Maine Books
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End needs workReview Date: 2004-12-02
A very wonderful story!Review Date: 2001-11-05
more stars if I could. It's a beautiful and entertaining
Christian romance novel.
This book is awesome!Review Date: 2000-12-03
Amazing Simply AmazingReview Date: 2000-03-31
Awesome book!Review Date: 2000-03-27


The definitive account of this brave regiementReview Date: 2000-08-25
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain was made Lt. Colonel when he first arrived to join the regiment and soon afterwards the regiment was becoming disciplined and effective, also under the command of Col (later Gen) Aldebert Ames.
From the first battles the unit fought in to the carnage of Fredericksburg and thus to Chancellorsville and finally to the 2nd of July 1863, Pullen describes vividly the heroic stance the 20th Maine made against the brave attack of the 15 Alabama and 4th and 5th Texas under Col. William Oates. The suprizing bayonet charge by the 20th Maine, when all seemed lost was a daring and bold moved that quite possibly saved the Union line and thus ultimately won the Battle of Gettysburg. The heroic regiment also fought bravely for the rest of the war especially at Petersburg where Gen. Chamberlain was seriously wounded.
Pullen does an outstanding job describing the everyday life of the regiment and describing various soldiers and the routine that made life away from home very tough to bear, however this regiment is to be commended for their commitment to the Union, to the state of Maine and to their families most of all.
This book is HIGHLY recommended to all Civil War Readers and once you start reading it, it will be hard to put down.
On Campaign - Army of the PotomacReview Date: 1998-07-21
Single best Civil War unit history I've readReview Date: 1999-07-01
Bayonet!Review Date: 2000-12-28
The regiment doesn't start with promise, however, and its first commander, Colonel Adelbert Ames, a hardened regular, is somewhat dismayed at his new command. However, hard work and professionalism pay off, and the 20th Maine does evolve into 'a hell of a regiment.'
The payoff is at Gettysburg on the second day on the far left flank of the Army of the Potomac on a wooded hill known locally as Little Round Top. Now commanded by the Lieutenant Colonel, Joshua Chamberlain (Ames being deservedly promoted to Brigadier General and brigade command), the regiment becomes the focus of the southern effort to capture Little Round Top and flank the Union Army. If one man could lose the war in the afternoon, it was Chamberlain and his homespun regiment from Maine.
They rise to the challenge, at heavy loss to themselves, execute a bayonet charge down the hill after running out of ammunition, sweeping up 400 prisoners and saving the Union left flank. It is the stuff legends are made of.
This is only one episode in this superb volume, and this book belongs in every Civil War collection. It is written with wit, verve, and accuracy, and it stirs the soul that our country was fought for and saved by men such as these.
Very Good.Review Date: 2003-10-26
Pullen puts you in the action so effectively that you really begin to wonder how regiments like the Twentieth Maine were able to perform so heroically for so long. Credited with single handedly saving the Union flank the second day Gettysburg, this unit produces one of the finest battle field commanders of the war: Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain.
With a combat record second to none, the Twentieth Maine just may have saved the Union. It is because of their efforts that the United States owes such a deep sense of gratitude to the State of Maine.

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30 hikes to 100 waterfalls by; bruce bolnickReview Date: 2007-07-04
Very Good BookReview Date: 2006-11-02
The BEST hiking guidebook!Review Date: 2007-05-12
Take a hiking honeymoon with this book!Review Date: 2002-12-20
excellent guide for waterfall loversReview Date: 2003-10-11
This terrific guide to the waterfalls of New Hampshire's White Mountains details 30 hikes to 100 waterfalls, so many of the walks take you to several falls. A regional map pinpoints the thirty treks and a lengthy introduction relates waterfall nomenclature and origins, tells you how to use the book and offers tips to make your trip enjoyable. Detailed within four subregions (the Connecticut , Pemigewasset/Merrimack, Saco and Androscoggin watersheds), entries are 6-10 pages long and include location, distance, altitude gain, difficulty, access information, a map, trail and hike details, and a photograph of the falls.
An indispensable guide for waterfall lovers, particularly those travelling with kids.
The book concludes with appendices on regional geology and camping facilities, a bibliography and an index.
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keen insights into the human condition, among other thingsReview Date: 2008-03-20
Wonderful Book!Review Date: 2006-07-06
Animal Lovers Are In For A TreatReview Date: 2006-08-21
You get first-hand accounts of the doc trying to save an ox that's choking on a too large potato or rescuing a cow from a love-struck moose. It's all told with enthusiasm and wry humor.
Wonderful, a great addition to my collection!Review Date: 2006-07-15
While You're Here Doc: Farmyard Adventure of a Maine VeternarianReview Date: 2006-03-21

The BEST Allagash Guide there is!Review Date: 2007-02-05
These are Allagash Bibles. I used them to prepare for my next 5 trips up the Allagash. No one knows this Wilderness Waterway better than Gil Gilpatrick. The next time I do this waterway, I will first read the latest updated version of his insightful guides.
been there, done that!Review Date: 2007-01-03
Boom Times in the AllagashReview Date: 2008-06-10
Gilpatrick likely realized that this first book, for all its colorful characters and lifelike historical fiction, left potential Allagash adventurers with critical gaps in planning an Allagash trip. The result was "The Allagash Guide," which provides a comprehensive guide and multiple checklists for planning a trip. "Allagash" provides the background information that will help you understand what you are seeing when you stumble across locomotives in the forest, and the remnants of locks, steamships, and derelict farms. And, since the Allagash is now preserved more or less as it was when the earliest inhabitants lived there, why not make the effort to understand just who those people were?
Gilpatrick's two books are complementary. If you are planning an unguided Allagash trip, "The Allagash Guide" is mandatory reading. If you want a little help understanding what you're seeing when you paddle through, then get "Allagash." Also, "Allagash" is wonderfully illustrated with historic photos of the boom times on the headwater lakes.
For further reading pick up a copy of "The Wilderness from Chamberlain Farm" by Dean Bennett, which provides a rigorous history of the Allagash, as well as of the founding of the Allagash Wilderness Waterway. If you still haven't had enough, get Henry Thoreau's "The Maine Woods," which describes his remarkable exploration of the East and West Branches of the Penobscot River and their headwater lakes from a naturalist's perspective.
Thoreau's guides were Penobscot Indians. Gilpatrick's two excellent books will be yours.
Great BookReview Date: 1999-12-21

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An exciting slice of Maine lighthouse life in 1855!Review Date: 1997-06-09
An exciting slice of Maine lighthouse life in 1855!Review Date: 1997-06-09
An exciting slice of Maine lighthouse life in 1855!Review Date: 1997-06-09
Birdie's Lighthouse-- a terrific book!Review Date: 1997-06-10

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chaseReview Date: 2007-09-15
ChaseReview Date: 2007-12-13
a real page turner!!!!!!!Review Date: 2007-06-23
Politician with a conscienceReview Date: 2006-10-30


Each of the 225 black-and-white photos is accompanied by a narrative caption that are as entertaining as they are informative.Review Date: 2007-06-09
Finest Comprehensive Book About Maine's PastReview Date: 2003-12-15
NO author of Maine historical and cultural subjects writes better, or has done more comprehensive research. I would certainly include it in the parcel I would assemble for exile to Boon Island.
I pray for the author's health, happiness, and continued productivity. He is the best of Maine writers and scholars, and sets the best example and model for the generally motley group of Maine "writers", especially the very narrowly-scoped academicians who slavishly follow fixed models of interpretation and presentation. I'm sure Fanny Hardy Ecstorm, Elizabeth Ring and James Baxter (god bless their beautiful souls) are smiling at this wonderful, wonderful writer.
For anyone who loves the old Maine sights and traditions...Review Date: 1998-02-26
A Day's Work: A Sampler of Historic Maine Photographs, 1860-1920, Part I, annotated and compiled by W. H. Bunting. Sponsored by Maine Preservation, Tilbury House Publishers, 132 Water St., Gardiner, ME 04345, 1997. 380 pp., oversize, paperback, $35.00
This is a wonderful book, so don't let the title drive you away. You must read halfway through that forbidding title to find out that it's about Maine, farther yet to learn that it's photographic, and "Part I" leaves you dangling. I would have called it Maine at Work, 1860-1920: Photographs and Text; the rest is superfluous--and I have added the word "text" because the text is just as delightful as the photos. I am writing this review because it's a book that people who love Maine shouldn't miss.
I have been summering in Maine for about forty years. The mountains and the skies and the rockbound coast make one constantly aware that Maine is different--the most northern and most eastern state in the USA, with a thousand of miles of shoreline and huge expanses of forest wilderness. Its wild geography has shaped its people and determined how they live. Vestiges of the past are everywhere, from the old docks and windjammers and lighthouses to the barns and sawmills and huge piles of firewood. If one wants an understanding and a feeling for those old times, this book is for you.
William Bunting's fascination with these historical photographs is communicated through the text. He has spent decades immersing himself in local history, and he not only explains each photo but goes behind it, delving into the history and significance of what is shown. If you want to know how to make hard cider, see p. 150 opposite the superb photo of the farmyard with a pile of apples by the old barn. The complex process of logging in the wilderness and getting the logs downriver to the mills and eventually by ship to market is followed through many photos with descriptive text (see pp. 34-44, 86-88, and more). Many buildings in Boston and points south were built of Maine granite; here you can see the granite cutters and the ships and men that carried that heavy cargo to market. Would you like to know and see how in the old days lobster fishing, seining, dip-netting, and canning were done? Or railroading, hunting, or harvesting ice? They're all here, and much more.
Start reading at the Introduction, a fine evocation of Maine today in relation to the past, and a convincing demonstration of the value of photos as historical documents. You will also discover that the author raises cattle and is a bulldozer operator, which doesn't quite explain his mastery of local history (this is his third book) but puts him closer to the down-to-earth people in the pictures. The introduction takes you directly into the text; there are no breaks or chapter headings. Bunting explains that the book is like "taking a journey," one that he took himself--and fortunately it has a good index. I began by looking up the places I know best: Waldoboro, Boothbay, Edgecomb, Casco, Bath, Damariscotta, but the book is a trap--once in, it's hard to get out. You go from photo to photo and from text to text.
The content of the pictures and text is absorbing, but I have said nothing about the aesthetic quality of the photographs. These old black and whites, from the days of heavy cameras and glass plate negatives, have a crispness and wealth of detail rarely seen in today's polychromatic action photos with artificial photo-effects. Many of them were taken for the purpose of making a record, and they project an authenticity that makes the viewer a participant. They have the grip of reality. The photos are worth the price of the book, and the text multiplies their value.
A Day's Work (Part I) focuses on many economic aspects of life in Maine in the late eighteenth and early twentieth century. The author, or annotator and compiler as he calls himself, says that some topics will appear in both volumes, but Part II will emphasize the pulp and paper industries, cotton textiles, coopering, axe manufacturing, etc. Perhaps he's waiting to sit down with the photographs and see where the journey leads. If it's anything like this one, it will be worth waiting for.
Herbert S. Bailey, Jr.
Fearrington Post 248
Pittsboro, NC 27312
A Day's Work WorksReview Date: 2000-03-08

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Steamy Summer ReadReview Date: 2001-06-30
This girl can write! A must read on the beach this summer.
Just don't let your young children near it. Parental guidance advised. Hot!
Heart-breaking TruthsReview Date: 2001-09-06
The Other Our TownReview Date: 2001-05-09
A challenging gem of a mysteryReview Date: 2001-07-10


Spare the Rod ý NEGLECT the child.Review Date: 2000-11-14
And while I have moved away, there are two great reminders of a childhood that I can only describe as ecstatic. A picture on my wall of E.B. White. And Hickoff & Plumley's book about the best places to fish. Some I've been to. Some I was taken to by these authors.
For those of you who are not as nostaglic and wistful about New England, let me with all honesty say that this book will serve as a superb and practical guidebook. And for those who have a little something more connected to the region, this book is a blueprint for irreplacable memories.
And damned good fishing spots and tips.
Fly Fishing in Northern New EnglandReview Date: 2000-08-08
ONE OF THE FINEST BOOKS, I'VE EVER READ!!!!Review Date: 1999-04-19
tells you what you need to knowReview Date: 1999-04-18
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