Maine Books
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This one is a keeper!Review Date: 2004-01-01
ExcellentReview Date: 1999-09-22
Advance Praise for Climbing the God TreeReview Date: 1999-04-01
"A debut novel set in a haunted Maine town. Eerie, understated, and deft. Colbert uses atmosphere the way David Lean uses scenery." -Kirkus Reviews
"The scope of Jaimee Wriston Colbert's storytelling is impressive, with no fewer than 16 central characters delineated in intricately overlapping narratives. The stories stand on their own as sensitive and unsentimental evocations of unrelieved loss." -The New York Times Book Review
"Here is a writer who, in powerfully linked stories, movingly evokes both our craving for the sacred and our tenacious embrace of the profane." -Dawn Raffel, Judge, Willa Cather Fiction Prize
"Ingeniously constructed and sensitively rendered, Climbing the God Tree is a compelling and moving novel." -Madison Smartt Bell
"Colbert has a knack for creating vivid characters and handles well the novel's recurring themes of loss and retribution." -Publisher's Weekly

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In the tradition of WaltonReview Date: 2006-05-14
Don't miss this one. You will love it.
A LITERARY LUREReview Date: 2006-01-30
Amusing, Funny and InsightfulReview Date: 2006-02-03
I personally know a few Maine fishing guides. I can tell you that Hall captures a true picture of the type of character that you might find in Maine fishing villages, with their subtle humor and unconventional thinking.
I was also impressed with the insightful knowledge of fly fishing that was sprinkled throughout the delightful stories.

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Outstanding book, but not for beginners.Review Date: 2007-09-13
Mr. Plummer teaches and demonstrates about things that can add drama to a painting such as using light, exagerating shadows, adding warm color on a generally cool scene, using analogous colors on the color wheel to create continuity, connecting shapes, deciding tonal values, etc.. He breaks the coastal elements into sky, surf, calm water, reflections, rocks, ledges and beaches, vegetation, boats, and buildings.
It's an absolutely stunning book and each painting is filled with enormous energy through the use of design methods that Carlton Plummer teaches and demonstrates in this book. I'm somewhat a beginner, but I love this book even though it would be more helpful to me if I were a bit more advanced.
Create Dramatic Coastal Scenes in WatercolorReview Date: 2007-07-11
great bookReview Date: 2006-07-06

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Homesick?Review Date: 2000-01-24
I moved away from Downeast Maine twenty years ago and I have missed it ever since. I miss the smell of the salt air and the nice cool breeze that always seems to be there. I miss the endless hay fields and the way the trees produce unheard of colors every fall. Most of all I miss the people. They are kind, honest, and carry an accent that could make anyone feel at home.
I bought the book Downeast Maine: A World Apart a month ago and I read it every day. The stories and black and white photos give the reader a true feeling for what it is like living in Downeast Maine. Reading it, I can almost smell the salt air and feel that unforgettable summer breeze. The book really brings me home again. It's wonderfull book!
Van Riper Shows Us The REAL MaineReview Date: 1999-09-21
Van Riper, a former White House correspondent for the New York Daily News ably handles both camera and notepad to record vivid, full-frame images of his neighbors. This is fundamentally a book about people, and he has clearly managed to transcend that putoffishness that Maine residents are known for to get their stories alongside their pictures. The text doesn't merely accompany, nor do the photos merely illustrate; they are inseparable components.
There is a timeless quality to these images of people, most seen at work. Only at times does a modern watch or a radar dome on a boat remind you that clams are still dug through back-breaking labor and lobster hauled up one or two at a time. The book was collected over a number of years, and italics note where the subject portrayed died between the portrait and publication -- and you feel the loss.
This is serious documentary, with more than a hint of Walker Evans and Sebastián Salgado, but with light touches as well. Van Riper devotes a page to the peculiar delight of Maine's own Grape Nuts ice cream, a confection that predates -- and in his view, outrates -- Ben and Jerry's chunky conglomerates.
A visually stunning series of what happens when a dead whale washes ashore in his small town of Kennebec closes out the book. The sharply mottled skin of the whale amid the wash-fade of a foggy illustrate the beauty of his corner of Maine, as Van Riper also tells us of hard choices a financially strapped, self-reliant community must face as it struggles to get rid of what is, after all, tons and tons of rotting flesh.
This sensitive portrayal proves that what it means to be from Maine has nothing to do with what bottled water you drink.
Lasting images from a superb photojournalist/writer/artistReview Date: 1999-08-09
His "moment" photographs are some of my favorites, including the photo of the boy at the pie-eating contest. It's an ageless photograph captured with precision timing and artful composition. These are traits of photographs throughout the book and share the essence of great documentary photojournalism--the ability to capture a simple (almost unseen) moment with artisitc and historic sensibilities. Van Riper captures this quiet beauty in medium format which lends itself to the superb reproductions.
Van Riper's fine images coupled with his words showcase his great ear for telling dialogue honed during his "other" career as a newspaper writer.

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a taste of maineReview Date: 2005-12-10
Aaron Werner
Louisville, KY
The perfect book for everyone who loves Maine.Review Date: 2004-01-14
Down the ShoreReview Date: 2004-01-05
If you never knew anything about fishing, you would have learned alot of information about the industry from the writer plus some very interesting and amusing tales. And the point of the book is to call some appreciation to the men and women who brave the elements to bring food to our tables....a great cause and so beautifully portrayed. I would highly recommend everyone see this book!

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Love it, love it, love it!Review Date: 2001-05-04
He lists the rocks and minerals found at each site and gives some information about the quality at most places, including size of crystals found, color (and quality of color), and so on.
My only regret? I don't know if I'll have time to visit each site he has listed! So many rocks, so little time........
Earth Treasures: ReviewReview Date: 2005-11-27
A Gem of a BookReview Date: 2001-07-07

Thorough and Readable Study of Plantation DevelopmentReview Date: 2000-03-26
Dunn offers a detailed contrast between the lives of the planter elite and the enslaved majority. This is a landmark work in the history of plantation agriculture in the West Indies.
The work should also interest readers of Southern history. Dunn compares the rise of a cavalier elite in Barbados to the same development in Virginia. Planters from the West Indies, especially Barbados, dominated the early years of the colony of (South) Carolina.
Other works on this period of West Indian history are Richard Sheridan's Sugar and Slavery and Gary Puckrein's Little England. Works by Hilary Beckles examine the lives of women and Blacks in this period of West Indian history.
Excellent Research Review Date: 2006-02-26
the brutality of the West Indies slave tradeReview Date: 2003-01-01

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This book's a great catch!Review Date: 2004-02-12
With an odd nickname like Fly Rod, Cornelia Crosby was bound to attract people's interest. Not only that, she was six feet tall and unusually athletic for nineteenth-century women. Ironically, she tended to be sickly as a child, so her doctor prescribed being in the outdoors as a cure. Cornelia discovered she loved to hunt and fish in the Maine woods. As a young woman, she began to write about her adventures in a popular newspaper column, using the pen name "Fly Rod." The name stuck. Sadly, a knee injury put an end to Fly Rod's active outdoor adventures, but she remained beloved by many for the rest of her long life.
An unconventional look at an unconventional woman.Review Date: 2004-01-14
--Reviewed by Nina M. Osier, author of "Granite Island"
Pleasurable text & photos from the Old Maine...Review Date: 2003-01-29

Richly detailed yet delicate.Review Date: 2002-03-03
Absolutely enchanting!Review Date: 2000-02-04
Delicate and enchantingReview Date: 2002-03-20
like the hungry bird, I, too,
am searching for sustenance and
find it in a ray
of sun that fools the clouds and
for a moment I forget home...
("During the Rainy Season")
Like a Zen painting which always leaves an empty space, so her poems draw us into her world between East and West but create at the same time an opening which allows us to find something of our own in these pages.
"Looking to the East with Western Eyes" is the expression of a fine and enchanting sensibility. Beautiful work!
Christa Polkinhorn-Umiker, Poet and Translator, Santa Monica, California.

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Maybel Takes a SailReview Date: 2000-04-12
An aptly illustrated, clever, entertaining story for kids.Review Date: 2000-07-14
Mabel booksReview Date: 2000-04-15
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