Oklahoma Books


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

Oklahoma
Lakota and Cheyenne: Indian Views of the Great Sioux War, 1876-1877
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (2000-06)
Author:
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Native American perpsectives of the Great Sioux war
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
This is a wonderful book.The War is reviewed by the warriors, wise men and tribe members.To see it through their eyes plus the scholarship of the author is really amazing. Someone once said that history is always written by the victors, but the honesty and balance of this book belies that.
Jerome A. Greene is a splendid writer and historian and has added an excellent volume to the canon of books already published on the subject. Thanks Amazon for making my aware of its existence.

Oklahoma
Lambing Out and Other Stories
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (2001-04)
Author: Mary Clearman Blew
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Powerful, Thoughtful, Moving Stories
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-21
This is one of the best collections of short stories I have ever read. The settings for the stories is Montana and the inevitable impact of the harsh environment on the people living there. In seven short stories and less than one hundred pages Blew has managed to combine the effects of an unforgiving climate with the turbulent lives of so-real characters that experience conflict, brutality and heart breaking violence. The environmental effect on the characters in the title story "Lambing Out" is stark and readily apparent. However, the impact in "Paths Unto The Dead" and "Monsters" is more subtle and will give the reader pause and, upon reflection, insight into the incredible talent of the author. This blend of human and natural landscape into the written word is powerful and unforgetable. If you ever wondered why anyone would live "out there", try these stories. For anyone interested in first-rate writing about the interrelationship between a regional environment and the people that inhabit it, this is as good as it gets. Don't be surprised if you end up with the impression the characters are real, that somehow Blew is not making these stories up. She is that good. These are powerful, thoughtful, moving stories that come very close to transcending region.

Oklahoma
Land in Her Own Name: Women As Homesteaders in North Dakota
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (1996-09)
Author: H. Elaine Lindgren
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Wonderful Book. Makes a Great Gift!!
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 1997-07-03
Elaine Lindgren has done an excellent job researching a little known subject. She gives not only a very fine introduction to the subject of homesteading, she provides a wonderful written documentary of the phenomenon of single women who homesteaded in North Dakota. This book is not only wonderfully written (it is actually a page turner), it also leaves the reader enthralled with a whole area of American history which had previously gone undocumented. I truly enjoyed this book and have given copies to friends who tell me they found it just as interesting

Oklahoma
Las uvas de la ira: (Spanish language edition of The Grapes of Wrath)
Published in Paperback by Penguin (Non-Classics) (2002-08-06)
Author: John Steinbeck
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excelente
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-14
cuando lei este libro hasta llegue a sonar unas cuantas veces con estar en la carretera polvosa camino a otra comunidad donde pudiese conseguir un mejor empleo, y durmiendo en una hooverville. la historia es fascinante y es tan buena que la novela no parece las paginas parecen cortas. la familia que emigra, la lucha por un trabajo, la muerte, el crecimiento y distaciamiento de la familia. esta novela pinta un cuadro dramatico aunque lleno de hermosura narrativa de la gran depresion de los anos treinta, narrada en un lenguaje humano. es una de las mejores de este autor. muy recomendada..

LUIS MENDEZ

Oklahoma
Last Chance Cafe (Oklahoma) (Born in the USA)
Published in Paperback by Harlequin (1997-06-01)
Author: Curtiss Ann Matlock
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I Love this book, This a very a courageous woman
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-03
I love this book,it shows men how strong women really are. It was interesting to see how this woman who wanted to stand up to her parents and show them she is a mature individual. I like how Matlock take us through her struggle. You want to offer her help yourself. I like the fact that Wade who owned the whole town didn't just give her but actually helped her. I was curious at the end when they actually agreed to marry I thought they would move into his house,but when he agreed to move in with her and the girls it shows all his gentmanly quality. I like that he gave her very good advice,and he was right in the beginning that if he sold the land to this woman he would end up helping her out.

Oklahoma
Last of a Breed: Portraits of Working Cowboys
Published in Paperback by Bantam (1988-04-01)
Author: Martin H. Schreiber
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In admiration of cowboys . . .
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-17
Photographer Schreiber is a romanticist of the West, with an eye for the individuals who choose life and hard work in the outdoors. His deep-focus black and white photographs often find their subjects in the foreground against the vast landscape, an empty sky, or a large sparely furnished room. The strenuousness of the work can be seen in photos of men slouched in chairs or on the ground, staring blankly.

Some pictures have familiar subjects, such as branding calves and roping horses. Others are nice surprises: four men talking together and leaning across the hood of a Ford pickup, a backyard photo of a wedding party, the groom and two best men in big cowboy hats, a cowboy outside a liquor store holding a flat of six-packs. Schreiber in his introduction says the cowboys he's known embody the qualities of honesty, integrity, sincerity, and kindness. This collection of photographs is a celebration of those values.

Oklahoma
The Last Rattlesnake Throw and Other Stories (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series)
Published in Hardcover by University of Oklahoma Press (1998-09)
Author: Ralph J. Salisbury
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Certainly an interesting book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-20
With the incredible racial injustices perpetrated by white males in this country and Native Peoples, it is astonishing that we are priviledged to learn about their struggles at all. As a feminist, I would have appreciated a greater consideration of what it means to be a Native American woman in this book, but it is a valuable assemblage none the less. Coming from a eurocentric family, it is a great joy to be able to learn about Native American Literature, much more refreshing than the so called "canonical" books written by boring white males. This is a useful corrective to that attitude.

Oklahoma
Latin American Mammalogy: History, Biodiversity, and Conservation (An Oklahoma Museum of Natural History Publication)
Published in Hardcover by University of Oklahoma Press (1991-10)
Author: Michael A. Mares
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Latin American mammalogy during the 1980s
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-14
According to the Preface, this book is a sequel to Mares and Genoways' (1982) highly successful "blue book," complementing it in aspects that were scantily or definitely not covered there; namely, history, biodiversity, and conservation. Of course, the latter two topics started receiving attention from mammalogists only during the 1980s, and the first one demonstrates the increasing maturity of the discipline: when one starts thinking about origins, ancestors and forerunners, becomes humbled by the foresight of the ancient few and the follies of the numerous contemporaries. Due consideration to the history of Mammalogy makes us all a little wiser and is therefore is a welcome complement in this book.

The book is organized into those three major sections mentioned in the subtitle, though conservation is split into policy/management and education, thus yielding four parts. Overall, history takes up 16% of the book; biodiversity (and biogeography) account for 35%, conservation policy/management (26%), and conservation education (23%). Each of the four sections is preceded by an overview that is translated into Spanish. Every chapter has a summary, which is also translated into Spanish. The presentation and format of the book is attractive, same as the typesetting. The quality of the graphs and photos (black and white only) is uneven, probably owing to the different means at hand to the contributors rather than to the publisher. All headings, subheadings, and captions are perfectly standardized, including references in the literature cited sections. The English text is remarkably free of typographic errors. In what follows I concentrate on the different sections and chapters that compose the book.

Part I: Historical background, consists of four chapters. Rollin Baker opens this section with an historical résumé of the classification of Neotropical mammals, from Columbus arrival until 1957. This is an excellent synoptic view of the progress made in classifying Neotropical mammals by taxonomists from many nations. Keith Sterling tells the story of Edward Nelson and Edward Goldman, who together did pioneering work on the mammalogy of Mexico. This is an interesting tale on two regular guys who were part of the infantry that developed the discipline in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Knox Jones analyzes the academic branching pattern of a single mammalogical root in the U.S., that of Joseph Grinnell of the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at the University of California-Berkeley. Grinnell (1877-1939) indeed was an intriguing and charismatic leader of U.S. mammalogy, but what bearing has this chapter on Grinnell and descendants for Latin America? In isolation, none; in conjunction with the following chapter, very much. Grinnell was an undisputed leader of U.S. mammalogy yet he is not known for having used his academic substantial weight in discouraging graduate students or "disciplining" critics or strays. Quite different is the personality of those who Michael Mares coins as "sapos" (sic, Spanish in the original). They are uncontested leaders of the discipline, who use their heavy weight to hammer down on underlings and strays the notion of who is the boss. These "sapos" are truly interested in the development of their science, but they want to be the one, only, and undisputed authority in the field. His/her associates will always be just that (but at least they will have an assured survival under the beneficial umbrella of their mentor) and his/her imagined enemies will receive relentless pressure until they cave in, migrate or die (academically speaking) in utter isolation. Poker-faced, "sapos" conveniently use the argument of nationalistic pride and patriotic honor when dealing with potential intruders from foreign countries. Mares must have observed very closely the behavior of several "sapos" because he not only describes them in great detail, but also even provides a key on "How to recognize a sapo," which I found very perceptive.

Part II: biogeography and biodiversity, consists of seven chapters. It opens with the contribution by Michael Willig and Elizabeth Sandlin, wherein they compare quadrat and band methodologies for assessing bat species diversity gradients and turnover along the Americas. I found this to be an enlightening analysis focused on a relevant problem. This chapter is followed by the long and rambling research report by Carleton Phillips and coworkers. I found it overly technical, dealing with a biogeographical issue involving two species of bats in the Caribbean (is this Latin America?). Bruce Patterson examines the role of biogeographic theory in dealing with down to earth conservation issues. He makes the point that there is not enough time left for studying areas one by one (the empiricist approach), and that theory will have to compensate for missing time. In contrast, William Boecklen presents a rather despairing litany on the limitations of biogeographical models. His is a neatly packed state-of-the-art chapter that it should have preceded Patterson's chapter. Gerardo Ceballos and Daniel Navarro present a scholarly review of the diversity and conservation status of Mexican mammals. This is a solid piece of work that will likely represent a benchmark for future studies of the same type. Although more restricted in scope, the contribution of John Fa and Luis Morales is a good companion to the preceding chapter. These authors examine the conservation status of mammals in the Trans-Mexican Neovolcanic Belt, a complex physiographic area across southern Mexico. In a commendably short chapter, Kent Redford and John Robinson recycle old information for a new purpose, that of determining the park size that assures the continuous existence of at least 500 individuals of a given mammal species. The conclusion is that most Brazilian parks (the only ones analyzed) seem to have an adequate size for most of the species examined.

Part III: Conservation policy and management consists of six chapters. Virgilio Roig describes how desertification brought about by man since the Spanish conquest, has resulted in decreased distributional ranges for several of the most conspicuous mammals in the southern cone of South America. Cleber Alho and Thomas Lacher report another case in conservation, on pantanal mammals. Although no mammal species seems to be endemic to the pantanal, the interdigitation of xeric and mesic vegetation and of terrestrial and aquatic habitats results in a rich mammalian fauna, even richer than that of typical tropical areas. The chapter by Jose Fragoso, on the effect of logging on a Belize tapir, seems out of place in this book. This is a plain progress report. In contrast, Jorge Cajal offers a synthetic and painstakingly documented work on the past and current distribution of guanacos and vicuñas. Although Cajal concentrates on the Argentine setting, he places his findings in the broader scope of neighboring countries. The contribution by Jeffrey Jorgenson and Amanda Jorgenson refers to imports of CITES-regulated mammals from Latin America to the U.S. This is an interesting chapter that succinctly explains CITES and then examines the statistics on importations of live specimens and parts, products and derivatives of mammals. Alisa Shull describes the role of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in preserving endangered mammals in that country. Although this agency and its mission have nothing to do with Latin America itself, it is interesting to be informed about its charter and operational mode --particularly the process of "listing."

Part IV: conservation education, is composed of six chapters. Don Wilson proposes that OTS (Organization for Tropical Studies), a consortium of universities and institutions, physically based in Costa Rica and administratively in the U.S., is a paradigm for tropical ecology and conservation education programs. According to Wilson, there is much to be learned from OTS, and that the experience developed in over 25 years of existence "could easily be transferred to similar programs in other tropical countries." Thomas Lacher and coauthors describe how international cooperation is helping the establishment of a program in Wildlife Management and Conservation at the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (Belo Horizonte, Brazil). Although of rather local interest, this chapter will become useful in providing the baseline against which the success of the above mentioned program could be gauged. Patricia Morton's chapter is on how to carry out an educational campaign to develop awareness of bat conservation in tropical America. I found that the guidelines proposed by Morton were good and adaptable to many organisms. Jane Packard and David Schmidly tell us about the role that mammalogists should play in promoting graduate training that integrates conservation and sustainable development. Although the authors carefully restrict their advice to U.S. universities, I found numerous words of wisdom throughout the chapter that are perfectly applicable to Latin American universities. Paisley Cato analyzes the value of natural history collections in Latin American conservation. Cato does an excellent rendition of the myriad of information pieces that well sampled, well curated, and well-conserved specimens may convey to the astute researcher. The final chapter of this section (and of this book) is by Janet Braun and Michael Mares. They call attention to the concept that natural history museums should not be mere repositories of dusty objects, but should instead become instrumental in promoting the development of a conservation ethic. Probably most museums do some of this through their exhibits, in-house education and research programs, and the dissemination of results in the literature. Braun and Mares are of the opinion that museums should do more. They make a compelling case for the establishment of outreach programs that take museum exhibits to the people, instead of waiting for them to attend at its central location. They further emphasize the importance of children education, which at tender ages are more susceptible of marveling at the wonders of nature. When grown up, these children may become advocates or even benefactors of the museums that once took the bother of reaching out to them.

In closing, I think this is a worthy companion of Mares and Genoways' blue book, and complements its coverage in precisely those areas most needed of immediate attention.

Oklahoma
Law & laughter: The life of Lee West (Oklahoma trackmaker series) (Oklahoma trackmaker series)
Published in Hardcover by Oklahoma Heritage Association (2002-01-01)
Author: Bob Burke
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Law and Laughter: The Life of Lee West
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
Lee West loves the law and the federal judiciary; his wife, Mary Ann, and his two daughters; quail hunting; and his hunting dogs. Not necessarily in that particular order. Lee West likes the cowboy poet Baxter Black; Wilma (Coffman) House; telling good jokes and stories; and needling circuit court judges about their willingness to reverse his district court decisions. Not necessarily in that order.
It goes without saying that many of us are fond of Lee West. Perhaps that fondness can best be illustrated by the forward written by former United States Senator and Oklahoma Governor, Henry Bellmon. For all the accolades and honors rightly directed at Henry Bellmon for his many years of public service to Oklahoma, he counts as among his noted accomplishments the original appointment of Lee West to the Oklahoma state judiciary in 1965. Governor Bellmon goes so far as to say of Lee West that "he might have been just the kind of judge our framers, many of whom were also quail hunters, had in mind when they created the Third Branch of government."
But then Governor Bellmon also describes Lee West as "an outstanding lawyer, who despite his Reba McEntire accent, or Little Dixie diphthongs, possessed a Master of Laws degree from Harvard University."
Governor Bellmon's forward only gives the reader a taste of what is to come. Bob Burke and David L. Russell, one of Lee West's colleagues on the U.S. District Court sitting in Oklahoma City, have authored the kind of book that works as medicine for anyone needing a boost in life. It's a book that works because -- well, Lee West is truly that special character so beloved by so many. This is not a book for the curmudgeonly.
Law and Laughter is all about Lee West. But that's the easy part of this review. After all, a biography should be about the subject of the biography. Burke and Russell are telling the reader as much as they can about Lee West. We learn about his family heritage and his ties to Oklahoma's "Little Dixie"; his birth in Clayton, Oklahoma, during the depths of the Great Depression, and his youth in Antlers, Oklahoma. We learn how Lee West loved the United States Marine Corps. We learn of Lee West's many years of public service with the Oklahoma state judiciary, the Civil Aeronautics Board, and the federal district court. We learn how he enjoyed teaching at Harvard Law School and the University of Oklahoma College of Law. We also learn how the law could have been the real loser. It turns out that Lee West has a successful record as a football coach. How much poorer we all might have been if he had stayed with football.
This is also a man who attended a state dinner hosted by President and Mrs. Gerald Ford arriving at the White House gates in a "1972 green and white Dodge clubcab pickup with an Oklahoma license plate." A pickup complete with dog boxes in the back bed. A man who admits to developing an empathy for the criminal and downtrodden from poetry read to him at any early age by his sisters.
As a reviewer, I have only one real goal. How do you adequately convey to the reader the true character of another person? That so many already know Lee West certainly helps a lot. Absent that personal acquaintance, a well-written biography is another way to learn. For those not fortunate enough to know Lee West, this book can very well be that useful substitute. For Lee West's life is one of those well-worth the time spent in learning just a little more. These two authors have given us just the right book to learn a little more about Lee West.

Oklahoma
Learning to Write "Indian": The Boarding-School Experience and American Indian Literature
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (2007-01-15)
Author: Amelia V. Katanski
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A historically accurate documentation of the forced assimilation of the Native American youth
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-05
Learning To Write "Indian": The Boarding-School Experience And American Indian Literature by Amelia V. Katanski (Marlene Crandell Francis Assistant Professor of English at Kalamazoo College in Michigan) is a historically accurate documentation of the forced assimilation of the Native American youth during the transition into the twentieth-century. As Learning To Write "Indian" investigates and deftly examines the hardships and pains that the American Indians were faced with, having to attend schools which denied them their families and tribes, their languages and religions, their culture. An invaluable contribution to Native American Studies, Learning To Write "Indian" is very strongly recommended to any American historian or enthusiast, students of the American Indian culture, and the non-specialist general reader with an interest in American history.


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