Virginia Books


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

Virginia
Meade's Army: The Private Notebooks of Lt. Col. Theodore Lyman (Civil War in the North)
Published in Hardcover by Kent State University Press (2007-05-30)
Author:
List price: $45.00
New price: $28.20
Used price: $31.07

Average review score:

Lyman and Lowe
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-04
Meade's Army is more that just an edited version of Theodore Lyman's experience with the Army of the Potomac. As one moves through the pages of Lyman's journal and flips back to the accompanying footnotes, one begins to appreciate the relationship between the editor and Lyman. While Lyman provides astute observations on everything from the flora and fauna of the battlefield to the chaos of fighting, the editor's annotations serve to link Lyman back to his social milieu. Classmates, relatives, and the social elite of Harvard University and Boston all meet at various times during the war and on the battlefield and the editor reminds the reader that Lyman is a product of his times and social status which color his observations. Such insights provide a deeper contextual layer to what is already a fascinating real-time account of the war.

It's about time!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-24
Too often when we read a book on the CW it is just a rehash of the same old facts presented as if the author has found "new evidence".
Too often when a diary or notebook is found and brought to light it is so poorly edited that is is almost unreadable. Here IS presented new ecvidence in the form of Lyman's notebooks.
Here is where David Lowe excells. Not only is much of this being brought forth for the first time, it is done in a manner that will satisfy the casual reader as well as the professional historian.
The inclusion of Lyman's period maps in their proper context increases one's understanding of the campaigns and the flow of the notebooks.
Well done and a great addition to anyone's library.

Excellent Primary Source for the War in the East
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
"Meade's Headquarters, 1863-1865", a collection of letters written during the Civil War by Lt. Col. Theodore Lyman to his wife while on General George Meade's staff during the last year and a half of the Civil War, has long been a valuable resource for those interested in the Virginia Campaigns of 1864-65. "Meade's Army: The Private Notebooks of Lt. Col. Theodore Lyman" is perhaps even more valuable, as Lyman was more free and expansive in his notebook observations than in his letters home. In the privacy of his own notebooks, Lyman allowed himself to record incisive observations of various commanders, not always to their credit. Something which came as a surprise to me that Lyman indicated that although he felt sorry for Gouverneur K. Warren being relieved of his corps command at Five Forks, Lyman seemingly felt that the action was justified based on Warren's personality and past performance. The book has a real "you are there" immediacy in detailing the last year and a half of the Army of the Potomac's war in the Eastern Theater (after the end of the war Lyman rewrote the notebooks dealing with the 1864 campaigns, but he fully retained the day-to-day flavor of being on the spot during those titanic stuggles). David Lowe has done an excellent job in editing Lyman's notebooks covering his service on Meade's staff (the notes are presented essentially without abridgement, although Lowe faced a Herculean task in tracking down and identifying the numerous persons referred to in passing by Lyman).

Virginia
Mountain Memories: An Appalachian Sense of Place
Published in Hardcover by West Virginia University (2003-10)
Author: Jim Clark
List price: $55.00
New price: $30.98
Used price: $17.85

Average review score:

Les Miller thoughts - January 24, 2004
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-24
" Mountain Memories" gave me a deeper appreciation of the Appalachian Mountains. I thoroughly enjoyed the wonderful journey through West Virginia's mountains with Jim Clark. It was inspiring to see a person so in harmony and appreciative of nature. We would all be better off to emulate that state of being. It was also fascinating to learn about the habits of some of natural inhabitants of the mountains. Jim's vivid and moving images made me want to head to West Virginia and experience the beauty for myself.

A Love Affair With Home and Nature
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-01
If you are a nature lover, photographer or just enjoy natural history, this is one for the permanent collection on our book shelves and in our hearts. It is a fantastic combination of excellent writing and inspirational photography.

For those of us fortunate enough to have grown up in the "country" this book will bring back those childhood memories of the lessons we learned by just going out into nature and really looking, listening but most importantly, feeling the spirit. The author has captured in words and images those inspirational moments with nature that become a part of who we are.

He has captured the essence of his personal love affair with West Virginia looking beyond the highways, the telephone lines, and all the marks of modern living to the true spirit of what it means to really connect with the personality of each changing season and the feast of visual experiences. The author then takes us beyond the beauty of the images and into his heart when he writes about what has inspired him. He shares with us his intimate knowledge of where to look and when for those special treats nature offers up each season in the West Virginia mountains.

It should appeal to anyone who has an interest in seeing the beauty in nature whether a photographer looking for great locations to photograph or someone who would like to spend a few hours with an author who has the power to capture our imaginations in a Huck Finn style of story telling about his beloved West Virginia. The book is rich with facts about the natural history of the area with extensive detail.

This is his second book and both should come with a warning. Once you read either book you will be making a trip, as I have, to the places the author presents so beautifully in words and pictures.

PHOTOGRAPHY IS MORE THAN TECNIQUE
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-19
If you are looking for another f/stop, shutter speed, aperture setting book on photography, then Jim Clark's second book, "Mountain Memories, An Appalachian Sense of Place" probably isn't the book for you. Actually, "Mountain Memories" isn't even a book about photography. It's really a sharing of the Appalachian area and memories of renowned nature photographer, Jim Clark. As a photographer myself, though, I can't help but write this review slanted towards the wealth of knowledge the book makes available to my fellow photographers.

If you are looking for a book that teaches you that a successful image goes much deeper than the photograph, then click on the "add to cart" button and you will soon be transformed into the heart of Appalachia as well as the mind of one of its native sons. You will also begin a journey that will transform you from a technically correct photographer to a creator of images and memories.

Jim takes you on a beautiful journey of discovery, sharing his thoughts and memories as he travels and captures the beauty that is Appalachia. I felt like I was at his side as he goes through the beauty of the seasons, painting the scenes of the birds, trees, waters and plant life of regions of the region in eloquent prose and breathtaking images. His love for Appalachia is very evident.

Although Jim doesn't mention f/stops, composition, etc. each page of "Mountain Memories" holds a wealth of information that will make you a better photographer. I've had the honor of traveling some of these trails with Jim and I've learned from him, from his workshops, and from his book, that technical knowledge isn't the only element of a successful nature image. If you don't have a passion for your subject, a desire to learn about your subject, a desire to convey a feeling, elicit a thought, reignite a memory or tell a story, you've created nothing more than a technically perfect "snap-shot". Add all these elements and you've created another memory to put into your "Mason Jar" (don't miss Jim's explanation of the magic of memories and mason jars.)

I highly recommend this book for anyone who wants to be a better photographer, or wants to learn more about the region, or just wants to learn about and enjoy the beauty that is Appalachia. I think that the sub-title could have easily been "An Appalachian Sense of Peace". It will be a treasured edition to my collection that will become dog-eared over the years as I revisit again and again.

Virginia
Mrs. Dalloway
Published in Kindle Edition by Rosetta (2002-05-23)
Author: Virginia Woolf
List price: $6.99
New price: $5.59

Average review score:

Nice Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
This is a great edition for anyone who has never read Virginia Woolf before. There is enough biographical information included at the beginning of the book to give any reader a good idea of Woolf's background before they proceed to the actual novel. It was very helpful for me as it was my first exposure to Woolf.

The novel itself is very interesting and the notations were quite helpful to keep the events and places throughout the novel straight.

Notice
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
It's a very good book. Mrs. Dalloway is very important book to understand the psycological game of a woman with existential problems in the twenties.

A League of Her Own
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
This is a fine edition and value, including a helpful preface introducing the author and novel as well as an appendix (the "annotated" part) with explanations of terms, places, and designations for non-Londoners along with identifications of literary, political and historical allusions for readers who could use a little extra help.

Anyone who has read James Joyce's "The Dead" will recognize some of the same themes and preoccupations in "Mrs. Dalloway," which in addition evokes numerous English "comedies of manners" as well as satirical narratives about a straight-laced Victorian culture that has become an anachronism in the 1920s. The story at times resembles a Jane Austen novel, except for the absence of a "fixed" point-of-view or reliable standard by which to measure the characters, each of which has, to lesser or greater degrees, sympathetic and unsympathetic qualities and is shown from the "inside" as a mind-in-process, a consciousness-in-flux (consequently, a reader needs to be careful not to apply an overly "logical" approach, insistent upon hanging on to a single point or statement as "the truth" about a character, who is more likely to try one possibility, then another, leaving it up to the reader to infer a character's essence through careful consideration of the important meanings derived from multiple impressions).

This is not a novel for the impatient or tone-deaf. Woolf creates a character's interior life through a virtuosic, highly mobile third-person narrator, who might be thought of as the character's "persona," not merely "expressing" the character's thoughts but "mirroring" how the character perceives him or herself as seen by others. Moreover, the indefinite pronouns can shift unexpectedly or occur in too close proximity to make identification easy or even definite. As a result, the reader has to work overtime to achieve entrance into the mind of the "right" character while simultaneously sensing the liquid, interpenetrating and shared qualities of human identity itself. And finally there's that tone, now soft, next loud, and never to be trusted to be without irony.

Woolf makes it fairly easy on the reader with the broad, sardonic strokes she uses to paint the practically villainous Sir William Bradshaw, the eminent psychiatrist viewed by many (especially himself) as the scientific high priest of this cross-section of deluded London luminaries; and she's equally nasty to her other "villain," Miss Kilman, a repressed and embittered born-again Christian who, like Sir William, lives by the code of "conversion," Woolf's euphemism for those powerful personalities who are bent upon breaking, controlling and dominating the will of anyone not strong enough to resist them. The other portraits are more subtle, requiring the reader either to hear the soft, nuanced ironical tones or risk missing both the social satire and the character. Woolf's targets range, perhaps not surprisingly, from the pretense, pride, and hypocrisy of an out-of-touch social stratum that clings to the "orderly" past; to the arrogance of modern medical "science"; to, more surprisingly, the suffocating alternatives offered by both religion and love.

Readers lured to this novel because of Cunningham's "The Hours" (novel or film) may be disappointed or quickly frustrated. Moving from Cunningham to Woolf is a bit like going from Fitzgerald to Faulkner, or from Austen to Shakespeare. What you immediately notice is, despite Woolf's limiting her story to a single day (compared to Cunningham's three-generation setting), the far greater range and more inclusive thematic focus and, most importantly, the sheer power and vitality of the prose (from fluid motion to dynamic rush). Woolf--like Joyce, Faulkner, and Shakespeare--employs a syntax that can cause the earth to move from under a reader's feet: she's a writer who represents not merely individual characters but captures the world whole not to mention the life of language itself.

The greatest challenge "Mrs. Dalloway" presents to a first-time reader is never to let up. It's essential to stay with Clarissa throughout her entire day, finally becoming a fully engaged participant in the party itself--the final thirty pages of the novel, which contain some of Woolf's best writing. Especially critical is the extended moment, almost 20 pages into the party scene, when Clarissa, like Septimus, walks to the window and has her epiphany. At that moment, one character chooses death; the other, life. But Woolf enables us to see these apparently opposite choices as "existential" cognates: both characters make choices that enable them to save their souls.

Cunningham is a first-rate stylist and craftsman who can tell a story that's moving and evocative, a narrative, moreover, that connects with today's readers by affirming the choices available to the self. But it inevitably pales alongside the vibrant novel and microcosm of life that is its source and inspiration. Virginia, like her character Clarissa, knows how to throw a party.

Virginia
Mushrooms of West Virginia and the Central Appalachians
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2003-04-25)
Author: William C. Roody
List price: $60.00
New price: $21.40
Used price: $21.40

Average review score:

Finally
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-06
After a decade of waiting for this book, I am certainly not disappointed. As an avid mushroom hunter, I have to say that this is the best field guide I have found.

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-20
I live in Tennessee. I own about 40 mushroom books and this one is my favorite. It is great to have a book for identification that covers mushrooms found in the south so well. The pictures are excellent. Roody lists possible look-alikes in many of the excellent, detailed descriptions. He also comments on the edibility of each species. Should be an excellent book for beginners and seasoned mushroom hunters alike. Highly recommended.

One of the Best Mushroom Field Guides Ever!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-11
I live in New York State and have been collecting mushrooms for years - edible and otherwise. I already own just about every other field guide to identifying mushrooms and other fungi, so when I saw this book for sale, I thought "do I really need another?" Well, it turns out I did. This book is fabulous! The pictures are first rate, and sometimes provide identifying detail that pictures in other books do not. While the "regulars" are there (mushrooms you find illustrated in almost every field guide) it also contains pictures of mushrooms that are common but not regularly pictured in other field guides. Consequently, it allowed me to solve a lot of long-standing "mushroom mysteries" in my backyard. The book contains longer than average "comments" on each species, often providing fascinating information. I highly recommend ths book!

Virginia
"My Madness Saved Me": The Madness and Marriage of Virginia Woolf
Published in Hardcover by Transaction Publishers (2006-01-25)
Author: Thomas Szasz
List price: $29.95
New price: $29.88
Used price: $26.96

Average review score:

Madness Saves us from What?
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-15
In his brilliant new book Thomas Szasz scientifically debunks the mental illness label long attached to Virginia Woolf and other celebrated geniuses. He shows how this great writer, with her eyes wide open, chose a marriage that she knew would box her in emotionally. She mistakenly thought this box would keep her safe.

She married this particular man for the same reason there became no way out of it for her. She wanted the lifestyle of a married women without any emotional commitment to the marriage itself. No normal man would put up with such a charade.

Virginia Woolf did not anticipate the difficulty of day-to-day living with such a warped man. But she was not his victim. Nor was she the victim of manic-depression. She made a Devil's bargain which she could not live up to and she felt powerless to get out of it.

Her fear of powerlessness became a self-prison. Powerlessness itself would have been perfectly okay. But Virginia Woolf was not authentic enough to admit her fear. Admitting her fear of powerlessness, would have left her knowing her marriage was a complete fake, and she could then have made different choices.

The histrionics and ultimate suicide which were subsequently called madness by biographers, were nothing more than ill-advised strategies to avoid facing the truth of her situation. To face the truth she would have had to deal with her fear. For all her genius, this simple fact was beyond her education and her understanding.

Knowing we are powerless is the antidote to fearing we are powerless. For anyone who wants real freedom, this is where it is found. Knowing we are powerless is solid ground, the real human condition that human beings try to avoid seeing by going into all kinds of bizarre histrionics. (You might argue here, but how powerful are we who can neither help being born nor dying?)

When we get to this real human condition, and simply feel our terror and anxiety, we do not offset it onto something or someone else as Virginia Woolf offsetted her existential fear onto her hatred of her husband and those who were her social and intellectual inferiors.

Had she faced her own fear she would have seen that she was all right anyway. And at that point some small, positive action might have presented itself to her rather than the crazy antics and mad language that kept her in the dark and boxed in, forever fighting the box of her own making. Looking always outside of the box for the answer, she thought her madness saved her from her helplessness. In truth, it only saved her from having to see the box and thus be able to take care of herself.


Virginia Woolf made the mistake too many of us are making in this culture. We box ourselves in to feel safe and then claim to be helpless victims of those self-made boxes. Once we are convinced we are helpless we begin to view self-responsibility as dangerous. At this point, those who wish to wield power over us don't have to divest us of our freedom. We willingly give up our freedom in return for assurances of supposed safety. To feel secure in the concern of others, Virginia Woolf preferred to think of herself as helpless or crazy. But, as Thomas Szasz proves, her intellectual failings cannot be accurately or scientifically described as a medical illness. A. B. Curtiss, author of Depression is a Choice.

The "madness" of ordinary life.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-12
A knockout! An incredible analysis of how one "becomes" mad.
Tom Szasz superbly documents, through an examination of the life and death of Virginia Woolf, how one learns that role (or perhaps any other role), and uses it, and how the world around one also ascribes such a role and uses it as well. We all, the "mad" and the "normal", gain and loose a great deal through this activity, all at the same time.

Simply stated, life is a tragedy (we all die) with no guarantees, and what we bring to it, including our innate stuff and that which we learn and internalize, determines the games we wind up choosing to play.

The Most Groundbreaking Book On Virginia Woolf Ever
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-15
It is not easy to challenge scores of other estemmed authors having pinned-the-tale-on-the-donkey, so to speak, in labelling Virgina Woolf as a most seriously, mentally disturbed artistic genius. But with this brilliant work by Thomas Szasz [(Professor of Psychiatry Ermitus at the State Univ. of NY, and adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute (along with his many stellar books including: "Lexicon of Lunacy," "Liberation by Oppression," & "Faith in Freedom")] - he most convincingly in this book shatters everthing you have ever read about Virgina Woolf to free her at along last from all the "madness" labels about which she did not deserve; and most tragically contributed, if not was the cause of her suicide. A brave book that takes on the very essence of psychiatry as a "science" even in these so-called modern times. My profound regret is that the brilliant VW did not have this champion when she most certainly needed him most.

Virginia
The Nature of the Islands: Plants & Animals of the Eastern Caribbean (Chris Doyle Guide)
Published in Paperback by Cruising Guide Publications (1993-09-01)
Author: Virginia Barlow
List price: $14.95
Used price: $46.44

Average review score:

Just the type of book I was looking for for an easy summary
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-17
I wasn't looking to study a huge encyclopedia type book, but I did want to know more about the plants I encounter on St. Thomas. This book was the perfect introduction providing not only visual references, but also practical information on where certain species are likely to be found, i.e. road sides, beaches, etc. Now that I have read through it, I find the need for a more thorough book, however this was the perfect start - just what I was hoping for.

Nature's Passport to the East Caribbean
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-02
I've been meaning to review this book for some time now. I've been travelling to the Eastern Caribbean for over twenty years; for the past few, it's been yearly. This book is one of the essentials for my journeys, like sun lotion and a passport. I swore at myself last year when I forgot it.
I travel for the sun and heat, of course, but rather than see the sites and take part in all the activities, I am happy just to be in the place, to see the islands, the people and their environment. Virginia Barlow's sweet book helps me ground myself every time I return. It's small and easy to carry and is one of the first books I turn to when I arrive.

Not Just a Field Guide, Surprisingly Interesting Reading
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-19
This short (150 page)book gives the reader an excellent introduction to the animal, plant and bird life of eight different types of habitats found on the islands of the Eastern Caribbean. The photos and illustrations are very good, but the text is what surprised me the most. Rather than simply providing a dry list of data points usually found in field guide species accounts, just about every species description is remarkably fascinating reading. The book's extensive bibliography shows that the naturalist author drew from a wide range of primary scientific sources to weave together uniquely interesting information regarding the inter-relationships of organisms in these neo-tropical environments. Most readers will welcome these brief but intriguing natural history accounts, and will be pleased that the author selected to describe only the most abundantly observed species. Personally, my only regret was that the book wasn't considerably longer. I have tried hard to find other, more in-depth, guides to the natural history of this region, but there simply don't seem to be any. To learn more about the region, one would have to research primary scientific sources, as this author has (thankfully) done for us, and beautifully synthesized her findings.

Virginia
New World Burning
Published in Paperback by Two Mountains Publishing (2005-11-15)
Author: Daniel Watkins
List price: $13.95
New price: $13.95
Used price: $7.77

Average review score:

New World Burning
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-01
Mr. Watkins has written an historical novel painting a searing and fascinating look at a part of the Jamestown story, which has not been properly explored. The remarkable generation AFTER Pocanontas, John Smith and John Rolfe becomes alive in a well researched and exciting portrait of America, as she teetered in withdraw from England, slavery (both black and white),the rights of the Native tribes, and the internecine struggles of those who later would be called "Americans". Young Philip Corstair, an indentured servant is leaving England in 1650 filled with the vivid hopes for life in a new world. Mr.Watkins' remarkable novel takes us on a journey of power and pain as young Philip fights his way through the horrors of battles and disease, and the enormous loss of love. This wonderful novel is a must read not just for history lovers, but for romantics at heart. It has been a popular addition to the SCC library.

I came upon this book by chance and was hooked from the first sentence on.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-01
The beauty of historical novels if well written and researched, which this one most certainly is, is the manner in which they transform the dry brute facts of history into compelling stories which inspire and transport the reader's imagination into a time and place not of their own. Daniel Watkins brings to life Virginia circa 1676 with all it's new world strangeness and fascinating characters-both real and imagined-with his first novel New World Burning. The two main characters Philip Corstair (a product of Watkin's imagination) and Nathaniel Bacon (a product of Watkin's obvious extensive research) are compelling, engaging and wonderfully tragic. Interestingly enough, the apocalyptic chaos of an exceptionally violent moment in early American history brought about by the consequences of self-serving political maneuverings and in which Watkin's writing so skillfully brings to life has contemporary parallels with respect to current political machinations. My only disappointment with New World Burning came when I finished the last page and had to put it down. At that point I was rudely thrust back into the 21st century and found myself once again in my apartment with a carpet that badly needs cleaning and away from the beautifully strange and interesting world I found myself engaged with while reading this book. I highly recommend it.

New World Burning by Daniel Watkins
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-28
I found "New World Burning" to be intriguing and insightful. It's a fascinating and informative fictional analysis of an under appreciated but extremely powerful event in Early American history. Watkins is a superb story teller, and surprise ending is an unexpected treat!

Virginia
The Night Before Cat-Mas (With Charm)
Published in Hardcover by Peter Pauper Press (1998-06-01)
Author: Virginia Unser
List price: $4.95
New price: $2.50
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

The Night Before Cat-Mas
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-08
The Night Befoe Cat-Mas is a treasure for anyone who shares their life with a feline companion. It is beautifully illustrated, and the narrative is enjoyable.

a "Must" for cat-lovers.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-28
This book is a take off of "The Night before Christmas" and is as dear as can be. A Purr..fect stocking stuffer for your friends who love felines.

An Enjoyable Story
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-06
This is an adorable parody of the story The Night Before Christmas. The illustrations are great, and the book is small enough to fit in your pocket. Not only that, it comes with a little charm that you can put on a bracelet.

This is a must read for any cat lover.

Virginia
No Ordinary Land: Encounters in a Changing Environment
Published in Hardcover by Aperture (1998-06-15)
Authors: Virginia Beahan and Laura McPhee
List price: $39.95
New price: $24.93
Used price: $14.95
Collectible price: $225.00

Average review score:

questionning
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-08
this is the kind of book that should be mandatory in classrooms !
the world as it is...

Hauntingly beautiful; redefines landscape photography for me
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-07
The photos of this book have the technical excellence of Ansel Adams pictures (except they are not B+W). But they are not vistas of pristine, pretty National parks that Adams shot; here the hand of man is all too present.

Breathtakingly beautiful and wondrous!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-24
Beahan and McPhee have eloquently captured both our enmeshment with nature, and Her attempts to hold fast. Photos so beautiful you catch your breath.

Virginia
Oh My Stars! Recipes that Shine
Published in Hardcover by Junior League of Roanoke (2000-06-01)
Author: Junior League of the Roanoke Valley
List price: $24.95
New price: $29.98
Used price: $18.74

Average review score:

A superb compendium of culinary delights
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-06
Oh My Stars!: Recipes That Shine is the collaborative effort of the members of The Junior League Of Roanoke Valley, Virginia and offer cookbook connoisseurs a superb compendium of culinary delights that would grace any table and enhance any formal or informal dining occasion. Visually enriched with a wealth of full color photography, the recipes range from Simmered Mushrooms Bourguignonne; Chilled Tomato Soup with Avocado Cream; Veal Piccata with Capers and Pine Nuts; and Virginia Trout Meuniere; to Cabbage and Potatoes with Tomatoes and Smoked Cheese; Herbed Sour Cream Muffins; Pepper Jack Cheese and Herb Souffle; and Frosted Brown Sugar Pound Cake. Kitchen cooks and dedicated cookbook browsers will fully appreciated the cooking tips and anecdotes that regularly appear throughout this enthusiastically recommended addition to family cookbook collections.

A Must Have for All!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-20
This cookbook is a must have for everyone! It contains easy and fun recipes for all types of occasions from "every night" dinners to dinner parties or special occasions. Great kids section! Beatifully designed and easy-to-follow recipes; great kitchen and cooking tips on sidebars.

Oh My Stars - this is fabulous!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-30
I love to collect cookbooks - especially Junior League cookbooks - and this is one of my favorites! "Oh My Stars" is filled with many wonderful, easy, elegant and delicious recipes! It has a fabulous children's section that has provided lots of fun ideas for my kids. It's easy to read, easy to follow and the ingredients are easily found and everything that I have made has been great! I definitely recommend this Junior League cookbook to all cooking, dining and cookbook enthusiasts! Enjoy!!


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