Massachusetts Books
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Discover the perceptive minds of children in this book!Review Date: 1998-12-08
Descriptive AnthropologyReview Date: 1998-11-20
A must read for educatorsReview Date: 1998-11-03
Goldman-Segall addresses relevant issues for educators.Review Date: 1998-11-17

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Delicious Bread PuddingReview Date: 2005-10-06
Each chapter begins with stories of the area and Tinky Weisblat shares her cooking experiences. Instantly you are drawn into a world of delicious soups and oatmeal bread. I felt nostalgic as I read about banana cake and glazed pecans. These are treats you may remember from childhood.
Delicious Winter Recipes:
Rhubarb Crisp
Chicken Curry
Chocolate Cherry Cake
Recipes for Summer:
Strawberry Rhubarb Jam
Aunt Lizzie's Ginger Drink
When I needed a recipe for bread pudding to use up my day-old hoagie rolls (they work very nicely sliced), Eric Carle's Bread Pudding looked quite delicious and very rich.
As usual when I'm cooking from a recipe in a cookbook, I used what I had on hand and substituted dried cherries for the raisins, champagne for the Grand Marnier (with ΒΌ teaspoon Fiori di Sicilia is is about the same), sucanat for the sugar and the addition of apple pie spice on the top with cinnamon sugar and a drizzle of melted butter. Needless to say, I was impressed with how the recipe turned out. It seems you could really vary the tastes and create just about any type of bread pudding with his recipe. The possibilities seem endless and you could make seasonal classics.
My father used to tell me stories about Dandelion Wine and this cookbook actually has a recipe. The art in this book is quaint and lends a nostalgic quality. Judith Russell's folk art has been exhibited in Historic Deerfield and was inspired by the beauty around her.
You may find yourself wishing for a wood fire and the chill of winter or wishing you could jump into the pictures and experience farm life and the cozy feeling of a warm house with snow falling outside the windows. Through creating the foods in this cookbook, you can experience the healing effects of comfort foods. Cookbook collectors will be especially pleased with this find. Perfect for reading on a cold winter night.
~The Rebecca Review
As fun to browse as it is easy to cook fromReview Date: 2004-09-15
The Pudding Hollow CookbookReview Date: 2004-08-31
The best elements of the book for me, however, are Tinky's evocation of life in rural "West County". Having spent childhood vacations with family in the area, I enjoyed seeing references to seasonal celebrations (Yankee Doodle Days), regionalisms (people from Heath are known as "Heathens"), and comments about places I regard fondly (the Mohawk Trail and Shelburne Falls' Bridge of Flowers). While the region has become remarkably cosmopolitan in recent years, and the recipes reflect that, it is the evocation of long ago that touched my heart.
Judith Russell's illustrations grace and complement the text with a delightful folk art quality. Her paintings and drawings capture the simplicity of life in the Pudding Hollow region and the seasonal delights to be found there.
More than a cookbook!Review Date: 2004-08-26

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reviewReview Date: 2002-01-18
A must-haveReview Date: 2002-02-19
Most comprehensive coverageReview Date: 2000-07-26
Previous reviewers say "lavish"; I say gorgeous.Review Date: 1998-05-09

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A must read!Review Date: 2001-07-19
OUTSTANDING! Pointed, engaging, inspiring, and well-written.Review Date: 1999-07-31
This is a fresh approach to sustainable suburban living.Review Date: 1999-08-16
A book that will inspire actionReview Date: 2000-05-27
Land's Sake sends about one-fifth of their fresh organic produce to Boston's homeless shelters and food pantries, as well as sponsoring a Harvest for Hunger every September, thus ensuring that their surplus finds an assured wholesale market (the town pays the price to send the food to the inner city) which benefits the disadvantaged and disenfranchised in the nearby urban areas. Donahue shows that suburbia "is the condition of residing outside the city proper with little functional connection to one's neighbors, aside from the schools, and almost no functional connection to the land," and he shows that community farms on common land offer a vibrant opportunity to keep farmland from being lost to development, and to transform the suburban condition from alienation to connection. This is a surprisingly powerful and exciting book that will show suburban and city readers how to become more connected to their land and to their source of food.

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New Red Sox InsightsReview Date: 2005-06-02
Red Sox Heroes of YesteryearReview Date: 2005-06-15
The Real World of BaseballReview Date: 2005-06-10
Wonderful CompilationReview Date: 2005-04-29
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Great jobReview Date: 2008-09-30
The best book of its type I have seenReview Date: 1997-02-06
A must have if you are interested in land use planning!Review Date: 1999-07-03
This book is available through ...Review Date: 2004-05-23

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InvolvingReview Date: 2008-08-24
brings an end to the idea of pure good and pure evilReview Date: 2006-12-28
Witches, Bewitching, and more Bewitching!Review Date: 2007-11-23
An Excellent Window into a Dark Time in HistoryReview Date: 2006-10-15
Salem Witch is set, as you might expect from the title, during the Salem witch trials of 1692. Elizabeth is the only child of relatively affluent and educated parents. Her father is a merchant who owns several ships, and her mother, atypical for the time, knows how to read. Because of her slightly unconventional upbringing, Elizabeth is more independent and free-thinking than most of the other Salem girls. Her best friend is a boy named George, the son of a local magistrate. George loves art and drawing, but is being pressured by his father to put aside such frivolous pursuits and take on the more practical career of law. Although the two are close friends, their different views on the witch trials put them at odds with one another.
I've always had an interest in the Salem witch trials, having grown up 20 miles from Salem. I think that Patricia Hermes did a nice job in this book of creating a fictional story, but populating it with actual people and events (and even dialog from trial transcripts) from the time. The story begins as several young girls start having fits, and claiming that witches are tormenting them. The first "witches" accused are social outcasts: a slave, a homeless woman and child, and a cantankerous old woman, all of whom have no one to speak for them. However, as the accusers start to feel more power, and as the climate of fear and dread darkens the community, more mainstream citizens are also targeted.
The outspoken Elizabeth doesn't believe in witches, and is convinced that the accusers are malicious and attention-seeking, part of a conspiracy to stir up trouble. This puts her in danger, and also puts her at odds with George, who is being pressured by his father to believe the accusations. George beseeches Elizabeth to be more careful about what she says, and she starts to wonder if she can trust him at all. This dynamic between the two friends, who care for each other, but aren't sure if they can trust one another, works well in the My Side of the Story format. We leave Elizabeth's story uncertain of George's actions, and only find resolution at the end of his story.
This book is a quick read, but one that tackles a difficult subject. It is not for the faint of heart (hangings, the imprisonment of a four-year-old girl, and references to Indian attacks), although I think that the author did a good job of conveying these events without being sensationalistic. She also does an excellent job with the atmosphere of the books, using the gray Salem weather as counterpoint to the fear and superstition that are ruining people's lives. Elizabeth is a good choice of narrator: young enough to be troubled and frightened by the events, but educated enough not to be swayed by them. George has more of an insider's view, as his father presides over some of the trials, and his story gives some peripheral insight into the influence of other recent events on the trials.
It's amazing in some ways to read this book and think that people were actually killed based on the unproven accusations of a group of discontented girls. But then again, this sort of thing has happened more recently with the epidemic of repressed memories of childhood abuse (though the accused were not generally hanged). I think that it's useful to study the Salem witch trials as a means of understanding and of preventing such out-of-control behavior from happening again.
I think that the Salem witch trials and the My Side of the Story format are a good fit, giving the reader sympathy for the accused and for the frightened majority who went along with the trials. Using a boy and a girl as narrators is also a way to make the book more accessible to boys and girls. I think that this book will be a hit with middle grade kids who enjoy historical fiction, especially those living in New England. I recommend the newly published Salem Witch for this year's Halloween reading.
This book review was originally published on my blog, Jen Robinson's Book Page, on October 14, 2006.

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TransportingReview Date: 2007-07-28
The adventures of a rebellious 17th century orphan Review Date: 2006-02-28
She chafes against her lowly, outcast position in a society that claims itself egalitarian, and resentfully despises their hypocrisy, but it doesn't occur to her to renounce the only religion and community she has ever known. Where would she go? What would she do? She does her work and confines her rebellion to small things - until she falls in love and lust with Adam Stradling, son of the Saints' minister and leader and a bit of a rebel himself, who delights her with his irreverent mimicry of his father, John.
Beahrs, with a background in archaeology and anthropology, bases this community on the Plymouth Colony people, the Pilgrims, as they came to be called. Farmers (husbandmen) for the most part, they keep to themselves, shunning the world and fearful of persecution. Because they do not recognize the king as the head of their church, their religion is illegal. Within the community discipline is harsh, with the stocks employed for infractions like observing forbidden holidays or clinging to superstitions. It is a pared down religion, shorn of frills and ceremony.
But Beahrs keeps his characters human, allowing them to stray from the righteous path in one direction or another. Some, including Melode, cling to the community because it's all they know. But when their land is rented and when the owner dies and his son brings in new settlers, the Saints decide to leave behind their familiar, but no longer safe world and migrate to the New World.
John Stradling sends Adam to London to arrange passage. Although eager for the adventure, Adam promises to reunite with Melode on the ship. Naturally things do not go as smoothly as Melode hopes, but to say more would be to sacrifice some of the plot's suspense. And there is plenty of that.
Not edge-of-the-seat, nail-biting suspense, but an absorbing, character-driven desire to know what happens next. And plenty does. From stifling, smelly berths and storm-tossed leaky hulls to precarious coastal fishing camps, frightening and frightened natives, isolated bird-nesting islands and fractious, struggling settlements, the story moves through much that the journey to the New World could offer in those early days and does it well.
Beahrs has a flair for the cadence of the language. Though he readily admits that no one can know exactly what people sounded like in the early 1600s he does a good job of making the reader feel transported.
Early in the book, the young girls are raking hay:
"I slip into the rhythm of the work line. The raking is rough and tacky where the grass is cut low, tines bumping over warm earth and cropped stalks. Hay builds beneath my rake, heaping in heavy banks. I pull the wooden handle back but it's all pillowy, durable hindrance. We've missed the first cool hour, and the heat of the day is trapped beneath the layers of my clothes like flax oil. The handle is rough and unfinished, and grates against my hands. Sweat beads on my forehead."
His prose is tactile, helping us experience Melode's world, from the extreme but ordinary lack of privacy to the harangue of the meeting room, the strangeness of a new continent and the timelessness of human emotions. Well written, with a fine, melodramatic plot, "Strange Saint" is an adventure for those who like some substance to their historical novels.
--Portsmouth Herald
A "Strange New World" that Beahrs uncoversReview Date: 2006-02-11
Extremely well-written with a compelling narrative, Beahrs has re-created a fascinating time in history with a page-turning plot.
Strange Saint by Andrew BeahrsReview Date: 2005-10-04

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Great visuals for the young!Review Date: 2007-11-25
Wonderful!Review Date: 2003-06-13
Writing the same review for the other two in this trilogy. Excellent all!
A GREAT BOOK!Review Date: 2002-11-24
This is a wonderful book !Review Date: 1998-11-13
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3 Young PilgrimsReview Date: 2008-05-08
Wonderful book, especially for those with Mayflower kin!Review Date: 1999-06-17
Three Young Pilgrims is the best Thanksgiving book for youngReview Date: 1999-11-12
An Unusual GemReview Date: 2001-10-10
Crazy James
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