Oklahoma Books


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

Oklahoma
Techniques of the Selling Writer
Published in Hardcover by University of Oklahoma Press (1975-01-06)
Author: Dwight V. Swain
List price: $14.95
Used price: $69.00

Average review score:

Dated but still good
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
This is a good one. It's written in an encouraging tone, it's entertaining, and it's full of good advice. The age is showing a little (women are either ditzy blonds or housewives who spend their husband's money on mink coats) but that just gives the book a certain charm.

It doesn't extensively cover the whole topic, this is not one and all book. It gives you the basic tools on how to create conflict, characters, and structure, but you should still check other books for tips on editing and style.

This was one of the first books I read on the subject (I've since read several others) and it really helped me to structure my writing better, consider POW, and the character goals. The friendly, supportive tone was very important, this book boosted my confidence and my manuscript is all the better for it.

So many other books are filled with dire warnings how hard it is to get your novel ever published and how there are thousand things you can (and probably will) get wrong. Not this one, it tells you to just keep on writing because that's the only way you'll get better.

A Little Dated and Long Winded
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-24
Techniques of the Selling Writer by Dwilight V. Swain contains some gems, but you must mine deep to find them. Written several decades prior, it shows its age. While one could get away with prose that takes forever to get to the point, the modern reader and writer expects a faster delivery.

Yes, this is a symptom of the microwave society. I don't excuse it, but accept it. Unfortunately, this book could lead new writers to believe bloated prose is still acceptable in publication today.

Believe me: It's not.

I still recommend buying the book as the wisdom is timeless, but the technique in delivery is not.

Realize what you are getting. You might--as I did--thumb through some passages that go on and on before that single sentence makes the point near the end.

That one sentence is still worth it, if you don't mind the mining.

Wolfe

One of the best books on writing commercial fiction
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
I've read this book a few times now and I find it one of the most helpful in crafting genre fiction. Swain gives a writer the nuts and bolts for building scenes and increasing tension to a satisfying conclusion for the reader. If you want to get published, I highly recommend reading this book and studying it!

The Best "How to Write" ever written!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-14
While the price of this book is steep, it is worth every cent!
It is the best book about writing that I have ever read.
I learned more from this one book than from the combined hundreds of other books on writing I own.
If you have the write stuff, this one book should be on your desk!
John Bradt

A must...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-05
If there is one book a writer just got to read, this is the one...

Tom Aardahl
Published writer

Oklahoma
Georgia Cooking in an Oklahoma Kitchen: Recipes from My Family to Yours
Published in Hardcover by Clarkson Potter (2008-04-08)
Author: Trisha Yearwood
List price: $29.95
New price: $16.99
Used price: $13.77
Collectible price: $29.95

Average review score:

Good Old Recipes Like Mom Used to Make!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-19
This would be a great cookbook for the new bride or a daughter just starting to cook. The recipes are pretty basic and mimicked a lot I had in my recipe files, but that must mean they are GOOD recipes! The brownies were very good, but don't over bake or they dry out. I used the icing for the German chocholate cake on the brownies and it was to die for!

Big Fan!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-08
I was so excited to hear that she was coming out with a cookbook. I am a big fan so this was a must have for me. I've made the deviled eggs "her way" and they're great!! My kids couldn't get enough of them.

Love it, Love it, Love it!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
I ordered this book as a gift for a friend at work, who loves Trisha Yearwood, and he also loves to cook. Well .... decided to keep the book for myself, and now I'm just waiting for HIS book to arrive in the mail! Trisha's style of cooking is much like the cooking that I grew up on in Georgia, and alot of her recipes are nearly the same as mine -- but I am enjoying the variations, as well as the new recipes I have never tried before. The Pecan Pie Muffins are to die for!! Be sure to try those !!! And, yesterday, my husband and I picked blackberries and I tried the Blackberry Cobbler recipe - it was a bit different than my own recipe, and we truly enjoyed it! If you like Southern cooking, you can't go wrong with this cookbook. Trisha tells little stories about some of the recipes also, and the entire book is fun to read. HIGH recommendations!

Wonderful book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-01
The recipes are tasty and so easy to follow. The personal stories are a nice touch. It is nice to get to see a positive side of a celebrity, instead of all the negative things you see in the media.

Not Only Can She Sing, She Can Cook Too!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-27
This girl knows her way around the kitchen thanks to her Mama who taught her well. All her recipes are tried and trues...try Kyle's Lemon Pound Cake which is irristable and the Barbequed Pork Ribs, they fall off the bone practically! Another great southern cookbook! Filled with colorful pictures of delicious food and family...

Oklahoma
Warfare in the Classical World: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Weapons, Warriors and Warfare in the Ancient Civilisations of Greece and Rome
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (1995-10)
Author: John Gibson Warry
List price: $29.95
New price: $18.77
Used price: $10.46

Average review score:

Great Primer for Ancient Warfare
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18
This is a superb introduction to ancient warfare and can serve as a springboard for further studies in ancient history. The artwork depicting the uniforms of various armies of that time is well done and the narratives, diagrams of battles are really helpful and informative.

Great Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-29
Loved the book. The sketches and battle tactics illustrated made them come alive for me. Gave me a much better insight into the whole thing. And the delivery was fast, even with free shipping.

The Best Resource Available on Ancient Warfare
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-09
As I researched the equipment and modes of Greek warfare while writing the historical novel "Maccabee," I consulted numerous excellent sources, but John Warry's book was without a doubt the best. It became my virtual bible for the staging of the battle sequences between the Jews in the Maccabean Revolt and their Syrian enemies who employed the Greek methods that had worked so well for Alexander the Great. Warry's explanations of military techniques in their historical context as well as the wealth of illustrations makes this a valuable resource for anyone interested in ancient warfare.

An excellent introduction to ancient warfare
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-13
This is an excellent introduction to ancient warfare. It is lavishly illustrated, and provides excellent diagrams to support some of the concepts such as how a phalanx of Greek infantry manoevered and then moved into combat. The book covers the technology of the times, but also looks at tactics and gives an overview of the politics that lead to the various conflicts. I would higly recommend this book for beginners in the field of ancient warfare such as myself. My only reservation, is that while the primarary authorities are extensively referenced in the text, I would have liked to see a bibliography (although the glossary is great too!) Highly recommended for beginners or those with a general interest in the topic.

Must have if you are interested in ancient wars
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-08
I just got this for my son and I ended up reading it first. I am sure during this X'Mas both of us will want to fight for the book. The pictures and the drawings are of the highest qualities. I love the descriptions of major wars. I just wish that the author has given it more explanation of the drawings for the major battles like adding more legends. Also, it is kind of hard to read/understand the numbers and types of soldiers for both sides on the battlefield. But all in all, this is a great book that I suspect I will read and re-read many times.

Oklahoma
Infantry Soldier: Holding the Line at the Battle of the Bulge
Published in Hardcover by University of Oklahoma Press (2000-05)
Author: George W. Neill
List price: $29.95
New price: $44.95
Used price: $8.50
Collectible price: $39.99

Average review score:

Clearly superb
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-14
This is one of the better first-person accounts I've ever read. I highly, strongly recommend that you take the time to read it. It's well-written, relevant, and hard to put down.

No fluff
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-09
A great day in an day out story about the war. No hype, no frills. Just the story of what the days were actually like for a foot soldier in WW II.

Good Book, Puts you in the Action
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-17
I had to read this book for a course on WWII. Neil does an excellent job of "putting you there" as the cliche goes. The complexities of battle, to the horrid conditions to the mindstate of men about to die are all covered well in this novel. Neill really does a good job of keeping the reader attached to the book, and helps bring to life something that many people have only read about in history text books. I recommend this novel to anyone interested in War in general, and of course in WWII.

View from a fox hole
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-16
George Neill presents a front line soldier's view of what it was like to be part of the WWII American infantry. While reading the book, I almost felt the cold and fear that were the soldier's constant companions. while the rear echelon soldiers got the winter boots, and the generals got heated quarters, Neill and his fellow soldiers tried to survive the cold, boredom and attacks. I felt like I was there. This book gets my very highet recommendation.

An intelligent look at war from the front lines
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-19
The ASTPer's were the brightest, most intelligent young citizen soldiers of their part of the World War II generation. Originally deferred from military service to be allowed to attend college, they were thrown into the battlefields of Europe when America needed bodies to make to final push to Berlin, just in time for the Battle of the Bulge. Infantry Soldier: Holding the Line at the Battle of the Bulge is an accurate account of the fighting and front-line conditions facing the common infantry rifleman during one of Europe's coldest winters. Neill not only served as one of these men, he has done the research and interviews needed to complete the picture, not just of the men on the ground who knew little beyond the events of their immediate foxhole, but events on the German side and U.S. Army rear echelon and high command decisions. Included is an excellent description of the destructive power of a German artillery barrage, and the problems encountered when supply lines are stretched and items desperately needed by the front-line soldier for survival are being diverted to rear-echelon personnel. Neill also takes an intelligent look at war in general, and the conclusion is that we should never forget the horrors and untold human suffering caused by war.

Oklahoma
Fields Of Gold
Published in Paperback by Kensington (2005-09-01)
Author: Marie Bostwick
List price: $14.00
New price: $8.20
Used price: $3.35
Collectible price: $14.00

Average review score:

Not as good as River's Edge
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-19
I absolutely loved Bostwick's other book, River's Edge and was eager to read this book. Like River's Edge, this book is beautifully written and has wonderful, expressive characters. However, the first 100 pages contain such a sappy love story and I was so disappointed. Once I got past that part, it became a much better read and surprised me with a few plot twists. All in all, a good book but not 5 stars.

Wonderful debut novel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-08
I'm a tad late reading this book but it didn't diminish from the wonderful story and great writing.
Filled with emotion and characters that felt like I knew them. I was very impressed with the way the author took a real person and weaved a clever plot of fiction.
Now I need to "catch up" and get the rest of Bostwick's books that have been released since this one.
If you haven't read Fields of Gold yet....don't wait any longer!

A fantastic read!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-23
Loved it, loved it, loved it. I couldn't put it down. I am an avid quilter, so I loved reading how she made that into a business for herself. The book includes great themes, love, true love, friendship, hope, hopes crushed, and a few surprises to boot. I look forward to reading her other novels and am excited to have found another author to list among my favorites.

Oh, My! What can I say?
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-19
I just loved this! Unlike anything I have ever read. I had to go buy copies for each member of our book club, and thank you Marie, for signing the book-plates for each one. A good choice for a readers group, there is much to discuss - relationships, history, values, etc. We had a wonderful discussion about this book last night at our meeting.

Marie is an amazing writer. I read her newest first, River's Edge, 2006 which was so very good, that led me to seek out her first effort. It did not disappoint. In this historical fiction, the author meshes a main fictional character to a significant historical character, and with well-researched accuracy. The unfolding storyline grabs the reader at the onset and doesn't let go. You will be reading far into the night.

The main character is Evangeline (Eva) an innocent and crippled young woman who was born with a physical defect. You will admire her, and love her parents - her mother's determination and her fathers love as they raise her. You will get attached to all of the wonderful characters in this novel, which is primarily set in the time prior and during WWII and revolves around historical events of the era. Eva is a talented quilter, and throughout the novel we see how quilting helps her deal emotionally and financially with the events of her life, and assists in her maturity as she struggles with her parents to survive the hardships on her parents Oklahoma farm.

I had one slight complaint about the ending - I wanted more information about one conversation. I was pleased to hear from the author that this is being addressed in the sequel which should come out in fall of 2007. One of the things I loved best was at the end of the book there is a section called "A Chat with Marie Bostwick" that gives the reader so much insight into the writing, the research and the author. I highly recommend this book, and her River's Edge as well, for anyone who appreciates a well-written novel, and a whole lot more than just "romance" - don't miss this. Both these novels make my "favorites" list.

Gloria Bernal
January 2007

One of the Most Delightful Books!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-16
I honestly do not know why there aren't more reviews on this book or why it's not one of the top ten best-selling books. This is definitely one of the most touching and wonderful books I have read this year or ever. It is written so beautifully that it makes you feel the characters' pain, love, dreams and hopes. Evangeline, better known as Eva, is a character that will stay with you long after the last page has been turned.

This is historical fiction and it is written so beautifully of a time that is still a sore touch in our nation's history ~~ the Roaring Twenties and the Great Depression. Eva grows up in Oklahoma on a dusty little farm. It's not an easy living but Eva was content. She has her parents and her best friend, Ruby and romance is too much to hope for, so she didn't dream of it. She pours her imagination and love into the most exquiste quilts ever. Then something magical happens to her and her life is forever changed.

Woven in with little tidbits and historical facts ~~ this makes for a great read anytime of the year. It's beautifully written and lyrical. Bostwick writes with a flair that draws the reader into the story and doesn't let go even after the last page is turned. You keep turning the book over to see if there is any more to be said about Eva, Ruby, Morgan and Paul. And you hope that there will be a sequel. This book will haunt you because for a short time, the characters and their stories are real to the reader ~~ at least it was for me.

And reading about Oklahoma, the Dust Bowl, the Aviation beginnings and small-town life, the Depression ~~ all became real to me for a short time as if I lived them. The stories are real even if the characters are fiction. It sheds light on a period of history that I've never really shown much interest in before. Now I am interested.

If you're looking for something to read that will take you somewhere else for a time and draws you into the lives of the characters, this book is definitely it. It is delightful and wonderful ~~ not depressing and it does tug at the heartstrings. It's a book about life.

6-15-06

Oklahoma
Letter from Home
Published in Hardcover by Berkley Hardcover (2003-10-07)
Author: Carolyn G. Hart
List price: $22.95
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $22.95

Average review score:

Coming of age abruptly...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-27
The summer of 1944, Gretchen Gilman was only thirteen. Yet thanks to the shortage of available workers, she is able to land a prize opportunity -- working as a reporter for her hometown newspaper.

Delighted to cover even mundane stories, Gretchen never imagined she'd find herself at the center of the biggest crime ever to hit her sleepy little Oklahoma town.

Faye Tatum, Gretchen's neighbor and mother of her friend Barb, was brutally murdered in her own home. Her husband Clyde, a soldier on leave, is nowhere to be found -- a fact that convinces most area residents he's responsible.

As the days pass, Gretchen is torn between her duty to cover the story for the newspaper, and between loyalty to Barb, who is staying with Gretchen and her grandmother. She's also struggling to deal with her widowed mother, away in Tulsa working for the war effort, as it seems Lorraine may have a few changes in mind for the Gilmans.

As narrator, Gretchen's voice alternates between two phase of her life -- that summer when she was 13, and present-day, when she's an older woman, who's had a successful journalism career. Hart does an excellent job, combining the elements of a mystery and that of small-town fiction.

Too many small-town cliches
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-13
I enjoyed this book and will read more Carolyn Hart mysteries. I found the ending - the mystery's solution - particularly satisfying. But much of the story called on way too many all-too-familiar and overused cliches of small town America. Which we all know (yawn) is narrow-minded, hypocritical and suspicious of those artistic types. The book's Children of the Corn mob scene is way over the top.

Nearly all of the characters fall into two rather obvious piles - the saints, and the villains. Grandmother is a perfect, selfless saint a la Ma Joad; the victim, Faye, is the Saintly but Misunderstood Artist. And the preacher, of course, is a slimy, evil purveyor of hell-fire-and-damnation. And then you have the silly side plot about the townfolk veering into vigilantism over what everybody clearly assumes is a domestic murder. HUH? And I had to stifle a snicker when, at the city council meeting, the leathery-faced, tobacco-chewing farmer yells out, "How come you ain't found Tatum yet?" How imaginative.

The mystery itself could have held its own without having to take these detours into such overworn territory.

the best book I've ever read...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-02
and I have read a lot. I very much enjoy Carolyn Hart's other books, but not as much as this book. The imagery is as compelling as the dialog. The characters are drawn lovingly & realistically. Her use of the letter, the preset & the past in each chapter keep me racing to read more. I felt that the "mystery" serves as a backdrop for the story of the characters, unlike most thriller/mystery works where the plot is the most important part of the book. I love mysteries, but for those who do not, this is just as wonderful a book showing the slice of life for these characters. This is the first review I've ever written, but this book compelled me to share my thoughts. It really is the best book I've ever read. Ms. Hart has my respect... and thanks.

Puts you at the scene of the crime
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-14
The descriptions are so vivid that you can almost smell the starch in the doilies,taste the crunchy watermelon and feel the blast of hot air through the window.

Not only does Ms. Hart place us amidst the happenings, seen through the eyes of Gretchen, she manages to make the story twist and turn so that at the end, we are truly surprised at the outcome.

The two young girls, Gretchen and Barbie, follow very divergent lives, and their story is told through fragments of a letter sent to Gretchen and her thoughts as she looks back to that time long ago.

This book should satsify any mystery fan and those who love stories from the 40's. We get a feel for the times with women doing war work, rationing and young boys from the town that are killed.

And one great thing about this book is that a young girl is given her break into journalism by a crusty old editor. A concept that in those times was remarkable indeed.

Coming of Age Murder
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-26
Gretchen Gilman is only thirteen the summer of 1944, but she's managed to get a summer job at the local newspaper. With all the men off fighting the war, the editor was desperate. It's hard work, but she's enjoying herself and gaining great experience.

One night, her friend and neighbor Barb comes to her window asking for help. They return to find Barb's mother, Faye, murdered in the living room. Immediately, the rumors start about Faye's dancing at the local tavern every night while her husband is off at the war. But Gretchen finds herself getting more caught up in events that will scandalize a small town and change her life forever.

I'll admit this book took a chapter or two to fully get. Each chapter starts with part of a letter the grown up Gretchen has received, a few thoughts of her own, then flashes back to the third person account of the story as it unfolded. Once I got into the story, I was hooked. Foreshadowing keeps the suspense up, while the writing style pulls you in. I felt like I was in the small Oklahoma town that summer with its problems, prejudices, and pride. The ending is as surprising as it is logical and extremely powerful.

In spite of all I've heard about her, this is my first Carolyn Hart book. It won't be my last.

Oklahoma
Storm Warning: The Story of a Killer Tornado
Published in Kindle Edition by Touchstone (2007-03-02)
Author: Nancy Mathis
List price: $11.99
New price: $9.59

Average review score:

Fantastic book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-27
A compellingly detailed narrative that's concisely written and superbly researched. Gives you just enough science and history to make sense of the events, but focuses on the human cost of this extraordinary storm.

Great book on tornadoes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
I thought the book Storm Warning by Nancy Mathis was outstanding. Besides explaining a lot about the history of tornadoes there is a book background on the late Japanese tornado expert Ted Fujita.

An Extraordinary Book about an Extraordinary Event
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
The May 3, 1999 tornado stunned central Oklahoma--but yet, it was not entirely unusual. As I grew up in Norman, Oklahoma (the center of weather research and now home to the National Weather Service), tornadoes were a fact of life. Springtimes in Oklahoma always included the hours spent in front of the television, watching the supercells. Even the non-scientific minds among us learn to grasp the basics of supercells, of the hook echo, of the wall cloud. We are willing to watch the storm on TV until it is within 10 miles of us, and then, and only if it is heading in our direction, will we descend to our storm cellar.

Nancy Mathis has captured the feeling of the springtime in Oklahoma; the awe, the fear, and the respect with which tornadoes are regarded. The book weaves together many stories of common people from this area, people just like any other central Oklahoman. And she compellingly tells the story of how lives are shattered, molded--simply changed by the power of the tornadoes.

The May 3 tornado (the big one--A9) passed within 15 miles of my house; I had been playing golf that afternoon on a course in Moore that was destroyed--in fact, had we played the back 9, we would have been on the course when the twister hit. But the sky looked ominous, with the clouds at different elevations moving different directions--signaling significant wind shear, a factor in tornado formation that Mathis discusses in this book. It was simple stories like this that Mathis used to create the feel of the book.

Mathis captures the history of tornado forecasting and the personalities involved wonderfully. She tells the story of the meteorologists excellently. I believe this book to be the best available at telling the story of the tornado in totality and of the people it impacts. I have just a few quibbles with this book--the occasional instances of strong language (always in quotes) require editing before youngsters can read it. The book is not particularly scientific, and there are no photos or charts explaining the science. That is not the intent of this book. The story is so gripping (and graphic), that some children could have difficulty stomaching it. But this gripping retelling is what makes the book so good--for the story of the tornadoes is so extraordinarily exciting, and the springtime afternoons in Oklahoma so spellbinding, that only a book written in that way can accurately tell the story of the May 3 tornadoes.

Great information with very human aspect
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-07
I have been hesitant about writing a review for this book because I am very clearly biased. I felt very honored that Nancy Mathis chose to include my daughter in the book. I got to participate in the portion of the book that discussed the people involved in the storm. Those parts were emotional for me to read. I got to see a tiny portion of the research that went into the book and after reading the book, I realize that there was a tremendous amount of research done for the book. I learned a great deal about the history and science of weather forecasting. I also learned about home construction. I don't think I have ever read a book quite like this one.

Gripping Tale of our Killer Storms
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-17
Tornadoes are the most powerful storms known, with an F5 monster reaching 300 mph winds. Fortunately they are far smaller than hurricanes and so do not usually cause the extensive damage that hurricanes can. The localized damage is often nearly total!

Nancy Mathis in her book "Storm Warning: The Story of a Killer Tornado" chronicles the story of one F5 tornado in particular, the one that struck Oklahoma City in early May of 1999. She provides much historical background, including the story of Ted Fujita, who survived World War II in Japan by a series of apparently random events to produce the Fujita scale to to aid in the understanding and prediction of tornadoes. Another important player, Gary England, pioneered tornado prediction when the United States Weather Service was unable to do so. Numerous people worked on developing the ability to give at least several minutes warning of an approaching storm. In the case of the Oklahoma City storm of May 3, 1999, this paid off big time, with many fewer fatalities than would have happened otherwise.

Nancy Mathis tells this story with great skill. Before the reader is through they develop a wide respect for the obsessional people (including storm chasers) who have continued to develop an understanding of the formidable storms. The reader also begins to understand the power and fascination of these nearly unique monsters of the American Great Plains, where 80% of all tornadoes develop.

I have seen the result of the passage of a weak tornado in Florida (in fact I crossed its path just an hour before it went through). Even though the storm skimmed the treetops, it dropped several long-leaf pines into the roofs of apartment complexes. Luckily no one was hurt, but it was close. These are not storms with which to trifle!

This is a great summery of tornado research and history, plus a great description of a particularly savage storm. If you live anywhere were tornadoes can strike (the whole United States, but especially the Midwest), you should read this book!

Oklahoma
High Country (Literature of the American West)
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (2008-04-30)
Author: Willard Wyman
List price: $16.95
New price: $11.01
Used price: $12.02

Average review score:

The "West": Still Alive in the 20th Century
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-04
At last out in paperback, this unusual novel finally gets a foothold. It's not a "Western" at all. There are no blazing guns, sheriffs, or bad guys. There is just the beauty of the western high country bringing sustenance to a kid farmed out from a depression defeated Montana ranch to a find life packing mules and horses into the mountains. . . . We see the mountains grow into Ty Hardin as he grows into them, even when yanked from them to fight a war he is obliged to fight and which wounds him physically as his mentor, Fenton Pardee, knows it will, somehow. . . . Hardin returns to his high country to repair, and subsequently suffer the failure of a love that cannot be. He soon finds the deeper love of the woman he marries. But that too goes awry, his love dying with their child in a botched delivery. . . . That sadness takes him from the Montana mountains where he found life into the High Sierra, the west's highest range, where he knows life. He becomes a legend and dies there, trying to rescue a drug addled boy who should never have tested a country so high. . . . The book is a startling testament to something we have cherished but have never quite resolved in our literature -- the perennial allure and majesty of the American west.

Magnificent Achievement - T. Weck
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-08
I admire a spellbinding story where the characters are real, their choices and dilemmas have a grab that keeps you absorbed by their story. Then you add to this a complete understaning of the settings, the profession, the way people behave in the wilderness West, and it becomes an insight into a vanishing breed as an extra bonus beyond being a great story. The prose is as good as it gets - it often has a poetic quality. This book should be a best-seller: that is the bottom line, plain and simple.

High Country
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-10
Great book, hard read, must find a place that has no noise, then you will get through, you will enjoy it. Sound like a prop from a college wrote it.
Over all I enjoyed it.

High Praise and A Higher Recommendation
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-28
Read this. It will stay with you. And it will probably lead you to check internet sites for pack trips into the mountains of western Montana and the Sierras of California so that you can experience what the novel describes and visit with the characters even more closely.

I loved this. One of my favorite reads of the last year. It communicates a life ethic that is 180 degrees from the culturally promoted one of contemporary American life. The persons you meet within its pages will awaken memories of folks from the margins of your life.

I can't say enough good things. It deserves to reach a wide audience. Make sure you've got plenty of time to give to this novel because you'll find you want to keep going and going till you've reached camp.

High Country a winner
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
Great book if you love the mountains and enjoy escaping into a great story line with wonderful descriptions of the life of a packer in the mountains. I could not put the book down!

Oklahoma
Riding with the Blue Moth
Published in Hardcover by Sports Publishing (2005-08-07)
Author: Bill Hancock
List price: $24.95
New price: $2.44
Used price: $0.40
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Inspirational Book!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-15
This is one of the most inspirational books I have ever read--in part b/c it was not written to be that. Bill Hancock's message is so simple...appreciate life. Appreciate the good times because they are good. Appreciate the bad times, because they alone can help you realize the good, and both are part of who you are. He should be commended for his tenacity to stay the course, both his journey in life and cross country biking!! I wish I could thank him in person for sharing his story.

Getting through tragedy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
I originally bought this book for friends who lost their 16 year old son in an accident. This last year I bought it for myself and read it. If you have recently suffered the loss of a loved one it is very difficult to get through the first chapter where the author details the loss of his son and the immediate reactions of the family and friends. After the first chapter the book moves into the difficult ups and downs of getting on with every day life with while being gripped by overwhelming grief. There are so many places in this book where the author is able to put incredible perspective on what most people would consider ordinary events. Whether you've suffered the loss of a loved one or not, you will read this book and look at people and things differently than you did before. I hope that I am a better friend to people who suffered a loss because of the understanding this book gives the reader. I found myself disappointed as I was nearing the end, because the book was so well written that I wanted to keep on going with Bill Hancock beyond his cross country bike ride. I "googled" the author and contacted him by e-mail to tell him why I had bought 2 copies of the book and how much it meant to me after reading it. He responded the next day with a very thoughtful e-mail. I highly recommend reading Riding With the Blue Moth by Bill Hancock.

It's not about the bike; well, really it is!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-17
Ooops; that is the title of another book out there; but it's still true and I think this is a fairly good book to accompany the book by Lance Armstrong which details Lance's fight with cancer. Both of these fellows having to deal with tragic situations.

The author goes through my home town; so I was fairly bent on not giving him 5 stars just because he did that in his journey from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic; but I am a cyclist; and I came to think after reading it, this is rather darn good; although, just like some characters that Bill describes, I've gone through some hardship, to the point that it was not easy to concentrate and read this; but I did.

March Madness; the NCAA tournament also, is underway as I write this for the year 2007; you know, it is in a tiny bit of a way a basketball book, seeing how Hancock is involved and connected with the NCAA; and it's things like that, that make this a good book to read. Now, I say this, because I believe the basketball fan could well find this entertaining too; but of course, not a basketball book like say, for example; the book "Pistol" that is currently in the stores.

But I'll keep this short and to the point; I like Dean Karnazes book, The UltraMarathon Man; but I read that and think, I wish Dean gave out more info on his running, diet, etc.

Bill Hancock for some reason, gives a lot of detail, the basic facts of his road trip on a daily basis; I mean saying part of his diet was on any given day, "17 Fritos or 12 Cheezits, 2 gallons of water and a gallon of gatorade" is detail I've never seen anyone relate about before; some of the chapters even has a bit of a question and answer session via email where Bill is asked questions and he gives back answers about his trip. So, it definitely has a real diary quality about it and it is the attention to detail that makes me give it the high ranking; cycling detail but of course the book is much more.

A solid enough book, I like his descriptions of many geographic locales; such as Yarnell hill; I had to look up that mountain on the internet I was so curious; or the Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma.

Glad to see the positive reviews for this book; but most of them are rather short to gather people's impressions. I decided to make mine a bit longer. A fine contribution to cycling literature.

ALONG FOR THE RIDE
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
I felt like I was along for the ride with Bill Hancock in "Riding With the Blue Moth", experiencing the emotional highs and lows, chuckling at the amusing experiences he had along the way, and shedding more than a few tears. Nothing strikes fear into the heart of a parent more than the prospect of losing a child. The Hancocks experienced every parent's nightmare and the healing of the cross-country bicycle ride was great both for the reader and, I suspect, for the author as well. I highly recommend this book to anyone, but especially to anyone who has lost an offspring or is close to someone who has.

Moved Emotionally Like No Other Book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-16
I've been reading this book at night for a week now. I shed tears nearly every night, and find myself at the bedside of one or both of my kids thanking God for the privilege I have of being their Dad. This book has almost become a devotional for me. The depth of the writing is stunning.... My prayers are with you Bill and Nicki. Thank you for letting us glimpse enough of your pain so that we can better treasure all that it means to Live.

Oklahoma
Salt of the Red Earth: A Century of Wit and Wisdom from Oklahoma's Elders (Oklahoma Horizons)
Published in Hardcover by Oklahoma Heritage Association (2007-05-03)
Author: M. J. Alexander
List price: $39.95

Average review score:

What wisdom
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
I purchased this book because my Aunt and Uncle are on page 97 but found that I love the whole book. There is so much wisdom in these pages. These people are amazing and the photos are beautiful.

SOLD OUT. Just a few copies floating around. Grab one if you can!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-18
This has become the must-have book on aging with grace. Why? Remarkable straightforward photos and quotes from remarkable straightforward people who have looked aging in the eye -- and not blinked.

If you can find a copy, grab it. If you can't, contact the publisher and ask when it will be available again.

a timely treasure
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-13
"Salt of the Red Earth" is a timely treasure commemoratiing the lives of sage Oklahomans at a momentous slice of time -- Oklahoma's Centennial. This carefully crafted book, with its unvarnished, honest quotations and beautiful photography is not only a snapshot of real people living long lives -- it is also a testimony to the dedication, determination and hard work of a talented photographer and savvy chronicler, M.J. Alexander.

Salt of the Red Earth
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-17
What a wonderful tribute to the older and wiser Oklahoman's in this Centennial year! M. J. Alexander does an amazing job capturing the wit and wisdom of all she interviewed and photographed. Our whole family enjoyed her work and we can't wait to see what she chooses for her next project.

Brilliant
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-28
What a wonderful book. The author has led us down a path, allowing us glimpses into days gone by, told by those who lived them. How inspiring to read positive words from people who lived through some of the hardest years in American history. The photos are beyond compare, just the faces of the individuals allow us to see the past. Some are worn and shadowed, wrinkled and aged, yet with finesse and compassion, Alexander has captured images of history, and all done with tenderness and care. Own this book, I assure the reader that they will be in awe at the gift of longevity these subjects have been given.
More from Alexander, please.


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