Oregon Books


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Oregon Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Oregon
Oregon Sweet Oregon
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins Children's Books (1997-10)
Author: Kathleen Karr
List price: $19.50
Used price: $89.02

Average review score:

This Book is Great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-11
I thought this book was really cool my little sisters checked it out from the library, I was bored one day so I decided to check it out I could'nt put it down I did'nt even want to stop for lunch I wish they would of told us the name of the Judd's Baby and Wade and Amelia finally tie the knot! I really like Robbie he seems so excited over everything just like Phoebe I hope that they tie the knot when there done with the next adventure I recommend this book to anyone it's great!

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-01
Oregon at last! Finaly, the Petticoat Party, after enduring more then the usual hardships on the trail, have arrived in the so-called "Promised Land" - Oregon. But for 13 year old Phoebe Brown, Oregon is downright boring. After a few days of farming, Phoebe is just plain fed up. She longs for the adventures and freedoms she experianced on the trail. Is she the only adventuresome person in the whole Oregon Territory?

Oregon
The Oregon Weather Book: A State of Extremes
Published in Paperback by Oregon State University Press (1999-09-01)
Authors: George H. Taylor and Raymond R. Hatton
List price: $19.95
New price: $8.90
Used price: $3.83
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

The Oregon Weather Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-02
George Taylor has written a complete and informational book about the weather in Oregon. If you are interested in knowing the facts, I highly recommend you read this book.

Everything you need to know about Oregon
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-27
This book is AMAZING in its information. I am currently studying Oregons Weather and this gave me a boost. You never thought a Hurricane forced storm could ever hit Oregon, but it has! And it looks like more is to come. Besides, if your planning to move to Oregon and is interested in the weather here...this is the book for you! Five STARS!

--Grant

Oregon
Oregon'S Journey
Published in Paperback by Troll Communications (1997-09-13)
Authors: Rascal and Louis Joos
List price: $15.95
New price: $45.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $17.50

Average review score:

A Parents Choice Award book, 1994.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-08
Spectcular text language, heartfelt, and friendship at its finest! The illustrations are beautiful. Duke and Oregon will steal your heart if the illustrations don't do it first! A teacher from Michigan.

Poetic and lovely -- one of my favorite children's books!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-03
Duke, a clown, realizes that his friend Oregon the bear needs to be free and so they set off on a roadtrip across America to the forested mountain regions of Oregon. Books as beautiful and evocative as this one are rare. The story is told simply, with an economy of style and capturing a wide range of nuance with very few words. It is a story of captivity and freedom, of prejudice and longing, a story of America and its diversity, both geographical and cultural. All of these messages come across in a story told to be delightful to children and poignant for their parents.

The pictures complement the story perfectly. One of my favorite pictures (it is hard to pick) depicts Duke sitting on a motel bed while Oregon is surrounded with cheeseburgers -- many of them merely sketched to suggest the passage of time (and the consumption of burgers).

Oregon
Outcome-Based Education
Published in Paperback by Multnomah Books (1994-10-01)
Authors: Ron Sunseri and Matt Jacobson
List price: $9.99
New price: $2.01
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Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Excellent synopsis of outcome-based education
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-27
For those of us living in OBE states, this book is an eye-opener. The author validates many of the doubts parents have had about OBE. The book is well-researched, informative, and an easy read. You'll especially find the information on the backgrounds and agendas of those pushing OBE to be enlightening. It's well worth the effort to find the book.

A tremendous resource regarding OBE or "Mastery Learning"
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-06
What an incredible book!! This is a must read for anyone who is interested in learning more about OBE and how it is being implemented, not only in Oregon, but across the U.S. Filled with facts and resources. I read this entire book in one night. MUST NOTE This book is written by a member of Oregon's legislature. Highly recommended.

Oregon
Overstory: Zero : Real Life in Timber Country
Published in Hardcover by Sasquatch Books (1995-09)
Author: Robert Leo Heilman
List price: $14.95
New price: $4.00
Used price: $0.46

Average review score:

A fine celebration of place and community
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-06
I picked this collection up while returning to my home in another Oregon river valley, after two years away on a contract. reading it first brought home to me the preciousness of place, the the wisdom of this writer. I recommend it.

What Fulghum is to Kindergarten, R.L.H. is to Douglas County
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-10
As a Douglas County transplant and an English teacher, I relished both Heilman's depictions of life and livelihoods as well as recognized his elevation of the spirit and humanity of this portion of the globe.

One may compare the witty short-takes of Robert Fulghum's "Kindergarten" series and Norman McClean's "River" collection to that of Heilman's "Over-stories".

This collection of writings is refreshingly simple backwoods as well as elevated highbrow. It is both for and about life, as one man has experienced it, told in such a way as to be universal in its appeal and understanding.

I use these stories in my classes to bring the world my students live in within the walls of academia. If nothing else, then to show them that it is possible to enjoy and recognize the beauty of something even when you feel you are surrounded by nothing at all.

Oregon
Pacific Northwest Camping Destinations: RV and Car Camping Destinations in Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia (Camping Destinations series)
Published in Paperback by Rolling Homes Press (2008-04-01)
Authors: Mike Church and Terri Church
List price: $19.95
New price: $11.49
Used price: $9.99

Average review score:

Great book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-25
We live near Tacoma and have a motorhome that doesn't fit in many of the state and federal campgrounds in the Northwest. This newest Church book is very good at helping to find the right places for our rig. In a month, using their advice, we found three wonderful RV campgrounds that we didn't know about. One is next to a first class trout river and another is at an entrance to Mt. Rainier National Park. Maybe the best part is that this book is helping us re-discover where we can go without using a lot of fuel! This is a great book for those that have never been to the Northwest as well as those that live there. Buy it! You'll like it!

As a northwest "native" this book is the best !
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
I have traveled extensively throughout the Pacific Northwest and much of the U.S. This year travel will be limited to the Pacific Northwest. As a "native" Washingtonian and lifelong camper I've been looking for a new guidebook that combines travel info with the latest on campgrounds. There are new parks and new travel ideas - enough to generate enthusiasm and travel plans! Each listing has large icon keys that make it easy to find suitable camping spots, ie 50 amps, big rigs, activities and more. The book covers Washington, Oregon and British Columbia with everything from weekend to multi-week trip planning possibilities. Thank you to the authors for a great guidebook.

Oregon
A Passion in the Desert
Published in Paperback by Wordcraft of Oregon, LLC (2007-04-01)
Author: Thomas E. Kennedy
List price: $15.00
New price: $15.00
Used price: $10.72

Average review score:

Writer's Writer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-16
Thomas E. Kennedy has written yet another brilliant novel. Ostensibly , A Passion in the Desert is about a college creative writing teacher , Fred Twomey , a name perfectly suggestive of dichotomy , struggling with normal mezzo del cammin issues: marital fidelity , alcohol dependence , a senescent mother , an alienated teenage son. Kennedy's novel , a feast of language like all of his oeuvre , is , in fact , questioning the idea of paternity. He's a Joycean running with the concept proposed in the National Library scene by Stephen Dedalus viz., paternity might be legal fiction. Like Joyce , Kennedy is not afraid to take us through the muddy terrain of his protagonist's consciousness. And if there's a father , there must be a son. Kennedy gives us a '' nullius filius'' to correspond with a father deaf to a son's pater ,ait , and until the penultimate scene , a terrifying Ithaca , if you will , in a tour de force second person narrative. A Passion in the Desert is powerful storytelling. A veritable masterpiece.

Foreboding and riveting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-06
After reading Kenney's Copenhagen Quartet, I couldn't imagine where he would go next to mine his seemingly endless supply of fascinating characters and stories. But "A Passion in the Desert," shows no fall-off from the brilliance of the Copenhagen Quartet. This book is, by turns, creepy, funny, amazingly insightful, and as personal as it gets within the ruminations of a character's mind, in this case, one Fred Twomey. And the great trick of Kennedy's writing is that no matter how surreal or fantastical his plots sometimes become, it always seems that they could happen to us. Everything remains plausible and personal. "A Passion in the Desert" is to be savored. Read the newspaper on the train or on a bus, but save Kennedy's latest for your armchair, with a chilled martini on a table next to you. And then begin reading and you'll know you are in the hands of legitimate master storyteller. Kennedy's work is as good as it gets.

Oregon
Plants and Animals of the Pacific Northwest: An Illustrated Guide to the Natural History of Western Oregon, Washington and British Columbia
Published in Paperback by University of Washington Press (1978-04)
Author: Eugene N. Kozloff
List price: $35.00
New price: $23.08
Used price: $4.55
Collectible price: $49.95

Average review score:

Plants and Animals of the Pacific Northwest by E.N. Kozloff
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-31
This is the best PNW plant and animal identification book on the market (and I have lot of such i.d. books). Lots of really good color pictures and detailed b/w's. Informative text on life history/cycles. Good index and well-organized. Great for helping children get going on school projects (the Latin names are there, but the text is plain English, flows well, and provides information that interests ordinary persons of all ages who enjoy the out-of-doors). Would make a nice gift for someone new to the area or otherwise interested in the topic.

What a beautiful book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-12
I fell in love with wild plants at the tender age of 11 when I went to camp with my 5th grade class. We did plant identification and I became intrigued by all the wonderful plants in the NW. WHen I got home I poured through my mom's copy of this book. I had been seeing it on our coffee table since I was like a tot! I fell in love with plants. This book has beautiful color pics of all kinds of wonderful plants and animals. It's awesome!

Oregon
Plundertown, USA: Coos Bay Enters the Global Economy
Published in Paperback by Hancock House Publishing (2003-07)
Author: Al Sandine
List price: $14.95
New price: $14.94
Used price: $4.75
Collectible price: $14.95

Average review score:

More than just local history.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-15
Sandine skillfully weaves several personal anecdotes into this narrative of the economic and social history of the Coos Bay region of southwest coastal Oregon. There are brief accounts of his having lived in North Bend, contiguous with Coos Bay, in the early 1950s, with later constrasting descriptions of the present-day distressed region as of early 2002. But the real subject of the book is the bigger picture of the rapid development by distant extractive industries of a west coast lumber port, with its subsequent boom-and-bust economy, and the implications for similar localities seeking job-creating ventures and increased payrolls by attracting remotely-based multinational interests. The author provides a detailed description of how prosperity for this one locality, so dependent on the exploitation and shipping of forest products, was only intermittently sustained. Today, Coos Bay is a city that has yet to come to terms with the implications of its own unstable dependence on short-term "job-creating" ventures.

The book is particularly admirable for its all-encompassing point of view, where the author steps back to visualize the regional socio-economic history of southwest Oregon in the context of the national or global economy. While the tone is somber, the argument is disciplined and suggests a sense of wonder at the severity of the many changes endured by this gritty working community. This reader agrees with the author that the fascinating history of the Coos Bay/North Bend area presents a rich vein for historians and economists.

This is a thoughtful and compelling local history that should have a broad appeal, even for those with an interest in labour and industry studies, or in the forest resources of the Pacific Northwest. It particularizes the geography of industrial work, and serves as a timely warning that industrial location is seldom permanent and is always subject to downsizing. Indeed, in resource extraction industries, plant shutdowns are likely eventualities for all localities embraced by corporate globalization. In fact, one of the more interesting themes in Sandine's study is that in a retrospective sense every one of the major players in Coos Bay's history--from shrewd and calculating pioneer lumber and shipping merchants such as Asa Mead Simpson to multinational lumber product enterprises such as Georgia-Pacific--were always conceptualizing their immediate future in hemispheric or global terms while acquiring and managing what was originally a public domain as a resource to be privately abused. Yet at the local level there was seldom any effort to understand the long-term implications of this form of transnational capitalism.

In its final chapters the book considers the historic absence of local interest group linkage and the deference and unassertiveness on the part of local development councils. It mentions occasional efforts at joint forest management, and a few of the largely ineffective campaigns to ameliorate the social impacts of structural changes in the industry. As Sandine relates, only recently has there been a real awareness that "world trade" on the local level simply means "the foreclosure of economic choice." The text is well-served by photos, bibliographical footnotes (many revealing sources that are unusual and reflect the author's ample range of background reading), an extensive bibliography, and a useful index.

A Tale for Our Times
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-04
Plundertown was my summer vacation book, and should be on everyone's wish list, especially those concerned about the environment, globalization, West Coast history, and a tale that has the dark drama of a well-written expose. The author has skillfully woven personal, political, socio-cultural, historical, and economic threads into a very engaging, compact narrative that starts with vividly recallled childhood memories of growing up in Coos Bay, then takes the reader on a wide-ranging epic journey that expands out to San Francisco and other urban centers of industry and finance, back in time when native peoples lived in harmony with nature and the forest, and forward to the time when nature had been exploited by buisness barons, and left barren for future generations. Chapters are short, densely packed with well-researched information, and provide a vivid and convincing saga of the human and environmental wounds that occur when business colonizes and exploits for economic gain. Because the tale is very local and personally felt by the author, the reader is able to live through a sequence of events that is being repeated in our time, in many parts of the world. The costs of globalization and economic exploitation become very real, not just abstract political rhetoric.
Highly recommended.

Oregon
The Portland Red Guide: Sites & Stories of Our Radical Past
Published in Paperback by Ooligan Press (2007-06-01)
Author: Michael Munk
List price: $16.95
New price: $7.98
Used price: $6.45

Average review score:

Gary Snyder says
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-13
It's a wonderful book and it's so well organized I can't believe it... delighted that my May Day toast is part of it. Gary Snyder

Oregonian on the Red Guide
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-03

Portland's lively left-of-center history is brought back to life in 'Red Guide'
The Oregonian
June 17, 2007

By John Terry




Interesting, the things found in the closets of Portland's radical past:

The founder of the exclusive Catlin Gabel School was accused of being a communist.

Two Tuskegee Airmen of World War II fame were from Portland; 12 in all were from Oregon.

The principal of Kenton Elementary School allied herself with social reformer Jane Addams, played host to muckraker Upton Sinclair and hobnobbed with Eleanor Roosevelt at the White House.

All this and much more thanks to the closet-cleaning work of intrepid Portland radical Michael Munk, whose new book, "The Portland Red Guide, Sites and Stories of our Radical Past," is new from Portland State University's Ooligan Press.

Munk is a native of Prague, Czechoslovakia, whose family fled the Nazis and came to Portland in 1939. He's a graduate of Lincoln High School and Reed College, has a master's degree from the University of Oregon and doctorate from New York University. For 25 years Munk taught political science at the State University of New York, Stony Brook, Chicago's Roosevelt University and Rutgers before retiring in Portland.

Munk -- Internet moniker "lastmarx" -- freely admits he's about as far to the political left as one can get without straying into the lunatic fringe. He's also an engaging personality with a delicious sense of irony evident throughout "Red Guide."

The book is divided into six political eras from the 19th century to the present, each entry in each section numbered and cross-referenced to maps and photographs.

Here is where radical writer John Reed grew up unfettered by Portland's upper-upper crust. There is where the Marine Workers Industrial Union headquartered during the 1934 Maritime Strike. Here is where Dr. Marie Equi in 1918 railed against war and was rewarded with three years in San Quentin.

Much of Munk's material understandably deals with the social, labor and political conflicts that roiled local waters throughout the city's history, events old-guard conservatives would just as soon see black-lined from its history. It also memorializes many who added richly to the city's fabric and heritage -- racial minorities, social reformers, religious leaders.

Ruth Catlin opened Miss Catlin's School for Girls in 1911 on Northwest Irving Street. She dedicated it to the "independence and freedom of action for women" and drew students "largely from Portland's wealthy elite," Munk says. She turned the school over to a board of directors in 1928 to become Catlin Gabel School.

The late 1930s found her on the infamous Portland Police Red Squad's list of communist sympathizers because she was active in a group "devoted to defending the elected Spanish government against a fascist invasion," says Munk.

Brothers Robert (Ruby) and Carl Deiz, graduates of Franklin High School, were Portland's contribution to the Tuskegee Airmen. Robert flew 93 missions with the segregated 332nd Fighter Group in Europe and was featured on a 1943 War Bond poster, "one of few depicting a black person," Munk says. Another Tuskegee airman, Charles Duke, was the first African American member of the Portland Police Department.

Grace De Graff, Kenton Elementary principal, was among the founders of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, organized to urge women worldwide to "refuse to do the work men cannot do because they are busy murdering other men."

Munk quotes a De Graff niece as recalling her thinking "what the Russians were doing was a desirable state of affairs," but also "Aaron Frank (of the department store Meier & Frank) was the nicest man" for helping out needy Kenton families.

You can reach John Terry, a retired copy editor for The Oregonian and member of the Oregon Geographic Names Board, at terryjohnf@cs.com


Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->Sports and Hobbies-->Summer Camps-->Day-->United States-->Oregon-->24
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