate the book higher. It's a view into history "through rose colored glasses", which is quit in style today, but that gives the starters on history a dangerously biased view. Real history is often painful to read about. These Indians were not heroes. Hundreds of innocent people were murdered and the real Nez Perce almost lost their wonderful Idaho Reservation because of this War. Congress was in a complete uproar. They were also opposed by other Indian Nations, specifically the Bannock, Shoshone and the Crow to mention a few. This is the story of a national disaster and tragedy. The real heroes were often those they attacked and the horse soldiers that had to chase them. Still, as a travelog and guide to 80% of the historic sites along the Nez Perce Trail, this book is a good starter. I also loved the historic photographs, some of which I have not found anywhere else.

Exploring the Trail of the Nez Perce Retreat
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-20
The story of the Nez Perce bands of Wallowa Oregon is one of the saddest of the expansion period of the American West. Driven from their homelands by a sneaky treaty they never signed, several bands of Nez Perce were moving reluctantly onto the new, smaller reservation. But a few angry young men left camp, on their own, and killed a white man they knew to be bad to Indians. The U.S. Army responded and thus began the pursuit of the Nez Perce, across Idaho, to Wyoming, and then Montana, over 1100 miles. Eight hundred Nez Perce men, women, and children walked and rode hoping to find a new place to settle where the Army would no longer pursue. But the Army did pursue, and finally caught up with the Nez Perce on a cold October day in Northern Montana, where after a 5 day siege, Chief Joseph finally surrendered to save those that were left, cold, sick, and tired. This book follows the trail, and recounts the history as told by several authors and particpants including General Howard, Yellow Wolf, and some Army Scouts. It is the one book you should read first. Then get out and drive the trail that the Nez Perce rode. I bet you can't drive it in one summer, but they rode that distance, moving camp every day, with the Army shooting at them when ever they didn't move far enough. Chief Joseph wondered when will the white men ever tell the truth. Why is the Indian not allowed to live under the same laws of freedom as the white man.

absolutely essential, a gift to all researchers
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-09
Alas, I have been asked by my publisher to write yet another book on Chief Joseph. I wish to do it well and respectfully, and, if possible, break a little new ground. So, I may be one of ten people on earth who has travelled the Nez Perce trail, both known and unknown, from the Wallowa all the way to Tonkawa, with requisite sidetrips to Nespelem and various relevant sites. All in all, I've put about 10,000 miles into this enterprise. And here's the hard truth: Cheryl Wilfong, whoever she is -- and God bless her researching soul -- has made this trip possible. She has broken the route down into three categories -- mainstream traveller, for the pavement folk; adventurous traveller, for the dirt road folk; and intrepid traveller for the white-knuckle, high center clearance, "I don't need guard rails" folk. I did it mostly on the adventurous/intrepid roads. And I can say, unequivocally, that she has created a work that will not soon be bettered, and which is absolutely invaluable for any Nez Perce afficianado, from the casual traveller to the "I only come out of the archives to breathe" geeks who are researching the familial ties between Wahlatits and Yellow Bull.

By the very nature of the task, she has a few errors, and they can put you in harm's way, such as having you travel 1.8 miles to a crossroads in the vast emptiness of Montana's back country when the actual distance is 11.8 miles. But these errors are so few as to be remarkable in their infrequency. Overall, she takes you mile by mile, dusty crossroad by dusty crossroad, rutted mountain pass by rutted mountain path, and conducts you on an assiduously researched journey of the trail that the Nez Perce followed from their homeland in the Wallowa and Snake/Salmon country to their exile in Oklahoma.

I could give you endless specifics, but here is the bottom line: you cannot take this trip, or any portion of it, without this book. You can forget your Josephy, misplace your Haines and your Lavender, or trade your Greene and your McWhorter for extra gas money. But you cannot -- CANNOT -- take this journey without having this book on the seat next to you.

Take it from someone who stopped at every pile of stones, every remnant of rifle pit and breastwork, every old campsite and every battle and staging area; who walked the high country trails near Lolo and the lowland campgrounds on the flats below Fort Leavenworth: You absolutely must buy this book if you choose to retrace any of this journey.

The Nez Perce Historic Trail Foundation and the National Park Service should canonize this woman.

End of story.

viewing history
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-08
This is an excellent work which I plan to use as a tool for planning vacations over the next summers. The history is concise yet accurate and supplements works by Helen Addison Howard (Saga of Chief Joseph), Merrill Beale (I Will Fight No More Forever), Alvin Josephy (The Nez Perce and the Opening of the Northwest), L. V. McWhorter (Yellow Wolf & Hear Me My Chiefs!) The maps, side trips, and road condition guides are useful. Classifications of roads for vehicles and travelers described as mainstream, adventurous and intrepid are unique for this type of history book and assist in planning based on the type of vehicle one might be using. Reminds me of hiking books. A knowledge of geography is vital to understanding history. Wilfong aids amature historians visiting the areas to view and get a better understanding of the physical conditions both the troops and the Nez Perce found in this tragic chapter of American history.

Oregon
Have Dog Will Travel-Northwest Edition, Oregon-Washington-Idaho, Hassle-Free Guide to Traveling With Your Dog
Published in Paperback by Ginger & Spike Publications (2003-01-15)
Author: Barbara Whitaker
List price: $19.95
New price: $17.99
Used price: $0.77

Average review score:

The Perfecr Gift for Pet Lovers!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-18
Many of my friends will not leave home without their dogs, so when I discovered this book I knew I had found the perfect pet lovers gift. The feedback has been excellent -- they report that the information is up-to-date, accurate, and easy to use. Dogs and their drivers are both well-served. Now all I need is my own dog...

ok
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-07
Mostly hotels not really camping which I was looking for. But it's great for hotels if you need something for that.

Restrictions, room descriptions and more!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-18
HAVE DOG WILL TRAVEL NORTHWEST EDITION includes Oregon, Washington and Idaho and has been newly updated to list over 2,100 dog-friendly accommodations throughout the Pacific Northwest. This isn't just a plain listing of dog- friendly hotels: it tells where in the building the pet is welcome, any restrictions, deposits, price ranges, and general room descriptions. From cabins to resorts, motels, and chain hotels, HAVE DOG WILL TRAVEL comes packed with plenty of specifics suitable for touring.

Especially recommended for dedicated dog owners
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-19
Now in a newly updated edition, Have Dog Will Travel: Northwest Edition by Barbara Whitaker is the a practical guide for dog owners and dog lovers to hassle-free traveling. Have Dog Will Travel: Northwest Edition features over 2,100 canine-friendly accommodations in the states of Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. Addresses, phone numbers, rates, web sites, and brief summary of basic information concerning each lodging fill the majority of the pages; with an additional sections offering basic advice concerning everything from first aid for a dog to types of available ID tags and how to best go about cleaning up after one's pet. Have Dog Will Travel: Northwest Edition is especially recommended for dedicated dog owners in the Oregon, Washington, and Idaho area.

Oregon
Holy Rollers: Murder and Madness in Oregon's Love Cult
Published in Paperback by Caxton Press (2002-03-01)
Authors: Theresa McCracken and Robert B. Blodgett
List price: $16.95
New price: $3.94
Used price: $3.85
Collectible price: $250.00

Average review score:

A Story From 100 Years Ago...With A Message For Today
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-24
It happened a hundred years ago. But it could be happening right now. "Holy Rollers; Murder and Madness in Oregon's Love Cult" can be read and appreciated on many levels. On the surface, it's a great true crime potboiler, filled with religion, sex and murder. But its also a cautionary tale about the vulnerability of seemingly normal, well-adjusted people to the seductions of mass insanity. Whether it's Edmund Creffeld in 1905, Adolph Hitler in 1933 or Jim Jones in 1978, we've seen it happen again and again. In fact, the story in this book has a peculiar kind of resonance in that one of the key locations--Waldport, Oregon, also was the place where the Heaven's Gate cult held its first public gathering.

Edmund Creffeld was a Salvation Army dropout who arrived in Corvallis, Oregon in 1900 to start a new church. Within a few short years, he had persuaded some of the community's leading citizens--primarily of the female gender--to join his cult of madness. They literally practiced "holy rolling," sometimes turning themselves over and over for hours and hours at a time, becoming all the more caught up in the cult of Creffeld's strange personality. Creffeld was tarred and feathered (really!) and run out of town. That didn't stop him, nor did a stretch in the state prison. His ultimate, violent end seems almost foreordained.

T. McCracken and Robert Blodgett have combined their talents to produce an amazing story. Thanks to exhaustive research in newspapers and other contemporary sources, they're able to re-create the wild ride of Creffeld and his cult in vivid, day-to-day detail. I finished the book in a single sitting; I predict you will, too.--William C. Hall

Fascinating Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-09
This was definitely a page-turner! I live in this area. So, it was interesting to imagine that this went on right here! I had never heard about it, and I have lived here for the last 25 years. Makes me want to examine all the houses and areas they went to.

The book is written with a newspaper sensationalism kind of feel, but that shouldn't bother you too much.

Holy Rollers Rocks
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-23
The authors give us a true account, set in "the good old days", showing us that murderous cults didn't start with the Manson family, and religious fanatacism isn't an import nurtured only in foreign lands. Immediate and enthralling as any real crime story currently on the shelves or TV, this page-turning ride has just the right amount of wry, observational wit to balance the horrors. I loved it.

An incredible, painstaking reconstruction
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-12
Collaboratively researched and written by T. McCracken and Robert B. Blodgett, Holy Rollers: Murder And Madness In Oregon's Love Cult is the "truth is stranger than fiction" story of the "Holy Roller" religious cult that made brutal newspaper headlines in 1903. It all began when Salvation Army dropout Edmund Creffield arrived in Corvallis, Oregon and founded a new "church". The city fathers were less than impressed -- but not so their wives and daughters! A century later, descendants of the people involved in the macabre events of Creffield's Holy Roller Cult still refuse to discuss what happened. Holy Rollers is an incredible, painstaking reconstruction and revealing expose that create a gripping book that offers especial insight into the dark side of mass psychology, religious hysteria, and unbridled charismatic religious authority.

Oregon
Insiders' Guide to Portland, Oregon, 5th: Including the Metro Area and Vancouver, Washington (Insiders' Guide Series)
Published in Paperback by Insiders' Guide (2007-01-01)
Author: Rachel Dresbeck
List price: $18.95
New price: $4.94
Used price: $3.45

Average review score:

Hard to interpret
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
This book has lots of useful information, but fails to tie the information in to graphics for those of us who have trouble visualizing the locations from the text. The neighborhoods are described by their names, and rougly tied into the city as a whole. However, the maps are not specific enough.

Highly Rated for Military Transfers!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-25
These books (there is a series) are the first resource we go to upon learning that it is, once again, time for us to transfer. They have all the information that most people could need and I recommend them to every military person I know that is in the process of transferring to make their move just a little bit easier. A look at the contents of this particular book:

Area Overview
Getting Here, Getting Around
History
Bed-and-Breakfast Inns
Hotels and Motels
Restaurants
Brewpubs
Coffeehouses
Nightlife
Shopping
Attractions
Kidstuff
Festivals and Annual Events
The Arts
Recreation and Spectator Sports
Portland Parks
Golf
Day Trips
Relocation
Child Care and Education
Health Care and Wellness
Retirement
Media
Worship
Index

No, there aren't a lot of pictures, but I can buy a coffee-table book for that. This is information and lots of it - including addresses, phone numbers, and websites when appropriate. Great for visitors and potential newcomers alike!

Good For Info
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
I liked the information in this book, Even has school listings. I was purchasing it for tourism purposes and it covers that but doesn't have pictures or long descriptions and prices. Since that is what I was looking for I was a little disappointed. Good for info bad for tourists.

A Great Book About The Portland Metro Area
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-28
INSIDERS' GUIDE TO PORTLAND, OREGON, 5TH is a great guide to the cities of Portland and Vancouver, as well as their surrounding suburbs. Besides such information as house values, attractions, and the quality of schools in the area, the book also features detailed listings of the radio stations in the area, as well as in-depth discussions of what types of healthy-eating ideas and ethnic cuisine you can find in this metroplex. The book lacks a deep discussion of shopping malls in the area, preferring instead to focus on the other types of stores where a guy can find things to keep his woman happy, including CDs to dance to with her and clothes to help him look his best for her, which seems to indicate that independent stores are often the way to go to keep such promises, especially in a high-culture area such as Portland/Vancouver. Despite the lack of information on local malls, however, it's a wonderful book.

Oregon
Lebanon Pioneer Cemetery: 200 Dodge St., Lebanon, OR : the end of the trail
Published in Unknown Binding by City of Lebanon, Oregon (1991)
Author: Patricia Dunn
List price:

Average review score:

Insightful and Unbiased
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-29
As is usual with any of Alistair Cooke's writing, that unmistakable transatlantic voice can be heard behind the words as if the author himself was reading his work to an audience of one - you. The generations who would remember the men of whom he has written are fast coming to an end, but there is enough in each of these insightful vignettes to whet the appetite of a true biography-phile of whatever era. I would say that Cooke enjoyed the company of each of his subjects, but that did not put him beyond objective honesty. The saddest, most poignant and ultimately most honest comment of all was that of his summing up of Edward VIII - "The most damning epitaph you can compose about Edward - as a prince, as a king, as a man - is one that all comfortable people should cower from deserving:he was at his best only when the going was good" To see more reviews go to http://barbaraceciliastewartbrowning.blogspot.com

Interesting biographies by an interpreter of their lives.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-02
Six famous transatlantic figures: 3 English and 3 American men, all of whom had a legendary meaning in the seventies: Charles Chaplin, H. L. Mencken, Humphrey Bogart, Adlai Stevenson, Bertrand Russell and Edward VIII. I liked his style of writing and he really provided insightful surprises on each of these famous men. An interesting read, if not for the history alone.

An all class act
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-09
Many of us who appreciate the work of truly great non-fiction writers were deeply saddened by the recent passing of Alistair Cooke.

Although best remembered for his long running radio commentary "A Letter from America" and his various television shows of early years, it makes for a pleasant change to go back and rediscover some of Mr Cooke's more substantial literary efforts.

A graduate in English literature from Cambridge University and a print journalist of considerable experience, Alistair managed to perfect a difficult balancing act. Throughout his long and prestigious career he steadfastly adhered to the highest professional and intellectual standards while still managing to enjoy enviable success within the mass media. In many ways he "Raised the bar" in regard to industry standards by proving that there was, indeed, a sizeable market for quality work if it was cleverly presented in an entertaining and accessible style.

In this book the veteran newspaper man draws upon his impressive array of observational and descriptive skills to create a striking collection of penetrating celebrity profiles. Alistair wrote with the deft, light hand of a popular scribe but also with the probing incisiveness of a psychology professor. At all times he examined the inner workings of his subjects with an almost clinical thoroughness and a commendable sense of fairness. When it came to creating word pictures, the man was an old master.

Alistair Cooke was a consummate journalist - an "all class act" and a credit to his chosen calling .

Incisive, Beautifully Written
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-15
Mr. Cooke is a very bright, amusing, observant man -- who writes so extraordinarily well you'll wish to re-read passage after passage for the pleasure of the sounds. He has chosen six men of diverse background and writes about them with sympathy -- but more importantly for this reader, with an acute sense of their singularity and what made them so. Any reader would only wish the book much longer because it's a beautiful one.


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