Oregon Books
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One of the Best Dear America Books!Review Date: 2008-11-06
An author's imaginary journey across America.Review Date: 2008-04-26
I remember the effect this book had on meReview Date: 2008-04-10
The book made an impact on me from page one. I highly recommend it.
AWESOME BOOK!!!!!Review Date: 2008-04-09
One of the Best Books of my ChildhoodReview Date: 2008-03-11

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Tragedy and HopeReview Date: 2008-11-15
Wiener often presents his personal story of the Holocaust to audiences, including: school children, prisoners, and cable television. In the back of his book he presents responses to audience questions that have been asked over the years with genuineness and candor. I was disturbed to see questions that clearly demonstrate ignorance or disbelief that the Holocaust ever happened. Having personally seen Wiener present to students, I was surprised and dismayed that there are many children who are not familiar with the Holocaust. This story and that of the few remaining survivors of the Holocaust need to be heard! This book does a great job in leading the readers through the tragedy and positive message of Mr. Wiener's story.
Beautifully written account of a horrific time in historyReview Date: 2008-11-14
If you meet Alter today, he is a man full of love, compassion and gratitude. He carries scars and continues to suffer nightmares of his experience. And yet, his message is incredibly positive and it is delivered with a twinkle in his eye. He has shared his story with thousands and his message is one of hope. In his book and his talks he inspires others to erase prejudice, embrace education, express gratitude for what they have and to never forget. Alter has inspired thousands and honored millions.
Superb Addition to Holocaust LiteratureReview Date: 2008-11-14
This is a remarkable book; a first-hand account from a survivor who endured a living hell for many years. The writing is beautiful: down to earth and very genuine. The lessons are inspiring: don't punish people today for what their relatives did years ago; be mindful that some people are good and some are evil and that one cannot generalize based on race or other categories; appreciate each day of life.
This author has spoken to hundreds of groups, prinarily students. He has changed life after life and has inspired many people to appreciate what they have instead of feeling sorry for themselves.
An excellent book, beautifully written. A major contribution to Holocaust literature.
Remembering the Past, Changes Our Future...Review Date: 2008-11-14
In his self-written accounting of the horrible atrocities he witnessed and endured during the Holocaust - aptly titled "From A Name To A Number" - Al has compiled a shocking, personal and pervasive record of this horrific time in European history before and during the second world war. From witnessing his father's execution and humiliating burial, to his "realization" years later that he had survived what 80% of Europe's Jews had not, Al takes the reader on a journey literally through hell and back. His language conveys an emotional sadness which grips the reader and draws them in to his environment. His accurate recounting of executions, living conditions and SS Nazi atrocities envelopes the reader and permits them to experience these events in ways few authors have accomplished.
My students are convicted juveniles whose educational choices did not permit them opportunities to learn about this period in history. Since Al's visit and the subsequent reading of his book by my students, many, many students have began to examine not only this era of history, but other areas as well. They are looking at trends, causes and affects and are even applying these lessons to their own lives in seeking understanding and prevention. All of them are so very thankful for Al's visit and have developed a healthy respect for his first hand accounting in "From A Name To A Number". It opened my eyes to aspects I did not know about as well and my lessons now reflect a more in-depth insight when teaching this subject.
My father passed away before he could see me attain my education and teaching position. I often wonder if he would be proud of the man I have become. In reading Al's book, I am positive beyond a shadow of a doubt that his father is very proud for the work he has accomplished in informing others about this tragic event in human history. I urge anyone to read this book and be thankful men like Al Wiener do all they can to help us remember! You will come away with a healthy respect for their heartfelt reminder... "Never Again"!
We must know the truthReview Date: 2008-11-09
Read his book, then share it with others. We cannot plead ignorance any more, and we must pay attention.

The Great EscapeReview Date: 2008-05-30
Great story and great INSTRUCTIONReview Date: 2007-02-28
MRS. Dee Schauer
Texas
Fantastic BookReview Date: 2007-02-24
Outstanding.Review Date: 2008-03-30
I first read this book while in elementary school, and was hooked to the extent that I've read it many times since over the decades. A truly outstanding story.
GrippingReview Date: 2007-01-23
I anticipated the book to be a bit of a let down after seeing the movie, but it really wasn't. They emphasize quite different aspects, and some parts of the movie were clearly made up with entertainment value in mind (people jumping motorcycles over fences for instance!). I can't blame the movie makers of course, because the compelling essence of this story is the daily slog of tunnelling set against the backdrop of the mind-numbing drudgery of incarceration. No movie could be long enough to get this point across, but the book allows one to build up a better picture of what captivity was like, particularly because it provides such incredible details. I was really struck by the ingenious ways the prisoners found to fake German uniforms and official passes, improvise tools, and build radios and other vital pieces of equipment. The book provides sufficient descriptions to allow you to get an impression of the main characters and camp layout, though I personally would have enjoyed a few photographs of the people involved (good and bad), though I realise these wouldn't have been easy to obtain.
The author has a relatively dry style typical of a historian rather than a dramatist, and at times relates key events remarkably passionately. The book ratchets up the tension without having to try too hard however, and I could sense the tension that existed whenever the guards entered the barracks to check for tunnels. The depression that accompanies every uncovered tunnel jumps out of the page, as does the resolve to keep trying to escape without ever accepting captivity.
I was also pleased that the author described the events some time after the final escape, so that I could see how thoroughly the Allied authorities pursued the main protagonists, and what was their evetual fate.
This book was a fine testament to the memory of the brave men who didn't wilt despite literally years of incarceration in conditions that can best be desribed as spartan. If they had all died without anyone knowing their story the world would be a poorer place.

Beautifully written storyReview Date: 2008-11-14
Tears for the Second ChanceReview Date: 2008-07-20
Hope Rising: Stories from the Ranch of Rescued Dreams
Extremely InspiringReview Date: 2008-07-16
Don't let your wife see you cry when you read this book.Review Date: 2008-06-18
If you can overcome that, make sure you get the next book that Kim Meeder wrote after this one.
Finally, if you are going to say how great these things that the Meeders' organization is doing, don't just spell it out here. Support what she is doing!
[...]
powerful, honest, truthful and spiritually upliftingReview Date: 2008-06-12


Thoroughly compellingReview Date: 2005-01-11
I've never read a more compelling or vivid exploration of the emotional heritage of hatred and the suffering (and ongoing hatred) it begets. There are paragraphs so divine I keep re-reading them to my friends and myself to try to figure out how Weatherford did it (and in her first novel!).
This novel is single-handedly responsible for raising my standards for literary fiction: Now that I know it's possible to produce a story as full as this, I want it this good all the time.
A psychological journeyReview Date: 2002-06-14
Throughout the novel, the reader follows Iris as she struggles to continue to operate her family farm, but we also witness a process much more subtle, which is the rebuilding of the main character's mind. In my opinion, this is creatively expressed in the process of recasting the family sculptures, specifically those of herself, her mother and her father. A very interesting book, full of many levels of meaning.
A Beautiful Landscape of Language and CharactersReview Date: 2002-04-07
A Great Novel!Review Date: 2004-04-03
HEART OF THE BEAST is the debut novel by Joyce Weatherford, which tells the tale of a family that has farmed and ranched for many generations in eastern Oregon. Their history ties them to the Nez Perce Indians, who now claim that the land, known as Heart of the Beast, belongs to them, and they plan on fighting for it until they get their land back.
Iris Steele, 28 years old, is the youngest survivor of this ill-fated family. She returns home to see to her dying mother, the beautiful Elise, and to help settle the estate. Iris's father Ike and older brother Jake have long ago passed on, and she is the only one remaining that will inherit the land that her parents farmed. Upon the death, Iris locates her crazy aunt, Hanna, Elise's sister, and she arrives promptly straight from the psychiatric hospital with her "heads", sculptures of several generations of Steeles and Winters. Hanna is obsessed with these heads, and now she needs to complete the very last one, that of Iris. Hanna cannot rest until this is done.
Iris is informed about a law suit against her family, in which the Nez Perce Indians claim the land she's inherited, The Heart of the Beast, is theirs, and she now braces to deal with yet another problem. And as she readies herself for this trial, she remembers her past, her life growing up in Oregon, and the tumultuous story that was her family.
This novel can only be described as tragic. Iris's family history is filled with men and women that farmed for a living, raising horses and cattle and growing crops, from the first generation that traveled the Lewis and Clarke trail as they made their way from the East Coast to Oregon, down to her own parents. But it was not out of love that they lived on the land. It was with a hatred and a violence that is graphically described quite succinctly and with much detail by Weatherford. Iris's father was a man filled with hate, showing only disdain for his children, anger towards his wife, and ruled the land and their home with a military arm. But as Iris relives her family's history, it is obvious why her father Ike Steele was as cruel and sadistic as she knew him to be. A family history of larger than life men and women fill the family tree, and it is this history that Iris remembers in detail, as well as her own childhood and memories of what living on the land meant to her.
HEART OF THE BEAST will be one of my favorite books read in 2004. It's told on an epic scale, taken out of American history books, yet most of it takes place in contemporary times, which is hard to believe as the images one gets from reading this book reminds one of days of yesteryear, when the West was still being tamed. It is mention of songs by Prince and Ever Clear that brings the reader back to the present. However, the story of the Indians and the white men that helped build this part of the country makes one think HEART OF THE BEAST is a story that takes place in the past. This reviewer feels that anyone that loves to read a good novel is going to enjoy HEART OF THE BEAST. Highly recommended!
Eastern Oregon ranch life at it's best (which is HARD!)Review Date: 2002-11-09


A Story of Incredible SufferingReview Date: 2008-09-06
On Page 74 author Kent Herburn mentions that the Lakota Sioux "murdered" George Armstrong Custer and his men at the Little Big Horn. Herburn fails to mention that it was Custer and his men that did the attacking, and the Sioux and others were simply defending themselves.
Although a few of the Nez Perce did manage to go north to Canada following the surrender Joseph and most of the others gave up the fight with the understanding they would be returned to their original homeland. Incredible suffering began as they were transferred from one place to another from North Dakota and then south to Kansas and Oklahoma, but not to their beloved Wallowa Valley in Oregon. After eight years of suffering with the cold, heat, and insufficient food the remaining Nez Perce (less than 300 of the original 800) were split into two groups, some to the Wallowa Valley and others (including Joseph) to the Colville Reservation in Washington where Joseph died in 1904 still clinging to his traditional way of life.
I found the book to be a very detailed read, and it is a book you are going to have to have patience to stick with it. I believe it is the most comprehensive book yet written on the flight and plight of the Nez Perce Indians. This story is most certainly, as the book's cover states, "an American tragedy."
Heart felt insight to the Nez Perce EpicReview Date: 2007-08-13
This book so reached me I immediately ordered several other books by the same author, as well as more copies of this book to give to friends.
A lack of objectivityReview Date: 2008-09-09
A truly moving storyReview Date: 2008-05-12
Chief Joseph's efforts to avoid conflict unless cornered, and how he still tried to lead his people to safety is a story of courage, betrayal and near extinction, written by an author who picks up on the soul and pain of this man--and his people--who must never be forgotten as a truly memorable part of indian courage and dignity. This is a book worth reading--and reading again.
author of THE SWAN: Tales of the Sacramento Valley
Sad, Like Life, But CompellingReview Date: 2007-08-14

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Thank you Linus PaulingReview Date: 2008-08-28
Thank you for prolonging our lives Dr. Pauling!
Genius Minds Will Never DieReview Date: 2008-08-01
You gotta read it! It will change your habits and spam your life time on earth!
Good luck!
My Two Cents WorthReview Date: 2008-05-13
The mildest form of chemotherapy, mustard gas was used in WWI. It was so difiguring that it's use was outlawed at that time. The form most often used in present day cancer treatment is the most toxic form available. As it burns the tissues, radiation is no safer than chemotherapy.
In the 1970's Nixon declared a war on cnacer, which meant he was declaring war on our bodies. I'm not war with my body, but rather desire to do all in my power to treat as the fearfully and wonderful made creation of God that it is.
While not a cure for cancer either, a truly healthy diet, optimal doses of all vitamins and minerals, fresh air, moderate sun exposure, plenty of rest, dealing with emotional issures, etc, can prolong people's lifes, give them a better quality of life with less pain and in less advanced cases even reverse the disease. Way to often we are looking for a magic bullet supplement or treatment for disease. There are no magice bullets, but rather we all need to take "responsibility" and care for our bodies the way they were designed to be cared for. Prevention of disease not cure should be our emphasis.
"L. POWER lp542," this is not a cure for cancer, Review Date: 2008-05-08
I have not read this book, but I somehow doubt that Linus Pauling would suggest in it that vitamins are a good primary treatment for cancer. In fact, I'm sure he didn't. Something this riculous could only come from a crackpot poster on Amazon...
GET THE BOOK!!Review Date: 2008-01-30

Oregon - Two Early DecadesReview Date: 2008-04-22
The book is a revealing glimpse at a sensitive and curious young girl, an only child, coping with early childhood and her school years in Oregon. The Williamette Valley and Portland, Oregon, are beautifully described as the area was in the early 20th. century.
Beverly shares family pictures, provides pioneer ancestor background, describes her schools and teachers, social life and interests in a delightfully easy to read manner. Her mother taught Beverly book appreciation, as well as music and reminded her always to "use her imagination"!
I love this woman for her keen insights and independence, and recommend her memoir (and all her children's books as well.) It is surprisingly different from other memoirs and holds your interest all the way thru, leaving you wanting to know more about her as she connects with the reader in a personal way.
A memoir of a book reviewReview Date: 2007-10-05
A girl from Yamhill
Author: Beverly Cleary
Mostly all children love and grow up reading Beverly Cleary's books. But some wonder, "What was her childhood like?" In this autobiography, Beverly Cleary tells the story of her life. It starts out from when she's a little girl living on a big farm in Yamhill, Oregon and goes all the way until she's in her senior year in Portland. Beverly lived in Portland near Klickitat Street which inspired her for the Ramona series, which are one of the most favored today.
Once, Beverly's elementary teacher assigned her class a creative writing project. When Beverly turned in hers, her teacher was so pleased with her writing that she read Beverly's paper out loud to the class and told her she had a gift for writing. Beverly wasn't a really good speller in elementary school. Her class held a spelling bee and she was given the word "beautiful" to spell. She started out with "beau..." but someone gasped which made Beverly think she'd spelled it wrong. Beverly ended up spelling the word "beau..." and was disqualified. When she was younger she wouldn't read any books. Her mother didn't understand. All of Beverly's relatives loved reading. Eventually, one time she was sick, she finally found her love for reading.
I really enjoyed this book and would rate it a 4 and a half because I myself love Beverly's books and it was really interesting to read about her life. I usually don't like biographies/ autobiographies, but this one really got me interested.
I think Beverly's a little like me because we both refused to read when we were little. I didn't hate reading, but all of the books I wanted to read weren't the kinds of book my mom wanted me to read. I wanted to read books about teen life and very up-to-date. My mother wanted me to read historical fiction and/or nonfiction. I love all books now except for nonfiction.
Beverly's style of writing is creative, descriptive and very fun to read. Most of her books are for younger children but she has written a couple for teens.
a memoir by Beverly ClearlyReview Date: 2006-11-22
Beverly tells us when her first baby tooth came out, when she recieved her first love letter from a boy she liked for 3 years. Beverly also tells us about her first date Gerhart she despised.
It is a great book that everyone will love.
beautiful simplicityReview Date: 2007-03-28
i especially loved the pictures scattered throughout the books. she is adorable and you can see a little bit of ramona in her. :)
I didn't want it to endReview Date: 2006-03-23


A great writerReview Date: 2007-01-16
A wild rideReview Date: 2004-11-16
The story only gets faster and more complex after that a good read. I read it in one day.
Wen Spencer just keeps getting better....Review Date: 2004-11-19
The first thing I will say about Book Four is you don't need the first three books to read and understand it. But, I believe you will be so engaged by Ukiah Oregon's story that you will WANT them.
In this novel, Ukiah Oregon discovers he has a big brother. While the feeling of not being the only one is good, neither brother can trust the other.
Strongly recommend you read this book when you have several hours to devote to it. You will not want to put it down.
Another Spencer winnerReview Date: 2006-03-07
New Characters!Review Date: 2005-02-28
Atticus and his partner discover Ukiah dead in a trunk of a car surrounded by mice. Obviously something they have seen before. Apparently, Atticus had more than his share of run-ins with death and mice. Not to mentioned this "kid" looked exactly like him. So, of course they decide to save him.
I like the fact Spencer decides to add a new character and for much of the book, the story is told from Atticus' view point. The reader also dicovers Atticus' love interest is different from Ukiah, also. Which continues the homosexual theme that began with Ukiah's moms. It also gives the Dog Warriors reason to leave another "breeder" alone. The action is nonstop and the reader can't help but feel for these characters. I really enjoyed all the books from this series.
The reason I chose to give it four stars instead of the usual five is that I felt Spencer should have explained situations more fully. For example, in this novel she shows the cult as trying to save mankind. Yet, they know by know that the sex drug is lethal to humans (many of their own have died from it) and does absolutely nothing to the "demons." Still they continue to manufactor it and sell it the the people. This completely goes against their agenda. There were several other things I found that were a contradiction to the character's or group belief.
Still, if you can overlook these things, I'm sure you will enjoy this novel.

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Church of the DogReview Date: 2008-10-20
What impact can one person have on others?Review Date: 2008-09-19
This debut novel introduces you to Mara, an aura seeing odd ball who is also an artist and a teacher. She ends up in a traditional town where she catalyzes some interesting changes.
A great read, this little book is short and engaging. Perfect for those vacation days or nights spent next to a roaring fire.
A Heartwarming and Uplifting StoryReview Date: 2008-08-24
Well worth the timeReview Date: 2008-08-15
Very well written, wonderful characters, worth every moment.
Uplifting Magical Tale of LifeReview Date: 2008-08-04
Mara is recovering from heartbreak. Her engagement ended when her former fiancé handed her a bill for the gas he used driving her to a hospital emergency room. An art teacher, the young woman believes, "I get to teach young people to look at light and life. I get to encourage them to appreciate themselves, and appreciation is a form of love."
Edith is discontent in her marriage. "I glance at my wedding ring and wonder if it's true, if I really am married...I think I'm just part of his landscape, and he simply accepts and expects my presence. A long time ago his eyes sparkled when he looked at me."
Earl's failing health has him re-evaluating his priorities. "My ranch. It's so strange to think that one day it won't be my ranch. I won't be making the calls...What if this house where I've lived my whole life just falls to the ground? What if the next person undoes everything I spent my life doing?"
Daniel still struggles with the tragic loss of his parents when he was very young. He removes himself from much human contact by working as an Alaskan fisherman, although his grandfather wants him to come home. "Come home to the land of of my losses and failures, to my inadequacies and irrational fears...There is one thing I do like about piloting the ship at night. It's the reason I chose this life. It's the sense of disappearing all over again, disappearing into a night so dark I cannot be seen, in a sea so vast I cannot be found."
Mara is able to sense what Edith, Earl and Daniel need in their lives, and to encourage them. At the same time, she grows and matures. The characters evolve; relationships develop and are explored. They even "travel" and visit one another's dreams--just one more form of communication the author uses in her entertaining story.
This delightful novel was originally released in 2000 and now, according to McLaren, is "a new incarnation." It is at once sad yet hopeful, melancholy yet encouraging. Church of the Dog is a story of redemption and healing, a gentle, mystical treatise on fully embracing life and love, and having the courage to face the future.
by Susan Ideus
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women
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