Washington Books
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A MasterpieceReview Date: 2006-02-08
A Welcome Antidote to the World View of the Bush AdministrationReview Date: 2005-11-02
A friend of the U.S., he has written it in an effort to call attention to widely held opinion, here and abroad, that unilateral policies serving the military-industrial complex have undermined U.S. credibility and jeopardized its security. These policies as realized in Iraq have brought esteem for the U.S. to a low point in Asia.
After a brief review of the history of U.S. involvement in Asia, his analysis includes Asians' profound disappointment in the current administration's contempt for treaty-constraints, especially concerning nuclear non-proliferation and global warming. Further, he highlights ironies Asians see that Americans seem to miss: the U.S. warning Iran not to intervene in Iraq's internal affairs, for example. It is no wonder that other nations fear that opposition to U.S. policies will cause them to be labeled "terrorist" and treated the same as Iraq.
While many people in the world admire American freedoms and generosity, Singh says "after September 11 this dream has soured, as U.S. xenophobes have turned against fellow-citizens of different appearance and colour." Unfortunately this seems to confirm Asian suspicions that racism at various levels of decision-making underlay the way in which military power has been misused in Vietnam and elsewhere.
Denial of safeguards to the rights of prisoners labeled "enemy combatants" at Guantanamo weakens the rights and freedoms of Americans as well. It is not only the impact this has on world opinion, especially in the Muslim world, Singh says, that is important.
Asians have come a long way, and their creativity and innovation now can match the West's. Therefore they ask to be treated with respect. This important book is an appeal to U.S. policymakers' intelligent self-interest.
Criticism From an American FriendReview Date: 2005-10-12
Distinguished and prolific Indian Author Patwant Singh tells us in his introduction, "I admire America. I have been visiting it regularly for over 40 years. I have long and enduring friendships there, and relish the welcoming warmth I experience each time I visit." Written by a friend, this unrelenting explanation of how Washington is viewed from Asia -- and why-- is particularly urgent now as America's economic position becomes more dependant on India and China, and political tensions in Asia escalate. Globalization, an unstoppable force for both good and ill, has destroyed any possibility of American isolationism. In spite of overwhelming military might, The United States cannot control the world. In his final chapter "The Pitfalls of Power", Patwant Singh gives us a unique view of ourselves. This is how others see us; we would do well to take heed.
Pamela de Maigret
Crisp analysis but...Review Date: 2005-10-20
The book also makes a persuasive case of how America, enamoured with its own power, has become a modern East India Company. Asians sometimes joke that America is not a nation, it is a corporation. Patwant Singh provides serious evidence and analysis to back that view.
What he says here is not new to Asian audiences anymore. In the recent years, an astoundingly large number of anaysts and intellectuals have more or less accepted that America is behaving irresponsibly. Many Asians are now resigned to an inevitable confrontation with America, over an issue or a non-issue, sooner or later. Patwant Singh however illustrates that this is not a recent change in American thinking - for the lst 60 years America has been consistently (and constantly) at war with the world. For USA, the 2nd world war apparently did not end in 1945.
At the same time, it must be added that the book does not offer a counterpoint. The conclusion about America does not build up through the chapters -- it is there right from the beginning. Patwant Singh then merely keeps adding the facts and analysis that would prove his point. This may make it difficult for an ordinary reader to make an informed or neutral assessment of his thesis.
Also, while the book proposes to offer an Asian view, most of the material appears to have been taken from Western sources. One can understand the reasons for this: the entire Asia does not publish half as much material as America alone does each year. Asian researchers are therefore wily-nily dependent on Western writers for their facts on international events.
Nevertheless, it is an excellent book, particularly relevant because it is written by an Asian.
This book has also been published in India by Rupa & Co., Delhi.

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Art On a Child's LevelReview Date: 2000-07-17
The method of walking through the National Gallery of Art and through the streets of our nation's capitol has brought both into our home at a level that can be shared with my children.
WOW!!!Review Date: 2001-03-10
The only thing that changed since then is that I took her and her 1 year old sister to Washington last week, using the book as a guide book. If you think you like these books now, try using them as a template for a trip with your children! WOW!!!!!! What a wonderful way to get them ready for a trip and what a wonderful thing to carry the book with you, comparing what you are seeing to what you have read!!!! How great to go back to the hotel and see what you have seen and are going to see!!!! How great to get home and have an instant scrap book!!!!
With this experience behind us, we also can't wait until next Spring when You Can't Take a Balloon to The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston is scheduled to come out!
Wild Adventure is key to Life and LearningReview Date: 2000-08-02
An Amazing Adventure in D. C.Review Date: 2001-04-16

Children's BiographyReview Date: 2004-08-02
Wonderful introduction to historyReview Date: 2002-10-28
History for budding historiansReview Date: 2002-10-29
I highly recommend this book for anyone who wants to start their child down the path of enjoying history.
A children's classicReview Date: 2000-06-06
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Very good!Review Date: 2007-01-04
The best book ever published on the subject.Review Date: 1997-03-11
Quire simply: Authoratative.Review Date: 2004-03-16
Lots of Text & Pictures - The 1 Book for German WWI AirshipsReview Date: 2005-01-16
Let me break down the highlights:
1. PICTURES: The book goes out of its way to show you as many pictures as possible of these German WWI airships and their crews and sheds. It is simply fascinating to watch the development of airships throughout the war (as the pre-War DELAG designs give way to more modern rudders and shapes...to the height-climbers painted black on the underbelly to confuse anti-aircraft fire). There are many many good sized pictures.
2. AIRSHIP RAID REPORTS: This feature just stuns me. Every single raid is documented in chart form, complete with which Zeppelins participated in the raid, take-off and landing times, distance ship travelled, average speed, number of crew, fuel use, oil used, hydrogen used, and (onimously) whether it returned to Germany safely or not.
3. HISTORY: 19 of the 24 Chapters are devoted to the WWI history of German combat airships. One warning: the commentary is slightly dry. You have to be pretty interested in the subject to get into the storyline. The book has depth, and will reward the studious reader. This is nearly primary-source information.
4. AIRSHIP HEROES: Peter Strasser (Naval Head of German WWI Airship Division) and Heinrich Mathy (one of the more successful airship captains) are quite prominent. There are stories of many other airshipmen as well. The personal aspect is a huge strength of this book.
5. OTHER AIRSHIPS: Also covered are not just Zeppelins, but Schutte-Lanz airships, which were rigids with wooden frames (verses aluminum in Zeppelins). Peter Strasser was not a big fan of these "glue potters" as he called them.
WARNING: This is a fairly technical book. If you want an airship book for more casual reading, check out "The Hindenburg - Illustrated History" by Rick Archbold. It is much lighter, but not nearly as detailed on this era of airships.

My favorite hiking book for the Yakima & Central Wa. area!Review Date: 2001-04-19
Off the beaten trackReview Date: 2000-08-11
One of the best guides put out in a series by the MountaineersReview Date: 2007-08-29
Central Washington is a vast, rocky, and dry steppe; a relatively uninhabited area in which the region's prehistory is readily apparent. Hikers will find the sun and varied landscape, holding a surprise of grasslands, mountains, caves, and ancient dry rivers, as well as a rich collection of plants, birds, and animals.
Some of my favourite hikes:
Swale Canyon-moderate
Dalles Mountain Ranch-moderate
Tucannon River-moderate
Hardy Canyon-moderate
Crab Creek Trails-moderate

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Stunning book...stunning journey....stunning metaphor of lifeReview Date: 2007-09-24
If we are the cities and cities are us - the roads to our cities and their streets become borderless and paved with the power of human dreams and desires, connecting us with each other in the search for the ultimate meaning for our lives - our freedom in making choices in our journey for better life...
"All Roads Lead to the American City" certainly deserves its special place ...and not only because of its relevance to American studies - but also because of its contribution to human journey...no matter where you are....and where you are heading in your life.
What Are U Waiting For?!Review Date: 2007-08-30
A great textbook in American Literature!Review Date: 2007-10-18
As an English teacher at the University of Hong Kong, I have quite a number of Arts students having a genuine interest in American Studies. If you are interested in American Literature, do you think you should only work on disciplinary studies of the subject? Is it adequate to watch some Hollywood movies or read crime novels and say that you have a good mastery of contemporary American culture? Tapping the insights of "the entire spectrum of the humanities and social sciences to evaluate the transformations currently underway" (p.4), any students or knowledge seekers can just follow Swirski's slim single tightly-knitted collection to find the answers as it puts Urbs Americana under the microscope. With this indispensable reader in hand, you can reach for core interdisciplinary analyses a la American Studies.
All Roads Lead to the American City is another magnificent offering from Peter Swirski, who is Associate Professor in American Literature and heads American Studies at the University of Hong Kong. Swirski is an exceptional talented writer who has written nine books in American Literature and Culture and has contributed more than fifty articles in various places. Swirski's works have been highly praised by numerous scholars and literary critics. Once again, All Roads Lead to the American City is an amazing collection that readers should not miss.
"Cities, for the most part, are America", and are "crisscrossed by tendrils of traffic-bearing arteries", writes Swirski (p.1). The metaphors of the road and the city are intensely revealed throughout the whole collection. With important contributors from interdisciplinary areas of American Studies (History, Film, Religion, and Geography, plus Swirski's own chapter on literature of the city), Swirski's collection comprises five intercultural essays with rich and lively content about American culture. Taken as a whole, readers will first follow the steps of a historian, Priscilla Roberts, to explore the socio-historical and political factors that contribute to the `perennial amibvalence' of the rise of cities and urban culture in America. Next comes a further elaboration of the metaphor of the road by a film scholar, Gina Marchetti, who uses works of a popular `road movie' filmmaker, Renee TajimaPeñas, to portray a personal search of identity through the eyes of an Asian American. Swirski himself, in the central chapter, invites readers to explore the New York City by a vivid and fascinating discussion of Ed McBain's police procedurals to argue for the crucial role of crime literature in "nobrow aesthetics", as Swirski calls it. The last two chapters are a literary-cultural examination of the dreams about the America's literature of the road by a literary and religious comparativist, Earle Waugh, and a vivid insight into the latest development of Urbs Americana from William John Kyle.
As the guests complimented in the Book Launch at the University of Hong Kong, All Roads Lead to the American City has the potential of becoming a great and influential textbook for any students, teachers, or general knowledge seekers. Its impact should not be underestimated.

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AMBIGUITYReview Date: 2001-10-22
Prose and ConsReview Date: 2000-12-22
A Look Back at a Vanished WorldReview Date: 2000-12-04

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One Woman's PerspectiveReview Date: 2000-04-26
One Woman's PerspectiveReview Date: 2000-04-26
savoir faireReview Date: 2000-06-26


Small town World War II story with a little mystery.Review Date: 1999-09-15
GreatReview Date: 2000-09-08
A great bookReview Date: 1999-10-28

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The Square That Shaped a NationReview Date: 2004-03-20
"The village has a kind of established repose which is rare in other quarters of a long, shrill city; it has a riper, richer, more honourable look than any of the upper ramifications of the great longitudinal thoroughfare, the look of having had something of a social history." James has it right and so does Harris. The Village is the northernmost point of the old medieval Street pattern of colonial New York, and it marks the beginning of the modem grid. That doubled physical character is perhaps an apt symbol of the combination of historical presences and avant-garde creativity that has marked the cultural life of this part of the city.
Harris appropriately begins his story with the creation of Washington Square and goes beyond the usual accounts. He emphasizes the complexity of its birth, revealing that its creation required a modification to the recently established 1811 grid plan. That posed a political problem that was managed with patience, persistence, and astuteness by the then Mayor, Philip Hone, a merchant, one of New York's two great nineteenth-century diarists, and the father of the square. By starting at that point, however. Harris omits the separate history of Greenwich, from which the mixed-up street pattern of the West Village derives, and he neglects a longer and important social history that played itself out a couple of blocks from the square. South and west of the square was Manhattan's longest-established African American neighborhood; it dated from the seventeenth century, having been enabled by the Dutch, who allowed slaves to buy land there and use their income from that land to purchase their own freedom. The British authorities were less accommodating to the community, but it persisted into the nineteenth century until the infamous Civil War Draft Riots, when it was devastated by a series of savage attacks on blacks.
He subjects many of the myths of the Village to the test of documentation, sometimes enriching the myth, sometimes undercutting it. While most urban studies of this genre tend to repeat each other, with no one seeking solid evidence for the well-cultivated memories of the place, Harris has dug deep into the holdings of the Municipal Reference Library and Archives, into newspapers and city directories, and, with special success, the visual record of the neighborhood. The book is subtitled An illustrated History of Greenwich Village, and that it is indeed. It has over 200 illustrations, and a very high proportion of them are uncommon, not the usual suspects which-like the myths-get reused from one history to the next.
If Harris offers no thesis, he does have a point to make. Although Manhattan is marked by constant change or, as one historian recently it, "creative destruction", there is remarkable continuity in the Village. Even with the recent intrusion of Starbucks, book- and drugstore chains, and overbearing buildings recently erected on the square by New York University, the neighborhood's appeal to creative people persists, particularly creative people in the arts literature. His point is made by the multiplicity of individuals who populate his history from Whitman, Melville, Poe, and Anne Lynch's salon in the middle of the nineteenth century up until the present. These individuals-some well remembered, others less so-have provided a crucial density to the world of culture-making.
One cannot begin to summarize the number of connections made by Harris, but the entangled associations of artists and intellectuals with groups and places that he elaborates reveal how the Village works. Harris points to the allure of the history of the place and its inhabitants. The most ambitious and talented pursue the challenge and the glory of association with the ghosts of giants. But part of what is unique about the Village are its many physical and cultural nooks and crannies. Harris's strategy of combining an account of the architecture the physical layout of the Village with the history of its literary and artistic figures becomes an explanation. The area feeds on the power and energy of New York, but it provides space-a necessary space-for invention of self well as art.
Still, the maintenance of the Village has required vigilance. Le Corbusier's views were not unique, and Robert Moses, the power planner who reshaped New York during the middle third of the twentieth century, saw little to save around Washington Square. His plan to run expressways through the park and SoHo, just south of the Village, threatened both the history and the social texture of the neighborhood. One Village mother, worried that her child's swings in Washington Square Park were at risk, took up her pen. The result, writes Harris, was not only a successful political mobilization that stopped Moses, but also The Death and Life of American Cities (1961), perhaps the most influential book on cities, planning, and architecture to be published in the twentieth century.
Greenwich Village's Complex HistoryReview Date: 2004-06-29
Luther Harris' book, "Around Washington Square: An Illustrated History of Greenwich Village" is an excellent introduction to the history, myths, lies, and unknown truths about this magnet for the students, the homeless, the artists, and the real estate agents who each value Greenwich Village for their own reasons. The text is very informative, and the illustrations are lush and generous. Broken down into easy-to-handle sections, Harris nonetheless is comprehensive. (He apologies to his readers if any particular individual, group, or building was omitted but he needn't have: just about all the bases were covered.) This is an exhaustive and wonderful book.
Exhaustively Covers TopicReview Date: 2006-11-11
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