Nevada Books


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

Nevada
The Insiders' Guide to Las Vegas (The Insiders' Guide Series)
Published in Paperback by Insiders Guides (1997-12)
Authors: David Stratton and Ken Ward
List price: $15.95
New price: $2.95
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Average review score:

Las Vegas - Lack Luster?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-08
The City is grand. The book does an adequate job in describings sites and getting you around town. Was it the best book? It worked well for us although we were looking for more definitive 'must see's.

Nevada
Insight Guide Las Vegas & the Desert (Insight Guides Las Vegas)
Published in Paperback by Insight Guides (2003-01)
Author: Martha Ellen Zenfell
List price: $23.95
New price: $13.65
Used price: $1.02

Average review score:

Not Very Helpful Insight
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-28
If you are looking for a guidebook that packs in lots of information alongside a ton of color pictures, this would be the one. It has an extensive history section and details the features of all of the major hotels and attractions. Take note that it is produced by the Discovery Channel, because it reads much like the channel's documentaries. That is the guide's downfall. While it is tall on info, it is horrible short on critique. It does not rate the hotels, restaurants, or attractions. If you want a really helpful guidebook, with lots of tips and advice, check out "The Unofficial Guide". The Insight Guide is a good secondary guidebook through which to read up on general Las Vegas info. Just don't make this one the first or only guide you buy about the city if you really want some insight.

Nevada
Mahogany's Revelation: The Story Continues
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2004-06-27)
Author: Nevada York
List price: $13.95
New price: $8.73
Used price: $8.68

Average review score:

End times
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-09
MAHOGANY'S REVELATION by Nevada York is one woman's quest to find the truth. A friend of hers, Dawn, who is searching for the son she gave up for adoption six years ago, questions her beliefs in Christianity, and Mahogany goes on a search to find the real story. A young Jewish man who finds Mahogany attractive, and his minister, the pastor of the Calvary Fellowship Church, aid her by explaining Biblical prophecy.

Meanwhile, a major terrorist attack on Washington D. C. changes the world. An earthquake in Israel destroys the mosque that stands on the site of Solomon's temple. The President of the United States is contemplating a nuclear strike on Syria, whom he believes responsible for the gas attack that killed 7,000 Americans, and an Arab cardinal, David Ibraham, is elected Pope in Rome. Some people in powerful positions feel that the Biblical prophesies regarding the end times and the coming of Christ are imminent and they are eager to help bring it about more quickly.

MAHOGANY'S REVELATION is an interesting and quick read. I do wish that more in-depth information about the real issues between the Palestinians and the Israelis had been explored, if it was going to be mentioned at all, rather than just the spouting of the widely accepted fundamentalist view that the Palestinians must be driven out to fulfill Biblical prophesy. As a Christian, I am sure God is capable of taking care of His own prophesy without the aid of mankind. Also, there was an instance where the new Pope is going to be chosen and the man, David Ibraham, is described as a Muslim in one place and the next, he is a Christian. While I understand that the man was not who he said he was, that was confusing. All in all, the drama made the book worth reading.

Reviewed by alice Holman
of The RAWSISTAZ™ Reviewers

Nevada
National Geographic Trails Illustrated Lake Tahoe, Pt. Reyes: California-Nevada, USA : Mountain Bike Map (Mountain Bike)
Published in Paperback by Rand McNally & Company (2001-06)
Author: Trails Illustrated
List price: $7.95
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Average review score:

A tale of two maps
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-04
The Tahoe map coverage is a little disappointing as only major trails in the immediate vicinity of the lake are included. However, the Point Reyes map is fairly extensive and includes trails throughout the better part of southern Marin county. Trails have a difficulty rating and a highlighted trail demarcation that were helpful but not as straight forward to understand as they could be.

Nevada
Neon Boneyard: Las Vegas A-Z
Published in Hardcover by Center for American Places (2006-10-30)
Author: Judy Natal
List price: $30.00
New price: $22.97
Used price: $19.50

Average review score:

Vegas brownout
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-19
The twenty-six main photos in this book are part four of Judy Natal's ongoing study of language and landscape. I thought these (and an additional seven) provide a rather slim reason for the book and as the title implies it is a neon sign A to Z which means that the photos are mostly tightly cropped to reveal each relevant letter so there are very few overall shots of this scrapyard. Fortunately a few photos just show one letter so they achieve their purpose easily. The photos do seem rather subdued in their color especially when compared to those appearing in Laura Domela's `Neon Boneyard' book. Domela also goes for close-ups but gets much more exciting compositions and really vibrant colors, a sort of daylight version of what these signs used to look during their working life.

Apart from the photos I found the book a rather conservative production: the use of roman numerals for the first few pages, the twenty-six photos all face a blank page, the captions in the back are just lettered PLATE A, B, C etc with no reference on the relevant photo spread (in fact the captions in the book have three styles: as roman numbers, as letters and after the twenty-six plates as straight page numbers) the ACKNOWLEDGMENTS take three pages (are readers really interested in all this back-slapping) plus another page for ABOUT THE BOOK which includes thanks to the Icelandic printer for doing what he is paid to do.

Daylight images of scrapped neon I think work better in Domela's photos rather than the ones in 'Neon Boneyard Las Vegas A-Z'.

***FOR AN INSIDE LOOK click 'customer images' under the cover.




Nevada
Nevada Birds
Published in Paperback by Waterford Press (2001-05-01)
Author: James Kavanagh
List price: $5.95
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Average review score:

Little more than a pamplet
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-25
It is helpful in identifying birds in the region; however, calling it a "book" is not accurate.

Nevada
Nevada: The Great Rotten Borough, 1859-1964
Published in Hardcover by Alfred A. Knopf (1966)
Author:
List price:
Used price: $6.78

Average review score:

twisted and deeply flawed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-26
Let's concede at the outset that Gilman Ostrander's 1966 history of Nevada is a well-documented and oft-times nuanced book.

Unfortunately, his own prejudices against Nevada (and the Great Compromise contained in the U.S. Constitution) leave him chattering nonsense on more than one occasion.

Ostrander seems to believe that the frontier economy of the American West (as counterposed to the earlier agrarian trans-Appalachian frontier) must be characterized as "capitalist authoritarianism." It sounds nicer than "fascism," I suppose, but after flinging such phrases Ostrander never follows up with any analysis to backup or explain such a charge.

Hard to believe a San Franciscan trained at UC Berkeley and Reed could be such a social prude on divorce and gambling. I think he was mad because he believed that Lake Tahoe was being destroyed by Nevada. But that Lake is still here, and to the extent it remains imperilled one might credit that danger as much to the Golden State as to the Silver State.

Whether or not the US Senate should have been created or not - Ostrander is agin' it - it's hard to hang an indictment of the Great Compromise on a cartoonish rereading of the history of Nevada as he has attempted in this book.

It's also a shame some of Ostrander's successors remember the extreme characterizations in this book while forgetting the nuanced hedging that Ostrander includes out of his inherent intellectual honesty - for example regarding the character of such men as H.M. Yerington and George Wingfield.

I don't think this book is so much bad as buffoonish, and I think Ostrander conducted his scholarly investigations with some integrity. Perhaps if he had refrained from carelessly tossing so many stinkbombs, he could have done some useful teaching.

Nevada
Notorious
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Pr (1996-07)
Author: Janet Dailey
List price: $26.95
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Average review score:

Modern Western Adventure - With A Little Romance
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-30
"Notorious" by Janet Dailey

The description on the back promises a story with western adventure, action and "breathtaking romance". If you are thinking of this book for strictly the romance aspect, I would say take a pass on this one. Although there is some steamy romance,and the tension and anticipation of it builds through the sparks between the main characters, there's not much and it doesn't happen until around Chapter 20 or 21, which was almost the end.

Having said that, if you are a lover of Westerns with a little romance thrown in(lucky for me, that is my case), you may find this an enjoyable summer read. It's got all the elements that make a good western. Ms. Dailey does a good job of paying homage to the traditional western. It's action packed with an old-fashioned cattle drive, a stampede,a land grubbing boss and his band of bad guys,shoot-outs,a saloon setting, a hero to die for and a gal in trouble. It's a modern day Western setting, but the story could take place in the old west as well.

A mysterious stranger, only known as Kincaid, pulls into a small Nevada town to have his pick-up repaired. Right off the bat, he has to rescue a beautiful girl from a deadly situation. The girl it seems is the owner of a cattle ranch that is barely holding it's own. At the chatty town bar, Kincaid gets advice from all sides on his stay there, the most telling coming from a tough guy telling him to "stay away from Rossiter". Eden Rossiter, the girl he saved. Naturally he does not heed the warnings and immediately gets a job on her ranch. As the story unfolds, we find trouble at every turn for Eden Rossiter, as Depard the land grubber tries to take over her little piece of heaven. Even her own brother seems to be suspect in the sabotage.

Kincaid, helps thwart off the dangerous situations constantly arising, but Depard already has it in for Eden for killing his son years earlier, and makes things mighty tough. Eden meanwhile has a deep secret about the day she shot Jeff Depard. And what is Kincaid's reasons for being there? Is he out for some sort of revenge for past deeds himself? Will Eden trust Kincaid over her own brother? There are a few surprises along the way, as the relationship between them runs hot and cold.

I thought the story dragged in a few places. The dialogue at times was a little dry, and the relationship between Kincaid and Eden took too long to develop. There were a couple of characters, who I would have liked to get to know a little better. A barmaid named Star, with a teenage son, were characters I became interested in(actually kind of hoping Kincaid and Star would get together at first),but their story line kind of fizzled out early on. There were some fun characters, the cook who's hooked on vanilla extact, and Rusty the cowhand who became Kincaid's sidekick.The bad guys were worthy of any good western. I did enjoy the western/adventure aspect and the little romance there was. So mostly I would recommend this to those who enjoy a good western.

There is an unabridged audio edition - Notorious [Audiobook] by Janet Dailey [Unabridged] - if you are looking for something to keep you company on a long drive(it's nearly 13 hours)

So good summer read for western lovers only.....Laurie

Nevada
The Ox-Bow Man: A Biography Of Walter Van Tilburg Clark (Western Literature Series)
Published in Paperback by University of Nevada Press (2006-07-27)
Author: Jackson J. Benson
List price: $21.95
New price: $10.95
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Average review score:

Half a Portrait
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-06
THE OX-BOW MAN by Jackson J. Benson is a rambling wreck of a book, but admirers of Walter Van Tilburg Clark will feel compelled to struggle through it. The flaws are egregious,the prose especially so. "Considering Clark's work habits, it is quite possible that rather than working from the draft, he had the material so firmly in mind that he didn't need to consult it." Aside from its faulty parallelism and pronoun reference problem, this typically atrocious sentence exemplifies the lack of coherence--Clark's work habits have little to do with his grasp of particular material--which subverts whole paragraphs and chapters. Also, THE OX-BOW MAN is the most sanitized of biographies. Benson cannot write an unflattering word about any of the Clarks, perhaps because they control the writer's papers. Benson insists that his subject was not an alcoholic, but Clark's letters are overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Benson exalts the Clarks' marriage but rarely quotes Barbara Clark or her diaries and cannot convincingly explain the couple's frequent separations. He stoutly maintains that Clark was "always true" to his wife, but even Clark's son has his doubts, noting that the writer's fame, good looks, and fiercely masculine presence won him female friends wherever he was. Still--Benson's information, though incomplete, is often fresh and very interesting, at least to us Clarkites. Justly he stresses Clark's heroic teaching, from which this writer and thousands of others greatly benefited. And in the last third of the book Benson blessedly interpets less, narrates more, and lets Clark speak through his letters, in which this important writer elucidates his most terrible burdens: a tragic writers' block and a tyrannical superego.

Nevada
Playa Works: The Myth Of The Empty (Environmental Arts and Humanities Series)
Published in Hardcover by University of Nevada Press (2002-08-01)
Author: William L. Fox
List price: $24.95
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Average review score:

Good but not great
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-30
I approached this book hoping for an analysis of the impact of emptiness and isolation on the human psyche. No doubt my expectations were influenced by my nationality -- Australian -- where our "playas" (which we call claypans or saltpans) are nearly all isolated and deserted, and the impact of human activity is minimal.

Fox provides graphic descriptions of the multiplicity of activities which take advantage of the US playas, ranging from military to counter-cultural festivals. He's clearly very well acquainted with his subject.

I found it generally depressing to read about the military use of playas. (Here in Oz, we had the Brits testing atomic devices at Woomera several decades ago.)

An interesting book, but too focused on American issues to satisfy my more general interests.


Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->People and Society-->Organizations-->Personal Development-->Scouting-->Boy Scouts of America-->Troops-->Nevada-->89
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