Washington Books
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Tied to time and placeReview Date: 2006-03-01
A Fun ReadReview Date: 2002-11-15
Terrific, as AlwaysReview Date: 2002-04-07
Great Read...Review Date: 2002-05-05
So funny and so sad!Review Date: 2000-05-12
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An important addition to World War I historyReview Date: 2008-03-07
Great Histroy and a Good Human StoryReview Date: 2004-05-01
One Step From GloryReview Date: 2004-02-19
NORD'S REVIEWReview Date: 2004-01-29
A Very Good ReadReview Date: 2004-01-13

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pleasantly surprised...Review Date: 2008-05-31
Excellant cookbook!Review Date: 2007-03-09
Great cookbook, very easy to folow the recipes. The things I have made all have been just great! I would recommed this cook book to anyone who enjoys good food.
One of the best cookbooks ever!Review Date: 2005-10-07
Taras, a cook from Oak Harbor, Wa.Review Date: 2004-09-20
no recipe has failed me yetReview Date: 1999-12-17
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The People in Pineapple PlaceReview Date: 2002-05-14
I love this book!!!!Review Date: 2002-02-20
A good book for kids over 5.Review Date: 2001-04-05
A strange giftReview Date: 2000-12-02
go look for pineapple place!Review Date: 2003-09-09
Collectible price: $11.90

Portait of an artist - in living colorReview Date: 2008-05-27
great bookReview Date: 2007-08-28
From Wisconsin to New Mexico: An incredible life.Review Date: 2003-09-24
O'Keeffe became a feminist before the word was even invented. When she realized that it would be impossible to become her own person while working in his shadow, she established the pattern of spending 6 months with him in NY and 6 months on her own in New Mexico, a place she always referred to as her spiritual home. Stiegitz died in 1946, and O'Keeffe lived on for another incredible half a century.
If you have the opportunity to visit New Mexico, don't miss the O'Keeffe museum in Santa Fe - and my all means visit her home in Abiqueque. To say it's Georgia O'Keeffe country is to put it far too mildly.
A Portrait That the Artist Would Have EnjoyedReview Date: 2007-08-30
There is not one spot of color in this book except for the auburn and gold lettering on the jacket of my paperback. The sixteen pages of photographs in the book, only four of which show O'Keeffe posing with her art, are black-and-white. One imagines, had the artist participated in this project and accepted that a literary work, with an artist as its subject, could be as beautiful and fascinating as the flowers, skulls, rivers, and stones she captured in her own paintings, O'Keeffe would have appreciated the lack of color. For much of her life, O'Keeffe's signature garb was black with a touch of white, due to a belief that admirers ought to focus on the art, not the artist.
While reading this book, one obviously is tempted to take occasional breaks from Lisle's gorgeously plain, non-effusive prose to google O'Keeffe's paintings. After I read about O'Keeffe's initiation into the jet age, where she was surprised to peer down from her airplane window and "see so many rivers, tributaries, and deltas undulating through the earth's deserts" ("Chapter 13: Clouds"), I just had to view "It Was Red and Pink." However, this book clearly is not an art critique. Paintings are discussed insofar as they provide insight into O'Keeffe's mind, heart, and soul. Most of the time, while reading, I stayed far away from the computer. I was riveted by tales about family, femininity, marriage, the artist's apparent struggle between remaining dedicated to painting and perhaps having a baby, the conflict between how she and the public perceived her work, intimations of mortality, and a devotion to the splendors of New Mexico even after her eyesight failed.
I would recommend this book to anyone who relishes art, history, New Mexico, femininism, humanity, or just would love to read a great book.
Georgia O'keeffe is a true American treasureReview Date: 1999-05-04

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Exciting, titilatingReview Date: 2008-10-08
"Hooked" on FordReview Date: 2008-10-03
Praise for Percious CargoReview Date: 2008-10-02
I just finished your recent book Precious Cargo. I greatly enjoyed your writing, character development, and story line. It is a sad statement on the condition of illegal immigrants and what they face trying to make a better life for themselves and their family's. I really liked Charlie Nobel, Nobel Lady and Raven, not to forget Kate. I hope this is the beginning of a continuing series.
Please continue to write as you have a great gift. Your writing allows me escape and think about the human condition. Isn't that what it is all about?
Precious CargoReview Date: 2008-09-22
Bellingham Devoted FanReview Date: 2008-09-02

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Good Read about SE Alaska Sightings Review Date: 2005-11-17
" Loup Garou "Review Date: 2005-06-05
This is the way to research and write about Bigfoot/Sasquatch, with facts and without contradictions or second guessing one's self!
Where I'm from, Maine, the French call Bigfoot "Loup Garou," which is french for "werewolf; wild beast."
I highly recommend this book. AAAAA+++++
Ken T. ~~
Hard To Put DownReview Date: 2006-04-27
One of the best!!Review Date: 2005-12-09
Raincoast Sasquatch/Robert AleyReview Date: 2004-09-24


sastisfied customerReview Date: 2007-09-26
Great SeriesReview Date: 2007-08-26
It's Not What You're Probably Thinking...Review Date: 2003-03-29
Recommended for ages 8-12...AND EVERYONE ELSE TOOReview Date: 2003-11-22
A time of great hope and incredible change in U.S. historyReview Date: 2003-08-05
This volume does not have a formal structure but you can still find four rather distinction units. The first (Chapters 1-10) talks specifically about Southern Reconstruction and the fight between President Andrew Johnson and Thaddeus Stevens, leader of the Radical Republicans in Congress. The second (Chapters 11-18) tells about the opening of the West and Indians ordered to reservations. The third (Chapters 19-25) contrasts the world of Boss Tweed and Thomas Nast, P.T. Barnum and Mark Twain, with the immigrants who came to both coasts of the country. The fourth (Chapters 26-37) starts with the beginning of the movement towards rights for women and ends with Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois taking on the Jim Crow laws, with the birth of the Industrial Revolution and its patron saint Thomas Alva Edison in between.
As you can see, this is an inelegant division of these 37 chapters at best. But in the second half of the 19th-century of American history lacks the direction of the first, where the nation was hurdling towards Civil War. The idea that America was indeed reconstructing, or remaking itself, makes sense. However, there is no finality to the story at this point because equality between the sexes and the races are still a half and full century away respectively. One sign of the changing focus of history is that George Armstrong Custer and the Battle of the Little Big Horn is literally a marginal topic while the story of Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce gets an entire chapter.
These volumes are wonderfully illustrated, with historic photographs, paintings, and in this particular volume political cartoons that help bring the period alive. Throughout the book you will find detailed features on subjects such as the first conservationist, John Wesley Powell, and the Route of the Nez Perce in 1877. As always the margins are crammed with notes, definitions, mini-biographies, and choice quotations. For children raised on computers and the Internet it is clear that Hakim is speaking their language, and for parents home schooling their children they will find Hakim to be an active teacher who anticipates questions and concerns from students even when she is writing and book and they are reading it. This is an excellent series of American history textbooks.

A MINNESOTA KENT KRUGER FANReview Date: 2008-09-16
Zap Comix Number 7Review Date: 2008-09-15
Another winning tale from Mr. Krueger and Cork O'ConnorReview Date: 2008-09-10
great regional whodunitReview Date: 2008-09-03
Alexander asks part Ojibwe former sheriff and current private detective Cork O'Connor to arrange a meeting with Buck so that the Red Boyz leader can assure the grieving angry man that justice will be done. He fears that if he takes matters into his own hands, a heated race war will ignite. However, before that can occur Alexander and his wife Rayette are executed; almost immediately afterward Buck is killed in a drive by shooting. Tensions have boiled over between the two groups with Cork believing only the hidden Thunder is able to ease the rising conflict before an open war explodes.
The Cork O'Connor mysteries are consistently some of the best regional whodunits. Cork has switched from law enforcement to private detective work, but though at times he misses his former job not in this case; he is thankful that he is no longer a sheriff as he has to go outside the law to insure justice occurs and a deadly war prevented. The story line is told from various viewpoints so the reader obtains a deep understanding of the Ojibwe need for the youth to know and cherish their heritage while many of the Anglo sees that as ironically an internal form of immigration. William Kent Kreuger is at his best with this strong thriller as his hero struggles to stop a lethal range war that will only harm everyone.
Harriet Klausner
Red Knife is the best so farReview Date: 2008-09-06
I signed up on Amazon to get Red Knife in hard cover when it became available. This is a nice arrangement. I got the hard cover at a good price (for a hard cover), and they got a chance to take orders instead of guessing on the volume.
The book came just before my birthday, so I think of it as a present. In my opinion this was your best book yet, better than Thunder Bay in almost every way. Thunder Bay was good, Red Knife was better. I think with Red Knife you have moved into the league of Follett and Hillerman who are my other favorite authors. They are still ahead because they have been writing good books longer, but with Red Knife you are moving up. It is as good as much of their best.
Reader to Author:
I found a lot of very thoughtful stuff in Red Knife. The themes of father and son, and how we should deal with truly violent and evil people were well thought out and examined with care. The style of turning the piece slowly for the reader to see more than one side of it is much better than structuring the situation and then dictating the solution. I appreciate the thought that goes into that kind of presentation.
Knit picker to Author:
This book was a lot tighter and better edited than the others. That keeps the "plausibility level" high, which makes for a higher grade fiction experience.
Two things snapped me out of my listener's trance. The first was the way they drank scotch in the Ripsaw bar. I'm not an elitist snob, but a lot of the "nectar of the gods" has passed my lips. I've never been tempted, nor seen anyone else tempted to down scotch out of a shot glass. Good scotch, (I've never encountered bad scotch) can be drunk neat, but it would be a rare thing indeed to see it tossed down out of a shot glass as if it were sour mash whisky or even rye chasing a beer. It might be worth asking a good bartender.
When Lucinda pulled a social security number off of a marine dog tag something went clang. At the next break I went upstairs and took a look at my own dog tags and found name, blood type, religion, and a service number but no social security number. It turns out however that my dog tags and the man who wore them are a bit dated. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_tag_(identifier) shows that a modern dog tag has a social security number but no service number. Score one for you and your editors for doing good research. So maybe even an A+ from the knit picker.
Recovering liberal to liberal:
I thought the themes that were associated with dealing with violence were very well thought out and laid down. The drug gang, the wife who murders her unfaithful husband, the potential for violence between groups of, Indians, whites, and the Indian boys gang and finally, the screwed up kid who slaughters his class mates were all thoughtfully constructed and I must say that they were treated fairly; this coming from a conservative reader speaking to a liberal writer. Your conclusions may have been a bit different than mine, but the treatment was fair.
In the last scene where Cork gives his guns to Henry, we split tacks, but even so I share Cork's wish that there be another recourse. The problem is that there probably is not.
Within the liberal liturgy moral relativity may be applied to each of the violent persons and groups in the plot, and insofar as it helps us to understand them it is useful. Taken in full measure however, moral relativity deprives us of the ethics that help us sort through these things. Logic without ethics is a sterile and wandering form offering little of value, and no motive to act. By depriving us of ethics, moral relativity becomes the entropy of philosophy, making everything into a dull cold mush.
If we are not much inclined to violence ourselves must we still redress violence with more violence when we encounter it? I think it probably comes down to that in the end.
I fear that when Cork gave his guns to Henry it was a metaphor for collecting up all the guns in the world to prevent further evil. For a variety of reasons that won't work. Don't turn in your guns Cork. Be careful not to confuse a workman with his tools.
Reader to author:
All in all sir, a very fine book that was thoughtfully structured, and a tale well told. Thanks. It was a great birthday present.
Jerry

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Love found again...Review Date: 2008-01-21
Remember Love Review Date: 2007-10-30
learns of a secret she had been keeping since they've know each other,
Trin felt deeply betrayed and angry-so much so, that he demands a
divorce. However, before anything could be resolved between them, Dom
was presumed dead in a tragic plane crash. Totally devastated at the
loss of his wife, Trin turned to his work and sought out professional
help to deal with his anger and bereavement. Then about a year later,
Trin receives some unbelievable news - Dom is alive! Ecstatic, Trin
immediately rushes to her side only to learn that Dom has no memory of
him or their marriage. Because. Not about to let a second chance at
his marriage slip through his fingers, Trin begins to court Dom,
hoping that one day soon she will regain her memory and they could
resolve the issue that threatened to tear them apart.
Dominique awakens in a hospital with no recollection of who she is or
how she got there. And, then a handsome stranger appears claiming
that he was her husband and that they were very much in love.
Attracted to him from the start, Dom allows herself to be romanced by
Trin. However, her newly found happiness is short-lived when Dom has
a minor head banging accident that causes her to regain her memory.
Now, Dom realizes that before her amnesia, her marriage was on a
downward spiral and very close to a divorce because of a secret from
her past.
Is all hope lost or will Dom and Trin be able to mend their broken
marriage before the point of no return?
The plot in Remember Love circles around two main issues - secrets and
anger. The heroine was keeping a secret that caused major destruction
to her marriage which leads to the hero unable to maintain control
over his rage and being on the verge of expressing a violent behavior.
Although, Dom should not have kept the secret, I could totally
understand the reason why she chose not to tell Trin. She knew Trin
would be heartbroken and she did not want to cause him unnecessary
emotional pain and heartache. Nevertheless, she never would have
imagined his reaction to be as such. And, if the secret from her past
wasn't a big enough conflict, Dom's job as an investigative reporter
caused even more havoc on their relationship, because Dom's new
assignment was to investigate the company where Trin was the CEO.
Yikes! There are some sexual scenes throughout the book, but they are
vanilla and gently described. Remember Love is AlTonya Washington's
debut novel and I found it to be a pleasant, enlighten read.
Nikita Steele
Reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed
Loved ALTonya Washington's books!Review Date: 2006-08-14
This review applies to: Remember Love
A Lover's Dream
and
Love Scheme
A KeeperReview Date: 2003-10-21
Trinidad,TrinidadReview Date: 2003-04-08
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I picked up this book and could not put it down. Amy's story, and the parallel and intermingling stories, were funny and poignant, but it was the subflooring of Maine's rural culture that lent this book its solid foundation and its human appeal. Read it if you want a rare and special look into real lives, defined by real communities, that still exist today but are rapidly and sadly evaporating.
Very highly recommended.