By Region Books


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By Region Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

By Region
The Birchbark House
Published in Turtleback by Turtleback Books Distributed by Demco Media (2002-09)
Author: Louise Erdrich
List price: $15.64

Average review score:

Worthy tear-jerker for adults, not just children
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-13
After reading so many praises from young adult readers, I'd like to make a suggestion for adult readers of historical fiction. I read this book, not so that I could instill a love of reading for my children, but rather, for my own pleasure in reading young adult fiction. The books may not involve many subplots, intrigues, and thickly woven characterizations, but certain ones can immerse you into their world of historical make-believe and even lead you to tears. I for one cried when reading this book. The way Louise Erdrich handles the coping of virulent illness and death through the eyes of a child is incredible. Not only does she paint this glorious heroine from a late 1800s Ojibwa girl, but she makes me dwell on the delicate vitality of the human soul and the subtle interconnectedness of each other. Yes, this book describes accurately the lives of the Ojibwa people of that time, but more importantly, above the cultural/historical lesson, the most prominent lesson from Erdrich's storytelling is her unveiling of human transformation into maturity clothed in the culture of the Ojibwa girl, Omakayas. Her auspicious past, her gifts with animals, her perseverance in caring for her family during the smallpox epidemic, and her coping with her brother's death -- for readers to feel that the book has a slow start, Erdrich more than likely chose to portray Omakayas' life in that way because that was exactly the pace it was. Meaning to say, it's not always violence and passion every minute, every chapter. The life of Ojibwas had a steady rhythm that followed the course of nature and only when the white settlers introduced themselves did that rhythm falter. For people who'd like an exciting quick read having to do with Native American history, I can't think of any. But for people who want to see life through a young girl's eyes -- life that involved hard work, sacrifice, love, death and living with what nature has provided, then this book is an excellent choice. Otherwise, there are a lot of old western novels that involve Native Americans (inaccurately of course) that would provide more of a thrill ride, if thrills are what you seek.

purchased for school
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-01
I purchased this book for my daughter who is attending CSUN. It arrived in a week and was in good condition, just like the description said.
Very happy with this purchase and many others.

Wonderfully Insightful Narrative of Native American Life Early in This Century
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-26
This sweet, tender, sometimes humorous book, chronicles a year in the life of Omakayas, a seven year old girl who lives with her tribe on an island near Lake Superior. The book is divided into four main sections, each relating to a season of the year, just as the Native America daily life is based. Through Omakayas, children learn as they read about how she helps build a birch bark house, how she does her chores, and many other important details of Native American life. This makes the book especially invaluable for the fifth grade Social Studies curriculum. Many Native American words are used throughout this book, but this is done in a manner which makes their meaning apparent. There is even a glossary for these words in the back of the book. Children will love this book as Omakayas makes friends with animals and deals with feelings about her family, loss, fear, happiness, and contentment, as well as other feelings familiar to the young reader.

The Real Little House on the Prairie
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-09
Generations of American children have grown up reading Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder. I'm in one of those generations. These stories gave us a view into settlers moving into formerly Indian territories and the hardships of breaking new lands to the plow, fighting weather, droughts, floods, and illness. These stories are our stories of conquering the prairie West. But there's another story that needs to be told and this story is of the Indians we died of disease and starvation and were moved off the lands so that white settlers could build farms and towns.

Laura Ingalls Wilder told the only stories she could tell - one dimensional tales of white people in a white nation. Louise Erdrich tells the story she is equipped to tell - one of a rich group of people living together in the Northern prairie lands. In this story Omakayas is a young Ojibwe girl living with her family, but the characters aren't all Indian. There's Albert LaPautre, a Frenchman who bumbles through trades and wild visions. There's Omakayas' father who works to pay off his yearly debt to the trading post and knows how to play chess so well that he can sometimes win enough food to help his family through hard times. There's Old Tallow, a medicine woman with a pack of angry dogs who teaches kind lessons through harsh examples.

For Omakayas and her family life is both hard and wonderful. There's enough sadness in the book to make you cry and enough happiness to make a child play-act the parts. The one thing I love about native storytelling is the respect shown to animals and plants that are needed to survive. Ms. Erdrich tells of this relationship with the skill of a master storyteller.

This book is richer and more complete than Little House on the Prairie. It's a responsible book and deserves more accolades and a greater following than that earlier work. It's brilliant and sensitive and fun. Everyday life never made me feel so fully. Please let all children in your life read this beautiful book.

- CV Rick, May 2008

half and half
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-01
We had to read the Birchbark House for a 7th grade class assignment. I thought this book was kind of interesting, because it had some funny parts and some sad parts in the middle of the story. In the beginning it was really boring. Sometimes it's hard to understand because they used a lot of Indian words but they provide a glossary. I think thee book could use some more funny and violent parts to get people interested to read more. I gave this book 3 stars because it was an o.k. book. It was kind of boring in the beginning but it got a lot better. It needed more funny parts. It was a good book but not one I would have picked. I would recommend this book to high schoolers, but they have to have a little Indian in them to understand you must like: sad, boring, exciting, and funny to enjoy this book.

By Region
At Play in the Fields of the Lord
Published in Paperback by Vintage (1991-12-03)
Author: Peter Matthiessen
List price: $14.95
New price: $4.45
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $14.95

Average review score:

a great and intriguing story.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-17
This is a very good book, but not great. Matthiessen's writing is engrossing and it is difficult to put it down. However, the vileness of some of the subject matter is a bit hard to swallow. This is, no doubt, a realistic tale, written after Matthiessen had traveled throughout the continent. The movie does have an influence, as one keeps thinking of Ms. Hannah. The plight and evolution of the natives and their values is intriguing. The disaster that results from outsiders forcing culture and religion down the throats of the "savages" is thought provoking and relates to many situations one sees. The characters aren't all that likable, but certainly very real. Hazel is a sad case. The jaguar shaman-to-be is a character about which it would be nice to learn more. Matthiessen says that he rewrote the last journey many times. This is the toughest part of the book to follow; is it real or a dream? I actually did reread parts of the end. There's no escaping the depression that comes from dwelling on the conflict in the jungle. I still feel that, despite the author's beliefs, his nonfiction work is better. But this is an enjoyable novel, regardless.

Best read all year
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-30
An excellent adventure story that is both fast paced and well developed. I've read a number of books by Matthiessen. This is the best I've read yet by him. His fiction is far better than his non fiction in my opinion.

Recommended
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-23
I see there are many 5 star reviews here on Amazon. I 2nd these reviews. Recommended.

I am reading this book as a book on tape which is a good way to "read" it. This is a "good read" and worth your time. Recommended. Email Boland7214@aol.co

Why Not More Acclaim?
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-18
Why do I never hear Matthissen's name come up when there is speculation about who will win future Nobel Literature prizes?
AT PLAY is surely one of the great novels of the last half-century, and the reviewers hit on all of the reasons why. But add to that FAR TORTUGA, and the Watson Florida trilogy; and then add to THAT his brilliant and important non-fiction, from The Tree Where Man Was Born to The Snow Leopard, to In the Spirit of Crazy Horse; then, for good measure add in Matthiessen's involvement in The Paris Review, and you have a resume that is Nobel-quality.
Hey, I love Roth, too (admittedly not everything), but get serious!

Consider a second read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-13
This case study of culture clash is the story of Protestant missionaries trying to bring the Word of God to jungle savages. They think themselves heroes of The Lord, but there are no heroes here save, perhaps, Louis Moon a reservation half-breed who lost his faith. Moon is now an aimless mercenary staggering through life, bouncing off one obstacle after another. When it becomes his job to massacre the indigenous people, he is revisited by drug-induced dreams of his youth and instead joins them as their rain god fallen from the sky (and a failing airplane).

Self-righteous missionary Martin Quarier, becomes less certain of his beliefs as the novel progresses, but seems incapable of moving beyond them. He sees the absurdity of the doctrinal feud between Catholics and Protestants, yet cannot think of priests as anything but the Enemy, in league with Satin. And Satin seems to be working on him, as well, churning up lust for the wife of another missionary.

The religious beliefs of the natives give a glimpse of how faith gets started. Their minor gods clearly provide more for them on a day-to-day basis than the major one Quarier tries to serve. He creates a "rice convert" or two, but is ultimately a miserable failure.
At Play in the Fields of the Lord is a classic tragedy of misunderstanding and miscommunication. If you haven't read it, it's worth that first read. If you have, it was probably long enough ago that it deserves a second look.

By Region
Polar Dream: The First Solo Expedition by a Woman and Her Dog to the Magnetic North Pole
Published in Paperback by NewSage Press (2002-09-16)
Author: Helen Thayer
List price: $15.00
New price: $8.46
Used price: $5.67
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Comments on "Polar dream"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
A great book! It is so exciting that it is very difficult to put it down! After reading it, I ordered a total of 10 copies as presents for relatives and friends.

Outstanding book--50 year old woman and amazing dog's trek to North Pole
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-30
Great book. Helen Thayer set off in her 50s to walk to the magnetic North Pole. She did it only with Charlie, the polar bear wonder dog, given (sold) to her by the Inuit who were sure she wouldn't survive without a dog team who knew how to fend off polar bears. She finally agreed to taking one dog, who became her true partner in the journey (and afterward). The story is an outstanding tale of what she learned about herself and how she and Charlie so totally bonded, mutually dependent on each other. Helen prepared well and clearly fully respects Nature in all senses. It is also a wonderful tale about Charlie--about the intelligence of dogs we people would see more often if we just give them a chance to be themselves. This is an outstanding book for anyone of any age and hopefully will help more people understand the criticality and fragility of Nature, and the importance of treating animals (in this case, dogs) with true respect, care, compassion, and love. The book clearly shows the intelligence not just of Charlie, but also of the various polar bears Helena encountered (and successfully avoided attack from, without killing them). It also is an excellent book to get people thinking about themselves and their thoughts. Some of the lessons Helen learned, for example, included early on learning to say "no" as well as the importance of remaining positive and in control even when Nature seemed to be in control via a strong storm whirling around her for several days at a time. She includes photos from her journey, which also are amazing. An exciting, excellent book. I highly recommend this for everyone.

I can't believe she did the whole thing!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-17
I am a big fan of stories of artic adventure, and this is one of the best. In this day of snow mobiles and ATVs, we have a woman at 50 -- author Helen Thayer -- setting out to walk to the magnectic north pole, pulling her own sled and accompanied by an Inuit dog she had only known for a couple of days. On her first day out, she suffers such terrible frostbite of her fingers they become almost useless. (I would have called it quits right there.) Then come polar bears -- one the world's most deadliest creatures. And they keep on coming. Some curious, some life-threatening. But, she continues on her amazing journey, not for fame or fortune, but for scientific information for her program Adventure Classroom. There are some fantastic photos included and very helpful maps. Her writing style is breezy and compelling. It's trimph of the human spirit and the bonding of a dog and companion. What a terrific book.

An Explorer and Her Dog
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-30
An extraordinary true story of courage, determination and fortitude. Every chapter not only contains the wow factor but is an illustration of what the human spirit is capable of. Thayer is an accomplished writer who keeps the reader wanting more. An incredible story of a woman and her faithful dog Charlie, as they endure the hardships of polar travel on foot together with no dog teams or snowmobiles or resupply.
Sue White
Edmonton, Canada

Described in vivid, engaging detail
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-09
Polar Dream is the personal memoir of Helen Thayer, the first woman (and the oldest person at age 50) to travel on foot, unresupplied, to the magnetic North Pole. Her harrowing trek on skis for 27 days, aided only by a dog trained to warn her of approaching bears, is described in vivid, engaging detail, as are her seven encounters with polar bears which she survived through skill, luck and quick thinking. Black-and-white photographs, including ones taken by the author during her trek, enhanced a narrative of profound insights into the beauty and wildness of the arctic. Readers who appreciate true life adventure will enjoy the excitement and wonder of Helen Thayer's Polar Dream.

By Region
Alone Across the Arctic: One Woman's Epic Journey by Dog Team
Published in Hardcover by Alaska Northwest Books (2001-10-01)
Authors: Pam Flowers and Ann Dixon
List price: $22.95
New price: $7.18
Used price: $0.49
Collectible price: $22.95

Average review score:

Riding with Pam
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-06
As I read this book, I felt like I was with Pam as she crossed Alaska. A truly well written book which gives the reader a wonderful insight into the beauty of Alaska and most of all into the human emotions of such an arduous journey. It is a book of truimph, beating all the odds!

Alone Across the Artic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-06
Excellent true story, well told with many explanations so the reader understands what is going on.

GREAT, great story!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-03
This is a great book that will inspire you to be a stronger, more adventursome person than you might otherwise be. I like the way the author incorporates diary entries from her expedition, and also the text inserts including helpful background information that might otherwise have bogged down the flow of the story. I bought both this (the version for adults or teens) and the companion book, Big Enough Anna, which tells the same story in a manner appropriate for young children. Both are fantastic, and I plan to give copies to friends as gifts. Way to go, Pam Flowers!!!

I LOVE THE STORIES OF YOUR ADVENTURES!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-18
Dear Pam,
I am from Burton Valley Elementry and in third grade.You did an amazing show!I loved it!I have one of your books .I have 'Big Enough ,Anna.Ihope to get more of your books.You have amazing and incredible adventures!I am a BIG fan of your work.Can we buy another copy of Big Enough, Anna and have it signed by you? (...).Thank You for your great books and presentations!

Thank you,
Iris Wagner

Hard to put down
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-03
I needed something to read during the benchmarks, so I ran to the library during passing time and grabbed the first book I could find on mushing (I'm an addicted musher). I had a hard time putting it down. The pictures were wonderful, and the story was great. It was a pretty fast read, I finished it that day, but I enjoyed it. I've reread it twice since I bought my own copy.

By Region
Birnbaum's Walt Disney World for Kids 2008 (Birnbaum's Walt Disney World for Kids By Kids)
Published in Paperback by Disney Editions (2007-09-18)
Author: Birnbaum Travel Guides
List price: $12.95
New price: $5.18
Used price: $7.29

Average review score:

So Exciting!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-08
My daughter and son both LOVE this book. It gets them excited and shows them a little of what to expect. There are real kids' opinions and reviews of rides and attractions. My daughter very much enjoys reading all about Disney! She'll definitely be prepared when we set off for our trip!! I would definitely recommend this book to anyone!

disney for kids
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-22
This book has all the answre's to questions on disney world. It's a fabulous book . It has every thing in it we need to know. We will definitely be taking this book to disney world with us, when we go in june.

Great book, useful and easy-to-follow info!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
This book was an excellent resource for us when taking our 20-month old to Disney World. Originally we bought it for the autograph section, but it soon became handy for reading quickly about each attraction at the separate parks. The tips written by children themselves were also helpful. The book is softcover and lightweight - easy to carry in your backpack all day at the parks.

Great for school aged kids!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
This book is a wonderful resource for elementary school aged children. My 6-year-old poured over this book before our trip to Disney and it helped prepare him for what to expect. Since returning from our trip a few weeks ago, he still looks at the book almost every day to point out things he remembers and what he'd like to do next time we go back. This book was completely worth the money spent on it.

WDW FOR KIDS
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
BOUGHT THE BOOK FOR MY DAUGHTER (WHO'S 8) AND SHE IS SO EXCITED ABOUT GETTING SOME AUTOGRAPHS AND FROM LOOKING THRU IT SHE KNOWS WHAT THE BEST RIDES FOR HER ARE! GREAT PICTURES IN FULL COLOR-VERY KID FRIENDLY!

By Region
Martin's Hundred
Published in Paperback by University of Virginia Press (1991-06)
Author: Ivor Noel Hume
List price: $24.50
New price: $16.92
Used price: $3.09

Average review score:

The Greatest Archaeology Book Ever!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
"Martin's Hundred" by Ivor Noel Hume is as exciting as a detective story and contains the best prose ever spilled on the subject of archaeology. Hume, the Father of Historical Archaeology, was the head archaeologist at Colonial Williamsburg (CW) for many years, and was once given the job of archaeologically investigating the expansive grounds of the James River estate known as Carter's Grove. He was actually looking for the underground remains of 18th century buildings that could be interpreted during tours of the mansion, which was to about to open to the public. What Hume and his associates actually found, completely by accident (as the best mysteries always unravel), was what was left of 17th century Wolstenholme Towne - an English settlement at a place called Martin's Hundred that had been completely lost to history after its destruction in the Indian Massacre of 1622. This book gives a blow by blow description of the finding and further excavations of this long lost settlement, and describes in exciting detail how the archaeologists and other researchers searched the globe for answers to the mysteries and questions raised by the dig. The story takes the reader from Virginia to England, Bermuda, Turkey, Holland and back to Virginia on an epic quest of high adventure. When I first read this book I was a young student archaeologist at Jamestown, Virginia, and overnight it became the best book about an archaeological excavation that I had ever read - although I had not read many at that point. A decade later, and after reading countless other popular and academic books, reports, and articles as a professional archaeologist, "Martin's Hundred" is still by far my favorite. Archaeologists normally write site reports, and if they actually publish anything at all it is laden with all kinds of anthropological jargon and dry, factual descriptions that the public (and even many other archaeologists!) can't understand. This book is the antithesis of that because it was written by a self-effacing, humorous, English gentleman with a great talent for using the English language as it is supposed to be used - with grace and flair and a unique style. I give this book the highest recommendation possible, and only wish that there were more books about archaeology as great as this one is.

Gets better with every read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-20
I first read "Martin's Hundred" while I was in elementary school and hung on every word. Fifteen years later I bought a copy and reread it, and I have read it again every three or four years for another decade still. Here's why "Martin's Hundred" is so good: Ivor Noel Hume's prose. Gentle, funny, self-effacing, and erudite, Hume's narrative of archeological discovery is a nonfiction page-turner. The evidence of a 17th-century English colony in Virginia is fragmentary, and only luck and patient scholarship sustained over many years yields a coherent picture of what happened and when. In the hands of some writers this could be deadly material, but Hume's elegant turn of phrase makes the story crackle along. This is a book to curl up with on a rainy day.

Scholarly and entertaining
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-14
It is rare that an academic book, no matter what the subject, will both inform as well as entertain. This book does both in spades. It details the four-year excavation project (much of it supported by the National Geographic Society) of part of the Carter's Grove plantation, near Jamestown, Virginia, in the hopes of finding evidence of earlier inhabitation and clues to the 1622 Indian "massacre" that occured there. Before it was all over, a fort, a lost town (Wolstenholme Towne), and the skeletal remains of at least three victims of the Indian attack were unearthed. Hume tells of the archealogical excavation in great detail, yet avaoids the ho-hum pitfalls such detailed scientific explanations might produce by utilizing a very approachable style, filled with humor and good cheer, especially when the weather got bad. Even archeologists are human after all, and false leads, wild goose chases, and seemingly endless unanswerable questions plague them as much as the rest of us; Hume's dealing with that in very human terms we all can appreciate makes this book a welcomed exception to the general rule. An excellent book.

One small quibble: in discussing the wooden palisade that surrounded the fort, Hume refers to a "Fort Laramie-style wall of pointed tree trunks." It's true that many American forts in the West had that kind of protective wall around them, but Fort Laramie never did; it had no wall around it at all.

An outstanding book for the non-archaeologist
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-02
I purchased this book on a visit to Williamsburg and it sat on my shelf for quite a while before I seriously dove in. This book combines a clear explaination of archaeological methods with the building suspense of a good detective novel. As The author and his team uncover the existence of an early Virginia colony and utilize an astounding range of techniques and research to slowly piece together the lives of the inhabitants you will be drawn into the past. More than that you will be excited to read on and discover with these archaeologists what really happened. I.N. Hume writes eloquently on all aspects of organizing and proceeding with a project of this scale and mixes those details regarding administration and method with the fascinating story of the settlement of Martin's Hundred flawlessly. I could not imagine a better introduction to the discipline of archaeology for the layperson.

Digging For Something Greater Than Gold
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-28
It's been said that the extent of most Americans' knowledge of their colonial history encompasses the Pilgrims landing at Plymouth Rock and the signing of the Declaration of Independence. In fact much else occurred over a period of almost 200 years: the Lost Colony at Roanoke, the Dutch colony of New Netherland, Roger Williams and William Penn's settlement of Rhode Island and Pennsylvania as havens for religious freedom, the bloodiest per capita conflict on American soil (King Phillip's War), the Palatine migration of the 1700s...

On the eve of the 400th anniversary of the first permanent settlement in America, Jamestown, Ivor Noel Hume's "Martin's Hundred" is an excellent launching point for learning about our antecedents and their attempts at colonization in the New World. Martin's Hundred was settled not far from Jamestown only 12 years after the first Jamestown settlers arrived. At one time the settlement had several hundred residents, with a fort, potter's hut, dwellings, etc. The "town" holds the distinction of being the first settlement destroyed by Indians, in 1622, when two-thirds of the populace was massacred. There was a fitful effort to reestablish the village, but it eventually died out. It was plowed under in the 18th century after a plantation, Carter's Grove, was built on top of it.

The exact location of the Martin's Hundred settlement was unknown until the 1970s, when archaeologist Hume chanced upon it during preparations for a renaissance of Carter's Grove. Hume's book traces the archaeological discoveries and subsequent research of this fascinating village. I was more intrigued by the history, while the archaeological discussion of potsherds and postholes became a little tedious. However, the reader comes away with a great appreciation for the patience, research, and organization that accompanies historical archaeology. Hume had to deal not only with pesky reporters, for whom the discovery represented major news in the popular press, but also cold, rainy weather conditions (which had the potential to destroy valuable artifacts), and the fickle reliability of summer interns.

Hume comes across as a true Renaissance man. For many of the clues and artifacts, he consulted obscure European etchings and paintings of the early 17th century, using these to substantiate many of his finds. A discriminating reader might view this with a jaundiced eye, but Hume is humble enough to avoid making sweeping pronouncements of his finds.

I can't imagine a better introduction to historical archaeology than "Martin's Hundred." Just continue plunging past the endless potsherds and postholes, and you'll be rewarded; much like what happened to me when I saw the photo of a piece of porcelain with the year "1631" etched into it. Truly breathtaking.

By Region
Month-By-Month Gardening in the Desert Southwest
Published in Paperback by Cool Springs Press (2003-04-09)
Author: Mary Irish
List price: $19.99
New price: $9.75
Used price: $7.09
Collectible price: $19.99

Average review score:

Gardening in Caliche Clay
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
I have spent several years now trying to get my backyard thriving w/plants but with low water use and a minumum amount of digging in this vexing soil. I have tried everything in garden improvements and still have not achieved what I want. It finally hit me that the only thing I absolutely needed to do was to find plants that grow in heavy clay soil that contains various amounts of caliche. If the roots can't grow through the soil then no garden. Mary Irish is a pro at dealing with these issues. This book along with a couple of others by her also have become my only garden books that I will be using this season.

Gardening in the Desert Southwest
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
This is a great month by month guide for everything you grow (fruits, vegetables, herbs, flowers,etc). It tells you exactly what to do each month.

The Best Book on Southwest Gardening
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-24
In my opinion as a Master Gardener, this book is the best there is for gardening in Arizona, period! I'm sorry to see that it is currently unavailable at Amazon, perhaps you can get it through the Maricopa County Cooperative Extension Service Service library.

Gardening in the SW
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-28
This book is a great resource for anyone wanting to garden in the Southwest. It gives a month by month summary of each class of flora (bulbs, cacti, trees, etc.) and what you should be doing for each. As a newcomer to the area, it is very valuable in teaching me what I need to now to be successful at planting in the desert.

Gardening book's a keeper
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-16
I needed a couple books to supplement the gardening books I currently had. After a few searches and questions, I ended up with the "Month-by-Month Gardening in the Desert Southwest" and "Edible Landscaping in the Desert Southwest: Wheelbarrow to Plate."

Both books complimented each other in that the Month-by-Month book was explicit in what to plant as each month of the desert came around, and the Edible book allowed me to work in several edible plants into my yard and garden plans - both of which I wanted. I like plants with duel purposes. I'm glad I went ahead and purchased both.

Specifically to the Month-by-Month book, the only reason I didn't give it a rating of "5" is because I got caught up short by it's page organization. However, after I caught on to how it's arranged - subject matter first, THEN, activities month-by-month - it was easy to reference. I guess I was expecting to pick it up in October and see everything that was available to plant for that month, but that's not how it's arranged. You find the kind of plant you want FIRST, say, TREES, then look up what month you're in. Unlike George Brookbank's book, "Desert Gardening" that is organized by the month. Still, if I had a 4 and 1/2 rating for Month-to-Month, I would have given it that rating.

The pages in Month-to-Month have good pictures and the text and instructions are clear. It has wonderful botanical references with specific names for each plant, so if I went to the garden supply shop, I'd know exactly what plant I was looking for - a great help.

It's starts out with delineations of Regions, USDA Cold Hardiness areas, and Zone Map - a must in knowing what plants are better suited for your own particular area of the SW desert.

The major sections are Basic Horticultural Practices such as getting and maintaining a healthy soil (tough in caliche), How to make compost (something we need so much in the desert), fertilizers, tools, watering (VERY important in the desert), etc.

Chapter One covers Annuals;
Chapter Two is on Bulbs; Corms, Rhizones, and Tubers;
Chapter Three is on Cacti, Succulents and other Desert Perennials;
Chapter Four is on Fruits;
Chapter Five is on Grasses (a nice surprise);
Six is on Perennials;
Seven is on Roses;
Eight- Shrubs;
Nine - Trees;
Ten - Vegetables and Herbs (my main interest);
and the Appendix.

For example, specifically referring to the Annual listing with its common and full botanical name lists over 100 plants, and that's just the Annuals pages; so if you can't find something to plant from this book, you're just not trying.

There are lined spaces in each month of each plant section so you can make your own notes - a great idea. You can use it to keep track of what you planted each year and how it did right there in each month/plant section you used. Great, year-to-year reference.

It seems whenever I flip the pages, I always have to pull up short by a heading, Helpful Hint, etc. that catches my eye. Like on page 113, the Helpful Hint is on Native Fruits - cool - prickly pear, wolfberry, mesquite pods, etc. The book also covers a little bit on interplanting and companion planting.

In a final note, on the plants lists, it also states which plant is Native and which plant isn't. That's a great help on knowing what plant might acclimate better to your desert garden.

By Region
The Shaman's Apprentice: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest
Published in Turtleback by Turtleback Books Distributed by Demco Media (2002-02)
Authors: Mark J. Plotkin and Lynne Cherry
List price: $15.83
Used price: $35.00

Average review score:

Best book for teaching children about people and nature.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-30
"The Shaman's Apprentice" presents more information about the relationship between people and nature than many much larger volumes. The story of Kamanya, Gabriela, and the shaman Nahtahlah, educates children about the important roles of all living things. The text is supported by rich and colorful illustrations which easily maintains the interest of children from four to 14. If you want the children in your life to understand the importance of rain forests and the need to preserve them, you must have this book.

The Really Awsome Shaman's Apprentice
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-23
It was a really good book. I'd recommend it. It is about a boy in Kwamala that wants to be a Shaman. He becomes the Shaman's apperentice. Read this book if you want to know if he becomes a Shaman himself. This would be a good book for 10 year olds.

The Shaman's Apprentice : A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-22
I saw this book on Reading Rainbow today, and I was enthralled by the story and the beautiful illustrations. The episode took Levar to the village the book was about and introduced us to the apprentice, now grown, being teacher to the village and his twin sons. My daughter is only a year old, but just the colors kept her attention. I look forward to when the words will have the same effect, as I'm sure they will.

Lovely! My three year loved it, so did I...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-14
This beautifully illustrated and wonderfully written book is that rare children's story that teaches and says something important while preserving the wonder and magic of how children (grown and otherwise) view the world.

An ecological lesson for children and their parents
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-29
The Shaman's Apprenctice is one of the rarest of books. It combines an engaging true story with beautiful illustrations. The result in an aural-visual experience that transcends the age of the audience and presents a valuable message to all. It should be required reading for every planetary denizen.

By Region
In Ruins: The Once Great Houses of Ireland
Published in Hardcover by Bulfinch Pr (1997-04)
Author: Duncan McLaren
List price: $28.00
Used price: $58.59

Average review score:

Great Photography and writing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-28
Left me wishing the book was twice as long.

Great photography ...very interesting and educational
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1997-08-28
Simon Marsden is a master of the art of infrared photography. The pictures are haunting and project an eerie dreamlike quality. I highly recommend this book as an excellent example of the chilling effects of infrared photography

Decidedly Haunting....
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-18
A most interesting pictorial collection of forlorn sadness.
I find the images both beautiful and emensly contemplative, images that conjure ghosts and spirits real or perhaps imagined, yet provacative none the less. One ponders how these phantoms shall apear in a thousand years, and rue the thought how long they may have lasted would they not been murdred by circumstances. The text that accompanies the images an important, interesting, and informative heuristic. This book ostensibly one any Artist, Architectae, or student of history should have in his LibrariƩ.

Haunting Images and Illuminating Historical Text!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-16
A wonderful book full of haunting images of the castles and houses of Ireland that have now fallen into ruin and decay. Excellent subjects for infrared photography.

The photographs are on the whole well composed and the overall effect can be quite disturbing. An explanation of the fate of the various buildings is included. A book which sits on the shelf ready to show visitors instantly the nature and feel of infrared photography.

There is an excellent supporting article by Pete Schermerhorn in the Official Infrared FAQ describing his visits to the places photographed in the book together with map grid references.

Examples of fine infrared photographs
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-30
For some reason neither the authors nor the publishers admit that the images in this book are photographed in infrared. This is a pity since the juxtaposition of buildings and foliage is one of the best subjects for this and overgrown ruins are an excellent subject. As an infrared specialist myself I have a small reservation about a few of the photographs from a technical standpoint but I can't fault the sense of composition and form that they show.

By Region
Testing of transition-region models: Test cases and data (NASA contractor report)
Published in Unknown Binding by For sale by the National Technical Information Service (1991)
Author: Bart A Singer
List price:

Average review score:

History written in beautiful English
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-17
I was referred to this book by an American Artist whom had lived in Japan for almost 50 years. As a Chinese, I thought I know Chinese history, but after reading through JD's detail account of events with vivid description of the personalities, I can visualize the historical moments through the paper. It is so well written that I have to read very slowly to digest it. Combining this with other readings during the same period, including Ray Huang's lesser known Yellow River Blue Mountain (his autobiography), I am beginning to see history in perspective!

Martyr For A Sane Foreign Policy
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-02
John Davies has crafted a superb tale of his years in Asia and Moscow. He was a classic Old China Hand, raised by missionary parents in China, a fluent speaker of the language, and a natural to serve in the State Department and as Army liaison during World War II. The book combines period documents with later reflections, dazzling readers with thrilling adventures and portentous encounters with the era's major figures: Generalissimo and Madame Chiang, Stilwell, Mao, Zhou Enlai, Roosevelt, Marshall. The 1948-9 Nationalist debacle sparked an anticommunist hunt for scapegoats blamed for "losing" China (it was never ours to lose), tragically depriving the US of wise counsel from Davies, John Service, Oliver Clubb, John Vincent and others. As J.K. Fairbank noted, neither before nor since has America had such gifted country experts to advise on foreign policy. Davies's view of a defense-minded Soviet Union again was more realistic than the official line which helped provoke the Cold War. His globetrotting is a little hard to follow, and fuller coverage of post-1945 events would be welcome, but these are quibbles. See L. Van Slyke ed, "The China White Paper." E. Sevareid, "Not so Wild a Dream" augments Davies's modest paragraph on their celebrated parachute jump and escape from Burma. E.J. Kahn, "The China Hands" details wartime conflicts and postwar persecutions, while J.S. Service, "Lost Chance in China" contains prophetic field reports by Davies's most astute colleague.

Superb! Overlooked because of persecution of "China hands."
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1997-10-12
If you wish to understand Sino-American relations in the 20th Century, this book by our most brilliant (and persecuted) Political Officer in the State Department, must be your starting point. It is more than educational. His digressions - descriptions of the voyages of Cheng Ho during the Ming Dynasty; Mukden during the early years of the Japanese occupation of Manchuria; the celebration in Moscow after V-E day; etc., etc. - reveal a literary gift of the highest magnitude. Truly, one of the best books I have ever read. In fact, it irks me that so few people have read it.

First person report of a fascinating period in history
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-06
While I had previously read Seagrave's Soong Dynasty and Tuchman's Stilwell, it was the bibliographical notes of Ambassador Lilley's China Hands that got me turned on to this book. I ordered it from an Amazon seller and I wasn't disappointed.

Mr. Davies offers vivid, evocative descriptions of events and people he encountered in China from his birth in Sichuan in 1908 until the Communist takeover in 1949. Apparently a religious record keeper, Davies is able to rely on his contemporaneous diary entries and letters to produce colorful details that would have been impossible to to recall 30 or 40 years after the fact. Davies does an exceptional job of mixing macroscopic historical events with his own microscopic personal narrative to create a flowing portrait of early 20th century China.

Though very much loyal member of Stilwell's China detail, Davies offers even-handed analysis of the events that eventually led to the fall of the Nationalist regime in China. Instead of putting the blame for the "loss" of China on any individual, Davies seems to point at the prevalence of sentimentalism over China in the minds of American foreign policy actors as leading to the mishandling of China during the 1940s.

I would recommend this book to anyone interested in China, Asian studies, or WWII history.

an excellent 'first person review of chinese history.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-09
As above, a wonderful description of Chinese history in the 20th century by someone who was there. From the manchu's through early revolution to Chiang and the Communist struggle; one insight follows another.


Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->School Time-->Social Studies-->History-->By Region
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