Social Studies Books


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Social Studies Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Social Studies
Only the Ball Was White: A History of Legendary Black Players and All-Black Professional Teams
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press, USA (1992-04-30)
Author: Robert Peterson
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Average review score:

Very Good Baseball History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-29
Robert Peterson (1925-2006) wrote this pioneering history in 1970 when many ex-players were living. Drawing on interviews, Peterson makes the Negro Leagues come to life. Readers learn of stars like Bullet Joe Rogan, Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson ("the black Babe Ruth"), Cool Papa Bell, Oscar Charleston, etc., and teams like the Kansas City Monarchs, Homestead Grays, Indianapolis Clowns, Chicago American Giants, etc. The Negro Leagues were one of the largest black-owned businesses, though a couple teams (Pittsburgh Crawfords) were run by racketeers. Readers learn about Rube Foster, who founded the Negro National League in 1920, the annual All-Star game in Chicago's Comiskey Park, barnstorming against white big leaguers, and travel conditions that ranged from decent to difficult and discriminatory. There is also an appendix with team rosters and yearly standings.

The Negro Leagues began to fade as Jackie Robinson joined the Dodgers in 1947, and folded completely in 1960 - a sad day signalling a better era. Then this book arrived to bring attention to the Leagues and its players. One, Ted "Double-Duty" Radcliffe (1902-2005), became a fixture at White Sox games, signing autographs, and throwing out the first ball on his 101st and 102nd birthdays.

Today fans can visit The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, buy team merchandise, and enjoy several good books on the subject, including I WAS RIGHT ON TIME (by Buck O'Neil), BASEBALL'S GREAT EXPERIMENT and several others. Peterson deserves at least a little credit for this.

Only the Ball Was White
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-23
A scholarly effort by a great Negro Leagues historian, evidenced by Oxford University Press imprint. Highly informative, a tremendous read! Five-star plus*****

A Monumental Journey Into The Forgotten History Of NLB
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-07
"Negro baseball," writes Robert W. Peterson, "was both a gladsome thing and a blot on America's conscience."

And in that one sentence, Peterson defines the glory of Negro Leagues baseball and how it also magnified the sordid race hatred of this nation, with the ramifications still being felt today.

When the book was published in 1970, the Negro Leagues was not really known by a whiter (oops, I mean "wider") audience. Peterson, who had a journalism background as an editor for the New York World-Telegram and The Sun, set out on this journey in 1966 by interviewing players, studying microfilm of black newspapers and delving into game accounts & features in sporting publications.

He traces the history of some of the greatest players and teams ever in the game from post-Civil War to 1947. Along with a history highlighted through extensive interviews are a recap of yearly standings and a register of players and league/team officials.

Names such as Cool Papa Bell, Judy Johnson, Buck Leonard and Rube Foster & teams like the Kansas City Monarchs, Cleveland Buckeyes and Pittsburgh Crawfords come to life and opened a door to a wealth of research into NLB that continues today.

Peterson, who passed away in February 2006 at the age of 80, was on a 2006 committee that selected players/executives from NLB and the pre-NLB era for baseball's Hall of Fame. His ballot was filled out before his death and used in the vote.

It can't be forgotten that NLB welcomed whites and women on the field of play, in the grandstands and in the front offices. Truly, Peterson shows in Only the Ball Was White that there were no rear entrances, separate facilities and racial hatred in Negro Leagues Baseball. The book will never lose its standing as a true beacon to a history that must never again be forgotten.

Wonderful Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-27
I consider myself a self-educated baseball historian, but had very little knowledge of the Negro Leagues - until I read this book. It's a wonderful introduction to the proud but sad history of the African American experience in baseball in the first half of the 20th century. I now have a strong working knowledge of the dominent personalities of the Negro Leagues and its many extraodinary athletes - many of whom would have been certain stars in the Majors.

As I read it, I kept thinking to myself what a tragedy it was that these great black ballplayers were barred from the Major Leagues. How different the game would have been. Cool Papa Bell - maybe the fastest man ever to play the game. Satchel Paige - one of the greatest pitchers of all time, black or white. Josh Gibson - the Babe Ruth of the Negro Leagues. Pop Lloyd - the Black Honus Wagner.

It's a overwhelmingly sad chapter in American history for sure; but it's also a compelling story of perseverence and dedication that allowed the Negro Leagues to succeed for so long in the face of incredible obstacles. If you love baseball history, do yourself a favor and read this book. Your baseball knowledge will not be complete without an understanding of the Negro Leagues.

Oh, what a game.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-20
Robert Peterson originally published this book in 1970 so it's really the original and standard history of the Negro Leagues. Peterson not only tells the history of these leagues and some of the great players, but also provides brief biographical sketches of dozens of players whose big league service would otherwise be lost to history. The book also has extensive appendices with annual standings and box scores of all-star games. The book gives us glimpses into Jim Crow America (and it was not just in the South).

Peterson portrays the often overlooked fact that the Negro Leagues were a business venture run almost exclusively by and for black people. And it was a tough business at that, but one that drew often sizeable crowds, especially on exciting and exhausting barnstorming tours. The Negro Leagues could not survive integration as its best players were siphoned off to the 'majors'. Despite the obvious benefits to those men who were finally broke through the wall of prejudice, the reader also understands that there was a sense of loss when the leagues shut down in 1960. More powerfully, the reader experiences the lost opportunities suffered by those players who never got the chance to play in the majors and make major league money, like Jimmie Crutchfield, the Black Lloyd Waner, who barely made a living on one side of Pittsburgh playing for the Crawfords while Waner hauled down $12,000 a year (a princely sum at the time) playing for the Pirates.

A must read for anyone interested in baseball, race relations, or American history.

Social Studies
The Princess Principle: Women Helping Women Discover Their Royal Spirit
Published in Paperback by Rawdon & Watson Publishing Company (2002-11-05)
Authors: Jana L. High and Marilyn Sprague-Smith
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A Must Read For All Women!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-28
It is about time a book like this has come along! It is filled with humor, hope and inspiration. In particular, Jana High's story brings home the importance of a good sense of humor in the midst of adversity. I also related a great deal to Julie Burch's story of struggling to be independent and learning to be happy with one's choices. I highly recommend this book for a friend, a co-worker, a relative, or yourself!

..Cover to Cover Reader-Man..
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-21
I was looking for a new book to give to my wife whom was down in spirit as our oldest left home after graduation. Well, I was impressed with this book by Jana High and Marilyn Sprague-Smith.
I read it too, on advice from my better half. The Princess Principle is a fresh interpretation on understanding and listening to one's own values, personal worth and self esteem system. The authors left me with clues and guidance on how to stay on top of the everyday life journey and how to place the bigger picture in daily focus through the road hazards ahead. I normally read astronomy and other science books but this was a great change for me.

A New Cinderella Story
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-06
Reviewed by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, award-winning author of This is the Place and Harkening: A Collection of Stories Remembered

Lately we`ve seen lots of movies that trade on a little girl's desire to grow up to be cared for by a handsome prince. That includes The Princess Diaries, Maid in Manhattan and other Cinderella stories that pretend to have an up-to-date twist for the modern woman. We have fashion designers exploiting women's desire for the glass slipper with five inch heels that will trash her posture and disintegrate her spine. Now we have The Princess Principle but it is not part of a trend toward exploitation.

Instead it is full of essays by eighteen women who share their hope, joy and expertise. The title may attract the very woman who needs it. It is an authentic inducement because our culture has made the idea of being a princess a part of our psyches that we might as well turn to our advantage.

The editors, Jana L. High and Marilyn Sprague-Smith, M. Ed., have assembled literate, well educated women with different stories and different angles on how we might improve ourselves and still live with-even accept-what now may appear to be our natural urge to be a princess. For these women, The Princess Principle isn't about being rescued; they know we are beautiful and important in the ways that count.

As a writer considering my own anthology I must also comment on the format of this book. It is rare among anthologies. It gives each contributor full and complete billing including her name on the front cover, her picture on the back. It is also careful to credential each author so the reader has a sense for who each of them is and how she might best approach that writer's views.

This book might even be a resource for readers because some of the authors act as coaches, therapists, or advisors in real life.

In the spirit of this exceptional format here are the contributors:

Lorri Allen
Sue Bergstrom M.Ed.
Julie D. Burch

Jennifer Curtet
Deb Gauldin, RN
Sheryl Rudd Kuhn, MRR
Carolyn L. Larkin
Janet Luongo, M.S.Ed.
Joyce C. Mils, Ph.D.
Rebecca Pace
Lori Palm
Vickie Pokaluk
Valerie A Rawls
Sheryl Roush
Sue Stanek, Ph.D.
Amy S. Tolbert, Ph.D.

My bet is that not one of these women is a princess in the traditional sense and that every one of them is a princess in the sense she is making her own way, happily and with self assurance, in this big, bad but wonderful world.

(Carolyn Howard-Johnson's first novel, This is the Place, has won eight awards. Her newly released Harkening: A Collection of Stories Remember has won three. Her new book of poetry , Skyscapes: A Woman's View,is looking for a home.)

"A PEAK Experience!"
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-31
This book reinforced my belief in self and rejuvinated my sprit of "hope". I enjoyed it so much that when I finished reading it I immediately purchased copies for my wife, daughter, sister and niece. Every man can benefit by reading this book and every woman deserves her own copy.
As President of Pinnacle Speakers Bureau, I help organizations plan events that are designed to be a PEAK Experience. I can truly say that this book is a PEAK Experience!
...Benny Williford, Pinnacle Speakers Bureau

Inspiring book to lift your spirit & soar!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-01
This book offers compelling insights that encourage you to see yourself in the very best light. What's more is that it awakens the awareness that each person deserves to be treated royally. Of course, that is not about being pampered and pandered to, but rather, to live, work and love in the world in ways that demonstrate your respect, caring and competence!

Give this book to every woman you know. This is an excellent book to give to young women as well.

Social Studies
The Success Principles for Teens: How to Get From Where You Are to Where You Want to Be
Published in Paperback by HCI (2008-04-15)
Authors: Jack Canfield and Kent Healy
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Average review score:

Must read for teens and young adults
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
This is a must read for teens and young adults.I bought it for my 17 year old and I wish I would have had it for my other children when they were teens.

A most inspiring message for teens and families
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-17
Success Principles for Teens is the result of Kent Healy's partnership with Jack Canfield, co-creator of the Chicken Soup for the Soul book series. Healy, teen entrepreneur turned twenty-three year old author and motivational speaker, lends his youthful voice to this inspiring book.

"I learned that the only way you are going to get anywhere in life is to work hard at it. Whether you're a musician, a writer, an athlete, or a businessman, there is no getting around it. If you do, you will win - if you don't, you won't" This quote by Bruce Jenner, Olympic gold medalist in the decathlon captures the essence of this extraordinary compilation of success principles.

Encouragement abounds for teens desiring improved grades and healthy relationships with peers and parents. The first step is for young people to take responsibility for their own lives.

Chapters build on one another: goal-setting and facing fears, rejection and feedback, track small successes and focus on the prize. Main principles are gathered at the conclusion of each chapter with a to-do list. The book is a comprehensive and practical resource presented in a teen-friendly format.

"I take rejection as someone blowing a bugle in my ear to wake me up and get going, rather than retreat." Quotes like this one by Sylvester Stallone in addition to others successful and well-known people appear every few pages. Stories by teenagers who have overcome obstacles to attain their best are interspersed with true stories by both authors.

This book must find its way into every junior high and high school library. As an adult, I was inspired after reading through this book. I shared some of the stories with my teenagers and strongly encouraged them to read it also. It contains the spark necessary to launch today's youth into fulfilling adult lives.

Armchair Interviews says: Inspiring message for teens and adults/parents alike.

Life-Changing Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-05
This book tells you everything you need to be successful or at least better your life. I'm a teen myself and I just read the book. Already I feel more motivated to strive for the life that I want. Before reading this, I had no ideas of what I wanted to get out of life or what I even really wanted to do with my time here on Earth. I've recommended the adult version of this book to my single mother because I beleive in the authors ability to help people better themselve and acheive their dreams. Every high-school student should read this book, or even read it at earlier ages.

Teens and adults will both benefit from this book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
Mr. Canfield and Mr. Healy have created a wonderful, much-needed tool for teens. Adults will benefit as well.

In my work with teenagers as an ADHD Coach/Consultant I recommend "The Success Principles for Teens: How to Get From Where You Are to Where You Want to Be".

It is a very positive book that gives hope to teens that may be experiencing challenges in their life.

My three favorite principles are Principle 1: Take 100% Responsibility for Your Life, Principle 13: Ask! Ask! Ask! and Principle 19: Give Your Best to Be Your Best.

Thank you!

Motivator for children
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-06
I know the book says for TEENS, but why wait????
My granddaughter's birthday is in July. Facing 10 and the next grade and struggling somewhat through the end of the last semester, I wanted her to have a view of the 'big picture' that she would be ready to take on the challenge of the critical years to come.

This book is about empowerment. Helping a child form their own opinions and allowing them to mature without encumbering them with mixed messages during a difficult time.
I have only been working with her a month, but she now understands WHY she WANTS a clean room. She has already developed some of her OWN goals and is even forming ideas about what she would like to be when she grows up.

Since the book is written by peers, it gives kids tools and examples in their own language.
She has come to understand that class projects are not something to be done casually, but with consideration and forethought.

Even MORE important is the sense of SELF she is discovering and, as an amazing side benefit, HAPPINESS.

Maybe they should have called this Stop the Mope, Learn to Cope.... I DID read the book WITH her to help her feel more empowered and teamed up with an ally.
I also figured this would be the best way to PREPARE ME for the changes she would get from this book.

Ready for a re-birth? Make this book a family event and grow together.

Social Studies
Urgent Message from Mother: Gather the Women, Save the World
Published in Paperback by Conari Press (2008-04-01)
Author: Jean Shinoda Bolen
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Average review score:

Time to Pull Out a Sixth Star
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-06
For me this book is a Bible.

It's worth six stars at least, and in my opinion Amazon.com needs to dust off a sixth star to accommodate it.

As you glide through Urgent Message, you begin to feel hopeful again, safe, and sheltered, and you think maybe it's possible after all for humanity to save itself. One reason for this is that Bolen not only lays out a roadmap to the future, she radiates a quiet confidence that her roadmap will indeed lead us to world peace, egalitarianism, and a good life for all.

But many miss the major point of the book. The point is not that women can save the world, but that a return to Mother Goddess will save the world. Only with female deity at our backs, like a good, strong wind, will women be able to switch things around for the planet.

Of course being an incarnation of the Mother Goddess Herself, Bolen also talks about where men come into the picture here. (Like all healthy mothers, the Great Mother plays no favorites; her boys are as valuable, lovable and magnificent as her girls.)

In the back of the book, I've scribbled page numbers for a long list of snippets to post on my weblog (some are already there). A few of my favorites:

"Women and Goddess became co-opted and lost in the politics of patriarchy; we forgot who we are, and we are now finding pieces, hidden in myths, dug up in archaeological sites, uncovered in the Gnostic Gospels.... The promised land? A land long settled by Goddess-worshiping, art-creating, peaceful people who had sacred groves..." (p. 146).

"If Mother Archetype, Mother Goddess, Mother Earth... placed a classified ad in the `Help Wanted' section ... the ad might read: `HELP WANTED: Everywoman. Home keepers for Earth. Must keep premises safe for all. Have concern for children's needs and development, ability to manage resources, resolve conflicts, work collaboratively, ask questions, listen, and learn from the experience of others, be empathic, and act with compassion for the benefit of all, including generations to come" (p. 74).

"Awe of the supernatural or divine is archetypal. There is in us all a tendency toward the spiritual - an orientation topward an invisible presence, to something greater than ourselves that cannot be fully known. Spirituality unites us - in silence, in awe, in devotion, and in soul connections. Patriarchal religions divide us into the saved and damned, heathen and Christian" (p. 71).

"The message from Mother is urgent. The half of humanity in charge of the world's agenda is led by men addicted to power and maintaining their dcominance. Only now, there are weapons of mass destruction.... And, if patriarchal religions continue to exercise control over women, there will soon be more people than the Earth can sustain. Our beautiful blue and white planet, this garden island in space, our Mother the Earth needs our help" (p. 47).

"Boys and men are afraid to be like women."

"Until women are equal partners in setting values, it is not safe for boys and men to be feeling and nurturing people without suffering from patriarchal judgments that they are not man enough..." (p. 97).

Jeri Studebaker, author of Switching to Goddess: Humanity's Ticket to the Future

URGENT MESSAGE FROM MOTHER
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-24
I recommend this book to every woman so she will share the URGENT MESSAGE FROM MOTHER with all her relations and we will secure our future unto the seventh generation and beyond. Jane Hardwicke Collings Midwife, Mother, Grandmother

Compelling and relevant
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
If your belief in a better life for everyone on this planet includes compassion and increasing recognition of Spirituality, then this book lets you know that you are not alone. Real solutions, ideas, projects, and direction are provided by Jean Shinoda Bolen in an embracing and encouraging context that can excite the mind, heart, and spirit of everyone who reads this book.

A Dymanic Shift in Perspective
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-01
Most of us realize that the patriarchal system we live in has not produced a peaceful environment. Wars, environmental degeneration, loss of empathy towards others and desensitization towards the devistation we see occuring to Earth (our mother)has rallied a call to women. We can save this planet. This little book is a plea for women to see the Goddess within us and "Save the World"!

another way?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
I wonder if it may be possible for all of us, women and men, all beings, in one way or another, to work together to heal the Earth? There are some wonderful thoughts and ideas here. However, I find that whenever its an "us" against "them" premise, divisions, alienation and blame not unity or healing occur. I am in complete agreement that our global community and the Earth are in danger. I am hopeful we can all work together, with out marginalizing anyone, male or female, one culture or faith or another, to heal our divisions and bring peace to the world. Its everyone's work, responsibility and oppurtunity to step out side their comfort zone to do this work, especially with those we feel are contributing to the problems. No one is distincly to blame for all that has occured, each of us plays a part and this is our greatest strength in finding a way to peace, it empowers each of us to make a difference. As life long activist, I have come to understand we each bear responsibility and compassion for our actions and toward the actions of others. Lets get to work and create a world where war and intolerance and blame will be no more, it will take each of us.

Social Studies
A Wealth of Family: An Adopted Son's International Quest for Heritage, Reunion, and Enrichment (Family Success)
Published in Paperback by Alpha Multimedia, Inc. (2006-08-01)
Author: Thomas Brooks
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Average review score:

Wonderful Account of One Man's Search for Heritage, Family and Identity
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-23
As a fellow adoptee who searched for and found my birthfamily in my teens over 15 years ago, and experienced wonderful relationships, I found this book an accurate reflection in many ways of an adoptee experience. Thought provoking, moving and compassionate the author gives a wonderful voice to the story of adoption. It is a must read for all those touched by adoption and I highly recommend this book.

Becoming a Citizen of the World
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-28
At age eleven, Thomas Brooks learned he was adopted and at first it shook his secure world. At age 25, while pursing his MBA, he decided to find his birth parents to complete the circle of his life. In A Wealth of Family, readers are treated to an international travel log and multicultural experience as we travel with Brooks in discovering his true roots.

Although Brooks was acclimated and culturally African American, he always suspected he might be of mixed heritage. When he received a document from the adoption agency, he was surprised to find that his mother was of Lithuanian Jewish background and his father was from Kenya. His parents had a brief affair while his mother was an undergraduate and his father was a graduate student at Penn State. After assuring his beloved adopted mother, Joan, that, no one would usurp her place in his life, he began to earnestly search for his birth parents.

Brooks grew up in a large extended family in the Pittsburg, Pennsylvania area surrounded by his mother's large family, the Lowrys. His parents divorced when he was four and he had little contact with his father. Brooks spent most of his growing years struggling with poverty because his mother was unable to work to support them. After a series of moves, they settled in Brighton, a white working/middle class suburb of Pittsburgh. After a rough start, Brooks began to excel in school, making excellent grades and was active in sports. He found himself fighting racism and stereotypes at time but preserved and was valedictorian of his high school class and going on to the University of Pittsburgh. Again, he applied himself to his studies and became immersed in a full college experience to include joining the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, a Greek Black organization and other clubs. He pursued engineering and then an MBA at the University of Maryland.

Because his birth mother, Dorothy, left contact information in his file at the adoption agency, he was able to quickly establish contact with her. Dorothy, who was living in England, flew to Houston, where Brooks was then working. They established a rapport and thereafter, Brooks flew to England and met his sister and three brothers. He was received with open arms and they slowly built a relationship, along with his grandmother, Maryan, Dorothy's mother, who was living in Pittsburgh. Dorothy wanted to meet Joan, but he realized it was a delicate situation and it would need more time for the two women, his birth mother and his adoptive mother to meet.

Brooks then took the steps to make contact with his father, Mboga Mageka Omwenga, which was much more difficult. In 1995, he and Dorothy made the trek to Kenya to make his paternal connection. First, they went on a safari to take in the beautiful country and then went on to Nairobi. All he had was a name and the fact that his father was of the Kisii tribe, according to a Kenyan friend in Houston. After a series of word-of-mouth connections, placing an announcement in the newspaper, and a few hits and misses, Brooks connected with his father's daughter, Margaret. She explained the father was out of the area but the two of them became acquainted. Brooks went back to Houston but thereafter started corresponding with his father. He went back to Kenya several months later finally met his father and was warmly received by the entire village and all his relatives, including his 100 year-old grandmother. He slowly established a relationship with his Kenyan family overcoming a few cultural challenges and miscommunications.

After his mother, Joan met Dorothy, the families seemed to blend and accept each other. Brooks came to love and appreciate having three families who all loved and supported him. His world travels served to broaden his understanding of different cultures and heightened his appreciation of his multiracial heritage. While he considers himself African American, he calls himself a world citizen. He learned to value the traits both his birth mother and father passed on to him, such as their intellectual ability.

Part memoir, part family history and genealogy, Brooks has written a memorable account of how race, culture, and family intersect while also recounting his own life lessons. He is a successful businessman living in Atlanta with his wife and family, mentoring inner-city youth and active in several social and civic organizations. There are many stories about bi-racial children but Brooks' story was unique in that it spanned three continents and melded three families to include a wealth of love, forgiveness and acceptance. This book is recommended for those interested in the topics of multiculturalism and adoptees seeking their roots.

Reviewed by Dera R. Williams
APOOO BookClub

Heartwarming story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
A Wealth of Family is a gripping chronicle of Thomas Brooks quest to discover the true wealth of family as he reunites with his birth family and in turn discovers his true self. It is inspiring story that will encourage members of the adoption triad and "traditional" families as well. As an adoptive mother, I highly recommend this book. It will help give you a healthy view of open adoption and the reunion experience.

It's That Good!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-12
Brooks' captivating writing style coupled with his amazing life story and steadfast approach to life make this book both an entertainment and thought-triggering masterpiece that had me hooked right to the last page.

a must read!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
I thought this book was inspiring, especially for those seeking their roots. I felt as though I knew the author personally by the end of the story as I went along for the journey with him. It is a must read!

Social Studies
When Words Are Not Enough
Published in Paperback by Broadway (1997-05-05)
Author: Valerie Raskin
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Average review score:

Excellent resource for women (and their families) managing depression.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
This book is an incredible resource for women struggling with depression. I wish I could give it more than 5 stars; I credit it with helping me save my life. The research is current, thorough and on point. It is particularly useful if you have post-partum, are pregnant or are trying to get pregnant. My husband also found it extremely helpful in learning more about my situation. This is absolutely worth the investment because it is a resource you will use time and time again.

So true
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-14
This was the best book I have ever read on depression.

Great for anyone who wants to learn more
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-07
This book was easy to understand and very helpful. I myself already had some knowledge about depresssion so it was not as useful to me as it would be to most people. I really learned some very interesting new things though. It clearly described the types of depression and how to know the difference. It gave me some new knowledge about hormones and their role-which is KEY. I definetly recommend if you have a relative with depression(like me) or you feel you may be depressed- even if you don't want to admit it (like me.)

Best book for ANYONE that has ever been depressed or Anxious
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-24
I have suffered ppd for the last 1.5 years. It was so bad I had to go on medication and since then had to up my dose. This book has helped me see why this has happened to me and how a person gets depressed in the first place. IT is NON judgemental and also validating but besides that it tells you how to RECOVER! It is a wonderful book. It doesn't leave anything uncovered. I want Valerie Raskin to know THANKYOU for saving my life and my marriage from the demon of ppd. I also got your book This isn't what I Expected and it is a wonderful addition to this one for the PPD sufferer. Big hugs and big thankyou to you Valerie.
You changed my life :)

Best book for ANYONE that has ever been depressed or Anxious
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-13
I have suffered ppd for the last 1.5 years. It was so bad I had to go on medication and since then had to up my dose. This book has helped me see why this has happened to me and how a person gets depressed in the first place. IT is NON judgemental and also validating but besides that it tells you how to RECOVER! It is a wonderful book. It doesn't leave anything uncovered. I want Valerie Raskin to know THANKYOU for saving my life and my marriage from the demon of ppd. I also got your book This isn't what I Expected and it is a wonderful addition to this one for the PPD sufferer. Big hugs and big thankyou to you Valerie.
You changed my life :)

Social Studies
Where Peachtree Meets Sweet Auburn: A Saga of Race and Family
Published in Paperback by Penguin (Non-Classics) (1997-05-01)
Author: Gary M. Pomerantz
List price: $18.00
New price: $4.60
Used price: $0.59
Collectible price: $18.00

Average review score:

The South has risen
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
Pomerantz hit the high water mark of urban histories by providing an intimate picture of the emergence of the South's premier inter-racial city, Atlanta, from the standpoint of the two families---one once slave and the other slave owner---who helped to shape its progressive destiny.

This Is A Great Way To Learn About Atlanta's History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-28
As a recent transplant to the city of Atlanta, I didn't know much about Atlanta's history. And as an African American woman with grandparents who left the South in search of bigger opportunities in the North, I was more aware of the racism than I was of how and who ushered in the social and economic change that created more opportunities for my generation. The book is extremely well written and once I started I couldn't put it down. This is great way to learn about history. Anyone interested in Atlanta's history in particular and American history in general should read this book!!!!!!

The making of a city
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-04
This book not only is about two families but also about how those two families influenced and built one of the great metropolises of America. Greatly narrated and beautifully told.

A Wonderful Read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-22
I've read several of Gary's books and found this one to be an amazing work of not only scholarship and very detailed research but it was also very readable. Some people may be put off by the sheer size of the book but once I was hooked (it took a few pages), I really couldn't put it down until I was done.

Luckily, I was on a cruise and quite a few sea days to lie back in the sun and savour this wonderful book.

I HIGHLY recommend it to anyone interest in how the South was transformed (both intentionally and unintentionally) by a small number of people with not only immense vision but also immense bravery and a sense of justice.

Bravo Gary!

The real Atlanta history
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-22
I am a native Georgian and raised in Metro Atlanta. This book opened my understanding of how, what, when and who made this city and why our state is so political about everything. Unfortunately, the race factor will always play a role in how we view and operate the local and state governments. This book just makes it clearer for anyone who works, lives and does business in Georgia. All Georgia history teachers should read this book. It would make Georgia history so much better for 8th graders and make them think. This is a must for reference material.

Social Studies
Women Warriors: Adventures from History's Greatest Female Fighters (Live Girls Series)
Published in Paperback by Seal Press (2004-04-26)
Author: Teena Apeles
List price: $14.95
New price: $0.99
Used price: $0.76
Collectible price: $14.95

Average review score:

great gift for girls...and boys
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-09
This little book hits the spot for preteen & older readers. It's graphically colorful, with a variety of interesting photos & illustrations; it's written conversationally, yet with enough factual citations to validate the unbelievable, heroic stories; and, it introduces the reader to a cast of amazing female characters mainly unheard of in contemporary American culture.

I bought it to send to my grandchildren, but was captivated into reading it myself. I learned a lot.

wise 'n fun
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-06
I received this book as a gift and am now a proud owner.... In case any merchandisers are reading this - I HIGHLY recommend it be in stores like Urban Outfitters and the like! It is a wise & fun book.

Bringing history to life !
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-06
History books can usually be pretty boring. This one is not ! It is fun, alive, easy to read and very colorful. The information is accessible to young readers and adult readers like me...who don't want to be overwhelmed with information, but want to have fun learning it ! This is an original and lively book, I would recommend it.

Wide-ranging and widely inspiring
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-05
Women Warriors is packed with fun, accessible introductions to a diverse group of fierce women. Rather than narrowly focusing on warriors of a particular culture or type, Apeles has included an impressive range of warrior women spanning numerous cultures and ages. By placing pop-culture icons, soldiers, political activists, and sports stars on neighboring pages, this inspiring text reminds readers that there are and always have been all sorts of ways to be bold.

(And I love that two of my personal heroes, Emma Goldman and Rosa Parks, share a page.)

A waste of paper
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-24
I purchased this work seeking information on the mythical amazons but hoped to find actual historical material on female soldiers. The world is full of women who took up the sword from the Sarmations and Celts to the French Resistence.
And history is filled with incidents of individual women who broke from their assigned roles and became soldiers and pirates so with all this truth out there, why did this book put so much focus on: 1) female trennis stars, 2) Xena TV show, 3) Powerpuff Girls cartoon, 4) Buffy TV show and the like?
Are women on the battlefield so sparse and uninteresting that Ms Apeles must describe Charlies Angels and the origin of Supergirl to add excitement to her 'work'?

Save your money and buy a book that focuses on the reality, not cartoons.

Social Studies
101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men
Published in Paperback by Advocate Books (2005-11-01)
Author: Alonso Duralde
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.93
Used price: $5.05

Average review score:

Great =)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-14
Love this book! Now I allways know what to pick at the video store! And LOTS of great movies. Thanks.
-Torfinn-

1001 Spoilers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-24
If you hate reading spoilers, don't read about any movie in this book unless you've seen it already. Duralde gives away FAR too much in his synopses, which are in my opinion completely unnecessary anyway. It is his commentaries that are the interesting element here, and motivate us to see the films. Why he chose to reveal plot turns, and thus needlessly deflate our enjoyment of the films is beyond me.

Movies for gays...not gay movies. There's a difference!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-17
Love it, love it, love it - short, sweet, funny, smart. Or as I like to call it, "the best bathroom reading book ever."

Oh, and my copy of "Can't Stop The Music" is on its way from Netflix as we speak ;)

Not another list book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-29
This is far more than a simple list of films that may be aimed at a gay audience. It is 101 hysterical fan rants from someone who has a wicked sense of humor and extraordinarily evolved taste in film.

This is a book that every film student should read because Duralde has a genuine passion for movies and the understanding of them to back up his opinions.

Many of Duralde's choices surprised and delighted me; he didn't go for the easy selections. Any book that mentions "Tarnation" and "Without You, I'm Nothing" in the same breath is aces by me.

Exactly what the title says
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-04
101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men is a seminal tome in more ways than one. Well, actually, only one. It hasn't got any of the good pictures in it. But it does have 101 movies that are essential to a broad range of the gay aesthetic. It's got movies for drama queens, diva queens, show tune queens, bears, disco queens, grunge queens and size queens. The only gay subgenre it's lacking is the queer sports movie, and I'm sure once Duralde has seen Summer Storm and Guys and Balls he'll add something appropriate to Bride of 101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men he keeps promising (unless that what he's titling the lesbian companion piece he keeps promising as well, in which case he'll have to include Bend it Like Beckham or, better yet, Personal Best).

When I came out, I was told I couldn't get my queer card until I'd seen Torch Song Trilogy and Murder by Death. Both are missing from 101. I'm not going to fight too hard for Murder by Death which is simply a very good example of camp and not particularly queerly significant beyond that, but I will say that I can't imagine a list of queer movies complete that doesn't include Torchsong.

But what is in the book is delightful and insightful. I knew Fight Club is about the slashiest thing every made, but it didn't occur to me to put it in a list of must-see movies for the queer cognoscenti. But even the obvious choices - Whatever Happened to Baby Jane, Sunset Boulevard, Valley of the Dolls, Sunday, Bloody Sunday and many more - are given new life and new perspective with plot synopsis, evaluation of what's important to the queer viewer, quotes from the movie and an interesting visual classification system.

Duralde examines these movies with wit and sensitivity. He makes you want to expand your DVD library, and in some cases your VHS library, not only with the movies he lists, but with the movies he mentions in passing discussion about other movies.

And, for the record, I've seen The Broken Hearts Club and it isn't nearly as awful as Duralde makes it out to be, but it is awful.

I cannot remember the title or anyone who was in it, but it you're looking for a movie emblematic of what bad queer cinema is, the one with the fireman who begs his girlfriend for a threesome without specifying the gender of the third participant and then is horrified when she brings some guy from the neighborhood who's been crushing on him for years into the bedroom is the one to choose.

Social Studies
Atlas of the North American Indian
Published in Hardcover by Facts on File (2008-11-30)
Author: Carl Waldman
List price: $85.00
New price: $70.01

Average review score:

Thoroughly written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
Very well researched and written book! If you are interested in Native American past and cultures, this is a great resource.

North American Indian Research
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-06
I am using this as part of my research to aid me with the series of paintings I am doing of North American Indians from the period 1850 through 1910. I found it interesting that of the paintings I have completed thus far, I often get asked by Native Americans if I have yet done any paintings of members of their tribes. This book helps with the geographical aspects of where my subjects may have been located at the time they lived.

Second great book by this author that I've rated 5 stars
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-20
Great maps explained by easy to understand text passages are the hallmarks of this user friendly and highly informative, not to mention interesting, book. I'm very impressed by Carl Waldman's work, which is characterised not by fawning apologias but by respectful insightful investigatory analysis.

Good info, well organized
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-03
While I enjoy this book and its wealth of info and maps, it is a shame that the only map in color is on the cover. 4.5 stars.

A complete and useful guide
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-09
A good resource for any student entering the field of North American Indian studies, this book is carefully organised and rendered. Waldman traces the many facets that have been used to explain who the North American Indians were, how they lived and where. The text is clear and direct, well-suited to the novice in this area of study. The wealth of maps and other illustrative material well supports the narrative, although space restrictions force a certain level of clutter at times.

Waldman opens the book with a description of how humans arrived in the Western Hemisphere. The "Ancient Civilizations" of Mesoamerica, such as the Olmec and Maya are well summarised, before the author turns to the Southwest peoples - the Anasazi, Hohokan and Salado communities. He explains the often overlooked or poorly considered Moundbuilders of the Lower Midwest. The section on "Indian Lifeways" turns to areas like California, the Pacific Coast, and Subarcic regions. While these peoples didn't achieve the strongly hierarchical civilisations of Mesoamerica, their various social structures were complex and dynamic. Their economic systems allowed them to endure and they adapted well to change, something too often lacking in Mesoamerica. To a limited extent, the geography and environment hosting these people granted them the flexibility to maintain a dynamic society, even in precarious conditions.

One aspect of life they were poorly prepared for was the European intrusion. Waldman sets aside a section to introduce the problems introduced by European colonisation. The litany of wars and rebellions take up a hundred pages of the text. The accompanying maps showing battle sites sparkle with stars indicating clash sites. Some of these wars have almost disappeared from historical accounts of North American settlement. It's a good reminder of how the whites took over the hemisphere and what cost that hegemony extracted from the native population.

In time, war was replaced by "Land Cessions" and resettlement. The reservation system, never a fixed idea, is carefully explained by Waldman. The modern result of reservation communities and the ambivalent policies surrounding both the settlements and their populations gave rise to a new awareness among Indian people. The poor acknowledgement of Indian contributions in two world wars was but one of many irritants leading to "uprisings" at Wounded Knee and elsewhere. The author goes on to list major Indian government agencies and Indian organisations and facilities. Indian place names, often overlooked, are listed, with the modern "nation" structures for the US and Canada provided. In all, this book will be a firm base from which to expand a study of Indian circumstances for the future. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]


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