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a great academic study on lewis and clarkReview Date: 2008-04-07
Technically and politically correctReview Date: 2004-01-31
Well Written and Exciting Look at the Explorers' Interactions with All the Tribes Along the Way Review Date: 2006-02-17
Interesting and thoughtful readReview Date: 2004-03-07
Excellent and valuable book that appeals to the head, not the heart Review Date: 2006-08-31
The most interesting aspect of the book for me was the discussion of Lewis and Clark as ethnographers (or recorders of primary data about native American life). Several members of the Expedition made particularly valuable notes on the lifestyles of the Indians they met. Sergeant John Ordway had a talent for recording homey details that give us a glimpse into a long-vanished world of Indians at the moment of first contact with whites. Sergeant Patrick Gass, a carpenter, perceptively described the houses of the Indians. William Clark gravitated instinctively toward political analysis, grasping who the leadership was and how Indian power politics worked. It's not surprising he later proved so talented as a diplomat managing Indian affairs in the West long after the Expedition. But it was Meriwether Lewis who emerged as the premier ethnographer of the Expedition. Food, clothing, cooking utensils, weapons all caught Lewis's eye and were recorded, and often drawn, in painstaking detail.
Thankfully, Ronda steers clear of political correctness, refusing to portray the Indians as saintly victims or L&C as the vanguard of American imperialism. Lewis and Clark among the Indians is academic history at its finest. The research is fresh, measured, and dispassionate. As such it will appeal to those readers with a particular interest in the topic.
It's worth noting that Ronda sets a goal in the introduction of avoiding the themes of "high adventure, national triumph, and male courage." One sometimes senses that he bends over backwards to drain excitement and humor from the narrative.

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Excellent to see in an english translationReview Date: 2007-06-27
For those who wondered where the Captain in the von Trapp family singers came from this fills in a void covering elements of his older children and first wife. Through his first wife, he was related to the inventor of the modern torpedo, who had set up a factory in Austra-Hungary before WW1.
The book is well written and reads quickly, and tells the tale of a dedicated and talented patriot in an prior phase of his life, which was later known to the world in song and story.
U-boats and insights into the geopolitical situation of Austro-Hungary in WWI. Review Date: 2007-10-09
Finally!Review Date: 2007-08-08
I've always wanted to know more about Captain von Trapp, in his own words and this book is as close as I am going to get. It did not disappoint as it provided a window to see the Captain, the man.
I could not help but believe this book was more a compilation from a journal he may have kept. I also could not help but believe, if not for his modesty, there was so much more he could have shared.
Perhaps, without realizing it, he showed us many sides, least of which were his tender and compassionate side. How many military captains do you know would allow a rescued kitten to live on board his submarine?
I gave this book five stars, not so much for literary greatess as for the enjoyment received from reading it and having a few more questions answered.
It should be enjoyed by all Sound of Music fans and I believe those interested in history will enjoy it as well. Even though I knew the outcome, I could not help but hold my breath as he told of daring escapades while captaining his u-boats. I found myself, while reading about his experiences, thinking of the movie, K-9, The Widowmaker.
My only complaint, it was only 188 pages log. :-(
An engaging and moving memoir of life in the Austrian NavyReview Date: 2007-09-26
Interesting History of the True Life "Captain" from the 'Sound of Music'.Review Date: 2007-08-22
The work is very short and von Trapp has a matter of fact writing style similar to that of U.S. counterpart Gene Fluckey in his memoir of the USS Barb. Unlike Fluckey however von Trapp had to go to war in an antequated obsolete gasoline powered Austrian U-boat which was barely a step above the Turtle or the Hunley. A german U boat Captain told him upon going inside the ship that he "was lucky to be Alive". In addition he had to deal with a multinational crew that grew more restless as the war went on and their countries began to break away from the Hapsburg yoke.
The memoir is a good glimpse of a theatre of WWI which is barely mentioned, the Naval War in the Adriatic and the Mediterranean. Very little has been written of the War at sea between the Austrian navy on one side and the Italians and the French on the other. Most I have seen have dealt with the Royal Navy in the Dardanelles.
The book also begins with some von Trapp Family background and reveals many interesting facts such as the Captain's first wife was English and many of 'the children' were a lot older than 'sixteen going on seventeen' when they escaped Austria. Sadly when the Captain died of lung cancer in 1947 it may have been related to all of the gas fumes he inhaled on the poorly ventilated u boat during the war.

A Fine ReadReview Date: 2008-05-27
only the beginningReview Date: 2008-02-16
4 and 1/2 stars, actually.Review Date: 2007-06-11
More than it seems, as magical as the titleReview Date: 2006-09-27
maizeReview Date: 2006-09-16
"Men are like corn growing. The sun burns them up and the rain washes them out and the winter freezes them, and the cavalry tramps them down, but somehow they keep growing. And none of it matters a damn so long as the whisky holds out."
I don't usually read books that talk about whisky and cavalry, but this one was really good. Although a lot of the writing is like the quote above, the plot is a fairly sophisticated examination of the practical complexities of human morality. At first glance, the two main characters seem to be from the wild west boilerplate, one good guy and one bad guy. But the good and the bad are close friends, and they actually identify with each other qutie a bit. There's also an ugly guy who turns out to be the closest thing the book has to a hero. In contrast to the standard cowboy-movie theme, the characters struggle with the difficulties of figuring out what it would even mean to be good, bad, or ugly in a place that has no real laws and exists permanently on the brink of extinction. Apparently the book was made into a movie, but I would bet that it didn't translate well.

OK readReview Date: 2007-12-12
bank on itReview Date: 2007-05-12
A masterpiece on a Western giantReview Date: 2005-12-25
Jedediah Strong Smith is a true American hero, though few people have ever heard of him. After Lewis and Clark, he probably explored and mapped more territory in the West than any other man. In the field of exploration he accomplished a series of "firsts" that is truly astounding. Dale Morgan, the premier modern historian on the fur trade period, has written a detailed and exciting biography of this great man.
Smith, born in New York state in 1798, came to St. Louis and answered William Ashley's call for "enterprising young men" to make a fur trapping excursion up the Missouri River in 1822. He helped Andrew Henry construct his fort on the Yellowstone and wintered in the mountains. Returning east, he participated in the fight with the Arikaras who were attacking Ashley's second expedition on the Missouri, and then returned to the mountains overland. It was on this trip that Smith re-discovered South Pass, the easiest grade over the continental divide. It was also around this time that Smith joined the long list of trappers who were mauled by grizzly bears; he survived the attack but had to have his ear sewn back on by Jim Clyman who was also there (Smith wore his hair long over his ears from then on to avoid the stares).
In 1824 he accompanied Alexander Ross of the Hudson's Bay Company on a tour of the country in the northern Rockies. He became a partner of Ashley, and at the Cache Valley rendezvous of 1826, he, along with David E. Jackson and William Sublette, bought out Ashley. Later that year he began his most famous exploring expedition across the Southwest to California (the first American to do so), continuing north through the San Joaquin Valley to the American River. Then Smith and two others trekked across the Great Basin (the first whites to do so), almost dying of thirst, and reached the Bear Lake rendezvous in July 1827, which "caused a considerable bustle in camp, for myself and party had been given up as lost."
At the breakup of the rendezvous, Smith returned to California to rescue the members of his party he had left there. He found his men in the Sierras and then headed north to Oregon. Here disaster struck. On the Umpqua River, Kalawatset Indians attacked Smith's men, killing all but Smith and three others. They made their way to Ft. Vancouver, where they wintered. In 1829 Smith trapped the northern Rockies and then with Jim Bridger in the Blackfoot country. At the Popo Agie rendezvous of 1830, Smith et.al. sold their fur company to the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. He returned to St. Louis and hoped to settle down, but was talked into taking a trading party and goods to Santa Fe. While searching for water on the dry plains of the Cimmaron, Smith was attacked by Comanches and killed. He was only 32 years old.
Not only was Smith an important explorer, but he was a literate man who kept journal notes of his exploits. (His valuable report on his California expedition of 1826-27 was later published.) His reputation was beyond reproach, and the regard that others held for him concerning his leadership abilities, knowledge, and perseverance was supreme. (His men always referred to him as "Mr. Smith" or "Captain.") He was also a devoutly religious man and carried and read a Bible everywhere he went. His opening the South Pass route over the Divide and the knowledge he collected and passed on about California and the Far Northwest did much to encourage emigration. Some consider Jed Smith the greatest of the mountain men, and it would be hard to disagree.
Morgan's biography is tremendous. He leaves no stone unturned in recounting the details of Smith's life and adventures. He writes with great style and authority. His annotations reveal the work of a dedicated scholar. This book is definitely one of the major works dealing not only with a major figure but with the larger field of the mountain men of the 1820's West. Highly recommended.
Should've been called Jed's World!!Review Date: 2006-08-08
Jedediah Smith and the Opening of the WestReview Date: 2005-08-05

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Healing the Heart and the HeartlandReview Date: 2008-04-10
She faces her mirror with honesty and has meticulously researched the ecology of the landscape, which she distills to poetry. The two are combined and offered to be accepted, or not. The book has the viewpoint of a naturalist, and is food for empathy.
Hawk Flies Above:Journey to the Heart of the SandhillsReview Date: 2008-04-06
A Healing JourneyReview Date: 2008-04-04
LA BloggerReview Date: 2008-04-02
A Good Book About Life, Place, and A Healed HeartReview Date: 2007-12-30
She writes lyrically about how much she loves the Sandhills, about the nature of the Sandhills and how she knows that she is only a secondary character is this vast hilly, sandy, treeless and marshy prairie. Interspersed between the stages of who she was and is are lovely vignettes from her notebooks about the unchanged, here, and the changing, there. By the end of the book, she wonders how long the water table will support the people she loves and the landscape she is passionate about.
But she also writes her own story, that of feeling abandoned by her mother as a young teen, about being attacked, raped and left for dead in her twenties and about her healing and regaining trust. "The things we do in our twenties and thirties are pilgrimages to find lost pieces of our youth." After years away from The Big Six Country Club, she returns to write her master's thesis on Ericson and The Hungry Horse Saloon. Although she writes in her journals and photographs life, she drifts through that summer and fall not knowing that she must wait and just be in that place for the healing to commence. Norton writes of equating growth with movement and finally realizing that inner landscape must be cultivated with stillness.
Norton's Notebooks are filled with prose poetry (the in-between vignettes). In "Dragonflies," she writes "Their gossamer wings moved like wind through riverside grass. Sometimes in flight, a dragonfly would coast, riding a current but only for a moment. I dreamed those magical creatures were relics from another age and I was some clever character, kneeling at water's edge gathering flowers."
In her narrative, she writes, "What succor is it, then, that rises from remembering, from the stories I tell? Slowly I come to believe that the mere telling itself is food for my soul. Story nurtures. I tell a story and I feel more whole."--as it is with us all.
Yet this is not a sweet and sentimental book. Norton writes with an edge of expectation, moving us forward to see the beginning of healing. She writes of the history of the land and the people as well as her family, long time Nebraska citizens. She writes, "What purpose do these stories serve, which rise from my childhood and haunt me as I travel these hills? I can not give up the belief that these memories, burning like lamps in the night shine through to me for a reason. Could it be a simple as the power of those things we love rising to remind us that we must name them? If I do not name those things I love, who will know what is worth saving and what can be let go?"
This is a good book. It tells of a life, a place and a heart that is healed.
by Judith Helburn
for StorycircleBookReviews
www.storycirclebookreviews.org
reviewing books by, for, and about women
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My Daniel: ReveiwReview Date: 2006-02-02
While wandering through the National History Museum with her grandchildren, Julia recounts her adventures. She tells the children about Daniel's dream: to find a fossilized dinosaur and save the farm. Julia had the same dream. But only she would see it completed.
Julia takes them to the result of Daniel and her struggles. Here, she feels as if Daniel is with her again. She becomes that Nebraska farm girl once again.
Pam Conrad did a good job writing the book and connecting the memories with the present. The recollections keep you reading. I thought the stories were enticing. However, while still good, I did not find this to be an extraordinary book to read.
What's next? Little House in the Graveyard?Review Date: 2007-08-02
Simply amazing.Review Date: 2002-06-24
My DanielReview Date: 2001-01-08
My thoughts of the Book My DanielReview Date: 1999-12-14
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Shakespeare and CompanyReview Date: 2008-04-07
not quite what I expectedReview Date: 2004-10-04
I purchased this book knowing little about Sylvia Beach and her bookstore Shakespeare and Company, but hoping to find out more. Since this particular book is rather autobiographical, I figured I could learn a lot from it about her. Actually it was more about her famous friends (Joyce, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and many other writers and other prominent social and literary figures of the day; if you're familiar with the Algonquin Round Table and their expanded circle of friends, a lot of these people cross over), with only rather modest information provided about herself. It is still an interesting read, and the stories she recounts are well done and witty, but the spotlight is less on her own story and more on the people she surrounded herself with. I would like to seek out a more objective biography of her to couple to the information I've learned in this book. Still, do read it, especially if you are interested in the literati of the 1920s-30s.
A Pleasant, Chatty MemoirReview Date: 2004-12-31
Shakespeare would be proudReview Date: 2005-04-10
There is a rather funny scene she describes. Because it was so hard to get Ulysses into America (since it was banned), Sylvia had a dilemma concerning distribution. Hemingway, who proclaims himself Sylvia's "best customer", tells her not to worry and within a few days he comes back to let her know he has a friend who has moved to Canada who will personally bring the books into America by ferry, stuffed in his pants.
I cannot say enough what a beautiful book this is. Beach is as gifted as the authors she esteemed and brings to life a world you wish you could climb into.
I would also highly recommend A Moveable Feast by Earnest Hemingway in conjunction to this.
A real treat for book lovers.Review Date: 2004-09-12

Stegnar recalls his teen years and recounts written early history of SW SaskatchewanReview Date: 2007-05-05
I have some qualms about this work, however. In particular, I was not so keen on those parts where Stegner relied heavily on book-based history that never directly touched his own life. To be frank, his writing in these parts surprisingly got a bit stodgy.
His thought on sense of place and belonging, however, are remarkable, hitting me right between the eyes. Indeed, he had me wistfully recalling my own childhood in what seemed a remote area of the world with the archaeological junk heap and all. In measuring his boyhood to my own, I noted how little times had changed in that interval of 60-70 years and how much has changed for kids in the last 40. It had me wondering how my own sons lives would be different were it not for the MAFIA (mother's against fun in America).
Growing up on the northern plains.Review Date: 2002-05-22
"On those miraculously beautiful and murderously cold nights glittering with the green and blue darts from a sky like polished dark metal, when the moon had gone down, leaving the hollow heavens to the stars and the overflowing cold light of the Aurora, he thought he had moments of the clearest vision ... In every direction ... the snow spread; here and there the implacable plain glinted back a spark - the beam of a cold star reflected in a crystal of ice." (The scene evokes in me a powerful memory, as I recall often standing alone on just such "murderously cold" snow blanketed prairies and gazing into those "miraculously beautiful" night skies.)
Vividly told account of the Canadian frontierReview Date: 2003-05-05
Stegner is a gifted, intelligent writer, able to turn the people and events of history into compelling reading. The opening section of the book describes the experience of being on the plains and specifically in the area where Stegner was a boy. And it lays out the geography of that land -- a distant range of hills, the river, the coulees, the town -- which the book will return to again and again.
The following section evokes the period of frontier Canada's early exploration, the emergence of the metis culture, the destruction of the buffalo herds, the introduction of rangeland cattle, and then wave upon wave of settlement pushing the last of the plains Indians westward and northward. A chapter is devoted to the surveying of the boundary along the Canada-U.S. border; another chapter describes the founding of the Mounted Police and its purely Canadian style of bringing law and order to the wild west.
The middle section of the book is a novella and a short story about the winter of 1906-1907. In the longer piece, eight men rounding up cattle are caught on the open plains in an early blizzard. Stegner builds the drama and the peril of their situation artfully and convincingly. The final section of the book returns to Stegner's memories of the town and the homestead, ending with his family's departure for Montana.
Stegner lived at a time and in a place where a person born in the 20th century could still experience something of the sweep of history that transformed the American plains. I've read many books about the West, and because of his depth of thought, his gifts as a writer, and his unflinching eye, Stegner's work ranks for me among the best. I heartily recommend this book.
Almost shockingly goodReview Date: 2005-07-30
Stegner, like Proust, experiences an "ancient, unbearable recognition" spurred by a return to the sites, sounds, and most importantly, smells of his childhood. He dreams of this period and is "haunted, on awakening, by a sense of meanings just withheld, and by a profound nostalgic melancholy." Everyone has some awareness of a deep meaning lurking in our past that has not, or cannot, be fully interpreted.
Perhaps the best part of the book is section three, the novella length exposition on the hope and danger of the high plains that does a superb job of creating looming dread as the winter drops hard on the land. Near the end of section three, Stegner expounds on what it is to be an American pursuing the Dream:
"How does one know what wilderness has meant to Americans unless he has shared the guilt of wastefully and ignorantly tampering with it in the name of progress? One who has lived the dream, the temporary fulfillment, and the disappointment has had the full course.... The vein of melancholy in the North American mind may be owing to many causes, but it is surely not weakened by the perception that the fulfillment of the American Dream means inevitably the death of the noble savagery and freedom of the wild. Any who has lived on a frontier knows the inescapable ambivalence of the old-fashioned American conscience, for he has first renewed himself in Eden and then set about converting it into the lamentable modern world."
wistful retrospectiveReview Date: 2002-10-01

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a very good introduction to re howardReview Date: 2007-12-13
The Black Stranger & Other American Tales by Robert E. HowardReview Date: 2007-09-28
With enthusiasm, skill, and expertise Mark Finn has written the new and definitive biography of Robert E. Howard. Finn not only corrects a number of errors previous biographies and biographers made about Howard and his writings, Finn also describes, with sensitivity and nuance, Howard's environment and upbringing and the context in which Howard's work should be placed. Finn neither places Howard on a pedestal nor demeans him, but instead gives Howard the credit he deserves. UNQUOTE
My favorite stories that Robert Howard wrote are Pidgeons From Hell, Beyond The Black River, and Red Nails. There are so many great ones but these really stand out as the very best.
Tell five other people about Robert E. Howard and enjoy his stories. There's a DVD called The Whole Wide World 1996 Sony Pictures that is about Robert E. Howard and Novelyn Price his girlfriend. Renee Zellweger stars as Novelyn and Vincent D'Onofrio as Robert. Blockbuster carries it. Enjoy Robert Howard Fans!
reading reviewReview Date: 2006-03-19
something to note...Review Date: 2006-09-25
It's my opinion that the text of this compilation was scanned from another source by a computer program, perhaps run through a second program to check for spelling errors, and reprinted without ever being properly proofread by a human being.
I'm not sorry I bought this book, but I am a little disappointed at how some publishers are so lazy as to rely almost wholly on computers.
A first rate collection!Review Date: 2006-03-03
The folks compiling this edition have given us a well designed and well selected anthology that reaches from the high fantasy of Conan among the pirates in "The Black Stranger" to the deepest of regional horror in "Black Canaan".
Buy and slowly savour this wonderful collection, the short story form doesn't get much better than this EVER!

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Good First NovelReview Date: 2006-05-04
Katia has done a great job of capturing Girl's character. Through her roadtrip, I kept thinking, "Yes, I've seen this person before," and then groaned as Girl pinged between bad decisions and the fate she drove herself towards.
This is an excellent first novel. I hope to see more of Katia's work in the future.
Captivating Look into a World I've Never Seen BeforeReview Date: 2006-03-18
RAUNCHY, GRITTY TOMBOY GOES "ON THE ROAD" Review Date: 2007-02-14
Often funny but sometimes painful adventures of an adolescent lesbian who leaves disappointment in San Francisco (where her partner has just died of a drug overdose) to hit the road for America's heartland. In a raunchy seach for freedom, fulfillment and personal identity, the gritty tomboy heroine (called "Girl") hitchhikes, steals bikes and cars, money and change, works the fields, people and the police and bunks down with attractive and less attractive, oddball partners. Katia Noyes's CRASHING AMERICA is an honest and open tale of a very brazen, but sensitive, rootless young woman who tries to find and even plant some roots in America's farm belt, showing quite another side of the "farm girl" tradition. And, Noyes demonstrates a refreshing other geographical direction--the usual one is towards the western mecca of San Francisco where the disenfranchised try to find "roots"-- Noyes takes us away from it and into the small towns and fields of Utah, Iowa, the prairie and the cornfields of the midwest towards Randa, an older woman she had met earlier in the west and thought she was in love with. She has much more to learn.
I first heard Katia Noyes, a California author, read passages of the book at the San Francisco Public Library and enjoyed her unrelentless humor and directness. It's all there in the book along with a fascinating array of other authentic midwestern characters. And, it's not just for "tom boys." Highly recommended. An extra bonus is the way Noyes uses a unique and individuaized language to express "Girl's" monologue and dialogue. She creates new language rules and it is delightful!
"I Was Alive and Going To Stay Alive"Review Date: 2006-08-22
As everyone else will tell you, CRASHING AMERICA is a powerful indictment of a society in which class injustice trumps every other factor in life, a system in which our children and our pets are our victims, brought into this world to amuse us and to provide a workforce, but otherwise to be ignored, molested and put down at will. At 17, Girl already seems to have a political understanding that defies common sense--surely no 17 year old ever had the writing ability that our narrator shows here--but such is the persuasiveness of Noyes' invention that I never bothered my head thinking about this until the long strange trip waS over and, like Girl, I was walking up Market Street towards the Castro on a sad Sunday afternoon from the bus depot on Seventh Street, looking at the workerbees who weren't there, for they had vacated the space to the bums and the wounded. Reading CRASHING AMERICA, I was reminded of similar scenes in Evelyn Lau's RUNAWAY and some parts of Tom Spanbauer's second and third novels, but here the brew is different, more focussed, more tragic, purer. Even the name "Girl," so reminiscent of a heroine from Erskine Caldwell's florid middle period, I got used to, as though it weren't so horribly symbolic.
After the tragic death of a girlfriend, Girl finds herself with literally nowhere to go. Her dad, "Mister White Socks," seems to despise her, and her mother committed suicide, her ghost clinging to the long reaches of Girl's memories. She heads midwest to get back to the farmland where the Clutter family got killed. That's the thing about Girl, you just want to shake her for every decision she makes is a bad one! And yet you sympathize with her at every turn and you know why she makes all these wrong turns. Oh! There's one part of the book that you will just throw the book down on the floor so horrifying is the lifechoice Girl decides to make. And yet then you will crawl back to the book just to find out what happens next. Katia Noyes, with whom I once took a writing workshop, has reader identification wired into every word she writes. And she can describe things so vividly it's like someone's waving them under your nose. A store detective wears a "surgically cut bob of red hair and a smug color of coral lipstick."
One caveat, and one spoiler--this book has a sequence in which a common housecat dies a tragic and painful death. It is not for the squeamish! The pages of my copy of CRASHING AMERICA are stained with tears all over that chapter. I've never read anything like it.
Search for mother in the heartlandReview Date: 2006-04-02
What I love most about this heartbreaking story is that she keeps looking for love no matter what, everywhere, willing to take any offered thread, but then hopelessly tossing out what's offered in confusion and pain. This feels so like real life, rather than the romances of found love, that it makes my heart crack. I cry in the end, at the hopelessness of Girl's situation, at how long she has searched, and how long she will probably go on searching.
For me, this story is about the search for the love we never got from Mother, and the search for love and truth in the heartland. Just as our own alienated families have disappointed and betrayed us, so has the country. The American Dream is dead. The fields have gone fallow.
In the end, for me, this was not a hopeful story, but painfully true to life.
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