Maine Books
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Something AbidesReview Date: 2001-05-10
Solid biography about Chamberlain's later life but...Review Date: 1999-09-03
Pullen has done it again!Review Date: 2000-08-21
A genuine American hero who transcends both myth and hype.Review Date: 1999-07-06
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'Handwritten' format proved a pain in the rearReview Date: 2008-08-28
a wonderful reference for ritualReview Date: 1996-06-19
Outstanding book for women's rites of passageReview Date: 1998-07-28
A must have in any woman's libraryReview Date: 2000-02-23


Fellow-writer EnvyReview Date: 2005-11-01
Don't expect a scholarly epistle on the origins of lobsterboats and their evolution although Dinnie somehow includes an awful lot of such information. Nope, this book is what its title says it is-a series of lively interviews with those that design, build, operate, and race lobsterboats (race as in "up to 55 mph"). She gets people talking, she listens, she remembers, and it all goes down on paper so pat and smooth I can but envy her skill.
A chapter may be the result of talking to one person. Old-timers Leroy Dodge, and George Allen. Designers Arno Day and Spencer Lincoln. Builders-in-wood Peter Kass and Dick Pulsifer of Hampton Boat fame. Builders-in-fiberglass like the Young Brothers. Lobsterboat racers like Gweeka Williams and the Holland Family. (Did you know that Maine lobsterboats were invaluable support vessels in the unsuccessful effort to defend the America's Cup at San Diego in 1995? One was the famed racing lobsterboat Red Baron, which was used as a weather boat.)
Or a chapter may be Dinnie's assemblage of facts and stories about a subject. Rum-running. Old-time "fishing" (meaning lobstering). Lobsterboat superstitions. Lobsterboats as water taxis and tugs. Lobsterboats as valued family pleasure boats. Lobsterboats seining, hand-lining, gill-netting, and even lobstering.
Dnnie keeps up an easy flow of quotes, stories, facts, and fun. I highly recommend this book if only for the pleasure the reader will get from watching a very good writer stoutly march through a subject.
EntertainingReview Date: 1999-11-01
Perhaps more accurately, Mid-Coast Maine LobsterboatsReview Date: 1999-06-24
A better read than expected but not as complete as I'd hoped for.
A rich collection of commentary on Maine Lobsterboats.Review Date: 1999-08-08

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Best mystery I've read all summer...Review Date: 2005-08-30
Despite the title, this is not a particularly "occupational" mystery. The characters are not petulant and temper prone, but rather, interesting and caring.
The plot is rather twisted and convoluted, and although the denouement seems clear at one point, there is one last twist in it.
Hopefully, this is the beginning of a series.
HookedReview Date: 2004-06-04
I feel I've found a "Nancy Drew" for the Adult Crowd!Review Date: 2003-01-26
Perfect reading for a lazy summer afternoonReview Date: 2001-08-04


Weasel resurrected!Review Date: 2007-04-30
How can they clear George when he won't say where he was?Review Date: 2004-09-15
Then they find the body of Hector Gosling in this room. They consider closing the room back off and re-wallpapering so no one will know. Why? They feared Ellie's husband, George, would be considered guilty. They know he isn't, and Eastport's police chief Bob Arnold knows George's good character. But, they still know he'll be looked at hard.
What they didn't know was that Bob and his wife are out of town due to his mother taking ill. State Trooper Colgate came to town to investigate the murders.
George refuses to say where he was when Hector was murdered, so he ends up in jail.
Ellie and Jake begin to investigate Hector's murder. The fact that George refusing to let anyone visit him compounds the problem. George is attacked in prison. The fact that Ellie is very pregnant and concerned about George complicates matters.
Jake is also repairing her home. In between repairs, CPR classes, and Ellie's doctor appointments, the pair begin interviewing the various people involved.
When another corpse is discovered, they realize they need to work fast. Jake finds herself in danger before the true killer is unmasked.
I enjoy books in this series. They are a fast read. Cozy mysteries set on the east coast are a favorite of mine. Every time I read a book in this series, I wish I could visit Eastport, Maine.
Jake and Ellie are great characters. They are supported by a great cast of characters as well. They are all believable and created well. The new relationship between Jake and her dad is so well written.
I highly recommend this book.
Solid and entertainingReview Date: 2004-05-02
It turns out that there were plenty of people with good reason to want Hector dead. His partner is scheduled to inherit everything, Hector broke up his maid's engagement, and he ruined a business deal for a wood-cutting couple who are barely making ends meet. Which makes for plenty of suspects for Jake and Ellie to investigate. The problem is, none of these suspects have more reason to hate Hector than George does, and all seem to have some sort of alibi for the critical times. Only when Jake puts herself in serious harms way does she finally figure out what must have happened. And by then, it just might be too late.
Author Sara Graves mixes home renovation with detecting in an entertaining story. Jake's largely disfunctional family (ex-drug abusing son, ego-centered ex-husband, and ex-radical bomber ex-husband as well as mobster ex-business partner) are over the top but add interest to the story. Jake and Ellie do some serious detecting and are well motivated through the story. MALLETS AFORETHOUGHT is definitely worth the read.
A must read mysteryReview Date: 2004-03-03
Now an integral part of the small seaport community, Jake and her best friend Ellie are just two of the volunteers fixing up Harlequin House for a fundraising gala. When the two women uncover a secret room, they open it and find two bodies inside. One is a woman who disappeared eighty years ago while the other corpse is the enemy of Ellie's husband. Jake knows that the police will have to arrest George since he told everyone in town he wanted to kill Hector and he will not give the cops an alibi. Jake starts investigating and her search leads to a suspect that plans to kill her so he can go on living in Eastport.
Sprinkled throughout the storyline are house repair tips that are very helpful and easy to follow, but also provide a sense of normalcy that augments the who-done-it. The heroine goes the extra mile for her friends in MALLETS AFORETHOUGHT, risking her own life to save the life of her spouse whom she knows is innocent. Sarah Graves is a very descriptive writer so the reader can visualize each scene in their head.
Harriet Klausner

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A delightful bookReview Date: 2006-06-07
A very moving account of the puffin projectReview Date: 1999-09-06
project puffinReview Date: 2000-12-11
one of my favorite childrens' booksReview Date: 2001-08-05

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A Wicked Good Book!Review Date: 2008-07-08
Maine HumorReview Date: 2008-06-27
Publisher's noteReview Date: 2008-06-25
Enjoy the flavor of Maine camp life, encounter people and animals that are true to life and laugh with your gracious host, Randy Randall.
Sandbox Camp Tales from a Maine Storyteller
Not a bad startReview Date: 2008-06-20
At first he wrote the stories only for those who might come to the cabin, but then some people thought there might be a book in the making. So here it is. The book makes no pretensions of being something other then what it is, one man?s view of the world as he remembers it and sees it today. Like many good storytellers he might exaggerate a little, or a lot, beat around the bushes some, and be a little loose with his facts, but as he says, his purpose is merely to entertain--even if only for a moment. And if you are pleasantly distracted and find yourself wishing you could find that old cabin in the Maine woods, then this Maine storyteller has done his job.
Randy Randall is a native Mainer. He lives on the banks of the Saco River where he and his wife Jean with her family are co-owners of Marston's Marina. A few years ago he retired from a career with IBM and has been busy since then trying to get his money's worth from the English degree he earned years ago at the University of Maine. He calls himself a raconteur and apprentice writer working to improve his style and delivery. The result of his efforts is this first book of collected stories and essays. Among other things he is a registered Maine Guide, a Vietnam vet, a retired Scout Master, and he goes lobster fishing. When he's not pumping gas for customer's boats at the marina you can usually find him out on Saco Bay pulling his traps.

The Western WindReview Date: 2004-11-04
An Interesting BookReview Date: 2003-12-10
As sparklingly craggy as the coast of Maine itself!Review Date: 2000-08-15
This is the best book!!! It is so realistic interesting!!!!!Review Date: 1999-08-08

A book worth reading, not for the fainted heartReview Date: 2000-06-12
Human Rights ConcernsReview Date: 2004-05-05
Thought-provokingReview Date: 2001-10-21

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beautiful photos, but skipped part of trailReview Date: 2007-09-11
delightful readReview Date: 2004-05-20
with Ms Dykstra (canadian!) i hiked from Maine to Gaspe on the IAT.
as an armchair traveller i found this short book (137 pages) thoroughly enjoyable. easy to read, wonderfull glossy pages and photos, heartfelt humour and pain; i wanted more. the end of the book has extensive guide lines for those who want to do the hike.
The very best kind of travel writingReview Date: 2004-10-04
If I have any criticism of this book it is that it had to end. Dykstra's seven-week journey on the Appalachian Trail flashes by in just a few hours of reading time, when I wanted it to keep on going and going and going... Perhaps the publisher can talk her into walking the remainder of the Trail, from Maine to Georgia, and we can have another enchanting book that is three times as long and filled with even more breathtaking photos. My highest possible recommendation for purchase.
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Unlike Sis Deans', "His Proper Post;" Michael Golay's, "To Gettysburg and Beyond;" or Willard M. Wallace's, "Soul of the Lion," Pullen's text does not presume to be a complete biography. It does not address the question of what forces in Chamberlain's up-bringing formed such an extraordinary man.
Unlike Chamberlain's own books "Through Blood & Fire at Gettysburg," and "The Passing of the Armies;" or Michael Shaara's, "The Killer Angels," and Alice Rains Trulock's, "In The Hands of Providence," this is not primarily a book about soldiers at war.
The question that Pullen addresses is, "What becomes of the hero after the battles cease: how is courage displayed after the war ends?" In the case of Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, and other great Americans, the answer is that true heroes continue to demonstrate the same commitment to service in peace as in war. True heroes demonstrate the same integrity and courage in their chosen civilian occupations that they once showed while facing iminent death.
Forget the trendy books on leadership and values. Instead, read Mr. Pullen's book. Be inspired by the story of an exceptional leader, who demonstrated his commitment to American values until the day he died.