Maryland Books
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This is the only book you need if you climb in MarylandReview Date: 2004-01-22
Best book for climbing in Maryland... PERIOD.Review Date: 2007-07-31
all the maryland climbing areas, compiled in one book!Review Date: 2005-03-30
Collectible price: $10.00

a must read for all mothersReview Date: 2001-02-24
Sensitive and personal: a must read!Review Date: 1998-10-06
Should be required reading for every high school studentReview Date: 1999-12-31


A fantastic debut!Review Date: 2005-06-18
My favorite by far was "Fugue", the story of a father obsessed with learning to build and play the organ. I was hooked from the opening lines: "Some fathers on Saturday afternoons fix the car or spray weedkiller on the lawn. Mine would take the air apart and put it back together with a fugue." In the next paragraph, she says, "On summer evenings his organ music got stuck in the screen door and floated on top of the cat's water dish." I love it! I'll never hear music again without this image in my head. Hagenston has managed to make the organ music itself a physical presence in this story, almost another character.
"Fugue" is also the most hopeful of the stories, most of which focus on characters in crisis - a woman whose husband has just left her, a preacher's wife unsure of her new position, a divorced father adrift in the world with only a gram of meteorite to show for his life. "A Gram of Mars" is a wonderfully written collection of short stories. I look forward to reading more from this author.
Richly Textured LivesReview Date: 2001-10-22
Funny, heart-breaking, tales of broken people/familiesReview Date: 1999-02-09

Used price: $15.74

Beautifully illustrated book on an equally as beautiful mtnReview Date: 2004-07-16
An excellent field guide with exquisite illustrations.Review Date: 2004-07-15
One of my favorite things about the book is that the plants are organized according to families, with information about each plant family. It's fun to find members of the lily family and the rose family growing in the woods. The book helps you understand relationships between plants in a meaningful way. I like thinking about how this onion that I'm eating is related to the trout lily that grows along Sugarloaf Mountain's streams! Plus, its illustrated glossary is an extremely helpful learning tool.
I recommend this field guide to everyone, from novice to experienced botanists.
THE GOOD WORDReview Date: 2004-07-16
pomegranateseeds@comcast.net
THE GOOD WORD:
A New Field Guide to Eastern
Wildflowers, Trees and Shrubs
by Jeri Metz
I just purchased the most authoritative and readable field guide to wildflowers, herbs, shrubs, vines and trees for the Mid-Eastern United States. An Illustrated Guide to Eastern Woodland Wildflowers and Trees by Melanie Choukas-Bradley, illustrated by Tina Thieme Brown, is eminently readable and includes all the local native and naturalized species that grow abundantly here without any help from us. This is the perfect book for anyone who is interested in gardening with Mother Nature, creating a water-wise native plant garden, or just identifying the local plants while out walking and hiking. The author describes the plants with expert plant taxonomy, humor, and personal anecdotes, throwing in folklore and history where appropriate. She includes specifics on habitat and range, as well as bloom time and where the plants can be found when walking the trails of Sugarloaf Mountain, Maryland. The illustrations, drawn from life, are simple and beautiful, appropriately delicate when describing fragile spring wildflowers, richly detailed and imposing when capturing the hardier species. They compliment every page they are on.
The book is a love letter from two naturalists to their adored Sugarloaf Mountain, where they spent ten years hiking and painstakingly identifying the plants. They view the mountain as a rare gift and "a learning laboratory." But this guide is so much more than the plants on Sugarloaf Mountain. It covers every plant I could think to look up. It includes a very readable botanical key and a comprehensive illustrated glossary. There are suggested readings. But what makes it unique and exceptional in my library of field guides, is the personal touch in both the writings and drawings. The love that Choukas-Bradley and Brown feel for these plants jumps from the pages and I can feel and see how wondrous and magical each plant is for them. By sharing their reverence and respect for all these plants, they inspire while they educate.
An Illustrated Guide to Eastern Woodland Wildflowers and Trees; 350 Plants Observed at Sugarloaf Mountain, Maryland, by Melanie Choukas-Bradley. Illustrated by Tina Thieme Brown. University of Virginia Press. $39.95 through the Audubon Naturalist Society and bookstores and on www.amazon.com.

Used price: $0.36

Herb bargain slogain " Teach your dollars more cents" istrueReview Date: 1999-02-01
Insight to attractions and the nativesReview Date: 2001-09-03
This book is $2.00 more and 150 pages longer that the City Smart guide, and well worth the extra money. If you are going to Baltimore, this is the book.
A must have for vistors and residents!Review Date: 1999-01-20

Used price: $8.65

A profusely illustrated exploration of the difference one school made to greatly impact the environment & nature of the PotomacReview Date: 2006-03-12
A profusely illustrated exploration of the difference one school made to greatly impact the environment & nature of the PotomacReview Date: 2006-03-12
A profusely illustrated exploration of the difference one school made to greatly impact the environment & nature of the PotomacReview Date: 2006-03-12

Must have for M&Pa buffsReview Date: 2008-01-07
Enjoyed it as a kid, enjoyed it 33 years later.Review Date: 2004-07-18
A piece of my childhoodReview Date: 2000-12-30

Used price: $91.24

THE foundation of Antietam studiesReview Date: 2008-05-03
Carman's role in the subsequent development of historical interpretation of this battle and the resultant literature cannot be overstated. Every historian who subsequently worked in the field - consciously or not - has been to some degree influenced by Carman's initial efforts, for his labors not only shaped the physical space of today's Antietam National Battlefield but also provided the template for all subsequent interpretation by first the War Department and then by the National Park Service (where it still forms the core of the interpretive model). Further, his unpublished manuscript has been used a principal source by the authors of every major history of the campaign and battle published in the 20th century: Murfin's Gleam of Bayonets, Sears's Landscape Turned Red, Harsh's Taken at the Flood, etc.
But using this resource has always been difficult - until now! The physical manuscript resides in the Library of Congress, where access is almost always restricted to the microfilm. (And if you've ever tried to read 1,400 handwritten pages on a microfilm reader, you know what a chore that can be.) Although it covers everything from politics to logistics to international diplomacy to political economy to civil-military relations IN ADDITION to providing a comprehensive strategic, operational, AND tactical account of the two-week campaign (including full treatments of the battles at South Mountain, Harper's Ferry, and Shepherdstown Ford) - the original work contained no index of any sort, nor in many cases even the most rudimentary of citations for its hundreds of sources.
Joseph Pierro has corrected these many obstacles, making this seminal yet underutilized resource available and accessible to scholars and Civil War enthusiasts alike. He spent some years tracking down and providing - in complete footnotes at the bottom of each pages - citations for hundreds of passages, allowing future users of the Carman manuscript to evaluate and return to Carman's OWN sources - including many of his never published letters from veterans that reside in various repositories.) He also provided a deft yet much needed polish of professional copyediting to Carman's sometimes clunky, occasionally bewildering sentences structure. The result is a major addition to the literature that stands in equal measure as reference work and as narrative history.
By its very nature, this is NOT intended as a work for beginners. (The closest comparison I can make is to John Bigelow's The Campaign of Chancellorsville - written around the same period.) At nearly half a million words, the sheer volume of information will overwhelm anyone without a prior base of knowledge. But for anyone researching ANY topic related to the 1862 Maryland campaign, or for those buffs who want to go beyond the broad strokes of the action, this long-needed contribution to Civil War history is a must have.
It took a century to get here, but the result was worth the wait.
A major work published at lastReview Date: 2008-04-22
Ezra Ayers Carman led the 13th New Jersey, Third Brigade, First Division, Twelfth Corps on September 17, 1862, fighting in the area of the Dunkard Church. After the war, he held a number of government position and was active in veteran's organizations. He maintained a lifelong interest in Antietam and in 1894 received an appointment as Historical Expert to that battlefield's board. His mission was to gather and coordinate as many firsthand accounts as possible. He directed the writing of the historical markers and is responsible for the Antietam maps in the Atlas of the Battlefield of Antietam. He died in 1909, leaving behind a hand written manuscript covering his research and understanding of the campaign and battle. This manuscript is one of the foundation documents used in every book on the battle but, until now, was never available to the public.
This is not a "my experiences at Antietam" book! This is a detailed, comprehensive campaign study of 24 chapters with extensive documentation and footnotes. Supplementing this is 15 appendices covering everything from army organization to the British perspective on the battle. While written 100 years ago, the author did a modern campaign study including national and international political considerations in addition to detailed battle studies.
The editor has maintained the tempo and feel of Carman's writing. While cleaning up the worst of the grammar, he did not modernize the prose. This decision, keeps both the immediacy and feel of 19th Century military history. Some may object to this but I feel it is an important addition, reminding me that this is not a third or fourth person account.
This is a LARGE book! Each page is about half again the size of a standard book and you will want a place to lay it flat for reading. There are no maps. The author assumes the reader would have access to an Atlas of the Battlefield of Antietam and did not include any. The editor has respected this and published without maps. I use my Trailhead Graphics Antietam National Battlefield map while reading to orientate me and keep the action is perspective. This is an invaluable reference work and a major improvement to my Civil War library.
Ezra's TreatiseReview Date: 2008-07-24


The Best, Most Complete Book on Maryland and its History!Review Date: 2000-12-24
The Best Book I have seen on Maryland History!Review Date: 2000-12-24
The only comprehensive, definitive history book of MarylandReview Date: 1998-05-31


Maryland's Eastern ShoreReview Date: 2002-07-26
The cover shot tells so much of what has made up the history of this quaint outback of Maryland. Anyone with a mind for beautiful photography should include this book for their library.
Maryland's Eastern ShoreReview Date: 2002-07-26
A Photographic Delight!Review Date: 2002-07-11
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