Florida Books
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Used price: $10.92

Go, Gators!Review Date: 2001-03-23

Used price: $4.61

Good reading even if you're not planning to visit Florida.Review Date: 2004-05-04
Florida, of course, has a right to more ghosts than more recently settled parts of the United States. As Author Walls points out, in 1620 when the Pilgrims reached Plymouth there was already a thriving settlement at St. Augustine. The state's paranormal riches date back even farther than that, though. The inhabitants of Crystal River State Archaeological Site's pre-historic burial mounds make their continuing presence known, as do those of the Timacuan Indian mound just north of the city in Ormond Beach.
Tragic lovers. A little girl playing jacks. A farmer who found a much easier (but horrific) way to get rid of his migrant workers than simply paying them for their labors. A doll that, imbued with its departed owner's personality, moves about its museum case and ruins the camera film of anyone who tries to photograph it. An old lady whose body left her beloved home when she died, but whose spirit continues to watch over the place with benevolent interest - except when a female guest's skirt is too short, in which case she tries to pull it lower by the hem! The ghosts that Walls describes are a varied lot, and an intriguing one. I believe I would take her advice about the places of which she says, "If you go there, it is wise to not go alone."
I would also take her advice about bed-and-breakfasts, inns, and eating establishments of all sorts. Her descriptions of these made me want to pull up stakes and head a thousand miles south, to sit on shady verandas and stuff myself with both gourmet and "plain old down home" cooking. Good reading even if you're not planning to travel soon, in other words!
--Reviewed by Nina M. Osier, author of "Rough Rider"

Excellent For Florida Genealogist & HistoriansReview Date: 1999-07-02

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A Florida fishing history lessonReview Date: 2005-01-02

Fishing Guide to the Upper Keys & Florida BayReview Date: 1999-12-24


This book has it all!Review Date: 2000-01-14

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unique private investigator who part Boy Scout and part NoirReview Date: 2004-07-28
"The Bikini Bottoms Optional Oyster Bar". Zolo barely survives a dunking in the Gulf of Mexico though he cannot remember why someone would toss him into the sea. Widow Jacob Mathias helps Zolo recover at his place in Apalachicola, Florida. Zolo starts to remember his client Henry McGill wanted him to learn what happened to internet stripper Lena, who the he believes was murdered. Now Zolo struggles to learn how he got embroiled with mobsters wanting him dead starting with the strip joint The Bikini Bottoms Optional Oyster Bar.
These two novellas star an intriguing knight in shining armor sleuth who has memory problems that will remind readers of Memento's Leonard Shelby. Both tales are well written as the hero struggles to keep track of what he knows, which he quickly forgets unless he writes it down (should try a Polaroid). Brian A. Hopkins furbishes a unique private investigator who is one part Boy Scout and one part Noir.
Harriet Klausner

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Dr. Graham is awesome!Review Date: 2005-01-08

A great adventure storyReview Date: 2007-07-28
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Collectible price: $10.00

A wonderful look at Central Florida's rich historical past Review Date: 2005-05-26
I took interest in the subject because I visit Central Florida frequently and wanted to check out its history. To this end, this book is good, easy and fun reading and a great place to start if you want a comprehensive historical understanding of Central Florida. The authors explain that the remants of the "true" natives (not killed by Europeans) were absorbed into offshoots of the Creek and Cherokee tribes who assumed the name "Seminoles." They also report that Oceola County is named for a legandary Seminole warrior and that Orlando is likely named after a soldier killed by Indians near Lake Eola in 1835.
Robison and Andrews also inform us that Kissimmee's boom-town pioneer days were personified by swamp-empire builder Hamilton Disston whose land deal not only saved the State of Florida bankruptcy but turned a cow camp and trading post settlement into a steamboat and railroad hub of the 1880's. Kissimmee was officially born on Election Day 1883 and it quickly earned a reputation as a town of saloons for ranchers and cowboys. It also boasted the nation's first ride-up-saloon.
However, the story of Central Florida cannot be told without including entertainment magnate Walt Disney. Within five years after the 1955 opening of Disneyland in Anaheim, California executives began to think seriously about expanding East. The story goes..."Disney and several of his top executives were flying in the corporate jet over Central Florida, scouting out potential locations when they located a vast stretch of virgin land near the junction of Interstate 4 and the Florida Turnpike...this is it!" they shouted.
Disney wanted to stay away from the beaches where there would be too much competition for tourists' time and money. He also wanted to avoid the mistake he had made at Disneyland: failing to control the land just outside the park's gates where garish development pushed right up to the property line and others made millions running hotels, restaurants and other tourist-related businesses.
This book is an excellent source of information about the growth of Central Florida's citrus and cattle industry. It also provides an outstanding historical accounting about the growth of Orlando, Winter Park, Kissimmee, Apopka, Maitland, Eatonville, Goldenrod, Pine Castle, Edgewood, Belle Isle, Windermere and many other Central Florida communities. Highly recommended.
Bert Ruiz
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