Utah Books
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A great read for anyoneReview Date: 2006-08-14
Predatory NaturesReview Date: 2005-12-17
Supported by caring women and touched by his daughter's guru-mentor, Sayers slowly begins to see the connection between this ghostly cougar and his own impotent anger against mortality as he struggles with the recurring memories of the son he and his wife drove to an untimely death in the frozen bosom of the Sierra mountains. Together they had thrown the boy's identity into doubt and seeded a fatal passion to prove himself worthy.
There is less dimension to the women in the novel. They are less embattled. The sacrificial son and the matriarchal jogger who fought for her life so that her children would remember her well both dissolve fitfully into memory, to be retrieved only by the vision and the words of Charlie Sayers. As a young father he had rejected his son's attempts to engage him in loving play which could have renewed his moribund spirit and healed the pain of his own orphaned childhood. Instead, he steeled the cruelty he had so bitterly learned and unleashed it on the apostolic son now in his care. The conflict implicit in this re-enactment of his own childhood is put to rest in his understanding the meaning of the jogger's death: "That woman died and I had come more fully to life. It didn't seem fair, but what could I do." That is the story he must tell, and in its telling does he begin to heal.
stephen karpowitz phd
OrderingReview Date: 2005-11-29

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Best places to stayReview Date: 2000-03-29
Hidden SouthwestReview Date: 2002-01-27
Detailed info, very goodReview Date: 2007-02-14
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County highpoints in UtahReview Date: 2006-11-05
High Enough...Review Date: 2001-07-09
High in UtahReview Date: 2000-10-22

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A Must Have!Review Date: 2000-07-13
Birth and development of a Hispanic communityReview Date: 2000-06-17
Exploring Textures in Hispanic HistoriographyReview Date: 2000-08-31

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I DIDNT LOVE THIS BOOK BUT I LIKED ITReview Date: 2006-11-13
You Gotta Love It, BabyReview Date: 2000-02-01
Excellent book about Hundley's basketball experiences.Review Date: 1999-08-01

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Oldest First Hand Account of the Black Hawk War in UtahReview Date: 2006-07-04
Salt Lake Tribune "Few of these histories are as valuable..Review Date: 2002-12-17
With little education, he diligently recorded the memories of his comrades in the Utah Indian War Veterans to tell a story that would otherwise be forgotten. Depredations discribes Utah's longest and most brutal Indian conflict, The Black Hawk War that raged from 1865 to 1872. The struggle began on the day Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox when the Ute leaders tried to settle a dispute that began when Antonga, or Black Hawk, killed one of John Lowry's cows. The peace conferance turned violent when a druken Lowery jerked Jake Arapeen from his horse and the Utes resolved to avenge the insult.
During the next year Antonga captured more than 2,000 head of "Mormon beef" and killed some 25 settlers. In retalliation, the terrified whites killed about 40 of his warriors and an unknown number of women and children.
The war degenerated into an orgy of vengence, but fundamentally it was about survival-and who would control the land. As Gottfredson observed, the Utes resented the whites "encroaching upon their rights by crowding them off their lands and hunting grounds."
The war created a vortex of fear and hatred that led to a greater violence and brutality on both sides........"
Brigham Young preached it was "cheaper to feed them than to fight them," but he spent millions in church funds waging a virtually secret war that only ended when U.S. troops intervened in 1872.
Peter Gottfredson witnessed "the last killing of a white man by Indians during the Black Hawk uprising. "Thinking they were attacking a member of the hated Snow family, Utes shot Daniel Miller, breaking his back. Dragging him from his wagon, the attackers "laid his face on a bed of cactus." A pasing friend heard his moans, and Gottfredson helped carry a litter to take the dying man home.
Miller never made it. He told his rescuers he would like to see his newborn twins before he died, and the men "asked him if he wanted us to take vengence upon the Indians."
Daniel Miller said, "No, they don't know any better," and "in a short time the poor fellow expired."
amazing...amazing bookReview Date: 2002-10-28

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Lots of Mormon referencesReview Date: 2008-04-05
A is for Arches... the REAL Utah symbol!Review Date: 2006-06-12
Nine species of wildlife occur in the illustrations.
Brigham Young is mentioned 4 times.
The Utah Jazz is mentioned once.
Under "H is for Handcarts," Hall writes "The pioneers' success proved that using handcarts was an efficient and inexpensive way to move large numbers of people westward." Inexpensive, yes. Efficient... the journal entries describing the deaths and hardships lead to an alternative interpretation.
Nevertheless, this is a very nice book to give to anyone who would like o learn more about Utah.
A is for Amazing!Review Date: 2003-09-25
Phillip Hoose

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A serious traveler's guideReview Date: 2007-11-24
Lots of InformationReview Date: 2007-05-07
My favorite book on this areaReview Date: 2007-11-27
I do not understand the comment of an earlier reviewer that it does not include helpful "tips" for "trip planning." You might consider supplementing it with a more standard guidebook of the Frommer/Froder variety, but I have used Journey to the High Southwest since our very first trip to the area (early 1990s) and have found it a trove of "useful tips." On that first trip, using this book, I was able, for instance, to plan travel through the Hopi Reservation, where to stay, how to find out about when and where there would be dances, etc. The recommendations of where to stay/where to eat are terrific. (We would never have found our favorite hole-in-the-corner diner in Espanola without this book!) In addition to all the good travel suggestions, it's beautifully written, a mine of information, and a joy to read. I am so happy to find that there is an 8th edition!

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Critically important reading for students of Mormon Studies and American Political History StudiesReview Date: 2005-11-07
Important, but flawed workReview Date: 2006-02-04
While the authors try to present their material objectively, a lurking anti-Mormon sentiment clouds their analysis. Most notably is the chapter in which they argue that the Mormon's actively sought to avenge Smith's murder. For example, the authors make the gratuitous statement that number who lost their lives to Mormon vengeance "can only be guessed at." Their attempts to show that anyone died are remarkably weak.
They color the death of Frank Worrel, a conspirator in Smith's murder, with a love letter Worrel wrote and his tender leave-taking of his wife and child on the day of his death. (Significantly, Smith's leave-taking of his wife and children before his death is not even mentioned.) However, the authors do not give the circumstance of Worrel's death are not given and their conclusion that Worrel was a casualty of Mormon vengeance cannot be evaluated.
The authors' attempts to link the Mountain Meadows massacre to Mormon vengeance are based solely on one statement by John D. Lee, who was then disaffected from the Mormon church. Again while they discuss the massacre in some detail, they neglect to mention that Brigham Young sent orders that the wagon train was not to be attacked.
Readers must be wary of these and other flaws as they read this important work.
Exceptional research work, slightly heavy presentationReview Date: 2005-12-29
The one major complaint I have is that I found some of the presentation a bit overly academical, with long sentences and fancy words. I prefer a simpler approach to writing. One that the average and simple-minded (like myself) can easily follow. This is not to say that it was all very complicated, but I sometimes had to read paragraphs or sections two or three times to comprehend the meaning. (Jan Shipps is another example of bad academic-styled writing, while Richard Lyman Bushman is an example of comprehensive writing.)
In spite of this weakness, I nearly gave it 5 stars for the sheer audacity and boldness with which it attacks its subject matter - not to mention the plethora of documentation and factual information surrounding General Joseph Smith's presidential campaign, the council of fifty, the 'Kingdom of God' and all the facts leading up to Joseph and Hyrum Smith's assasination at Carthage.
The final chapters conclude by giving us the names of the men responsible for the assasination (including the men who pulled the trigger!) and what became of them following the act.
Junius & Joseph paints a clear picture of the political times of the 1840's, including the ambitions and tactics of politicians including Henry Clay, Martin Van Buren, John Tyler, James Polk, Thomas Ford and several others. It also lists names of 30 of the 50 members of the 'council of fifty' and describes exactly what we know about the somewhat secret organization.
A fascinating read for anyone interested in the politics and conspiracies surrounding the death of Joseph Smith. It will place you completely into the time, and give you an understanding of the event that is as complete as possible with the documents available to us today. It may never get clearer than this.

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A great book for teachers and students alike...Review Date: 2007-09-10
While the book is at times a bit overly idealistic and starry-eyed, you can't help but admire the enthusiasm and passion with which Tallmadge tries to instill his passion for nature in his students. He's the kind of teacher that any lover of Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, or modern writers like Terry Tempest Williams, Leslie Marmon Silko, or the like would immediately take to. He wants his students to understand their connection, not only with the land, but with each other, as a community of learners as well as a community of human beings. And then, at the end, when everything seems to fall apart, he finds solace in the simplest of items: a jack pine cone. I'd say more about that, but I don't want to ruin the moment of revelation that comes at the end.
Sufficed to say that "Meeting the Tree of Life" will leave you with a greater appreciation as well as understanding of the complex relationships that exist within nature as well as within the human soul. Like this review the book can be a little overly flowery at times, but the understanding that comes with reading this book makes those moments of saccharine sweetness almost pleasant. Give this book a try and I'm pretty sure you won't be disappointed.
It's a Wonderful Life!Review Date: 2001-11-27
Wilderness adventure in the nature writing traditionReview Date: 1998-11-03
In one way, this book is in the tradition of the author's admired nature writers -- such folk as Emerson, Thoreau, John Muir, and Aldo Leopold. But the framework is an autobiography, beginning with brief mention of his childhood in suburbs, which he describes almost as if they were crowded cities, and from which he began to escape at age 15 to backpacking and climbing. A college student during the Vietnam War, he later sought in wilderness "authenticity" and " a model for just and sustainable human societies" -- which he did not see in the world he and his friends had grown up in.
He begins the detailed story with a difficult High Sierra climb -- between his military service (having volunteered for a program of Russian studies and intelligence work in order to avoid Vietnam itself) and graduate school. As he seeks for understanding of his motivations and feelings, he speaks first of challenge, thrill, danger, and athletic pleasure, but eventually realizes that he has become a naturalist, appreciating nature in all its complexity, not just the physical challenges and dramatic views. We follow his wilderness explorations, first in the mountains of the southwest during his first three years as a professor in Utah, then his disappointment in leaving the mountains for his next job, in Minnesota. There, however, he develops an appreciation of the wilderness of the flat country, mostly in canoe trips.
Certainly an offbeat English professor, he had his students read nature writing, then accompany him on difficult treks to mountains and lakes, and return to write about their experiences. This approach was not appreciated by his colleagues, who apparently preferred traditional methods of teaching literature and writing. He ends this volume with the shock of being denied tenure -- but finds new awareness in the metaphor of a pine cone that releases its new life only in fire.
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