Illinois Books
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FantasticReview Date: 2008-02-20
Great book, easy enjoyable read for any injured workerReview Date: 2007-12-08
Very HelpfulReview Date: 2007-12-06
Easy readingReview Date: 2007-12-05

Used price: $13.09

Mesmerizing and important...Review Date: 2008-05-02
Absolutely stunning and fantastical - lost in the detritus of human tragedy is often the point that adversity creates heroes of ordinary people.
Hermann Wygoda was just that - a hero.
This is an important story to be shared throughout the generations.
Awe InspiringReview Date: 2006-03-16
I would highly recommend this book to anyone who does not believe that one man can make a difference in the world.
Kelly Mallett Lowe
Amazing true-life adventure.Review Date: 1998-10-25
"Audacity", he said, "is a prerequisite for survival", and Wygoda had plenty. Escaping occupied Poland, actually travelling into Germany to work under the noses of the Nazis (even those who could "smell a Jew"), and eventually commanding a division of Italian partisans, the author exhibited a rare courage and determination that earned awards from three Allied nations.
His story, written in later life for his children, is recommended for WWII readers, Holocaust students, and anyone else who enjoys true-life action adventures.(The "score" rating is an unfortunately ineradicable feature of the page. This reviewer does not "score" books.)
A Man of Indomitable WillReview Date: 1999-03-19


Indiana Dunes Saved For MeReview Date: 2007-01-13
Great book chronicling an undiscovered treasureReview Date: 2007-01-09
More than corn fieldsReview Date: 2006-12-24
Recommended for supplemental reading lists in the areas of environmental studies and American Midwestern history.Review Date: 2006-11-05

Used price: $16.09

Great bookReview Date: 2007-12-15
grab it!Review Date: 2007-12-14
History of Chicago West SideReview Date: 2007-12-13
Inspired by this book!Review Date: 2007-12-10

Solid HistoryReview Date: 2006-04-12
fantastic biographyReview Date: 2004-04-08
Davout, Le TerribleReview Date: 2000-06-21
Excellent Military BiographyReview Date: 2000-05-04
This is an excellent biography of a Napoleonic commander. The book covers Davout's military career from when he entered the Ecole royale militaire in 1779, through the Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars and finally his death in 1823. The narrative flowed along faultlessly although I would have liked more detail in regards to Davout's battles. However the author has covered these battles well enough and provided eight maps to assist the reader in following the action. Davout fought in numerous campaigns from Egypt to Russia and was successful always, his most famous battle being at Auerstadt.
Mr Gallaher has also supplied the reader with some insight into Davout the man with details of his relationship with his devoted wife and the tragedies of his children. You leave this book with a feeling that Davout was a man who did his all for duty (France and the Emperor) but never forgot his family. I loved reading this book and I felt it was not long enough (420 pages). I fretted about finishing, I wanted more, I did not want to put the book down nor finish it!
I would recommend this book to anyone who loves reading about the napoleonic period or anybody who enjoys a decent military biography. This is a great book about a great commander.

Used price: $9.95

profoundReview Date: 2004-12-25
warfareReview Date: 2000-03-28
Fire circle chantsReview Date: 2001-03-31
Profound, groundbreaking, important.Review Date: 1999-06-09
It's a landmark for its contribution, but also as an extraordinary piece of literature in itself. Prose so shining you want to lick it off the page.

Used price: $34.64

the holy grail of American music researchReview Date: 2008-01-24
Updating HistoryReview Date: 2008-02-18
A colorful look at a forgotten eraReview Date: 2005-01-20
"Lost Sounds" is a detailed look at an aspect of the American music industry that is not just forgotten; it seems never to have been fully appreciated -- the early years of recorded music, with an emphasis on the essential contribution made by African American artists. The book has been praised as a unique reference work, and it is that; but it is also a rich history of late 19th- and early 20th-century American popular culture, as well as a collection of poignant personal stories of the entertainers who created it. Along the way, the book offers a primer on recording technology. And, although these accounts of once-popular performers and their now-unfamiliar careers and music are not in the least preachy, they do constitute a carefully documented examination of a key -- and painful -- era in American race relations.
Author Tim Brooks is himself an unobtrusive character in these adventures, the modest yet sympathetic researcher who has come along a century after the fact to ferret out the information, breathe new life into it, and in many instances save it from oblivion.
All of which makes "Lost Sounds" not only an extraordinary good read, but also an exceptional good deed.
No library shelf should be without itReview Date: 2005-04-03
Additionally, U.S. copyright laws have made it nearly impossible for anyone to reissue them as CDs. According to the author, there were approximately 800 recordings made by African Americans prior to 1920, the majority of which are still intact but half of which are owned by successor corporations like Sony and BMG who will neither reissue them nor allow anyone else to do so. Which explains why the majority of this material ends up being released overseas.
The book documents more than 40 artists chronologically, assessing their work and skillfully placing their biographies within the context of a complex and tumultuous era. It covers the famous (Bert Williams, Eubie Blake, Fisk Jubilee Singers) and a host of lesser-knows. The Discography provides a listing of CD reissues (if available) for each chapter, plus web sites where you'll most likely find them.
While seemingly an exhaustive tome, the author himself reminds us it's intended to stimulate preservation and future research: the final chapter "Miscellaneous Recordings" examines unissued recordings, "custom" noncommercial recordings, rumored but unconfirmed recordings, records by artists sometimes misidentified as black and more, in the hopes that future research will turn up more information.
Though massive at 656 pages, the book is highly readable and entertaining, very well organized and indexed making it easy to zoom in on particular aspects of interest. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in the era of early recording in general, or African American studies in particular, and feel no library shelf should be without it. It's a wonderful resource for interdisciplinary studies.

Used price: $7.86

Evidence of Mauretanians in the MidwestReview Date: 2003-09-21
The author begins with a thorough history of King Juba II and how he and his wife, Cleopatra Selene became rulers of ancient Mauretania in North Africa. Then continues to explain the war waged by Rome against this semi-independent nation and it's effects, or the Mauertanian exodus it caused. All of these events the author illustrates in a slightly dramatized manner. With the majority of chapters that follow, he focuses on the Illinois site; it's relics and the comments of various experts, while giving his own viewpoints and understandings. The information is arranged well with perfect quotes at the start of each chapter, plenty of black and white photos and a summarizing timeline. Because there is still much that remains untold and undiscovered on the subject, could be why the book wasn't closed with a strong conclusion. And I also felt that a few more maps, besides the one of Illinois would have been beneficial to the book. But otherwise I was pleased with it overall.
Whether the existence of a "treasure house of gold" remains entirely true or not, it still is a very interesting and educational read. Even the actions and nature of Mr. Burrows, and the trouble he caused interested investigators, makes it read almost something like a fiction novel. And as controversial as theories can be, it still is a story that shouldn't be ignored or remain lost in time. For starters, Frank Joseph's book will entice your curiosity.
Suspenseful Report on the as of Then 21-Year-Old Burrows Cave Controversy's DevelopmentReview Date: 2007-05-15
The structure of the 2003 book is most rewarding. Five chapters (1/4 of the book) is devoted to ancient Mediterranean history, featuring Egypt, Rome (including Greece), Numidia and Mauretania. Starting with Cleopatra and ending with her grandkids. The popularly "educated" via respective Hollywood movies will be left very surprised. The next chapter is devoted to reconstructed history at the time, after Caligula turned the Roman empire's previous amicable relationship with ancient Mauretania (roughly today's Morocco) sour, conquered that African kingdom, leading to an exodus of its multicultural population to the only save haven: The Americas, largely unknown to Rome, but not to the Africans. Seven chapters are devoted to the controversy of most important archaeological find of the century (at least) versus most elaborate hoax. Usually I don't care that much for this sort of focus, but in this case I can promise a most suspensefull and eye-opening reading experience of this major section of the book. Two chapters are devoted to general evidence of Africans in the pre-Columbian Americas (largely not copying Ivan Van Sertima's 1976 classic They Came Before Columbus: The African Presence in Ancient America, but listing fresh findings). Another two are devoted to the evidence of the Illinois cave itself, analyzing the many significances.
Be prepared that this print doesn't finish up everything about Burrows Cave and that you will google it after having finished this book. The reason for that is that within the 21 years after its discovery an all-encompassing scientific analasys of the cave could not take place. For the most absurd, yet fascinating, mostly saddening, frustrating and angering reasons. Yet many objects have been able to get scientifically analyzed, in a CSI fashion. And yes, the way, all of this has been handled could be described as a crime. By virtually everyone involved. That provides for an unexpected reading. Not only focusing on the find itself, but the high-handedness of the discoverer who doesn't want to diclose too much, the greed of some of the involved, asocial private collectors, ignorance and arrogance of prejudiced experts, inadequate laws, the utter passivity of the government throughout the entire affair and many more failures of I-and-I (us) humans who are obviously not able to deal with such a find, no matter from which perspective. As a result, this treasure has survived almost two millennia, getting protected by Native Americans during that time, only to get largely lost, destroyed and otherwise inaccessible within a few years of exposure to current Western culture. I hardly dared to turn the pages for the contrast of awestruck wonder for the 1st century A.D. forgotten Mauretanian exodus with its evidence left behind and the grim despair of having to learn about our contemporaries: "What have they done now to the historic evidence?!".
If you are interested in the subject of early "discoveries" of the Americas preceding Columbus from all sorts of peoples such as Africans, Polynesians, Chinese and Europeans, would like to read an update (of 2006) and are able to overstand German, look for "Bevor Kolumbus kam. Die frühen Entdecker Amerikas" by Rene Oth (literally translating as: "Before Columbus Came: The Early Discoverers of America")
An inherently interesting and iconoclastic discourseReview Date: 2003-10-08
Africans in the midwest before columbus?Review Date: 2003-08-15

Used price: $12.98

An penetrating self-examination of a life, political and otherwiseReview Date: 2007-06-28
This is history as truth, not as a Chicago establishment/media snow job!Review Date: 2007-04-27
Dan Walker inspired an entire generation of citizens to get involved in government, to make it better, to serve the needs of their communities and the State of Illinois. This inspiration was provided by a vision to clean the system up, the improve it, and to make it accountable. Sadly, the power structure recognized his popularity in the state, and after he left office, engaged in an 8 year effort to discredit him. Ultimately they found something. Trivial, but sufficient to bring him down.
This book chronicles the entire story, from its earliest beginnings deep in the early days of the Daley Machine, all the way through his walk through the state, election, term as Governor, and ultimately his downfall. Notably, he was convicted not for anything he did while in government, but rather for technical violations of Savings and Loans regulations. If you had any doubt about the viciousness of the party regulars in Illinois, on both sides of the aisle, this book ought to be a reference point for your investigations. And, you can expect the fireworks again, should this book be reviewed in the coming months in and around Chicago.
Read it for yourself. I did, and though I lived through the events, there was still much to be learned by looking back. Equally important are the lessons it provides today for students of Illinois politics, Mayor Daley, Barak Obama, and anyone thought to have a seat "at the table" in our government today.
Nothing Short of EnlighteningReview Date: 2007-06-03
A terrific read and remarkable insight into American politicsReview Date: 2007-06-03
It is really three stories woven into one. The first is Dan Walker's rise from Navy enlisted man to Annapolis graduate to U.S. Supreme Court clerk to Governor of Illinois. The second is the inside story of how politics and government really worked - and probably still works - in Mayor Richard J. Daley's Chicago and Illinois. And third, an improbable prison memoir, for Governor Walker served 18 months in Federal prison for the failure of his S&L.
Governor Walker, who served one term as the Independent Democratic governor of Illinois from 1973 thru 1977, was a reform-minded, anti-machine, "good government" administrator. He took on the pay-to-play practices of the Chicago machine that are still too-prevalent today - the Jack Abramoff scandal is just one example still making headlines - and paid a huge political price. Challenged by Mayor Daley's hand-picked candidate in his re-election primary, Walker lost. The Democratic candidate then lost to the Republican, "Big Jim" Thompson, and the GOP controlled the Illinois state house for the next 20 years.
It is the story-behind-the-story, however, that is truly fascinating. How politicians - from both parties - controlled jobs and votes is the real story. The real workings of machine politics -- from the ward level up thru the governor's office and into the U.S. Attorney's prosecution for a victimless regulatory error - are conveyed clearly and dramatically. Few political science texts come close to this insider's insight.
The most disturbing parts of the book are Governor Walker's reminiscences about life in the (so-called "minimum" security) prison in Duluth, Minnesota. Every chapter of the book starts with a scene from prison life, and each is more depressing than the previous one. Perhaps what was so surprising for me was that while I never thought of myself as "pro-prison reform," I came away from this book angry about the official abuses and degradations.
"The Maverick and the Machine" should be required reading in every college political science class that even touches on American politics or government. And for the political junkies among us, it is the must-read sleeper of the year!

Used price: $11.83
Collectible price: $40.00

Dollhouse 1/12" scaleReview Date: 2007-11-29
Highly recommended!Review Date: 2002-01-24
"Miniature Rooms" begins with a brief history of Mrs. Thorne and how the rooms came to be. The rest of the book is a complete catalog of the Rooms, divided into two sections - the European rooms and the American rooms. Every room is beautifully photographed from at least two angles, using the existing lighting in the rooms so that each has the same realistic quality enjoyed in the Institute. Along with each photograph is a description of the room and its furnishings. I would recommend "Miniature Rooms" to anyone who enjoys the Art of Miniatures.
Absolutely captivating!!Review Date: 2006-12-22
The Definitive Book on The Thorne RoomsReview Date: 2005-11-20
I have visited The Thorne Rooms many times over the years and they never fail to enchant me. This book allows me to call them to mind easily and aids me in my own building of miniature rooms. The one thing that the book cannot show is the great attention to detail Mrs. Thorne gave to the rooms off the main rooms and the outside scenery created for each room. However, the book does give an excellent idea of the nature of the rooms and the reason why they are so famous and loved.
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