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A must-have for citizens of Sooner NationReview Date: 2008-08-24
to good to put downReview Date: 2008-08-23
Great compilation of Sooner football historyReview Date: 2008-08-22
Die-hard FanReview Date: 2008-08-13
Sooner magic captured in printReview Date: 2008-08-12

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ExcellentReview Date: 2008-10-01
Dragonfly guide reviewReview Date: 2007-09-17
The Texas Odonata BibleReview Date: 2006-12-23
A Complete Guide to South-Central OdonatesReview Date: 2005-11-08
A serious book for the serious readerReview Date: 2005-08-20
Be warned, though, that you cannot approach this book lightly. The author uses scientific terms liberally: you will have to spend time acquiring the vocabulary.
For the serious Texas "Odo-nut" this is an absolutely essential part of your library.

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A must have!Review Date: 2008-07-02
James Grooms
excellentReview Date: 2007-12-02
Our Great Giants of the PastReview Date: 2006-11-16
Great book for repair and parts identificationReview Date: 2002-06-11
If you only buy one windmill book...Review Date: 1999-04-16

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Insightful into the common soldiers of this conflictReview Date: 2006-06-16
Nicely written and well illustrated. A good book to have for those interested in this subject.
An amazing account of the men who fought the Civil War.Review Date: 1998-09-28
The book shows us how common men of all walks of life, and nationalities became soldiers (or not). There are many excerpts and quotes from the people who were there. It gives insight into how they fought, the equipment they used, the pride they felt and what it was like when it was over.
The pictoral history in this book is wonderful. There are pictures from the actual conflict as well as pictures of artifacts photographed later.
Davis' writing style creates such a vivid picture of the world these men lived in. This book is a long way from the dry accounts many history books provide.
I highly recommend this book!
An amazing account of the men who fought the Civil War.Review Date: 1998-09-28
The book shows us how common men of all walks of life, and nationalities became soldiers (or not). There are many excerpts and quotes from the people who were there. It gives insight into how they fought, the equipment they used, the pride they felt and what it was like when it was over.
The pictoral history in this book is wonderful. There are pictures from the actual conflict as well as pictures of artifacts photographed later.
Davis' writing style creates such a vivid picture of the world these men lived in. This book is a long way from the dry accounts many history books provide.
I highly recommend this book!
essential reading for military history enthusiasts everywherReview Date: 2000-10-06
This book should be One of the handiest one-volume sources of information ever assembled: serious, and surprisingly hard to find, information on the nation and its people is interspersed with the many colorful characters and incidents so often associated with this dramatic conflict.
Key interests and user groups;Artists and illustrators, Collectors, Costumiers, Historians, Historical societies and interest groups, Modellers, Re-enactors, Restorers, Special interest groups, Wargamers, Schools, Educational Establishments.
Soldiers brave and trueReview Date: 2005-08-15

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Blue Angel Pioneer Review Date: 2007-12-21
Learning to understand JapaneseReview Date: 2007-03-13
This book is a solid 4 star book. I preferred the front half of the book when Dusty was a POW. The story was sharper and more interesting. His observations of the Japanese and of his situation were insightful on something most people don't being to understand. In the later half, things seemed to drag a little. While it was interesting what he did as a Blue Angel, I felt that there was more struggle with writing it than the earlier section. My other reason for only 4 stars (really, the front part was a strong 4.5 stars) was the writers style. There were to many times when his style just killed the chapter for me. While no Chuck Yeager, From POW to Blue Angel is a good story to read!
The story of deeply religious young men whose beliefs led them to reject military service.Review Date: 2006-10-15
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
The Story of a Member of the Greatest GenerationReview Date: 2006-10-22
Then again, at the beginning of the War the Americans were flying the F4F Wildcat. Up against the Japanese zero it was slower in both climbing and level flight. It didn't turn as sharply so was outmatched when it came to dog fighting.
Finally at the beginning of the war the Japanese pilots were the best trained with the most hours, the most experience in the world.
October 26, 1942 was the date of Dusty Rhodes first combat patrol. They ran into zeros and Dusty Rhodes was shot down. From the book it appears that he never saw the plane that got him. It fits right in with the statistics.
From there it was a series of Japanese prisoner of war camps until the end of the war. Surprisingly his stories of life in the camps are not nearly as bad as many of the stories that have been published. His life was by no means good, but by no means as horrible as say the Bataan Death March.
After the war, it also seems that he had less troubles than many. Divorce, yes, but he handled this easily - to short a marriage, to much had happened. He was soon back on flight status. Soon after that he commanded the Blue Angels. He went on to flying a fighter in Korea, and a reasonable career after that.
This book covers from basically getting shot down to his return from Korea. It is largely based on his memories, but exhaustively researched to back up what he said. It is well written and an joy to read. You have to respect these members of what Tom Brokaw correctly called 'The Greatest Generation.'
Truly inspiringReview Date: 2006-08-29

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A BOOK LONG AWAITEDReview Date: 2008-10-03
A very interesting book that shows the life of and the difficult career of General Thomas, a Virginian, who was a keystone to the success of the Union in the western campaigns.
Book review on new biography of General George Thomas, the Rock of ChickamaugaReview Date: 2007-11-28
Any author writing a biography of George Thomas is faced with a major hurdle in that most of Thomas' private papers were burned at his request when he died, and the fact that he died suddenly of a stoke soon after the Civil War which left no chance for a memoir. The author addressed these problems by relentlessly researching every collection of Thomas Papers available and reviewing as many private letters that he could. Other authors may have done this also, and used them to influence their writing, but Mr. Christopher Einolf has done more. He quotes from the Thomas letters giving the reader a glimpse of the real Thomas.
The author uses an understated writing style that I think would have been appreciated by Thomas himself. He lets the facts speak for themselves in many cases and lets his readers draw their own conclusions. However he is not shy about sharing any new understanding of Thomas that he has reached. His description of how Thomas' attitude about blacks changed, from one of a conventional Virginia land owner to a real Civil Rights advocate and that this change came not so much as an evolutionary process but more of a `frame-break' moment after the Battle of Nashville when he saw for himself how well his black troops fought, gives us a new major insight into the man. This view came as a revelation for me as I never agreed with some early Thomas biographers who assumed Thomas had some innate goodness in him that would not allow him to treat blacks unequally. With his aristocratic Virginia upbringing, it did not make any sense. To me Mr. Einolf's analysis rings true.
The author's battle descriptions and analyses are very good with the notable exception of the Battle of Chattanooga. He basically subscribes to the standard `miracle theory' or to luck, as he has the soldiers saying, for the great success at Missionary Ridge. He states that `military historians' say the artillery was badly placed, and that the Union soldiers could scurry up the ravines unseen by enemy soldiers. This may be true, but the author misses the point that the prime factor in winning the battle was the effort of General Joseph Hooker and the fact that Thomas delayed his attack as long as he could to allow Hooker time to flank the ridge from Lookout Mountain. Confederate veterans on high ground and in good defensive positions would ordinarily not have been worried about any Federal charge, but with the added knowledge that a Union Corps was marching across their line of retreat, they decided it was time to skedaddle. That aside, the author's description of Stones River, Chickamauga, Nashville and the other battles is very good and his conclusions are astute.
Mr. Einolf's chapters on Thomas' post war actions and decisions during the occupation and the early reconstruction periods are given the detail they deserve. The author shows how Thomas had a unique perspective on the situation due to his being a Southern gentleman, a Unionist and knowing first hand the qualities of the black men who fought for their freedom. These two chapters really differentiate this book from other Thomas biographies.
In his concluding chapter entitled "Thomas in Historical Memory" Mr. Einolf goes into the reasons for loss of Thomas' place in history. This makes for very interesting reading especially in what he has to say about the Southern Historical Society. While I personally think he is too mild with regard to Generals U. S. Grant and William T. Sherman in their treatment of General Thomas during the war and later in their memoirs which contributed to the loss of George Thomas in history, Mr. Einolf's opinion on this matter has merit.
Overall this biography is excellent and a very creditable addition to the literature on the American Civil War.
A thought provoking, insightful account of a man with convictions and a different look at the culture of the mid 1800's.Review Date: 2008-01-07
Excellent book, but long on military info and short on personal facts...Review Date: 2008-05-05
The background of George Thomas is very similar to Confederate General Robert E. Lee. Coming from a prominent Virginia family, Thomas went to West Point, served in the Mexican and Indian Wars, and then taught at West Point. But unlike Lee, when the Civil War began, Thomas placed his oath to the Constitution above his loyalty to his family and his state and sided with the Union. He never saw his homestead or his sisters again.
While both armies had more than a few eccentric characters in key leadership positions (think Grant, Sherman, Stonewall Jackson, McClellan, J.E.B. Stuart, etc.), Thomas proved to be one of the most steady, consistent but understated generals during the Civil War. His friend and West Point roommate, William Tecumseh Sherman said of Thomas that "He was never brilliant, but always cool, reliable, and steady--maybe a little slow." After the war, Sherman praised Thomas as "the second-best general of the war, after Grant, and argued that Thomas was a better general even than Robert E. Lee."
His greatest successes were at the Battle of Chickamauga and the Battle of Nashville. His actions at Chickamauga helped to save the Union army from total annihilation and earned him the nickname, The Rock of Chickamauga. He finished the Civil War as the sixth highest ranking general in the Union army behind Grant, Sherman, Halleck, Mead and Sheridan.
While I found George Thomas: Virginian for the Union to be engrossing, it's very long on military information and short on personal facts. The reasons for this are the same reasons that Thomas is not very well known today. First, he had all his personal papers burned upon his death and he rarely spoke to his colleagues about his personal life. He never published his memoirs, unlike many of the key players from the war. He also was the first general to die after the war at the young age of 53 (in 1870). Three friends wrote biographies of Thomas after his death and respected his wish for privacy. This book doesn't even contain a photograph of his wife, Frances. Frances was also a very private person, and they had no children. While I would have preferred more personal information, I can't hold it against Einolf is very little is available to researchers.
But despite this shortcoming, George Thomas is still an excellent book and one that I would strongly recommend to others.
Notes, a bibliography, and an index enhance this evenhanded appraisal of a truly remarkable commander.Review Date: 2007-12-02

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Tragic but honest: A Woman's Journey into DespairReview Date: 2008-02-22
Great bookReview Date: 2007-06-01
Substance and Soul - What is Truly NecessaryReview Date: 2007-12-02
However, the reader is treated to an infinite barrel of wisdom. Certainly, Caroline had to deal with much more in her life than overcoming writing styles, so it helps knowing this just to get through the book. It is easy to miss what is really going on here. Homesteading requires a harvest of food for nutrition and another harvest of food for the soul. The book talks very little about dust storms. More is spoken of the planted gladiolas, the harvest, the songs of birds, and of Christmas. Letters are torn up in frustration, and rewritten to be positive. Each response to a letter opens with words of thanks for encouragement offered.
This little book is terrific - the kind of book that changes lives. If you enjoyed Victor E. Frankl's "Man's Search for Meaning" you might also love this. Though not analytical and direct as Frankl, it quietly relates shared personal values. In contrast to Frankl, Henderson lives very much in freedom, but within the shackles of her environoment.
Enhanced with a biographical essay and precise annotationsReview Date: 2003-06-12
Dreams can save a person from an otherwise mean lifeReview Date: 2001-10-17
Caroline Henderson moved to a farm near Eva, Oklahoma, in 1907. During the next six decades, she and her husband, Will, endured the hardship of depressions and the dustbowl on their farm, with really only one bumper crop to show for their labors. Turner's overall introduction, as well as his introduction to each section, does well to place Henderson's life in context. She had great dreams for her life, both as a literate woman and as a farmer but by the end of her life, she is disillusioned and considers herself a failure.
Most of Henderson's farming experience demonstrates that dreams can save a person from an otherwise mean life. In 1917 she wrote, "The fact that we cannot see the end does not relieve us of our obligation to push forward, to gain every inch we can in humanity's forward march." As a young farm wife, she met challenges with inventiveness, and hardship with strong will. Even as crops withered and neighbors moved away, she finds beauty in flowers and friendship in animals. However, too many failed crops and dried-up dreams took their toll on Henderson's optimism. In 1952, she wrote in a letter to her daughter, "Every day seems to bring some new sorrow in these last years of fruitless effort and disappointment." With dreams dashed, Henderson loses all sense of proportion and she reads each setback as catastrophe.
"Letters from the Dust Bowl" is as heartbreaking as it is inspirational. Al Turner is right; it's a very well written book.
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Money well spentReview Date: 2007-08-01
Really interesting!Review Date: 1999-01-19
For the serious treasure hunter, this book may provide a place to start looking for sources, but it doesn't contain any detailed maps or secrets.
Nonetheless, I would strongly recommend this book to people with an interest in lost treasure or with an interest in the history of Oklahoma. (I found out from this book that I grew up about 20 miles from a lost gold mine area!)
genuis!Review Date: 2005-08-26
A wealth of information for those who seek buried goldReview Date: 2005-01-01
Many of the old west treasure stories recorded here would now be lost to history if not for Steve Wilson's thorough detective work.
I was shocked to read one review here stating "there are no detailed maps" in the book. I beg to differ with that opinion. This book contains several authentic treasure maps. It is an absolute fact that treasure was recovered using some of those maps. (Read "Shadow of the Sentinel" or "Rebel Gold" for the story of one treasure recovery). I'd go as far as to predict, that in the near future, other treasures will be found using the maps in this book.
Every day another treasure hunter enters the ranks of those who seek buried gold. They can do no better than to read, and read, then re-read the OKLAHOMA TREASURES AND TREASURE TALES.
To truly understand the way treasure maps are actually drawn and how they work this book is a must. Study these maps paying careful attention to the codes and ciphers hidden in them, then with some luck and lots of hard work you might be the next person to get rich from Steve's work.
Bob Brewer
Author/Historian/Cache Hunter
A ClassicReview Date: 2000-02-27

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Oklahoma Wonder & LightReview Date: 2008-01-14
Great PicturesReview Date: 2007-12-18
Really shows the beauty of OklahomaReview Date: 2007-12-03
These book also makes a great resource for photographers and tourists looking for wonderfully special locations.
Spectacular photosReview Date: 2007-06-10
Breathtaking Beauty!Review Date: 2007-06-02

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Old Bill Williams, University of North Carolina, 1936Review Date: 2004-12-04
Content: After fighting in the Revolutionary War, Bill's father, Joseph Williams moved from the western mountains of North Carolina, across the Mississippi River to the area near St. Louis. There, Bill was raised near trading posts, becoming familiar with traders, mountain men and Indians, learning to live off of the land, hunt and trap. Early in adulthood he became a circuit preacher, becoming a self-appointed missionary to the near-by Osage tribe. The Osage, instead of being converted, did the converting and adopted Williams into the tribe where he married, and lived among them, as one of them. After his first wife died he and an old acquaintance, Paul Ballio, opened a trading post among the Osage. By the time this venture failed Williams had developed a reputation for understanding the native tribes, and more importantly, being trusted by them. He was recruited in 1825 to go on a government expedition to establish a trade route to Santa Fe from St. Louis. Arriving in Toas with the expedition, he was discharged from their services. Instead of returning to Missouri he stayed for many years in the Rocky Mountain west roaming from New Mexico as far north as what would become Idaho, Wyoming and Washington. During his time in the west he trapped and traded as a free trapper, never being employed by any of the fur companies of the period. Generally free-trappers worked in small groups through the trapping seasons of fall and early spring, coming to rendezvous in the summer, to sell their furs. Old Bill gained a reputation as a loner, earning the nickname of "Old Solitaire". He also worked from time to time leading trading expeditions to California and other destinations. As the fur trade became less lucrative Old Bill led trading expeditions more frequently. In August of 1845 John C. Fremont hired Old Bill to lead his Third Expedition to the Salt Lake country. In 1848 Fremont volunteered to locate a southerly route through the mountains for a railroad into California. Again, he hired Bill Williams to guide his expedition. On this trip, according to Favour, due to Fremont's ego and blind determination, of the thirty-two that entered the mountains that winter, only 21 came out alive. Most of the 11 dead either froze or starved. Those that survived were barely living when they walked out of the mountains. Shortly after surviving this debacle Old Bill was killed trying to retrieve goods abandoned on the expedition. He was 62. Fremont laid the blame for the failed expedition on Williams, who was dead by then and could not defend himself.
Critique: Favour is a sympathetic biographer going as far as to call Old Bill Williams the greatest mountain man. His sources are recorded in copious footnotes, but his arguments sound nostalgic, and many are family remembrances from then living descendants, giving the same credence to passed-down family legends as contemporary letters and diaries. Favour also seems to be guilty of creating dialogue, without citations, between characters, often containing details only an eyewitness would know.
B.L. Clark
Great book about a legendary mountain man.Review Date: 2006-09-16
Affable read of legendary mountain manReview Date: 2004-07-13
Attempted preacher to the Osage Indians;
Guide to the Sibley Santa Fe road survey;
Trapper extraordinaire;
Friend to several Indian tribes;
With the 1833 Joseph Walker expedition to California;
Horse stealing adventures;
Indian battles;
Guide to Fremont's third and fourth expeditions.
A prominent figure of the early American West and oftentimes overlooked for his achievements.
One of the best of the fur trade books.Review Date: 1999-01-30
Williams was born in North Carolina in 1787, moved to the Missouri frontier, and began trapping while in his teens. He served in the War of 1812, was in Indian trader, an itinerant preacher, scout, explorer, and mountain man. Williams, as Favour points out, was the most noteworthy of the hundreds of mountain men in the Missouri River Country. Equally important is the revealing portrait of the mountain men and their lives. In Bill Williams, the author found those unique traits possessed by this singular group of men who led a young nation through uncharted lands to a rendezvous with the Pacific.
Bill Williams' image was unlike that of the typical hero. He was a study in contrasts. Williams was tall and redheaded, dirty and disheveled, had a knowledge of Greek, Latin, and comparative religion, and ate primitive frontier food including raw calf legs. Physical strength, ability to endure thirst, scanty rations, and fatigue counted for little unless a mountain man also had determination, courage, and fortitude. Williams and a few others possessed all of these traits yet the majority of mountain men, including Williams, died of disease, hunger, Indians, or exposure.
Williams emulated Indians in dress, deportment, speech, and conduct. If being taken for an Indian was the highest compliment a trapper could receive, it wasn't such for Old Bill Williams. Whether it was lifting a scalp, hunting buffalo, or stalking an enemy, Williams did it better than any Indian and was pround of his sobriquet - Master Trapper. Williams stood out from his contemporaries regardless of the method of comparison: bringing in the most fur, outfighting and outdrinking anyone, or simply living past his 61st birthday.
Williams' six decades of life spanned the fur trade era and through his eyes the author presents that adventurous time with clarity and understanding. Williams traversed the West, battled the Ute, Apache, and Blackfeet, wandered the great mountains and parks of Arizona and Colorado, and blazed new trails. His horse stealing excursions were a legitimate enterprise by fur trappers' standards. He excelled in this field and stole hundreds of horses from California to Mexico, including horses owned by unfriendly Indians.
As a guide to Fremont's fourth expedition, which sought a railroad route through the Southern Rockies. Williams' place in history is circumscribed. After this expedition, Fremont castigated Williams, blaming him for the failure to cross the Rockies in midwinter. Williams had warned Fremont that a crossing in winter was dangerous yet went with him anyway. Eleven men froze to death. Favour tends to whitewash Williams in this incident but any blame is needless as nature wouldn't permit a crossing by anyone that winter.
After that disaster, Williams continued to guide parties across the frontier. In March 1849, Williams and Benjamin Kern were murdered by Utes evidently seeking revenge for a previous attack on their village by a contingent of the U. S. Army. When the Utes discovered they had killed Old Bill, they gave him a chief's burial.
Old Bill's death was denied by many Indians. For years they told tales of a majestic mountain Elk, with a slash of red across its crown, serenely grazing in Colorado's South Park, stopping from time to time to gaze intently toward the Southwest - toward its namesake Arizona's Bill Williams Peak which stands alone on the skyline along the western boundary of a frontier long past.
Old Bill WilliamsReview Date: 2006-01-31
Although never quite reaching the pantheon of Mountain Men, Old Bill Williams spent most of his life among the fur-trapping greats (including Jed Smith, Kit Carson, Tom Fitzpatrick, and Joseph Walker), traveling throughout most of the Rocky Mountain West from 1825-1849. He considered himself a master trapper, though his solitary ways limited what was known about him. Alpheus Favour's book on Williams was written 70 years ago and is still the only book-length study of his life; it's doubtful it could be improved upon.
Williams was born in North Carolina in 1787 but grew up near St. Louis. Unlike most Mountain Men he was educated and could read (a different source says he knew Greek and Latin, but Favour makes no mention of this) write, and keep accounts. A religious man, he first was an itinerant preacher and made an excursion to the Osage Indians to convert them, though they seem to have converted him. He lived and traded with them for a number of years, and then in 1825 served as an interpreter on the Sibley survey of the Santa Fe Trail. This was when his trapping days began and for the next two decades Williams trapped throughout the West, from the Yellowstone country to California to Taos, which might be considered his homebase, since it was the place he often returned to. He had a number of Indian wives and children by them, fought often with the Blackfeet, was a spectacle when drunk, went on horse-stealing expeditions, and cheated the Indians on occasion when trading with them. In other words, he was rather par-for-the-course as far as Mountain Man behavior went.
His most controversial act occurred in 1848 when John Fremont hired Williams to guide him across the Southern Rockies on his fourth expedition, conducted to find a railroad route through the mountains. It was a foolhardy dead-of-winter expedition, which everyone, including Williams, tried to talk Fremont out of attempting, but Williams went anyway. Why is a good question, though no answers are forthcoming. The expedition was a disaster, with huge snows and sub-zero temperatures, and 11 men died before the expedition escaped the mountains. Fremont, of course, blamed Williams. The charge was that Williams deliberately misguided the group, hoping to come back later to claim abandoned supplies for himself. A second charge against Williams was that he engaged in cannibalism when starvation threatened the party. Favour dismisses both charges. Shortly after Fremont and the remaining men made it back to Taos, Williams was sent with another member of the expedition, Dr. Benjamin Kern, back to the mountains to retrieve equipment left there; on their return they were attacked by Utes and killed.
Favour was a lawyer and a western enthusiast, and this was his only book (he also wrote a monograph on Arizona state laws). He has researched his subject deeply and writes with clarity and authority. He finds Williams appealing, but is not enamored by him. It's a good biography, a classic of the Old West.
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The book contains great "Did You Know" boxes within the text with a short factoid. It also contains things ancillary to actual on-the-field play, but nonetheless important: e.g. the perennial game-day hangout, O'Connell's, and super-fan Cecil Samara. I also got a big kick out of the chapter on "The Rivals: The Accursed Teams of Texas and Nebraska." I would have liked to have seen more quotes from former players about their feelings for TX and NE - to stir the pot more.
There is a lot of information to digest. So I appreciate the author/publisher including some easy-to-read call-outs in the book, like actual diagram of the Wishbone and the Right 53 Veer Pass, and a full win-loss record from 1895-2007. Don't forget to take the 50-question quiz at the end of the book to test your knowledge of Sooner football.
This will make a great gift for the Sooner football fans in your life. A great read that will make you appreciate the storied history even more.