California Books


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

California
Alcatraz Island: Maximum Security
Published in Paperback by Donald James Hurley (1989-10)
Author: Donald J. Hurley
List price: $11.95
Used price: $3.09
Collectible price: $10.55

Average review score:

best book on alcatraz by far
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-05
as a person who has read many books on Alcatraz, i can say that this is an excellent book to read, filled with many pictures. Describes all the escape attempts, and generally keeps you from putting it down to read it in one sitting..... I highly reccommend it!!!Great insites on The Birdman, Creepy, etc...some facts that other books dont reveal...

Excellent - Best Alcatraz book that I have read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-26
I have read about ten books on Alcatraz and this one is by far the best. The author is the son of one of the guards that was at Alcatraz. He has certainly done his homework before writing this book. He lists each attempted escape from the first to the last listing the participants and what happened during the attempt and also what eventually happened to each inmate.

Outstanding Job
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-12
This book was great!!! It contained much precise information about the Island, from beginning to end: Conquistadores to the closure of the Federal Pennitenary on March 21, 1963. It personified many individuals who lived on Alcatraz, both families and inmates. It also gave a very descriptive overview of almost every part of the prison and it's operations. The book also has much information about individual prisoners and their escape attempts. Not to mention, the book is loaded with tons of pictures. I believe this book was the greatest book ever writtten about Alcatraz Island Federal Pennitenary. I guess enough to make me want to go into the field of Corrections Administration. The book is very easy to read, along with many vivid pictures on each page that makes the entire book very impressive. Mr. Donald Hurley did an outstanding job!!!

California
All That Glitters: A Nick Polo Mystery
Published in Hardcover by St Martins Pr (1997-01)
Author: Jerry Kennealy
List price: $21.95
New price: $2.95
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Ross McDonald reincarnate!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-22
I'll be up-front: I've known Jerry for about a decade now, as a lawyer hiring him to do "research." It was his experience as a vice cop and later as a firefighter in San Francisco that forms the basis of his bottomless pool of material. As a fan of the classics in detective novels, from Sayers to James and Poe to -- well -- Kennealy, I find his Nick Polo stories of contemporary California society as compelling, insightful and readable as Ross McDonald's Harper series. Good, quick reads with versimlitude (like that Jerry?), lots of wit and action. In fact, I'm sure I know Polo's landlady!

Kennealy's a goldmine of a find!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-27
Fortunately for us all, Amazon.com can get all the works of Jerry Kennealy for those who are interested. He's a masterful mystery writer in the Robert Parker/Robert Crais vain and his Nick Polo character is every bit as funny as Spenser or Elvis Cole. Kennealy knows his stuff(having worked as a PI in the Bay Area for quite some time)and he knows what it takes to hold a reader. I've been fortunate enough to meet the man on a few occassions and he's been a tremendous help to me in my own attempts at mystery writing. Give this man a chance and he'll make you a believer after just a few pages. He's a real buried treasure, but hopefully he can finally get the success he really deserves.

A good read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1997-12-17
This was my first Nick Polo book and it was really enjoyable, Polo is a Mike Hammer type character with great charm and wit. Well written, I have ordered the rest of the series thru Amazon.

California
Aloha Crossing
Published in Paperback by Pinata Books (2008-06-30)
Author: Pamela Bauer Mueller
List price: $8.99
New price: $8.99

Average review score:

excellent sequel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-04
This is an excellent sequel to Hello, Goodbye, I Love You.

I really love Ms. Bauer-Mueller's tale of what it takes emotionally
to raise a seeing-eye dog and then give it away. It takes strength of
character from both giver and receiver.

Revisiting the characters made me realize how much I loved the first one.

Share this book with your friends.

Terrific read for young and old
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-08
We really loved the whole book because it was a story of adventure, love, friendship, loyalty, devotion, perseverance, and triumph. What more could you want from a story? In Aloha Crossing, Pamela does a tremendous job of having the reader be "right there" with the characters. We feel Kimberly Louise's frustration, we know what it's like to be lost during a hurricane, and we grow to love each character more and more as the book goes on. This is a terrific read for young and old.

A MUST- read for people of all ages!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
I could not put this book down until I found out if Aloha made it through the hurricane. Living on an island, you know hurricanes are always a possibility so living this one out through the lives of Kimberly Louise & Diego was exciting and scary at the same time. Trying to imagine what life is like without seeing comes alive as Pamela Bauer Mueller let me "see" into Kimberly Louise's life. Having Aloha as her faithful companion almost makes me not feel badly about her blindness. Diego inspired me with his courage and trustworthiness, traits that reminded me how young people can really make a difference in the lives of others. Kids of all ages will be encouraged to follow their dreams, work hard and enjoy the moment. A MUST-read for people of all ages.

California
Ancient Egyptian Literature: Volume II: The New Kingdom (Ancient Egyptian Literature)
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (2006-04-03)
Author: Miriam Lichtheim
List price: $21.95
New price: $13.99
Used price: $12.50

Average review score:

Has All the Virtues Its Predecessor
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-20
This is an admirable volume II, consistent with what made volume I my first choice. In this volume, there are monumental inscriptions, instructional literature (including some very amusing works on the scribal life), hymns (including the great hymn to Osiris, and the Akhenaten hymns to the Sun), selections from the 'Book of the Dead', some prose tales and a factual narrative. Introductions and notes are terrific. Ka's are left untranslated.

Excellently presented
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-21
Ms. Lichtheim has done a wonderful job in her book, Ancient Egyptian Literature: New Kingdom! Her selections cover a wide range.She has a small introduction to each piece, besides the introductionto the book itself. Her placement of notes at the end of each selection is a godsend, no more madly turning to the back searching for the appropriate notes! An excellent choice for those interested in Egyptian history, or simply those wanting a better understanding of ancient literature. Buy it, it's worth it!

finally, a collection of translations
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-15
Finally, a collection of good and readable translations of Egyptian literature which both the layperson and the expert will find useful. Lichtheim has given the academic world a much needed reference with the translations of the text and a good introduction to the social history of the creators and the circumstances of the texts being recovered.

California
Annie's Soup Kitchen: A Novel (Literature of the American West, V. 13)
Published in Hardcover by University of Oklahoma Press (2003-06)
Author: Lawrence R. Smith
List price: $24.95
New price: $1.75
Used price: $0.47

Average review score:

Annie's Soup Kitchen - The Movie
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-18
"Annie's Soup Kitchen" would make a dynamite movie!
Here's a game I invented, and played as I read the book: Choose the movie stars you would cast as members of the Soup Kitchen gang. Samuel Jackson as the General!
Can you beat that?
And here's another idea: Get the book to those movie stars. Samuel Jackson, where are you? Here's your role!

The Poke Salad Saviour
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-28
Annie, we love you! Who else but a nonagenarian Irish woman straight from the Age of the Potato Famine would undertake to nourish the bodies and souls of the multitudes, the castaways of society who populate a soup kitchen in the shadow of the Valley of the Rich (notorious Orange County, Calif.,where never is heard a discouraging word over the sound of Hummers in the morning, Hummers in the evening). Annie, you're a saint! Tubs of food, tanks of pasta, bushels of greens resurrected (like the souls you cherish) from the supermarket dumpsters (yes, vegetables have souls, too--don't we talk and play Mozart to them?).

And what a motley tribe who feed from your table of viands and inspiration. In fact, filled with your spirit, they conspire with you to subvert the establishment--an oil company, a food-packing company-- Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, you don't want to miss the scatological just desserts channeled by mysterious means into a food-packing company. (Ahem, I use the word "desserts" advisedly--don't try this at home, without professionals at hand.) Or the disbeliever brought low by the burning bush, whence speaketh divinity. Poor Betty, she'll never badmouth a person of color again. Or the General--now here's a dude with his mojo mojing. When he sniffs the air, the birds listen; his magic hands choreograph the powers that count against the powers that be; he speaks his own mojo language--those who have ears let them hear, those who have eyes, let them see. He will invoke imprecations and maledictions on the non-readers of Smith's pages: why, I had the audacity to put the book down in an unguarded moment, and the heavens thundered against me. I barely escaped His wrath by feverish catching up. Beware. These powers are best not affronted.

But sometimes even magic, the will of a Saint, and the best laid plans of cagey conspirators are not enough to cleanse the dross of the world, to transmute the lead into gold. It takes an act of divine nature--all those politicians, all those media hounds, all those wanna-be's who wanna prevail by prevarication and jumping on the bandwagons of the holy. We see it every day. Here's someone doing GOOD. Let's act like this is our bandwagon. Annie's Soup Kitchen, like all mythic books, is REAL. You'll know it when you see it. Everything in it happened, just like you saw it on the evening news, only without the fictionalizing. The rains fell, the dams broke, the unwashed masses were washed in a universal baptism, and the world tried to reconstitute itself under the new order. Only Grady, like Ishmael, is left to tell the tale.

So, read this book: fall under its spell, or try in vain to escape the conjurings of the General: he knows who buys, and he knows who only window-shops. He's tapped in. The lookers-in-windows live in glass houses. Fortunately, they're only a stone's throw from the Truth and a good meal.

"Annie's Soup Kitchen" is magic.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-10
Once in a while-not often-a writer comes along with a voice and a story so good-humored, hopeful and compelling that the reader's world-view is changed for the better. Lawrence R. Smith is one of those writers, and "Annie's Soup Kitchen" is one of those stories. It might fall roughly into the category of magic realism, but it's more accurate to say this book is just plain magic.

The cast of well-drawn, unforgettable "marginal" characters starts with Annie O'Rourke herself, a ninety-five-year-old nurse who runs a soup kitchen from an abandoned lot by the railroad tracks, and includes hard-nosed Betty, who undergoes a startling conversion after talking to a burning palm tree out back (who says miracles can't still happen?); the General, a powerful black man who delivers mystifying monologues while wearing knee-high rubber boots filled with soapy water; John DeLorean-is it that John DeLorean?; and a host of other mostly good-natured eccentrics. In response to a frightening "shadow plague," they form the monkeywrenching Magnificent Seven in an attempt to stop the disease at its environmental source. Though antagonistic, the authorities are impotent against the power and good-will of these quirky and magical souls.

Especially in these dark and discouraging times, "Annie's Soup Kitchen" is a wonder and a joy.

California
Anton Chekhov's Life and Thought: Selected Letters and Commentary
Published in Paperback by Univ of California Pr (1975-06)
Authors: Anton Pavlovich Chekhov and Simon Karlinsky
List price: $12.00
Used price: $8.22

Average review score:

The Best Source of Information on Chekhov's Life and Art
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-25
There are many biographies of Chekhov, including the new one by Rayfield, but this edition of the letters is the best source of the writer's life and thought. Long out of print, it was wise of Northwestern University Press to re-issue this book. The other editions of the letters, by Hellman and another by Yarmolinsky, cannot compare.
This volume is valuable for its superb, lengthy introduction, which is a capsule biography. In addition, each of the fifteen sections are introduced by an engaging biographical headnote.
The letters themselves are the record of an extraordinary person, a man who instructed other writers to succeed in their work by feeling "compassion down to their fingertips."
This book shows the emotions and thoughts of the writer who lived that simple but wise piece of advice.
Among the more amusing letters is the one to his wastrel brother, in March 1886, in which he wittily enumerates the qualities of well-bred people. Among them: "They don't guzzle vodka on any old occasion, nor do they go around sniffing cupboards....They shun all ostentation: empty barrels make the most noise."
This volume is full of such humorous but sage advice, and reveals the man behind the extraordinary short stories and plays better than any biography.
You will remember some of the letters in this book throughout your lifetime.

Brilliant!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-13
This is a fascinating book, for fans of both great literature and great biography. There have been many collections of Chekhov's letters, but this one points out the errors in those previous ones (such as the one edited by Lillian Hellman) and corrects them. It focuses primarily on the letters in which Chekhov talked about his literature and the productions of his plays, and on his relationships with other artists, such as Tolstoy, Gorky, Stanislavsky and many others less well known outside of Russia. It also corrects many misperceptions about Chekhov created the various memoirs (such as Stanislavsky's) and biographies based on the erroneous information in those memoirs.

The Chekhov that the reader gets to know through this book is a vividly real human being.

Karlinsky si! Chekhov si!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-16
A fabulous book!! No one could ask for a better read, late at night, with the blankets tucked around one, and a hot buttered rum at one's side!!

Chekhov was a man!!

California
Architecture Tours L.A. Guidebook: Hollywood
Published in Paperback by Schiffer Publishing (2004-12-31)
Author: Laura Massino Smith
List price: $9.95
New price: $6.75
Used price: $5.83

Average review score:

A great way to see the sights
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-02
If you'd like to take any of several self-guided automobile tours of Los Angeles and nearby areas, Laura Massino Smith's books are excellent. Each tour book has clear directions and easy-to-read maps, lots of fascinating notes and information, plus photos of what to look for. I've lived in LA for over twenty-five years, and Smith's books have surprised me with things I'd never seen or hadn't noticed. There are three of her books in my glove compartment so far (Hollywood, Silverlake, and Hancock Park/Miracle Mile) and I'll be getting the rest as well.

Great series!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-20
These are great guides to view all the architectural gems in my neighborhood and surrounding areas. Highly recommended for locals or people who visit Los Angeles often. You wouldn't think there are so many historical houses and buildings to see in this town, but Laura Massino Smith has compiled them into these handy books with great photos as well.

Major Enhancement to Travel in LA
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-04
I loved Laura's architectural tour of Hollywood. Her directions are clear. She includes lots of interesting places that are both on and off the beaten path. The pictures enable the reader to easily identify the buildings she features. And, she includes helpful descriptions of the architecture and interesting facts about the buildings' history. Great tool for travellers intersted in architecture.

California
Architecture Tours L.A. Guidebook: Silver Lake
Published in Paperback by Schiffer Publishing (2004-05-01)
Authors: Laura Massino Smith and Laura Massino Smith
List price: $9.95
New price: $7.90
Used price: $8.44

Average review score:

A great way to see the sights
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-02
If you'd like to take any of several self-guided automobile tours of Los Angeles and nearby areas, Laura Massino Smith's books are excellent. Each tour book has clear directions and easy-to-read maps, lots of fascinating notes and information, plus photos of what to look for. I've lived in LA for over twenty-five years, and Smith's books have surprised me with things I'd never seen or hadn't noticed. There are three of her books in my glove compartment so far (Hollywood, Silverlake, and Hancock Park/Miracle Mile) and I'll be getting the rest as well.

Neat-o things to see of historical value in one small book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-19
A lot is packed into a great "carry with you as you tour around the hard to fully describe area of Silverlake". I give my `I keep in my car' copy to visiting out of towners so they don't have to figure out what the big deal is; it's all in the book and they can then see it for themselves right in front of them. A wonderful series of architecture books for both natives and visitors of Los Angeles.

Great Series!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-18
These are great guides to view all the architectural gems in my neighborhood and surrounding areas. Highly recommended for locals or people who visit Los Angeles often. You wouldn't think there are so many historical houses and buildings to see in this town, but Laura Massino Smith has compiled them into these handy books with great photos as well.

California
The Art of the Great Hollywood Portrait Photographers
Published in Hardcover by Random House Value Publishing (1987-10-14)
Author: John Kobal
List price: $19.99
New price: $161.75
Used price: $14.78
Collectible price: $63.50

Average review score:

see my review under listing of ART OF GRT HWD PORTRT
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-06
see my review under listing of ART OF GRT HWD PORTRT
other edition.

All the stars in heaven
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-11
John Kobal's The Art of the Great Hollywood Portrait Photographers is as good as his book on Hollywood with Kevin Brownlow, which is one of the essential books to read (and one of the essential TV series to watch) for anyone interested in movies.

Kobal gives an illuminating account of the function of the movies during the Depression, contrasted with eg Walker Evan's photography, and explains 'glamour', tying movie stars in with the Venus from Milos and the Mona Lisa quite convincingly. Well thought, well written. Chapters follow on the organisation of the studios, how publicity was done as it has rarely been done before or since. And some beautiful images - Garbo by Ruth Harriet Louise, Clara Bow by Nicholas Murray and Eugene Richie stand out, but there are many. The images are exceptional, taken by some of the greatest artists of the camera and the volume layout does the images justice. All complemented with reminiscences from the stars and photographers themselves. The very best history, anecdotal, with many perspectives and implications explored, and written with love.

This book has touched a deep chord sensitive to vanished beauty. The stars are now just names, some of them not even that. And of course they were not the same as their carefully crafted images displayed in this book. These evoke not only the stars themselves but the fact that they brought hope to many who perhaps would have found it otherwise hard to deal with the Depression - all those hopes, fears, ambitions, petty, grand and mean, silly and endearing. Only the images of beauty remain!

The Art of the Great Hollywood Portrait Photographers
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-06
Publisher: Knopf; (October 12, 1980)
First edition copy. This book is oversized and OUTSTANDING!

291 pages of glamour. 1925 - 1940 is the tops in Hollywood glamour. Though the 40s weren't bad either.

These are some magnificent photoplates. Superbly printed in this volume. Even the pickiest at quality (like me) will be happy. Amazing images not shown in ohter books. The Kobal colection is vast and bar none the best. This is a wonderful selection from him, that he put together in this book.

See more of my reviews for more must have full page or near full page portrait glamour books from this Golden era.

BUY THIS BOOK, then thank me later.

California
Assumption and Other Stories
Published in Paperback by Bilingual Review Press. (2003-07)
Author: Daniel A. Olivas
List price: $12.00
New price: $4.50
Used price: $1.97

Average review score:

Each story immerses the reader in a unique aspect of the American experience
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-31
What a wonderful read! Complex and intriguiging, covering a wide range of complex moral, physical, and emotional predicaments of the Latino community of Southern California, making them accessible to the reader in the most inclusive and spell-binding way. No simplistic situations here; Mr. Olivas is advancing American writing from the Latino perspective to the level of the great South American authors.

At times funny and always fascinating
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-18
This books contains a series of shorts stories that are freshly written and enticing to read - at times funny and always fascinating. Although fiction, the author's references to actual locations in Los Angeles (including Pico-Union) sometimes transported me back to the "old neighborhood". Enjoyed this books many short stories involving themes of racism, Latin culture and sexuality. Highly recommend.

Intermesh themes of human sexuality, tragedy, challenge
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-13
Assumption And Other Stories is an anthology of short stories by the demonstrably talented Chicano author Daniel A. Olivas (Deputy Attorney General, California Department of Justice). His diverse stories intermesh themes of human sexuality, tragedy, challenge, loss, gender, and ethnicity , ranging from a young lawyer who tells her parents about her lesbianism, to the dark sexual rumors of surrounding the suicide of a popular young priest at a Catholic school, to the terror that strikes families when a white supremacist starts shooting at a Jewish children's day camp. Highly recommended reading, these original and memorable stories clearly document Daniel A. Olivas as one of the best and most original Hispanic American authors working today.


Books-Under-Review-->Health-->Alternative-->Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine-->Practitioners-->United States-->California-->88
Related Subjects:
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