Iowa Books
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Historic Travel ReadingReview Date: 2003-10-02

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $39.99

Media market made simple, but at a costReview Date: 2001-08-17


From a Kansas point of view, this book is just mediocre.Review Date: 1999-04-12
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Little amusements, little moreReview Date: 2002-05-29
The Hiding Place is a slight piece of a ring of sentimental value being "lost" is moving, its sentimental value and hiding place recalled, and it's being returned to it's multilayered hiding place.
Musette Disappears is a short character piece of a small girl leaving church - and the memories of her.
Blacky's Story is the tale of the family dog, apparently never well trained, his exile, and the family joke/strain surrounding him.
The O'Connell Sister is the tale of twin spinisters who were anything but friendly to the neighborhood children.
Mr. Pierre is a story of the hairdresser with flair - a gambler, a cheat.
Thirst is a paragraph regarding dreams and thirst.
I am oversimplifying the stories - but they truly are more sketches, dreams, character studies, memories than stories of a more formal nature. Essentially a talented author has presented us with a solid collection of author's exercises.

Used price: $95.58

A dense and very academic bookReview Date: 2001-08-31
-Paracas an ancient cultural tradition on
the south coast Peru.
-Paracas: Discovery & Controversy
-A technical & Iconographic analysis of Carhua Painted textiles
-Stucture,
Image & Abstraction: Paracas Necropolis headbands as system templates
-Paracas necropolis bundle 89: A description
-Physical
& Chemical Analysis of Paracas Fibers
-Ecology & Society in embroidered images from the Paracas Necroplis
-Social & Political
leadership in the Lower Ica Valley: Ocucaje Phases 8 & 9
-The Paracas problem: Archaelogical perspectives.
As you can see from the above contents list this book is aimed at specialists - and the language is dense in academic and thick with reference terms. The illustrations are meagre and all in Black and white.
While there is a lot of information in this book, as a person doing research in areas relating to some of these subjects I have found this book hard going. I'm sure to find some useful things but only after much digging and decoding of jargon.
So, if you are after a book with beautiful pictures of Paracas textiles - avoid this like the plague. If you are after archaeological research by people who have worked in the field and have finally been able to publish what they have found then this book is probably for you. I'd classify this as a reference work, not a general use book, especially for people new to the area this book would be difficult to use.

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Worth readingReview Date: 2000-04-10
Unfortunately, the book is quite uneven in that not every author seemed particularly willing to share their process. For instance, I left the section with Joyce Carol Oates wondering why Woodruff bothered included it; plainly, getting information from her was tantamount to pulling teeth and the result is superficial.
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Good story up to the point where the conspiracy theory is introducedReview Date: 2007-08-26
The premise is that the race for the governor's chair is wide open, the incumbent having announced that he will not seek reelection. The cast of characters running for the office is a wild one, from a Republican with a checkered business past to an openly gay man. In between there is a known cross-dresser and a "priest" with a past that no one seems able to track down.
As the campaign continues, someone is systematically killing the candidates and the authorities are baffled, as it appears to be the work of a professional killer. However, once the conspiracy theory is put forward, the professional becomes a nitwit and engages in a set of foolish actions. For someone who has been clever enough to evade police for so long to attempt an armed takeover of the Iowa government with only a few people and in front of television cameras is absurd.
The story was serially written by eighteen different authors and as always is the case suffers from the lack of style continuity. Since the tightness of the plot becomes unraveled towards the end, the quality of the story is not enough to overcome this.

has a lot historycal errors,Review Date: 1997-11-02
Used price: $2.23

A Workmanlike Biography, But UninspiredReview Date: 2005-11-19
The first half of the book is the stronger, discussing Butler's family life (much of which was incorporated into "The Way of All Flesh," a wonderful study of a dysfunctional familty) and the five years he spent running a sheep station in New Zealand. The reader comes away with a sense of the man.
The second half is simply tedious, focusing on Butler's fights with various critics over his later works and his relationships with three men with whom he was close. I found none of this to be interesting, and think other readerrs are likely to reach the same conclusion.
Prof. Raby has been thorough in his research, leaving no stone unturned. Unfortunately, he seems to have felt compelled to discuss each and every stone, rather than focusing on "The Way of All Flesh."
A typical scholarly work.

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Dvorak fans will love this Iowa taleReview Date: 2008-02-16
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The journey is broken down into sections that highlight a few places to visit in each area. Starting in Wisconsin's Upper Coulee Country & Mississippi River Valley, to the Mississippi Valley & Bluff Country of Minnesota & Iowa, then to the Minnesota River Valley and finally the Prairies of Minnesota & South Dakota. Interesting period history and some geographic information is given on these regions throughout the pages, which also exhibits a good share of black and white pictures. After these chapters come a few notes on Festivals & Pageants in certain towns along the route. Then the author talks about different travel option ideas for interest, such as small convoy camping or large group motor coach tours. At the back of the book is a quick reference list mainly giving phone numbers and some other contact information for towns & cities in each of the previously mentioned areas.
The book is fairly decent but meager and it really may not be what you expect. It provides very little in direct help on planning a trip (recommended places to eat or stay) but does gives a "lengthy" explanation of the Dakota Conflict of 1862. It's just as much, or maybe even more so, a book of U.S. history facts, findings and events as it is of an actual travel guide.