Michigan Books
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The Crows (Five Star Mystery Series)
Published in Hardcover by Five Star (2007-12-12)
List price: $25.95
New price: $25.95
Used price: $16.93
Used price: $16.93
Average review score: 

Page turner! Great Book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-25
Review Date: 2007-12-25
THE CROWS is a creative well written psychological suspense thriller.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-17
Review Date: 2007-12-17
CPA P.J. Benson moves away from Kalamazoo into a small house she inherited from her paternal grandfather in Zenith Michigan, a farming community where nobody locks their doors. This proves to be a mistake as P.J. discovers when she is taking a walk in the woods and she hears shots ring out. She rushes home finding a blood trail that leads to her kitchen until she reaches a dead man.
Detective Wade Kingsley is put in charge of the case and feels that P.J. is a possible suspect even though she doesn't know the man. Her closest neighbors John and Julia think they know who the victim was and they believe he stole bioengineered lady bugs from a lab. They can't tell the police because John brought them home from work without permission. Several times P.J. feels someone has been in her home but the police think she is crazy (a sore spot for her because her mother is a schizophrenic) but she knows where each pf her belongings are supposed to be. When certain evidence comes to light, Wade believes her and wants her to stay at his sister's house until they can figure out what is going on. P.J. refuses and almost gets them both killed from a ghost out of her past.
Since mental illness runs in her family, P.J. ponders if the things that are happening to her are hallucinations like a jealous lesbian poisoning her food or her hearing the voice of someone dead for eighteen years over the phone. She comes to realize she is as sane as anyone else and somebody is playing mind games with her. The mystery is well constructed with different neighbors at different times coming under suspicion. THE CROWS is a creative well written psychological suspense thriller.
Harriet Klausner
Detective Wade Kingsley is put in charge of the case and feels that P.J. is a possible suspect even though she doesn't know the man. Her closest neighbors John and Julia think they know who the victim was and they believe he stole bioengineered lady bugs from a lab. They can't tell the police because John brought them home from work without permission. Several times P.J. feels someone has been in her home but the police think she is crazy (a sore spot for her because her mother is a schizophrenic) but she knows where each pf her belongings are supposed to be. When certain evidence comes to light, Wade believes her and wants her to stay at his sister's house until they can figure out what is going on. P.J. refuses and almost gets them both killed from a ghost out of her past.
Since mental illness runs in her family, P.J. ponders if the things that are happening to her are hallucinations like a jealous lesbian poisoning her food or her hearing the voice of someone dead for eighteen years over the phone. She comes to realize she is as sane as anyone else and somebody is playing mind games with her. The mystery is well constructed with different neighbors at different times coming under suspicion. THE CROWS is a creative well written psychological suspense thriller.
Harriet Klausner

Crusades: The Illustrated History
Published in Paperback by University of Michigan Press (2005-09-12)
List price: $26.95
New price: $16.90
Used price: $11.59
Used price: $11.59
Average review score: 

Beautiful and Informative!
Helpful Votes: 34 out of 36 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-03
Review Date: 2005-06-03
This is a great introduction to the medieval Crusades with eye candy to boot! It's a very even keeled overview - without all the political biases that so often get in the way of explaining a subject objectively. This book educates the reader on the various crusades within the context of their times.
Seeing is Perceiving
Helpful Votes: 56 out of 57 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-19
Review Date: 2005-07-19
"Crusades - The Illustrated History," Thomas F. Madden, Editor, shares all the strengths of Madden's "Concise History of the Crusades." It is a refreshing and positive look at the falable but devoted knights and kings of Christendom who deeply desired to see the holy sites of Christianity delivered from the hands of their unbelieving conquerors. It is eminently fair in its approach to historical facts. It also incorporates much new knowledge of the period.
Besides being a facinating account of the period, it is a beautifully designed book. Its sections are broken up into short studies with rich colored illustrations. You can read it in short stages, and absorb the material at leisure. It also shares the strength of a perspective shared by several historians, so you are aware that the research is not just one man's ideas but the fruit of much fresh information.
This one is worth the money and time you will put into it.
Wm. H. Scarle, Jr. - BA, M.Div., Th.M - Tampa, FL
Besides being a facinating account of the period, it is a beautifully designed book. Its sections are broken up into short studies with rich colored illustrations. You can read it in short stages, and absorb the material at leisure. It also shares the strength of a perspective shared by several historians, so you are aware that the research is not just one man's ideas but the fruit of much fresh information.
This one is worth the money and time you will put into it.
Wm. H. Scarle, Jr. - BA, M.Div., Th.M - Tampa, FL

Cut and Run: Loggin' Off the Big Woods
Published in Paperback by Schiffer Publishing (2002-06)
List price: $19.95
New price: $13.78
Used price: $13.38
Used price: $13.38
Average review score: 

A treasury of old photographs
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-31
Review Date: 2002-10-31
The publisher stumbled onto a treasure in this collection of photographs of early logging in America. Mike Monte's enthusiasm shines through his commentary on the history of logging. He's interested in the loggers, their trees, their lifestyle, their machinery, their locales, their women, in short, in everything associated with the logging industry in the United States more than a century ago. I keep wondering what it would be like to eat in the logging tent at the table with these rough-looking guys, or sleep on a plywood cot next to a fellow still wearing his hobnail boots--or hang out the laundry in a couple feet of snow....this book is to die for!
A history of a colorful era
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-11
Review Date: 2002-12-11
Book Review
That "Cut & Run" Loggin' Off the Big Woods" is a coffee table book is obvious when you see its cover with the three lumberjacks posed with their axes but, it is much more than that. There are over 150 pictures in its 144 pages all of them clear as bells and none of them seen before by me.
In addition to the pictures, there is text on each page and the text is what sets it apart from other books of its type. The book is written by Mike Monte, who I know. He lives in Crandon, Wisconsin, is a former logger and the son and grandson of old time lumberjacks. Where he got all the original photos I don't know but, the writing comes naturally to him from a life long interest in the logging history of the north woods. If its possible to love the sinner while hating the sin, Mike does that. He makes plain his contempt for the timber barons who were responsible for the cutting and running but his love and respect for those people who actually did the work and lived the life shows through on every page.
Although most of the book is about the loggers, teamsters, railroaders, sawmillers and river rats who did the work, there is also a lot about their wives and families. There is an entire chapter on "Padus" a typical "sawdust" town which no longer exists. Its now part of the small town of Wabeno. There are pictures of boiler explosions, train wrecks and fires all of which plagued these early towns and mills. Pictures of stores and saloons and mud choked main streets. People in their Sunday best and lumberjacks sleeping 4 and 5 to a bed in the logging camps. All with colorful descriptions , some from elderly people who actually lived the history.
You learn a lot about those days. Beneath a shot of a 'Jack with a two bitted axe, for example, Mike explains that they kept one edge sharp, the other dull and used the dull end on frozen wood since a sharp edge would chip out on frozen wood.
Since the timber companies all paid about the same wages, food in the camps made all the difference. Mike says that 'jacks would quit jobs to follow good cooks from one job to the next.
The book doesn't stop with the clearing of the pines. There are sections on the follow up harvests of hemlock and hardwoods and, finally, the cutting of what was left for pulpwood. By the 1920s it was pretty much all over. Some 70 years to take it all.
For those who are really interested, Mike shows pictures and explains, for example, the difference between an A frame jammer and a slide ass jammer, both of which were used to load logs onto railway cars. The book can serve as a history lesson into a colorful industry of the past and/or, simply a collection of interesting photos. Either way, its well worth owning
Dave Johnson
That "Cut & Run" Loggin' Off the Big Woods" is a coffee table book is obvious when you see its cover with the three lumberjacks posed with their axes but, it is much more than that. There are over 150 pictures in its 144 pages all of them clear as bells and none of them seen before by me.
In addition to the pictures, there is text on each page and the text is what sets it apart from other books of its type. The book is written by Mike Monte, who I know. He lives in Crandon, Wisconsin, is a former logger and the son and grandson of old time lumberjacks. Where he got all the original photos I don't know but, the writing comes naturally to him from a life long interest in the logging history of the north woods. If its possible to love the sinner while hating the sin, Mike does that. He makes plain his contempt for the timber barons who were responsible for the cutting and running but his love and respect for those people who actually did the work and lived the life shows through on every page.
Although most of the book is about the loggers, teamsters, railroaders, sawmillers and river rats who did the work, there is also a lot about their wives and families. There is an entire chapter on "Padus" a typical "sawdust" town which no longer exists. Its now part of the small town of Wabeno. There are pictures of boiler explosions, train wrecks and fires all of which plagued these early towns and mills. Pictures of stores and saloons and mud choked main streets. People in their Sunday best and lumberjacks sleeping 4 and 5 to a bed in the logging camps. All with colorful descriptions , some from elderly people who actually lived the history.
You learn a lot about those days. Beneath a shot of a 'Jack with a two bitted axe, for example, Mike explains that they kept one edge sharp, the other dull and used the dull end on frozen wood since a sharp edge would chip out on frozen wood.
Since the timber companies all paid about the same wages, food in the camps made all the difference. Mike says that 'jacks would quit jobs to follow good cooks from one job to the next.
The book doesn't stop with the clearing of the pines. There are sections on the follow up harvests of hemlock and hardwoods and, finally, the cutting of what was left for pulpwood. By the 1920s it was pretty much all over. Some 70 years to take it all.
For those who are really interested, Mike shows pictures and explains, for example, the difference between an A frame jammer and a slide ass jammer, both of which were used to load logs onto railway cars. The book can serve as a history lesson into a colorful industry of the past and/or, simply a collection of interesting photos. Either way, its well worth owning
Dave Johnson
Dead Folks
Published in Hardcover by Atlantic Monthly Pr (1996-06)
List price: $22.00
New price: $1.49
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $24.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $24.00
Average review score: 

Dead Folks
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-05
Review Date: 2007-03-05
Doesn't get any better than this. I love Jon Jacksons Mystery writing! Keeps you on the edge of your seat!
A great read!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-25
Review Date: 1999-07-25
Jon Jackson always delivers the goods...never predictable wordsmithing that often reads like a musical score...

Death On Grave Street (Five Star First Edition Mystery)
Published in Board book by Five Star (2005-02-21)
List price: $25.95
New price: $9.98
Used price: $1.48
Used price: $1.48
Average review score: 

Death On Grave Street
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-25
Review Date: 2005-09-25
Interesting plot. Humorous and colorful description of characters living along small port town on Lake Huron.
entertaining paranormal police procedural romance
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-05
Review Date: 2005-03-05
Unable to work homicide ever since his pregnant spouse Cindy was murdered in a drive-by killing, fortyish widower Tyrone Trotman retires from the Detroit Police Department to accept the job of police chief of Port Ottawa. He makes an offer on a historical home with the famous Last Tree located in the yard. Tyrone meets the owner, Jane Blane, the love child of the town's recently deceased leading citizen; to his shock he wants her and she reciprocates. They even discuss marriage as love at first sight strikes both of them.
Meanwhile, Deputy police officer Billy Budd informs Tyrone he found a corpse in the cemetery that was not primed for burial; not long afterward a second murdered body shows up in the same locale. While the townsfolk insist it is the spirit of the Last Tree calling out to all the trees cut down in the last century, Tyrone seeks a more mortal culprit.
This is an entertaining paranormal police procedural romance starring a wonderful protagonist who does not believe in the legends yet talks to the Last Tree and heeds otherworldly advice to save his beloved. The romantic subplot is fun as the lead duet knows they belong together and don't waste time or energy otherwise. The townsfolk and the Detroit witch augment a fun lighthearted bewitching who-done-it that will have the audience wondering if the tree spirits or a Lorax like human is speaking violently for the long gone forests by killing people.
Harriet Klausner
Meanwhile, Deputy police officer Billy Budd informs Tyrone he found a corpse in the cemetery that was not primed for burial; not long afterward a second murdered body shows up in the same locale. While the townsfolk insist it is the spirit of the Last Tree calling out to all the trees cut down in the last century, Tyrone seeks a more mortal culprit.
This is an entertaining paranormal police procedural romance starring a wonderful protagonist who does not believe in the legends yet talks to the Last Tree and heeds otherworldly advice to save his beloved. The romantic subplot is fun as the lead duet knows they belong together and don't waste time or energy otherwise. The townsfolk and the Detroit witch augment a fun lighthearted bewitching who-done-it that will have the audience wondering if the tree spirits or a Lorax like human is speaking violently for the long gone forests by killing people.
Harriet Klausner
Deep Woods Frontier: A History of Logging in Northern Michigan (Great Lakes Books)
Published in Paperback by Wayne State University Press (1989-10)
List price: $24.95
New price: $23.37
Used price: $17.09
Used price: $17.09
Average review score: 

An excellent history
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-14
Review Date: 2005-09-14
This book is an excellent history of the different eras of logging in the U.P. It thoroughly covers the pine era, hardwood era, and the pulpwood era. It also goes into detail about many of the most important men behind the lumber companies, both large and small. If you are at all interested in the history of logging, or have an interest in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, this book is an excellent choice.
Great History of the Heydays of Northern Michigan Logging
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-07
Review Date: 2000-05-07
Highly recommended if you have any interest in the timber industry's history. Book includes commentary on the results of some poor management practices and the attempts to farm clear-cuts. A good history of logging and the lessons learned. Lots of interesting characters and stories, as well. Obviously a well researched book.

Detroit Divided
Published in Paperback by Russell Sage Foundation Publications (2002-09)
List price: $17.50
New price: $17.50
Used price: $7.53
Used price: $7.53
Average review score: 

Well-researched, fascinating view of SE Mich
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-24
Review Date: 2004-04-24
Detroit Divided covers many issues well-known to residents of SE Michigan - issues such as racism, the labor market, housing, transportation, etc., always coming back to the question of what factors influence the segregation of the city and its suburbs.
It was published in 2000, and is still quite up-to date, but there is no mention of the influence of recent changes in Detroit's downtown, such as GM, sports stadiums, casinos, and current revitalization projects.
What I really liked about this book was the survey data from the census, and from surveys done by residents in the inner city and the suburbs. I liked finding out about what "We as Detroiters" had to say about these issues, and I found myself agreeing with a lot of the findings because I see them on a daily basis. It is nice to have numbers to back up what are vague mental pictures of what the situation involves.
I learned quite a bit about the area, things I didn't know about our history and about the present. Professionals in urban issues will certainly use this book, but I would also recommend it to the general public and especially to residents in Detroit and SE Mich.
It was published in 2000, and is still quite up-to date, but there is no mention of the influence of recent changes in Detroit's downtown, such as GM, sports stadiums, casinos, and current revitalization projects.
What I really liked about this book was the survey data from the census, and from surveys done by residents in the inner city and the suburbs. I liked finding out about what "We as Detroiters" had to say about these issues, and I found myself agreeing with a lot of the findings because I see them on a daily basis. It is nice to have numbers to back up what are vague mental pictures of what the situation involves.
I learned quite a bit about the area, things I didn't know about our history and about the present. Professionals in urban issues will certainly use this book, but I would also recommend it to the general public and especially to residents in Detroit and SE Mich.
Couldn't Stop Reading
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-23
Review Date: 2005-12-23
Why does this metropolis continue to have the most racially divided composition of the United States? Well, if you find yourself with the same question I reccomend this book. It gives good insight into how metropolitan Detroit became the city it is today and insight into what those of your race and and the other are doing/thinking. If you are curious about the extended population other than the whites/blacks then don't buy this but my money was well spent.

Detroit on Stage: The Players Club, 1910-2005 (Great Lakes Books)
Published in Hardcover by Wayne State Univ Pr (2007-08-30)
List price: $39.95
New price: $30.24
Used price: $57.23
Used price: $57.23
Average review score: 

Great Discussion about a Great Detroit Organization!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-01
Review Date: 2007-12-01
Marijean Levering has done an excellent job giving a history and understanding of this historic Detroit Players Club. The book is well-researched and is more thorough and accurate that anyone would ever expect an outsider to be able to write. If the book has any fault, it is that at 292 pages, her book only scratches the surface of the stories that could be told of this famous mens theater club.
Detroit on Stage
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-07
Review Date: 2007-10-07
" Detroit on Stage " is not only a history of the Player's Club in Detroit, but also includes other Theater Clubs. It is interesting because it also gives a history of Detroit during the period of 1910-2005. It includes some Prominent Members with interesting facts of their lives, like Edsel Ford asking his Father Henry Ford for money to pay his dues to the Players Club. This book is easy reading, well organized, Indexed and gives the history of Prominent Members of the Players Club.

Detroit Tigers Lists and More: Runs, Hits and Eras (Great Lakes Books)
Published in Paperback by Wayne State University Press (2002-05)
List price: $27.95
New price: $11.42
Used price: $11.41
Collectible price: $27.95
Used price: $11.41
Collectible price: $27.95
Average review score: 

Detroit Tigers Lists and More Hits a Home Run!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-12
Review Date: 2002-06-12
This is absolutely a "must-have" for any Detroit Tigers fan! Not just a book of statistics, "Detroit Tigers Lists and More" is about every fascinating and obscure trivia you ever wanted to know about the Tigers. Everything from Tigers in other Halls of Fame to player nicknames to fantasy teams to miscellaneous info too good to pass up (like notable fights, forfeits and family relations) - it's here, all neatly cataloged and indexed for easy reference. Pick one up for your favorite sports fan!
Detroit Tigers Lists and More Hits a Home Run!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-12
Review Date: 2002-06-12
This is absolutely a "must-have" for any Detroit Tigers fan! Not just a book of statistics, "Detroit Tigers Lists and More" is about every fascinating and obscure trivia you ever wanted to know about the Tigers. Everything from Tigers in other Halls of Fame to player nicknames to fantasy teams to miscellaneous info too good to pass up (like notable fights, forfeits and family relations) - it's here, all neatly cataloged and indexed for easy reference. Pick one up for your favorite sports fan!

Detroit's Historic Fort Wayne (MI) (Images of America)
Published in Paperback by Arcadia Publishing (2007-04-04)
List price: $19.99
New price: $12.42
Used price: $12.39
Used price: $12.39
Average review score: 

Right subject but WRONG city!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-25
Review Date: 2008-01-25
I ordered the book, but your review is not for Oakland California!
Your review is for Oakland County, Michigan!
Please correct.
Your review is for Oakland County, Michigan!
Please correct.
Detroit's Gem
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-10
Review Date: 2007-07-10
Thank you authors, James Conway and David Jamroz, for putting together a wonderful book on a jewel in Detroit's history. Historic Fort Wayne was built in the early 1840's and saw troops going off to fight, from the Civil War in the 1860's through VietNam in the 1960's and all the wars in between. This book highlights the very beginnings of the fort's history (even before - a bit on the founding of Detroit starts the book off) and, through hundreds of photographs, moves us right up to the 21st century where this gem is now (very slowly - much too slowly) being restored.
My favorite pictures are from the Civil War - but there are quite a few from all the wars of the 19th and 20th centuries. And there is even a chapter on its restoration.
Detroit has a history of forgetting its history. I cannot tell you how many historic structures were torn down for one inane reason or another. In fact, it's still happening to this very day - plans to tear down the beautiful and classic structure of Tiger Stadium - built in 1912 - are being discussed as I write this.
But, that's the way Detroit is.
Unfortunately, Detroit has all but ignored Historic Fort Wayne (oh, the powers that be will throw a few pennies toward restoration here and there, but hardly enough to justify any acclamations). It's the Detroit Historical Society that is doing the real restoration work by having Civil War reenactors have mock battles and the such in order to raise money. Maybe some of the city fathers can give a little of their own cash (are you listening Mr. Illitch?) and bring this gem to where it should be. Folks, Historic Fort Wayne is a true ORIGINAL historical fort that just happens to be one of the few remaining structures Detroit has from the first half of the 19th century.
My favorite pictures are from the Civil War - but there are quite a few from all the wars of the 19th and 20th centuries. And there is even a chapter on its restoration.
Detroit has a history of forgetting its history. I cannot tell you how many historic structures were torn down for one inane reason or another. In fact, it's still happening to this very day - plans to tear down the beautiful and classic structure of Tiger Stadium - built in 1912 - are being discussed as I write this.
But, that's the way Detroit is.
Unfortunately, Detroit has all but ignored Historic Fort Wayne (oh, the powers that be will throw a few pennies toward restoration here and there, but hardly enough to justify any acclamations). It's the Detroit Historical Society that is doing the real restoration work by having Civil War reenactors have mock battles and the such in order to raise money. Maybe some of the city fathers can give a little of their own cash (are you listening Mr. Illitch?) and bring this gem to where it should be. Folks, Historic Fort Wayne is a true ORIGINAL historical fort that just happens to be one of the few remaining structures Detroit has from the first half of the 19th century.
Books-Under-Review-->Health-->Alternative-->Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine-->Practitioners-->United States-->Michigan-->30
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Overall, out of the hundreds of mysteries I read each year, this is one of the best I've read.