North Dakota Books
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Organizational behavior Review Date: 2007-12-06
Poor theory, good applicationsReview Date: 1999-06-11
AlrightReview Date: 1999-11-20


Excellent conclusion!Review Date: 2005-02-08
bland.
Loved ItReview Date: 2002-03-11
Third book in Dakota Moons SeriesReview Date: 2002-03-08
Genevieve Blue Eyes is married to Daniel Two Stars and they find themselves in a tiny little rental on land that used to be theirs. Neighbors do not want "those wild Indians" living near them and make life miserable, culminating in a very, very intense encounter for Genevieve.
As a war breaks out, Daniel serves as guide for the Army and little Aaron whom we met as a small boy in earlier books, has enlisted as a "junior" recruit. It is during this war that Daniel Two Stars faces one of the biggest challenges of his life and his marriage. The ending does somewhat make up for the hit and miss writing of the book, and since I am such a fan of Stephanie Grace Whitson, I would definitely buy the next book if there is to be one.


several inaccuraciesReview Date: 2008-06-28
Exploring South DakotaReview Date: 2000-05-09
Good begining referenceReview Date: 2001-05-06

Disappointing novel in the Wilcox series..Review Date: 2006-12-24
If it was any better it would be mediocreReview Date: 2002-12-10
Wilcox has had a colourful past--veteran of WW1,former convict and now an itinerant sign painter in the Mid West in the Great Depression and a man who has established a reputation as a sskilled investigator Why then does he come across as so dull in the book?
He is asked by a relative in North Dakota to dig up evidence that will exonerate a friend who is suspected of murdering her husband.Suspects are not exactly scarce--there is the nubile neighbour and her mildly retarded daughter;his partner in a clothing store known to be resentful of the deceased's less than hands on approach to business,and members of a dance band he once lead some of whom feel they are being held back by his less than dynamic leadership
Wilcox questions suspects,sleeps around with several female charcters and teaches his nephew to fight and bored me into a light coma in the process
Turgid,Unexciting .No sense of place or period.
Its boring and no condemnation can be more damning
If Steinbeck wrote mysteries . . .Review Date: 2000-09-13
Wilcox reminds me of every boy's favorite uncle, the one who's a black sheep to the women of the family for not settling down, who stops by when he needs a bed and a few square meals, bringing with him a whiff of sin and a few great stories. He travels the small towns of the Dakotas and Minnesota during the Depression, taking on sign-painting jobs for grocery stores and law offices when they're available, and camping by the side of the road in his modified Model T. When the jobs are few on the ground, he'll take on a murder investigation.
In "A Way with Widows," his sister asks him to come to Red Ford, North Dakota, to help clear a neighbor of killing her husband, who was found on the stairs of another woman's house. In "No Badge, No Gun," a minister who has heard of Wilcox's reputation as an investigator asks him to solve the murder of his niece, found dead in the basement of a church. Wilcox's investigating style consists of wandering around town, talking to people, gathering threads of facts and weaving them into a plausible story. He's suspicious, but not cynical. Told about the perfect character of a churchgoing man, he observes, "Nothing in this world raises more doubts in my mind than apparently perfect young men."
Yet Wilcox is also a flawed man. He makes mistakes and is perfectly capable of being turned by a pretty widow with something to hide. His attempts at seduction sometimes succeed, but more often fail, which makes sense at a time when a woman's reputation could be affected by who she's seen with.
One hopes for better things for Adams and Wilcox, but if it doesn't happen, it won't be the fault of the publisher. Like most of Walker's books, these are beautiful to look at -- details from Edward Hopper's paintings appear on most of them, which is a nice change from the usual blood and skulls that passes for art on most mystery covers -- and the $8.95 price tag is more than reasonable for these absorbing tales of small-town crimes of passion.

Used price: $5.25

Not the best...Review Date: 1999-12-30
Beautiful, engaging, and stunning photographyReview Date: 1999-03-25

Used price: $4.44
Collectible price: $16.50

Huh! Jews in North Dakota?Review Date: 2000-05-15
Good EffortReview Date: 2005-03-22
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Darkhouse Spearfishing Across North AmericaReview Date: 2002-02-01
The ONLY book on spearfishing available.Review Date: 1998-10-23

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Collectible price: $39.95

Excellent Native American History Book Review Date: 2005-09-12
interesting, though not clearly objectiveReview Date: 2000-08-19

Used price: $13.39

The Indian casualtiesReview Date: 2008-07-24
Almost Like Gray, but not QuiteReview Date: 2005-08-24

Used price: $90.32

North Dakota???????Review Date: 2008-03-28
Northern Plains quietudeReview Date: 2007-10-09
One of the strengths of the book is the editorial flow. Rather than just run page after page of photos here the work is divided into eight chapters each with a page introduction. Some are quite short like the first one: Views of North Dakota, which surprisingly is made up of twelve shots of the inside walls of the state penitentiary where bad guy Charles Olive, murderer and sign painter created a series of murals showing the North Dakota landscape. The Marking the Land chapter has thirty-seven photos of man-made signs, rusting agricultural machinery (deliberately left as a mark on the landscape) and larger than life animal statues. Artists and Workplace chapter (sixty photos) features workshops, bars, retail interiors and commercial architecture. Religious Life (twenty photos) reflects the diverse nature of grave markers and church buildings found in the State.
Although I have a paperback copy (2500 printed according to the imprint) I think it could be considered a book of coffee table proportions, well printed in an impressively fine screen and unusual for a photo book it has an index, too. I would only fault this book of photos in the way captions have been handled. Like many photo books they are at the back with a thumbnail and page number when nearly all the text would easily fit under the relevant images.
I think Jim Dow's impressive photos reveal a lot more of North Dakota than the predictable cold, boring and flat cliché.
***FOR AN INSIDE LOOK click 'customer images' under the cover.
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Asaad Abduljawad