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

Indiana
Auschwitz: A History in Photographs
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (1993-10)
Author:
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A Testament To The Memory Of The Innocents Who Were Murdered
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-25
Having visited the exact areas from which these photographs are taken, I am so grateful to have this book as a memorial of my visit and experiences there.

To actually see the places where innocent Jews were executed and where countless thousands of children were gassed and their remains cremated as part of the Nazi industrial death machine, is one of the most harrowing experiences of my life.

If you are unable to visit the Auschwitz-Birkenau museum personally, then this book has to be the next best thing. The photographs show that little has changed there from those evil years under the Nazi regime of Hitler, Himmler and co..

The buildings full of human hair, much from children still bearing their innocent plaits and curls. Buildings full of spectacles and suitcases still bearing the names of those murdered, along with so many other personal possessions. The buildings where they existed before the ultimate short trip to the gas chambers. The firing squads and the 'wall of death' between blocks 10 and 11. They are all documented so well in this book.

This book is highly, highly recommended. How long these sites will actually remain is beginning to be questioned. Even now, with anti-Semitism again raising it's ugly head in Europe, plans are being talked about to build discotheques and shopping centres in the viscinity of the Auschwitz-Birkenau museum. Little if any thought is being paid to the desecration of the memory and sanctity of the site where so many innocents perished. How long will it be before the site is itself talked of in terms of it's removal in pursuit of 'progress'.

The memories must be kept alive so that history does not repeat itself. This book is a testament to the evil perpetrated there.

Excellent Pictorial Account
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-24
Having just visited Auschwitz last week, I ordered this book as a remembrance of my experience there. The pictures and the stories behind the way they were obtained are extremely compelling and accurately show the accounts of the people who perished there.

A great picture novel that helped me learn more.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-27
I'm still yet a child, and still yet to grow, but I will never grow out of the rememberence of the Holocaust. It was a time in our worlds history that we should never forget. This book helps reminds us of it and gives us a better view and perspective of what happen and to never take advantage of it.

Indiana
The Basic Problems of Phenomenology (Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy)
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (1982-06)
Author: Martin Heidegger
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Continuation of Being and Time
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-21
This book is a must read for those that choose to read Being and Time. The book itself is based, like so many of Heidegger's books, off of a lecture course he gave at the University of Marburg in the summer of 1927. This is important because Being and Time was ready for publication in 1927. If we put Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics alongside The Basic Problems of Phenomenology and Being and Time, we have the predominant whole of early Heideggerian thinking.

As for the book itself (for now on referred to as BP), the book is incomplete--just like Being and Time. Heidegger undertakes Three Parts each with Four chapters (see page 24). But BP only deals with all of Part One and only chapter 1 of Part Two. Heidegger gets no farther than the Problem of Ontological Difference (entities vs. the Being of entities) and the lecture course ends. But the book is extraordinarly helpful because of what it does address. Part One is elaborate and interesting because it deals with other philosophers and their ideas. Heidegger pays particular attention to Kant, Aristotle, Descartes and explains how their ideas have been inherited into the contemporary philosophic era. What I found most interesting was the deconstruction of Medieval and Modern ontology. Heidegger thus gives a broad historical interpretation of the history of philosophy and explains the presuppositions of each period.

Obviously this book is not for philosophical neophytes. The book should only be undertaken by those with some background in 20th century philosophy and knowledge of basic Heideggerian thought. The book's appeal should thus be limited to few individuals, and certainly only those with philosophic interest.

The book borrows much of the terminology from Being and Time with some notable exceptions. Authenticity and inauthenticity have pracitically been dropped. The term "horizon" becomes notably more important and the term "Temporality" is of great importance to understanding what is being disclosed from the text. Ontological difference is explicitly defined, though it was implicitly defined in Being and Time. Pay particular attention to Part Two of the work, for it questions through many of the underlying questions I had after completing Being and Time. If you are disappointed how the book abruptly ends, it is to be expected. But for those 285 people on Earth interested in Heidegger this book is indispensable. But read Being and Time first!

Philosophy Student,
Drake University

eminently readable and interesting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-14
This is an eminently readable translation of Heidegger--a chore that is indeed quite difficult. Moreover, the material Heidegger treats here finds a very concise, cohesive presentation, so it is all in all a very approachable text. As a reviewer noted below, this text is quite helpful in understanding _Being and Time_, or just generally for its own value in exposing Heidegger's thought around this time. Highly recommeded for someone serious about approaching texts by Heidegger.

Clean as a whistle, until it defines "is"
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-05
Mostly, philosophy is clean as a whistle, and we rarely understand it well enough to bow to the obviously superior form of intellect which, lecturing in 1927, strove to convince those who would like to consider themselves at the cutting edge of knowledge that:

"We have here once again the peculiar circumstance that the unveiling appropriation of the extant in its being-such is precisely not a subjectivizing but just the reverse, an appropriating of the uncovered determinations to the extant entity as it is itself." (p. 219).

If you read the small print on the cover of THE BASIC PROBLEMS OF PHENOMENOLOGY (1982, published in German as Die Grundprobleme der Phanomenologie in 1975) by Martin Heidegger, you will see that this book includes "Translation, Introduction, and Lexicon by Albert Hofstadter." The Lexicon is quite an accomplishment: pages 339 to 396 contain a wealth of information about the pages on which particular words ended up in this translation of lectures by Heidegger on philosophical problems. If you read the book first, then come to the first entry on page 340, "already, always already, antecedent, before, beforehand, earlier, in advance, precedent, prior--expressions used with great frequency: . . ." you know that dozens of pages can be cited for "some characteristic instances: . . . " Longer entries provide more complete indexing for being, being-in-the-world, beings, Da, Dasein, exist, extant, horizon, interpretation, "is" (See copula), Kant, now, nows (nun), ontological, ontology, philosophy, problem, problems, problems, specific, projection, project, self, structure, subject, Temporal, Temporality, temporal, temporality (zeitlich . . .), temporalize (zeitigen), theses, thing, thingness, thinghood, thinking, time, transcend, truth, understand, understanding of being, unveil, and world.

Frankly, I am glad that I have previously attempted to read lectures and the Heraclitus seminars which used the Greek alphabet (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, etc.) for Greek words, so that I was warned that translation was necessary, and I learned enough Greek words to recognize that ancient language even when it is printed in transliterated form, with no indication that a foreign language is being used, as frequently occurs in this book.

"In a corresponding passage Aristotle says that this `is' means a synthesis and is accordingly en sumploke dianoias kai pathos en taute, it is the coupling that the intellect produces as combining intellect, and this `is' means something that does not occur among things; it means a being, but a being that is, as it were, a state of thought." (p. 182).

People with absolutely no knowledge of Greek might try reading the Lexicon entry for "Greek expressions" (pp. 358-359) before reading pages 73, 86, 115, etc. to remind themselves that when they read "to on" on page 53, they were reading Greek, as "to ti en einai" on page 85 is a bit more obviously not in English, as Aristotle was not. How helpful is this? Consider the final entry in Greek expressions: zoe, 121. Looking it up, I find in the final paragraph of section 12:

"First, however, one problem makes its claim on our attention: besides the extant (at-hand extantness) there are beings in the sense of the Dasein, who exists. But this being which we ourselves are--was this not always already known, in philosophy and even in pre-philosophical knowledge? Can one make such a fuss about stressing expressly the fact that besides the extant at-hand there is also this being that we ourselves are? After all, every Dasein, insofar as it is, always already knows about itself and knows that it differs from other beings. We ourselves said that for all its being oriented primarily to the extant at-hand, ancient ontology nevertheless is familiar with psuche, nous, logos, zoe, bios, soul, reason, life in the broadest sense. Of course. But it should be borne in mind that the ontical, factual familiarity of a being does not after all guarantee a suitable interpretation of its being." (pp. 120-121).

The actual lectures only consist of 22 sections, with "The Being of the Copula" in Chapter Four (pp. 177-224) primarily considered in sections 16 and 17, though the outline of the subject at the end of Heidegger's Introduction, section 6, suggested that this would be at the end of Part One, Chapter Four. Section 18 on the existential mode of being of truth has also been included at the end of Chapter Four, where it seems to follow quite naturally. Though it is only followed by Part Two, Chapter One, anyone who wishes to imagine more may adopt the idea stated by Heidegger on page 225 that Part Two would also have four chapters, in which we could encounter the basic problems again ending with "fourthly, the problem of the truth-character of being."

There isn't anything about pandering in the Lexicon, but the 22 listings for "copula" might be close, considering the "See `is' " cross-reference and the amount of political scandal that has recently been generated by President Clinton when he was trying to think non-copulatively in the way he defined "is." The 1908 Oxford translation of Aristotle included in note 4 on page 181 illustrates the kind of compartmentalization that most people exhibited in thinking about the impeachment proceedings:

"For neither are `to be' and `not to be' and the participle `being' significant of any fact, unless something is added; for they do not themselves indicate anything, but imply a copulation, of which we cannot form a conception apart from the things coupled."

Indiana
Being and Logos
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (1996-05-01)
Author: John Sallis
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Average review score:

Absolutely essential
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-18
This book is as fresh today as it was 25 years ago when it was originally published. John Sallis continues to be one of the most interesting voices in philosophy in the U.S. In this magnificent work Sallis explores several of the most important dialogues in the platonic corpus by concentrating upon the interaction between logos--speech or writing--and "being" within those works. What we get is an impressive set of interpretations upon old favorites: Meno, Apology, Republic, Sophist, Phaedrus, Cratylus. Since Sallis has been heavily influenced by Heidegger and Derrida he pays particular attention to the form of the dialogues and their slippery language. Rather than the tired old cliches about Plato's "theory of ideas" or "theory of hedonism" we get compelling, insightful interpretations about the twists-and-turns in the dialogues and the interplay between interlocutors. This book so rich as to defy the conventional, short review.

It is works like this which remind us that Plato is every bit as radical and profound today as he was 2,500 years ago. Put down those dreadful books by Vlastos and Nehemas; pick this one up! You will not be sorry.

A very well written and engaging study of Plato's dialogues
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-13
I wholeheartedly recommend this work; Written by a well respected continental philosopher, it is perhaps the finest introduction (in english) to the many dimensions of the platonic dialogues.

Interpretive essays that really get you into the dialogues
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-26
The problem with Plato's dialogues is that they were written over 2,500 yeqrs ago. That's not Plato's problem, it's ours. The whole cultural milieu, on which the dialogue draw heavily, no longer exists. What's a Mother to do? Well if you get Doctor Sallis' marvelous little book you will be given guided tours of several important dialogues: Meno, Phaedrus, Republic and others. Of course, it doesn't replace actually reading the dialogues, and his language is a tad Heideggerian (but not offensively so). All in all a good read.

Indiana
A Belief in Providence: A Life of Saint Theodora Guerin
Published in Hardcover by Indiana Historical Society Press (2007-03-31)
Author: Julie Young
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Enlightened by A Belief in Providence
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-27
Amidst all of the published books out today that either reflect on such a materialistic world we have become or those that place "famous" people upon a pedestal out of touch, it was extremely refreshing to read a novel about a genuine saint of our times! Julie Young deserves praise for her research and dedication in educating the reader about this amazing woman, Saint Theodora Guerin and in the journey of her recent canonization! I applaud Julie and the Indiana Historical Society Press for this publication and I look forward to reading any future publications to come from this gifted writer!

The Road Through the Wilderness to Sainthood
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
Ms.Young has brought to life the challenges faced by Saint Theodora Guerin in establishing a school for woman in the frontier of Indiana. This is a fascinating look at the hardships and trials that Sister Guerin overcame in a country where she didn't even speak the language. This book is wonderful for young people and an inspiration to readers of all ages.

Woman, Nun, Teacher, Founder, Saint
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
Saint Theodora Guerin was a woman who endured, survived, and learned at a time when women held little power. This book details her challenges from disinterested Bishops to local Catholic bashing. Details are provided, but also broadstrokes of midwest history.

Interesting book tying history, and personality together. Saint Guerin was born in France, migrated to the wilds of Indiana where the politics of founding a school for women was almost overwhelming. And as with many faithful Christians, she suffered from an affliction that challenged her to strive.

This is a good book for history.... of feminists, of Catholics, of Universities (she founded St. Mary of the Woods in Terre Haute, Indiana), of Indiana, of the process of becoming a saint.

You'll find your own challenges in this book... if she could do so much, with so little..... how can I do more with what I have??

Indiana
Bequest and Betrayal: Memoirs of a Parent's Death
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (2000-03)
Author: Nancy K. Miller
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untitled
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-27
This is the first work of literary criticism that I read like a novel; I simply couldn't put it down. By combining literary criticism and autobiography, Miller pushes the boundaries of literary criticism in productive ways and forces us to rethink the field. Finally a book I can recommend and give to all my friends, regardless of whether they are academics.

Scholarly & readable-- what a combination!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-16
Nancy K. Miller is one of my favorite contemporary feminist theorists. This study of several "Memoirs" written by adult children of deceased parents kept me interested in ways that scholarship often does not (I usually read it for work, not pleasure-- this book combined the two). With this book, you should also read Maus : A Survivor's Tale by Art Spiegelman, because one of the most fascinating chapters is a study of Spiegelman's gripping Holocaust narratives. Autobiography shapes all writing in ways that critics are really just beginning to explore-- Dr. Miller is at the forefront of this field and deservedly so.

Beginning Real Life
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-26
The opening line of Bequest & Betrayal came as a shock of recognition: "When my mother died, I thought my real life would begin." I read avidly the beginning pages, and then, suddenly, got frightened and stopped. What did it mean for me, a 28-year-old, to identify so strongly with a woman writing about her mother's death? Between the resentment and forgiveness that connect parents and children, Miller shows us, is the possibility of realization. We can realize that there is a separation between our parents' lives and our own, their stories about parents and children and our own stories. The succession of generations-dying parents and newly born children-does not necessarily resolve conflict, nor is it the only way toward realization. The chain of generations can be broken: the absence of reconciliation can be lived with. Can I begin to live my real life now?

For me, a first generation immigrant, family has been a source of both identity and difference, something essential but secret, unknown to others, and incompatible with public American life. In reading Bequest & Betrayal, the memoir of a woman who is not like me at all, according to the conventional terms we use to think of identity, I found that it was nevertheless family that linked us, the simple fact that we are all entangled in family plots of some kind. Families not only give us our unique differences and tribal markers but can become the foundation of non-familial communities. Differences between people are complicated, not always predictable; they don't always fall along party lines.

I often tend to read "too autobiographically" but had never encountered an author who freely confessed to the same extravagance. I thought that I read for what I needed because that was the only way I would find myself in stories about Americans not quite like me. Now I suddenly discovered that someone else, maybe everyone, reads this way. The cross-generational and cross-cultural identification that was the basis of my private reading experience became part of a publicly shared experience. If we are allowed to take seriously, as Miller encourages us to do, the "bonds of paper" that connect generations who don't share bonds of blood, then communal life need not depend solely on our parents or the body of the family.

Indiana
The Birds of Michigan
Published in Hardcover by Indiana Univ Pr (1994-12)
Authors: James Granlund, Gail A. McPeek, and Raymond J. Adams
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The Book of Michigan Birds by those that know them best
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
This is a large beautiful edition of Michigan birds written by many of Michigan's ornithologists and most knowledgable birders. The illustrations and artwork are superb and I wish I could have them as artwork in my home without tearing them out of the book.

This is not a field guide or identification book but a resource of most of the knowledge about each species of bird seen in Michigan up to the publication date of the book.

I refer to this often when I wish to get more information on a birds history of occurance in the state or its population status or biology.

More recent information on species status and sightings can be found on the Michigan Bird Records Committee website.

Anyone that is interested in the birds of Michigan would treasure this book.

Blessed by Peterson
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-15



The Natural History of Michigan avifauna presented includes population fluctuation, habitat changes, current status; historical records verified from as far back as the 19th c. in some cases. Reasons for decline or increase in numbers and range are usually well known or theorized by ornithologists (there are a few unsolved mysteries) A less pedestrian look at these details: " Maurice Gibbs in 1879 reports the Cardinal or 'Red Bird' as an "accidental visitor"

Artwork: Full sized color plates = full page layouts featuring the male and female set amongst their preferred habitats or a vegetaional sample. A Bobolink chortles in his mellow hay field, The Towhees scratch leaves under the brambles and the Great Gray Owl is caught in the act of enchanting his Northern starlit forest.

Includes species extinct and extirpated as well as all species that have visited the State at least once on record. As an example, a McCown's Longspur is listed as a Michigan bird, a species that rarely if ever seen anywhere beyond it's breeding range in the Upper Midwest, (Colorado to Alberta), yet a verified record exists at Whitefish Point - Chippewa County in May, 1981.

What else? If anything it manages to capture the great beauty found in the details of a birds life. (The Great Horned owl female sits through yet another snowstorm on an old heron nest to keep her two eggs warm in the late winter incubation period.)

SB

A 'must have' for Michigan birders
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-02
"The Birds of Michigan" is more than an oversize picture book. It's a treasure. The 200 species of birds that nest in Michigan are depicted in original, full color paintings by Michigan artists, and the detailed text on over 400 birds that have been seen in the state is compulsive reading. The species accounts were written by some of the state's leading ornithologist-naturalists, including their own field observations, and I learned something new about my favorite birds on almost every page. Originally, I'd checked "The Birds of Michigan" out of the library, but once I'd read it, I had to buy a copy of my own.

The careful observations and the level of detail about each species sets a standard none of the field guides can match:

* The earliest published spring arrival date for Chimney Swifts in Detroit is 04/05/1981.
* Belted Kingfishers excavate nesting burrows in river banks, usually taking a week to dig a tunnel three to six feet long.
* Forest regeneration and winter feeding stations have extended the range of the Red-Bellied Woodpecker to the Northern Lower Peninsula.
* I'm glad I'm not the only birder in Michigan who misidentifies the Pine Warbler for a Chipping or Swamp Sparrow!

My heart-felt thanks to the artists, ornithologists, editors, and sponsors of this book: Sarett Nature Center; Kalamazoo Nature Center; and First of America Bank. It must have very expensive to produce, but the results are worth every penny spent. My only suggestion for the next edition would be the inclusion of a CD of Michigan birdsongs.

Indiana
Camel Xiangzi
Published in Hardcover by Indiana Univ Pr (1982-02)
Author: Lao She
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GREAT FEEL FOR CHINA BEFORE THE REVOLUTION
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-25
having read both versions i strongly prefer the older evan king translation for it's clarity and readability. this version was written, translated, and printed before the revolution under the title "rickshaw boy" by lau shaw. if you are new to this book try to find one of these increasingly scarce editions to read first. it is a tale simply told with easy running narration like in a first rate biography. it is a great portrayal of old china as seen through the eyes of the chinese.

Lao She must be rolling over in his grave! The exploiting class is back with a vengeance.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-01
(This book is also known as Rickshaw Boy and has had different translators. I read the version translated by Shi Xiaoqing and illustrated by Gu Bingxin that I bought in China. ISBN 7-119-00512)

This is the great classic novel of exploitation in Old China, before the 1949 Revolution. It's also anti-individualist. It's the early 1930s and Xiangzi arrives alone in Beiping (Beijing) with dreams of making a living as a rickshaw puller. He is a loner who constantly struggles against forces beyond his control. On more than one occasion his rickshaw is destroyed and each time he tries to bounce back. Class struggle is woven throughout the tapestry of this story.

I read this after Nawal El Saadawi's Woman at Point Zero. So what really caught my attention was the character, Joy, who enters in the last third of Camel Xiangzi. I decided to use both of these novels in my thesis on women forced into prostitution. Joy is sold to an army officer by her lazy greedy father. Joy learns that temporary "marriages" are the MO of her officer "husband." Each time he is transferred he just buys a new wife, because it's cheaper than hiring housekeepers and prostitutes, and he leaves them with the bills.

When Joy returns home she's damaged goods and her father forces her to prostitute in order to support his drinking habit and her two younger brothers. Her life becomes hell on earth. I don't really want to spoil the ending. Let me just say that Chinese novels rarely have happy endings.

In his 1954 afterword Lao She reflects back on how much China has evolved since those dark days and how "Today, nineteen years later, the working people have become masters of their own destiny." Tragically more than half a century later, while China has the fastest growing economy in the world, many of its citizens, especially girls, are much worse off. The great exploitation novel of 21st century China would be called Sweatshop Girl or Hostage Hooker. The protagonist would be a teenage girl from one of the inner provinces like Sichuan or Hunan. She would be forced to leave school and migrate to a city like Guangzhou. She would lie about her age to obtain a job in a sweatshop working around the clock, for pennies an hour, to support herself and send money home. Another worse, but unfortunately very common scenario (in Russia as well), she would be abducted walking home from school by a pimp from organized crime. When her parents try to find her the police sit back and do nothing because they are working with organized crime. A search engine turned up numerous articles about this. China is also the only country where more females than males commit suicide. Its one-child policy has led to a birth ratio of 119 males to 100 females. Rather than leading to a greater appreciation of women, who "hold up half of the sky," it has fueled a higher demand for trafficking in women.

I am reading Will the Boat Sink the Water: The Life of China's Peasants by Chen Guidi and Wu Chuntao. It was written in the last few years by a husband and wife who are journalists from Anhui Province. The suffering of China's billion peasants seems even worse than in Lao She's day. I also recommend The Garlic Ballads, a novel by Mo Yan.


One of 20th century's greatest Chinese novels.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1997-10-31
Lao She (pen name for the Chinese author, 1899-1966) wrote this moving story about a rickshaw puller during the 1920s in Beijing, China. An earlier English translation by Evan King (1945) was BOMC choice but not a good translation. King changed the ending and did other things a translator should not do. This edition is good. For a view of the ordinary people, the underdogs and poor of China during difficult times this is a most helpful book.

Indiana
Choking in Fear
Published in Paperback by American Book Publishing (2004-02)
Author: Mike McCarty
List price: $19.95

Average review score:

lWell written & accurate
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-18
As AN INVESTIGATING OFFICER IN THIS PARTICULAR CRIME STORY, I CAN ATTEST TO THE HIGHLY ACCURATE REPORTING & RESEARCH THAT MIKE MCCARTY PUT INTO THIS BOOK. I RECOMMEND THIS BOOK AS A FIVE STAR NOVEL! DAVE BLUE (INDIANA STATE POLICE RETIRED)

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-16
This horrific crime took place in the area where I grew up and I have often wondered when someone would write the story of what happened that night. Mr. McCarty has done an excellent job of capturing the innocence of the time and how your entire world can change in one day.

Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-25
This was an excellent book! I am from the same home town as Mr. McCarty. In fact we lived only blocks from one another and I remember this night very well. It was very interesting to get the details I never knew about this horrific crime and how it has changed my family, and the way we think about being safe in our own homes. It also brought back several memories of people I had forgotten that also lived and worked in our hometown, thanks for those memories. Thanks Mike for a great book--Laura Brady-Faurote

Indiana
The Complete Romances of Chretien De Troyes
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (1993-02)
Author:
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Classic Stories
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
If chivalry and courtly love interest you, this collection of romances is sure to please you.

Chretien's stories are some of the best
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-26
I've read several books on Arthurian literature, and this is one of my favorites. In Knight of the Cart, Chretien really makes Lancelot shine as he sacrifices more than anyone (Arthur particularly) to save Guinevere. Knight with the Lion is a little on the twisted side as Yvain falls in love with the wife of the man he kills, breaks a promise with her, then gets her back through trickery of words.

Very solid, very readable translation by Staines.

One of the finest translations
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-02
This is without a doubt one of the finest translations into English of Chrétien de Troyes' Arthurian romances, which includes the seldom found "William of England".
In "Cliges" are many references to the "Tristan and Iseult" story found in other venues. The tale of Greek and English lovers is not typical of what one expects to find in Arthurian romances.
The term "courtly love" wasn't introduced until the nineteenth century, but according to French scholars, the story of "Le Chevalier de la Charette", or "The Knight of the Cart" (AKA, Lancelot and Guinevere) is the first lyric poem that dealt with this subject. I'm sure I won't be the only person who finds surprises in this early version of the tale.
For those who would like to see one of Sir Thomas Malory's sources, and enjoy a good read into the bargain, this is indeed a book to consider purchasing.

Indiana
Earth Treasures: The Northeastern Quadrant : Connecticut, Delaware, Ilunois, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, ... York, oh (Earth Treasures (Back in Print))
Published in Paperback by Backinprint.com (2000-04)
Author: Allan W. Eckert
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Earth Treasures: Review
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-27
Although light reading, the text serves as a functional guide; lean and concise requiring the reader to become involved in cross reference.

A Gem of a Book
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-07
One of a fantastic series of 4 chuck full of informational volumes dedicated to a particular geographic area. A must for any rock hound weather you travel or just live in the geographic area of the volume. If you can afford it, get all 4 regional volumes. Start with your area. The location information brake down of the minerals to be found in each state counties is so valuable you can't do with out it. Saves time, eliminate barren hunting grounds and it's so detailed as to where and how you find the minerals. This is just one of a fact full accurate guide series you'll want to have in your rock library. Don't settle for an older printing, this one is reprinted and has been updated.

Love it, love it, love it!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-04
This book looks like it's going to be a GREAT asset in my mineral hunting! I like the way it's set up, by state and then by county within the state. It lists the various sites, tells what has been found at each site and (by a code explained in the front of the book) where in each site the minerals were (in a field, in a mine, in the water, etc.). There are directions of varying degrees to each site. That's the one thing I'd quibble about -- some of the directions aren't that precise. But I understand that some of these sites are private lands, or not completely documented, and he can't come out and say, "Go fifty feet past the blue house, down a ravine, and to your left." In general, the directions seem good enough to get you close, and after that it's up to you.

He lists the rocks and minerals found at each site and gives some information about the quality at most places, including size of crystals found, color (and quality of color), and so on.

My only regret? I don't know if I'll have time to visit each site he has listed! So many rocks, so little time........


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