Oregon Books


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Oregon Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Oregon
Holy Rollers: Murder and Madness in Oregon's Love Cult
Published in Paperback by Caxton Press (2002-03-01)
Authors: Theresa McCracken and Robert B. Blodgett
List price: $16.95
New price: $4.49
Used price: $4.49
Collectible price: $250.00

Average review score:

A Story From 100 Years Ago...With A Message For Today
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-25
It happened a hundred years ago. But it could be happening right now. "Holy Rollers; Murder and Madness in Oregon's Love Cult" can be read and appreciated on many levels. On the surface, it's a great true crime potboiler, filled with religion, sex and murder. But its also a cautionary tale about the vulnerability of seemingly normal, well-adjusted people to the seductions of mass insanity. Whether it's Edmund Creffeld in 1905, Adolph Hitler in 1933 or Jim Jones in 1978, we've seen it happen again and again. In fact, the story in this book has a peculiar kind of resonance in that one of the key locations--Waldport, Oregon, also was the place where the Heaven's Gate cult held its first public gathering.

Edmund Creffeld was a Salvation Army dropout who arrived in Corvallis, Oregon in 1900 to start a new church. Within a few short years, he had persuaded some of the community's leading citizens--primarily of the female gender--to join his cult of madness. They literally practiced "holy rolling," sometimes turning themselves over and over for hours and hours at a time, becoming all the more caught up in the cult of Creffeld's strange personality. Creffeld was tarred and feathered (really!) and run out of town. That didn't stop him, nor did a stretch in the state prison. His ultimate, violent end seems almost foreordained.

T. McCracken and Robert Blodgett have combined their talents to produce an amazing story. Thanks to exhaustive research in newspapers and other contemporary sources, they're able to re-create the wild ride of Creffeld and his cult in vivid, day-to-day detail. I finished the book in a single sitting; I predict you will, too.--William C. Hall

Fascinating Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-10
This was definitely a page-turner! I live in this area. So, it was interesting to imagine that this went on right here! I had never heard about it, and I have lived here for the last 25 years. Makes me want to examine all the houses and areas they went to.

The book is written with a newspaper sensationalism kind of feel, but that shouldn't bother you too much.

Holy Rollers Rocks
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-23
The authors give us a true account, set in "the good old days", showing us that murderous cults didn't start with the Manson family, and religious fanatacism isn't an import nurtured only in foreign lands. Immediate and enthralling as any real crime story currently on the shelves or TV, this page-turning ride has just the right amount of wry, observational wit to balance the horrors. I loved it.

An incredible, painstaking reconstruction
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-12
Collaboratively researched and written by T. McCracken and Robert B. Blodgett, Holy Rollers: Murder And Madness In Oregon's Love Cult is the "truth is stranger than fiction" story of the "Holy Roller" religious cult that made brutal newspaper headlines in 1903. It all began when Salvation Army dropout Edmund Creffield arrived in Corvallis, Oregon and founded a new "church". The city fathers were less than impressed -- but not so their wives and daughters! A century later, descendants of the people involved in the macabre events of Creffield's Holy Roller Cult still refuse to discuss what happened. Holy Rollers is an incredible, painstaking reconstruction and revealing expose that create a gripping book that offers especial insight into the dark side of mass psychology, religious hysteria, and unbridled charismatic religious authority.

Oregon
Insiders' Guide to Portland, Oregon, 5th: Including the Metro Area and Vancouver, Washington (Insiders' Guide Series)
Published in Paperback by Insiders' Guide (2007-01-01)
Author: Rachel Dresbeck
List price: $18.95
New price: $4.04
Used price: $3.45

Average review score:

Hard to interpret
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
This book has lots of useful information, but fails to tie the information in to graphics for those of us who have trouble visualizing the locations from the text. The neighborhoods are described by their names, and rougly tied into the city as a whole. However, the maps are not specific enough.

Highly Rated for Military Transfers!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-25
These books (there is a series) are the first resource we go to upon learning that it is, once again, time for us to transfer. They have all the information that most people could need and I recommend them to every military person I know that is in the process of transferring to make their move just a little bit easier. A look at the contents of this particular book:

Area Overview
Getting Here, Getting Around
History
Bed-and-Breakfast Inns
Hotels and Motels
Restaurants
Brewpubs
Coffeehouses
Nightlife
Shopping
Attractions
Kidstuff
Festivals and Annual Events
The Arts
Recreation and Spectator Sports
Portland Parks
Golf
Day Trips
Relocation
Child Care and Education
Health Care and Wellness
Retirement
Media
Worship
Index

No, there aren't a lot of pictures, but I can buy a coffee-table book for that. This is information and lots of it - including addresses, phone numbers, and websites when appropriate. Great for visitors and potential newcomers alike!

Good For Info
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
I liked the information in this book, Even has school listings. I was purchasing it for tourism purposes and it covers that but doesn't have pictures or long descriptions and prices. Since that is what I was looking for I was a little disappointed. Good for info bad for tourists.

A Great Book About The Portland Metro Area
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-28
INSIDERS' GUIDE TO PORTLAND, OREGON, 5TH is a great guide to the cities of Portland and Vancouver, as well as their surrounding suburbs. Besides such information as house values, attractions, and the quality of schools in the area, the book also features detailed listings of the radio stations in the area, as well as in-depth discussions of what types of healthy-eating ideas and ethnic cuisine you can find in this metroplex. The book lacks a deep discussion of shopping malls in the area, preferring instead to focus on the other types of stores where a guy can find things to keep his woman happy, including CDs to dance to with her and clothes to help him look his best for her, which seems to indicate that independent stores are often the way to go to keep such promises, especially in a high-culture area such as Portland/Vancouver. Despite the lack of information on local malls, however, it's a wonderful book.

Oregon
Lebanon Pioneer Cemetery: 200 Dodge St., Lebanon, OR : the end of the trail
Published in Unknown Binding by City of Lebanon, Oregon (1991)
Author: Patricia Dunn
List price:

Average review score:

Insightful and Unbiased
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-29
As is usual with any of Alistair Cooke's writing, that unmistakable transatlantic voice can be heard behind the words as if the author himself was reading his work to an audience of one - you. The generations who would remember the men of whom he has written are fast coming to an end, but there is enough in each of these insightful vignettes to whet the appetite of a true biography-phile of whatever era. I would say that Cooke enjoyed the company of each of his subjects, but that did not put him beyond objective honesty. The saddest, most poignant and ultimately most honest comment of all was that of his summing up of Edward VIII - "The most damning epitaph you can compose about Edward - as a prince, as a king, as a man - is one that all comfortable people should cower from deserving:he was at his best only when the going was good" To see more reviews go to http://barbaraceciliastewartbrowning.blogspot.com

An all class act
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-09
Many of us who appreciate the work of truly great non-fiction writers were deeply saddened by the recent passing of Alistair Cooke.

Although best remembered for his long running radio commentary "A Letter from America" and his various television shows of early years, it makes for a pleasant change to go back and rediscover some of Mr Cooke's more substantial literary efforts.

A graduate in English literature from Cambridge University and a print journalist of considerable experience, Alistair managed to perfect a difficult balancing act. Throughout his long and prestigious career he steadfastly adhered to the highest professional and intellectual standards while still managing to enjoy enviable success within the mass media. In many ways he "Raised the bar" in regard to industry standards by proving that there was, indeed, a sizeable market for quality work if it was cleverly presented in an entertaining and accessible style.

In this book the veteran newspaper man draws upon his impressive array of observational and descriptive skills to create a striking collection of penetrating celebrity profiles. Alistair wrote with the deft, light hand of a popular scribe but also with the probing incisiveness of a psychology professor. At all times he examined the inner workings of his subjects with an almost clinical thoroughness and a commendable sense of fairness. When it came to creating word pictures, the man was an old master.

Alistair Cooke was a consummate journalist - an "all class act" and a credit to his chosen calling .

Incisive, Beautifully Written
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-15
Mr. Cooke is a very bright, amusing, observant man -- who writes so extraordinarily well you'll wish to re-read passage after passage for the pleasure of the sounds. He has chosen six men of diverse background and writes about them with sympathy -- but more importantly for this reader, with an acute sense of their singularity and what made them so. Any reader would only wish the book much longer because it's a beautiful one.

Interesting biographies by an interpreter of their lives.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-02
Six famous transatlantic figures: 3 English and 3 American men, all of whom had a legendary meaning in the seventies: Charles Chaplin, H. L. Mencken, Humphrey Bogart, Adlai Stevenson, Bertrand Russell and Edward VIII. I liked his style of writing and he really provided insightful surprises on each of these famous men. An interesting read, if not for the history alone.

Oregon
Lonely Planet Washington, Oregon & the Pacific Northwest (Lonely Planet Travel Guides)
Published in Paperback by Lonely Planet (2008-06)
Author: Sandra Bao
List price: $24.99
New price: $12.48
Used price: $16.54

Average review score:

Good Book, Double Check Printed Prices
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
Great book and very helpful for our travels. Many of the prices printed were out of date (Hotels, entertainment, etc...) but prices change often so just call and check.

Excellent Companion
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-22
This and Fodor's Pacific Northwest served well as our guides to the Oregon & Washington coasts for three weeks. As longtime AAA (autoclub) members we still carry and occasionally refer to their guidebooks; but, prefer Lonely Planet & Fodor's.

Yet Another Great Book About The Pacific Northwest
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
LONELY PLANET WASHINGTON, OREGON, AND THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST is yet another great book covering the highly bountiful Pacific Northwestern region of the United States, as well as British Columbia in Canada. Although it lacks extensive coverage of media options for each major city in the region, that's more than compensated for by in-depth descriptions of sightseeing, dining, and outdoor activities, as well as discussion of local vernaculars. This is a book that no one who enjoys traveling should be without.

I need a magnifying glass to read the contents inside!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-28
Why is Lonely Planet making the text so terribly small when us boomers can no longer see this tiny print without strong glasses with books like this one? They should be helping us since we are the ones who travel most.

Please reader,s let's get them to increase the size instead of decreasing,

Oregon
Mountain Bike America: Oregon: An Atlas of Oregon's Greatest Off-Road Bicycle Rides
Published in Paperback by Beachway Press (1998-05-15)
Author: Lizann Dunegan
List price: $15.95
Used price: $2.29

Average review score:

Guide Book for Beginners
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-04
This is a good book with many interesting places to ride. The maps and directions are very detailed allowing the reader to easily find the featured trails in the book.

The difficulty ratings are exaggerated however. The book seems to be geared toward beginning riders. All of the trails that I have checked out have turned out to be very easy regarding technical skill level. If you have ANY experience I would reduce the difficulty level by 1 (e.g. difficult to moderate, moderate to easy).

The book is fairly thorough, but there are many great spots left out of the book. As far as the valley goes it leaves out what I would consider some of the Greatest Off-Road Bicycle Rides. MacDonald Forest, Rickreal, McKenzie River trail, Oakridge, etc...

I would reccomend the book, but I would HIGHLY reccomend talking to your local bike shop for the hidden treasures of Oregon.

Oregon's best trail guide!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-06
Lizann's book is the best guide I've ever read! Great photos, maps and descriptions of some of the best riding in the Pacific Northwest. A great buy for any fat tire rider who's new to the area.

Comprehensive guidebook
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-28
I'm am glad to finally see a comprehensive mountain bike guidebook that covers subjects that many readers want more information about. This guidebook includes a section on mountain bicyle camping and biking with your dog. I've always wanted to take my gear with me and camp overnight and this section was very helpful. It lists outdoor vendors that carry camping gear and gives you a sample list of what you should bring. This book even has overnight a trail called "Haystack Lake" that is a good trail for those wanting to try their first overnight trip. I also have a dog and the "Mountain Biking with Your Dog" section gave a lot of practical advice I could use and also listed vendors that sell dog gear. I'm so glad to finally see a book that not only describes great trails but also is a great reference for other aspects of mountain biking!

awesome maps
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-20
This book is the first guidebook I've seen that truly has maps that are useful. They are so visually detailed and helpful that I would highly recommend this mountain bike guide to any new or experienced mountain biker. Oh yeah, when I'm on the road this book also gives me a lot of history and information about the area I'm visiting.

Oregon
The Oregon Experiment (Center for Environmental Structure Series)
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (1975-12-11)
Author: Christopher Alexander
List price: $59.95
New price: $43.13
Used price: $34.90
Collectible price: $69.95

Average review score:

Short summary of the important stuff, mistakes to learn from
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-28
The good news is that this book is a short summary of what most people
will find important when they apply patterns either in the field of architecture
or in their own field of design. It provides insight into Alexander's theory
of economics--a stance which caused him to be unfavorably labeled as a
socialist when these ideas were taking form.

Patterns, in this book, are almost a footnote to the broader ideas of
design, of economics, and of socially coordinated construction that
form the core of Alexander's exposition here. The economics form a
compelling argument for a process of piecemeal growth. Alexander gives
practical advice on how to administer the social process, including the
creation of a community pattern board that oversees the introduction of
new patterns into the community language, and the retirement of old
ones. By putting the pattern mantra aside, this book helps the reader
get beyond the point where they are looking for patterns in their own right
to provide the answer to every design question, and pushes the reader
to think at the level of the foundations.

The bad news is that the book takes the reader into a couple of miscues.
Alexander would later bitterly recant the role this book accords to the
architect. Architects should be master builders rather than the font of
design ideas. The architecture role emerged in the Oregon Experiment
to lend the project an air of conventionality and credibility, a compromise
that kept the project from achieving its goals.

Current tidbits of retrospective literature try to make sense of the experiment;
some claim it succeeded (in spite of those aspects Alexander felt were
wrong-headed) and some claim it failed. Grabow's biography of
Alexander (Christopher Alexander: The Search for a New Paradigm in
Architecture) features some choice words about the miscues in this
experiment. Taken with the retrospective Grabow brings us, this book
provides a perspective on patterns that is completely absent from the
other books in this series. Some of these, such as the foundations in
economics, are there for the picking. To reap some of the other insights
requires study that goes beyond casual reading, but such study is
appropriate to the depth of insight it will afford, and you owe it to
yourself to explore it. These insights are crucial for making patterns
work in a practical way in a social setting.

If you want to learn about patterns, and you want to start with an
Alexandrian book, I think this is the one you start with. Get the big
picture first, in the context of the underlying principles, and come
back for the pattern details later in A Pattern Language, and for the
artist's artistic exposition of his art in The Timeless Way of Building.

Building an educational community
Helpful Votes: 30 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-11
The Oregon Experiment is one of a series of influential volumes on architecture and social design published by Christopher Alexander and his colleagues in the 1970s. While the most well-known volume in the series, A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, and Construction, develops general principles for the design of social spaces at all scales, The Oregon Experiment applies those principles to a specific case: the campus of the University of Oregon.

If you are looking for an example of a specific campus plan, however, you will not find it here. Central to Alexander's approach is the notion that communities should not create fixed master plans, but rather should develop a common pattern language, and then apply it organically, in a piecemeal fashion, as needs arise. The book talks as much about this process of planning as it does about individual construction projects. Whenever a need arises (expansion of a building, addition of a door, creation of a green) people consult their pattern language and build something to suit the space and satisfy the need. Because everyone follows the agreed-upon language, the new parts harmonize with those that already exist (or replace earlier, poorly-designed structures).

If you have enjoyed studying Alexander's patterns in A Pattern Language, you will find here a collection of new ones that are specific to a university setting, including "University Population," "University Shape and Diameter," "Departments of 400," "Local Administration," "Classroom Distribution," and about a dozen more. Although he clearly draws on ideas from British universities in many cases, he unaccountably does not include one of the fundamental features of the British model, namely the residential college of 500 (or so) within the larger institution. (Although he does include aspects of this pattern under the heading "Small Student Unions.") As always, Alexander's pattern descriptions are clear, blunt, and thought-provoking.

The question that most readers will want to have answered is, "Does all this really work?" When the volume was written, of course, the process was just getting under way, and so we cannot know from this book alone whether everything described was successful or has been sustained over the long term. From what I've seen of campus master planning in public universities, it often turns out in the end to have less to do with creating good educational environments than it does with kowtowing to the local chamber of commerce and lining the pockets of already-rich trustees. But just because something is difficult doesn't mean it shouldn't be made the goal. If Alexander or someone at the University of Oregon were to produce a sequel, "The Oregon Experiment 25 Years On," I'm sure it would meet with a warm reception.

An inspiring proposal
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-23
The Oregon Experiment comes from a time when Eugene, Oregon was a capital for social and community experiments in the US. It's a practical, brilliant, gentle, idealistic proposal, without peer in modern literature. There are a few papers on the experiment after twenty years, available on the web -- the experiment basically had the life bureaucratized out of it. But this book remains as a shining, solid proposal, which any participatory experiment should look over very closely.

A frustrating piece of vapourware
Helpful Votes: 80 out of 86 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-02
As a software designer and as somebody who lives and works in buildings in cities, I find the ideas in some of Alexander's other books on architecture and design - The Timeless Way of Building and A Pattern Language - very interesting and appealing. They are a brave attempt to point to a more human, community-oriented way of doing things.

I had high hopes that The Oregon Experiment would describe a concrete example of whether these ideas worked when they were put into practice. It does nothing of the kind. It describes an interesting thought experiment in participatory design and tries to present this as a vindication of the Pattern Language concepts. But nowhere does it even mention whether the design it describes was ever actually implemented, much less whether it worked from the inhabitants' point of view.

It is very easy for a design team to get carried away with what a great design they have on paper. I've done it loads of times. That enthusiasm tells us nothing about whether a design is actually going to be a success.

I know Alexander later moved from academia and started trying to put his ideas into practice on actual building projects. A book on his real experiences and how well the original ideas stood up to the cold light of reality would be fascinating and important. The Oregon Experiment isn't that book.

Oregon
Pacific Destiny: The Three Century Journey to the Oregon Country (Tom Doherty Associates Book)
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (2002-06)
Author: Dale L. Walker
List price: $28.40

Average review score:

Long Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-30
Lots of good detail and smaller stories threaded into one fabric, but I was really disappointed to find the 'history' of Oregon end around 1860. Took me a long time to finish either because it's dry or because I'm a slow reader...

Spur Award
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-23
PACIFIC DESTINY has received the Spur Award from Western Writers of America, Inc. as Best Nonfiction Historical Book for the year 2000. The award will be presented to the author at the WWA annual convention, to be held the last week of June, 2001, in Idaho Falls, Idaho.

Last year, WWA awarded to author Dale L. Walker its Owen Wister Award, given for lifetime achievement in Western history and literature.

A well-told story
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-26
This book attempts to trace the history of the Oregon territory by stringing together the stories of various pioneers. The book's strength is that Walker is a wonderful story teller and you can't help but be hooked by his tales of mountain men and emigrants wandering around a vast wildnerness. Walker has a keen eye for the look and feel of the times. The book is a bit light on context with only a few brief discussions of the politics of the period, but that'a probably an unfair criticism because that isn't what the book sets out to do. I read this because I'm going to the Northwest for a vacation in a few weeks and Walker's book will greatly enrich that trip.

A breathtaking and brilliant study
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-12
Dale L. Walker has written a magnificent and penetrating history of Oregon. This book is unique because it explores the personalities of those who made history, and integrates these biographical insights into the whole fabric of history. Walker is the peer of Bernard DeVoto and David Lavender, the other great chroniclers of the American West. For anyone seeking the history of the Northwest, and all those who shaped it, this is the best and most authoritative book in the field. Walker's research is amazing, and his ability to integrate diverse materials is outstanding. Walker's other great gift is lucidity. This book is a great read, clear, transparent, and brimming with anecdote.

I recommend this as one of the great histories written in modern times.

Oregon
Pony Girls (John Denson Mysteries)
Published in Hardcover by Forge Books (2004-05-01)
Author: Richard Hoyt
List price: $24.95
New price: $0.94
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $29.99

Average review score:

A wonderfully new and original mystery!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-24
I had never heard of Richard Hoyt until a friend loaned me a copy of Pony Girls. Hoyt has the effrontery (and writing skills) to imagine an entire novel as his detective's initiation in to the shamanist world of animal spirits. He has imagined a trio of investigators who work together. They are Denson (or Owl), and Willie Sees the Night (definitely Coyote, we can hear him baying at night) and Denson's new girlfriend, Annie Dancer, a former FBI agent. And oops, we can't forget T, with whom Denson has enigmatic conversations in his mind-bending trips out of reality. Is T, Denson's creator, the Great Spirit as private detective author? Or is Denson imagining him. Yoiks! All this works, both as a hopping good mystery, but also as a genre-breaking exercise in the imagination. The subject here, besides the mystery who killed humans and horses, is the nature of evil. Is Evil the shape-changing Koonran, or are we all potential horse killers. As a bonus, Hoyt throws in almost everything we want to know about wild horses in the west.

A Different Whodunnit
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-22
As a private detective novel, Pony Girls is, uh, different. John Denson flies out of his skin in hallucinogenic surreal trips, sometimes meeting his creator, T, an author. Is T the Great Spirit as trickster? Denson's partner, Willie Sees the Night is a shaman. Is he really Coyote in human form? The new addition to the firm, ex-FBI agent Annie Dancer, Denson's girlfriend, is a computer whiz. The mystery: a killer of people and wild horses. In this fictional wormhole, logic and Native American mythology operate side by side. Denson and
Annie find whales dying on a beach; a killer of horses and humans is on the loose. Is television reporter Erica von Bayer the killer? Or could it be her wealthy mother? Are they hosts to Koonran, the shape-changing beaver monster? This book, wild cubed, is not for the reader who wants a conventional private detective novel, but is highly recommended for those who like ideas, imaginative exploration of the human condition, and smooth writing.

Hoyt has wigged out
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-17
Richard Hoyt is an excellent writer -- he could write a good book in his sleep and he appears to have done so. Or if not in his sleep, then possibly stoned out of his gourd. I can't think of any other reason why he would have written such a pointless non-mystery. Or why he would have made such stupid geographical errors as putting Oregon north of the Columbia River or driving to Medford on I-84. And the only way it takes 24 hours to drive across Oregon is if you're too stoned to drive over 30 mph.

Pony Girls is quite readable and even enjoyable, if you think the journey is everything and the destination doesn't matter. I've been a fan of Hoyt for years, but my advice is to go back and read his early work, when the mysteries were mysteries and the plots made sense.

weird private investigative tale
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-06
Thirty-six sperm whales died on an isolated Oregon beach. Two months later, sixteen European jumping horses followed by twenty-two Spanish Mustangs are murdered in various atrocities. A group forms called the Ad Hoc Committee to Save the Spanish Mustang. They hire Portland, Oregon based private investigating partners John Denson, Annie Dancer, and Willie Sees the Night to learn who and why the horses are being slaughtered.

The trio goes down their own paths trying to solve the mystery. Former reporter John seeks logical links even tying the dead horses back to the whale tragedy; ex-FBI agent Annie uses her information technology skills and links to look for serial killer patterns. Willie using hallucinatory drugs walks the out of body ethereal path of following the souls of the horses in their afterlife. As the threesome converges, evidence points towards the family of TV journalist Erika von Bayer, but which member and his or her motive remain unknown.

Readers will have to expand their horizons to accept what is reality in this weird private investigative tale in which anything is possible in the Hoyt universe. The story line is fun to follow due to the strange sleuth partners. John tries to emulate Holmes; Annie applies profiling to identify an animal killer; while Willie is tripping on some other plane that perhaps the Amazing Randi might debunk or be convinced. To appreciate the center of weirdness theme inside and outside a fine who-done-it, readers will need to shelve reality, but it is worth the trip.

Harriet Klausner

Oregon
Quilts of the Oregon Trail
Published in Paperback by Schiffer Publishing (2006-11-04)
Author: Mary Bywater Cross
List price: $29.95
New price: $21.01
Used price: $21.01
Collectible price: $29.95

Average review score:

QUILTS OF THE OREGON TRAIL
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
THIS IS AN EXCELLENT BOOK THAT HIGHLIGHTS THE QUILTS, THE MAKERS OF THE QUILTS, AND THEIR STRUGGLE TO REACH OREGON. I AM IN AWE OF THESE WOMEN AND THE TRIALS THEY ENDURED TO REACH THEIR NEW LIVES.

Stories of Quilts and Pioneers
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-29
Anyone who is interested in pioneer history will love the book, "Quilts of the Oregon Trail", by Mary Bywater Cross. There is far more than quilt history in this book. The author has integrated the quilts into a broad study of the lives of the women who owned or made them.

The information presented with each quilt is fascinating. We learn about the women's lives, their families, and the trials and tribulations involved in the trip west as well as their experiences after arrival. As each quilt maker comes to life through these stories we learn details about her quilt including how and where it was made and what it might have meant to her.

The photos of the quilts and the people are a joy to view. They make these women's lives all the more real. As a quilter and quilt history enthusiast this book is a favorite of mine.

Quilts of the Oregon Trail
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-06
Yet another wonderful book for my collection. The Quilts of the Oregon Trail share the times and lives of the women of this era, as someone who knows little of American History this is an interesting book sharing the wonderful workmanship of the time. I enjoy collecting and learning from books and this is another beautiful work showcasing the rich heritage of the states within America.Thank You.

Women, their quilts and history
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-08
Great book for whom is interested in quilts, women who made them and history. No patternbook!!!! 56 quilts are shown in full color with photos of the makers.The book presents quilts as documents of history in order to learn about the lives of the women who made the migration.

Oregon
Sandy: The Sandhill Crane Who Joined Our Family (Northwest Reprints)
Published in Paperback by Oregon State University Press (2000-10)
Author: Dayton O. Hyde
List price: $17.95
New price: $7.95
Used price: $0.02

Average review score:

Cranes and Other Wildlife in Oregon
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-22
The book functions on many levels; as a memoir of an Oregon rancher raising a family, as a history of Klamath ranching, as the story of one crane's survival, and as a plea for conservation. Dayton Hyde rescues an egg from a flood, gets it to hatch and then has a friend for life as the sandhill crane makes itself a member of his growing family.
Many black and white photos through the book show the cranes, the new chicks, and scenes of ranch life. The author describes the animal behavior and their interaction in interesting vignettes. One can't help but learn a lot about nature just from enjoying his accounts. The rescue of the baby porcupines was quite funny.
I'm glad to see it still in print.

Review of Sandy
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-24
This is perhaps the best-written book I have ever read. It has great descriptions, accurate information, and great humor. I can't believe it is written by a cowboy and not an English teacher. I plan to buy more copies to give as gifts. Thanks, Dayton. I love your writing and look forward to reading more.

I just loved this book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-29
What a marvelous book! I laughed out loud when I saw the photographs of the author showing the cranes how to fly. A book for all nature lovers by a most gifted story teller. A book to read and savored and then read aloud. And to to think it is nonfiction!

A little-known gem!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-25
This book combines an engaging narrative story style in the tradition of Will James with philosophical musings a la Thoreau, and caps it with a stirring call to action reminiscient of Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring". Dayton Hyde's observations on the plight of our endangered native species are still so fresh and relevant that it's hard to believe the book is over 30 years old! Don't mistake this book for some boring, preachy diatribe, though. It is more than anything else a charming love story about Hyde's passion for Sandhill Cranes and his adventures with them over twenty years while ranching in Oregon and raising a family of five human children and assorted other wildlife.


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