Illinois Books


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

Illinois
Cold War Poetry
Published in Hardcover by University of Illinois Press (2000-10-20)
Author: Edward J. Brunner
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Excellent collection
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-18
This is a wonderful collection of poems from an era when the world was at war--though not fighting everywhere--in many ways not dissimilar to our own era, when many supposed allies are in truth enemies.

The poems are unique, adept and cunningly capture the essence of an era at the same time more frightening and simpler than our own. People knew, then, that there were things of which they should be terrified, and that crystal understanding registers in each of these poems.

What is most terrifying today is that people are not sufficiently frightened, but live in a fantasy land, dreaming of peace while mass warfare against the West is planned everywhere.

Strangely enough, one finds hope in these poems.

Important perspectives on great cold war poets
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-09
A great book, eagerly anticipated by lovers of the serious poets of the era. Especially appreciated are the critiques and commentary of the works of the late Hyam Plutzik, whose major work, Horatio, has been called brilliant by many reviewers and readers, over the last forty years, and who still has a following among serious students of poetry.

Brunner's introduction provides an important historical framework for his discourse. It reminds one of the push-pull between mass culture and classical ideals that existed in post war society, and the way this reality fueled the work of serious poets and artists at the time.

Hats off to Dr. Brunner for taking the time and care to provide a critical and historical perspective of poets who should be more widely known that the Beats, but aren't.

The issue is how to get a book like this to a wider audience.

Illinois
Come Home, Love Dad
Published in Paperback by Bernard Street Books (2000-11-01)
Author: Shelly Reuben
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COME HOME, LOVE DAD smiles with love
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-24
Not all families are disfunctional. In fact, Shelly Reuben proves this beyond a shadow of a doubt. What a wonderful portrait of a loving father as told through her eyes and through his own letters. Reuben paints a picture in words that creates images of a real father. One who lives in a houseful of love, surrounded by his five children, tolerant and loving wife, friends and crazy relatives. One readily sees why Reuben has selected words as her vocation. Her father created, plagerized, quoted and paraphrased the thought provoking guidence and evocative sentiments with which he communicated to his offspring. Written on stationary, or on the back of landlord-tenant court documents, these jewels of creative writing tell of a romantic soul. He is clearly adored, not for his incredible inventions or tenacity regarding real estate investments, but for his character, strength, concern and consideration. Those of us who can relate have surely had fathers of similar noble quality. Those who cannot fathom the beautiful relationships between father and child have missed an incredible experience. Reach back into childhood, read this and enjoy the experience.

Come Home, Love Dad review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-30
If you want to read something that makes you feel good about life, read Shelly Reuben's book, Come Home Love Dad. With so many books flooding the market about serial killers and political espionage it's a pleasure to read something about an actual person that really touches you. Miss Reuben expertly uses narration as well as actual letters written by her father to gradually reveal his personality to the reader. I came to know a man who was an inventor, a landlord, and a salesman, but first and foremost - a father.

Illinois
The Compass: The Improvisational Theatre that Revolutionized American Comedy (Centennial Publications of The University of Chicago Press)
Published in Paperback by University Of Chicago Press (1991-11-01)
Author: Janet Coleman
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Excellent, informative, fascinating
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-28
This book is chock full of information about the "Beginning" of modern improv. It's an excellent story well told. It reminds me of a story I know about sheetrock.

YES you need this book, AND you are a fool not to get it.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-17
This book is pinnacle to your success as an improvisor. Understanding the evolution of improvisation as well as the tried and true tactics are mandatory to being a good performer. Please do not hesitate. You will never forgive yourself! Really! This is endorsed by really big improvisors. Also see "Truth in Comedy" by Del Close and Charna Halpern! Truth in Comedy is also a great book that will open your little "short-form" mind to a "long-form" world!

Illinois
Considerations of persistence and security in Choices, an object-oriented operating system (Tapestry technical report)
Published in Unknown Binding by Dept. of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1991)
Author: Roy Harold Campbell
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Average review score:

The World Reduced to Grass and Insects
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-11
This book attempts to conceptualize the idea of a full scale nuclear exchange between the cold war superpowers, since the idea itself is now "unthinkable". To explore this lack of understanding the author first explains in detail the immediate and long lasting effects of full scale nuclear war. Then, he comments on the situation, making a bid for sanity in an insane situation. The author believes that self-destruction and even planetary destruction "is not something that we will pose one day in the future... it is here now" (182). Schell believes that only a fundamental change in the belief system of the people of the entire planet can erase the danger currently hanging over the world; no amount of arms limitation or reduction will end the threat of total annihilation.

Required Reading -- for Anyone
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-11
Schell takes the most compelling subject imaginable -- the very real possiblity of nuclear annihilation -- and puts it into gripping, passionate prose. Anyone with a concern for the human race should read Schell's account of the effect of nuclear weapons on nature and civilization. And anyone afraid of being humbled or disturbed needs Schell's reality check all the more.

Illinois
Creating Historical Drama: A Guide for Communities, Theatre Groups, and Playwrights
Published in Hardcover by Southern Illinois University Press (2005-08-01)
Authors: Christian H. Moe, Scott J. Parker, George McCalmon, and Romulus Linney
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An invaluable tool for aspiring playwrights seeking to capture the nuances of history upon the stage
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-13
Now in an updated second edition, Creating Historical Drama: A Guide for Communities, Theatre Groups, and Playwrights is a straightforward manual for transforming events and figures from American history into masterful dramas. Written by three former directors, producers, writers, and teachers of theatre, Creating Historical Drama covers features of biographical, pageant, and epic drama, how to lead and organize a theatrical group, how to energize community resources and evaluate a production site, and much more. An in-depth guide offering sample script excerpts, black-and-white illustrations, and a wealth of expert detail, Creating Historical Drama is an excellent reference and resource for community and professional performance groups, and an invaluable tool for aspiring playwrights seeking to capture the nuances of history upon the stage.

comprehensive guide for writing, producing, promoting, etc., historical dramas
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-27
The authors with both academic and working experience in theater production relate general guidance and practical considerations for evaluating resources, organizing activities, and engaging in relevant, skilled, coordinated actions for a community theater group to stage a successful historical drama. The crucial challenge of finding and developing talented actors is not overlooked either. Success for such a community production is measured by standards of artistic performance, community service, and management responsibility. Historical dramas are particularly appealing to community theater groups because of the wide freedom they allow in dealing with different historical times, the range of important and often colorful characters, and recurring issues in human affairs. Historical plays can also have a high education value for a local population when local historical characters, scenes, and topics are portrayed. All dimensions of this type of drama particularly suited to community theaters are dealt with, from developing an idea and perspective, writing a script, staging, and engaging with the larger community. This second edition is an abridged revision of the first edition put out in 1965.

Illinois
Dare the School Build a New Social Order? (Arcturus Paperbacks; AB 143)
Published in Paperback by Southern Illinois University (1978-11-01)
Author: George S. Counts
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Wonderful, a must read for teachers
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-06
I found this book to be inspiring. While I am mired in the realities of grad studies in education--lesson plans, theory, pedagogy, etc.--this book helped remind me of why I wanted to pursue teaching in the first place. Counts calls for teachers to become leaders, not just in their schools or local communities, but as an effective, powerful political force. We are the ones in the trenches, aren't we the experts on education in America? Shouldn't we know how to fix it? Shouldn't we try?

The book is a bit dated--I couldn't help by shake my head in disgust when I read Counts ideas of what a teacher's union could and should do and compared it to my limited experience with those organizations. He presents an idealized movement where social problems that are the root of educational problems are addressed/eliminated, where teachers are respected leaders and seen as the professionals they are, and where our schools, in the end, effectively serve more students than they currently do.

Teacher's Role in the "Social Order"
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-12
Count's brief book on the role of teachers in the shaping of society's values is a must read for future teachers and anyone interested in the social foundations of education. By positing that teacher should champion classroom discourse that focuses on issues of democratic living, he places the emphasis of the curriculum where it should be - issues of social justice. Likewise the implementation of this ethically conscious curriculum is left in the hands of those who, if empowered, could have the greatest impact concerning issues of equity in American society - classroom teachers. The relevance of Count's criticism of racism, rote education and of the dangers of unchecked capitalism are such that this work could have just as easily been written in our present.

Illinois
Dark Alphabet (Crab Orchard Series in Poetry)
Published in Paperback by Southern Illinois University Press (2006-08-25)
Author: Jennifer Maier
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Average review score:

The Music of Words
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-14
Let's cut through the usual academic hoo-ha and highfalutin, lit-crit code-talking. This collection, Maier's first, is just plain gorgeous. Packed with wit, burning with passion, personal as a late-night conversation, these elegantly crafted, far-ranging, accessible poems will make you laugh, ponder, catch your breath,and yes--cry, more than once (mind, this is an Alaskan ex-hunting guide talking). There's some sort of alchemy at work in Maier's poetic voice, something you can't quite put your finger on. But if you read these poems aloud, you'll hear it for yourself: the music of words, each one a perfectly tuned wind chime, ringing in the dusk.

Dark Alphabet by Jennifer Maier
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-23
Jennifer Maier is hilarious. The imagination at work behind the poetry in her first collection, Dark Alphabet, is voracious and supple. It expands the world from the tiniest points into a universe bright and dark with meaning. It yields sly-eyed, delightful images that burn in the mind long after the poem is gone. And, as a bonus, her imagination tickles and teases with the agility of a truly consummate poet. On moving on from an old love: "Will April lay down her xylophone / and pick up the cello? / Or December go gravely in his mourning coat / without his white gloves, his diamond tiara?" And the poet's answer to a friend who asks why she is not a novelist: "although / I have combed the Gulf Coast towns / of my childhood, seeking the snowy egrets / of great short fiction, it is only the poetry birds / who land on me." Maier possesses the sort of wit that steals the familiar object out from under your nose, rendering it to you again, either inside out or in a different color, say, chartreuse. It's then, with a jolt of recognition, that you see what has been overlooked: the lake as a "murmuring woman" under the moon, like the woman oppressed by the memory of her drowned son but kept from falling through the earth by the atoms that "push back / bound in their electric need." Or the earnestness of the young undergraduate asking her professor if she believes in soul mates, her "eyes two sharpened spades / turning the loam of her future." These poems move nimbly between the commonplace and the resonant, fired by the poet's deep reverence for language and a fascination with the way our minds enter our own experience and that of others, often through unexpected doors: a hymn to a saint, a cherry cordial given to a child by a black-sheep uncle, the thread of a cashmere sweater winding through the lives of generations of women. Compassion, stripped of sentimentality, moves behind each word, giving flight to Maier's poetry birds that form "a dark alphabet against the sky."

Illinois
Dark Journey: Black Mississippians in the Age of Jim Crow
Published in Hardcover by University of Illinois Press (1984-03-01)
Author: Neil R. McMillen
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Average review score:

The shameful past of Mississippi
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-25
Neil McMillen gives us a look at the real effects of Jim Crow in Dark Journey, the story of white supremacy in Mississippi in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. McMillen explores this society of racial apartheid from the vantage point of the oppressor and the oppressed, for as he states in his preface, "until historians adequately explored the exterior forces that operated on the black community there could be no truly adequate histories of the interior life of the people within that community." He includes many descriptions of Mississippi during this "race-haunted" time from blacks themselves, which adds significantly to the texture of McMillen's "bottom up" depiction of how truly repressive the white regime was. What quickly emerges from this straightforward study is a society dominated without question by whites, one in which whites sought to re-establish race relations as they existed prior to the Civil War. They largely succeeded.

What strikes the reader forcefully from the beginning of McMillen's book is how insidiously prevalent the system known as Jim Crow was in Mississippi, and how it affected every aspect of black life. Jim Crow did not mean that blacks were simply in effect denied the right to vote and had limited economic opportunities, though to be sure both of these hurdles existed. White supremacy, as McMillen deftly points out, meant far more than denied voting rights and low-rung jobs. It meant (either de facto or de jury) poor or no high schools, lynchings, outrageous jury verdicts and trials, harassment for succeeding in traditionally white professions, no libraries, etc. The sheer scope and overriding predominance of white supremacy in Mississippi is shocking, especially since whites really did not seek to hide it from prying Northerners. White supremacy transcended class lines for the most part, McMillen show us, and even acted as a greater force upon whites than economic self-interest. For example, every white owner of a store, restaurant, garage, theatre, etc., who refused to serve blacks was also losing the money blacks would have paid them.

McMillen concludes that from the 1890s to the middle of the 20th century very few blacks overcame the high political and economic barriers placed in their way by a Mississippi society bent on oppressing them. Blacks in that state, however, managed to create and maintain their own separate political, religious, educational and social institutions despite the odds against them. Those who could, moved away from Mississippi, much like the oppressed and degraded Irish left their native island to escape the shackles of British economic and sectarian control. Truly, Mississippi's society was born of hatred of blacks by whites, a situation not totally eradicated by the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s.

Thorough yet an easy read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-25
Dr. McMillen provides a rare insight into the world of Black Missippians during the 1920s, '30s & 40's. His writing style is a lovely complement to his ingenious insights. He is truly one of our greatest scholars & non-fiction writers. This book is a must-read for anyone even mildy interested in African-American or general Southern history. Black or White this book will help you understand this period in our history. I can't wait for his sequel.

Illinois
Days on the Family Farm: From the Golden Age through the Great Depression
Published in Hardcover by Univ Of Minnesota Press (2007-09-10)
Author: Carrie A. Meyer
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The best insight into living on a farm
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-14
I was fortunate to hear Carrie Meyer give a presentation on this book and immediately bought it. I am now buying extra copies for family members who live on farms in Illinois and Iowa. I grew up on a farm in Central Illinois (roughly 100 miles of the family farm Carrie describes) in the late 1930s. This book has the daily diary from 1900 to 1944. It also has income and expense ledgers for everything they bought and sold. It tells about living on the farm in good and difficult times. Carrie's family is still living on the farm. This is the best book I have seen about life on a farm and how technology changed how farming was done. It is a must read.

An engaging and articulate read and a highly recommended addition
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-03
"Days On The Family Farm: From The Golden Age Through The Great Depression" by Carrie A. Meyer (who grew up on an Illinois farm and went on to teach economics at George Mason University) is a memoir based history of life on a Midwestern farm from the beginning of the twentieth century to World War II as recorded in a daily chronicle kept by farm wife May Lyford Davis. The result is an entertaining and informative 'window into time' through which is revealed an American yesteryear when May and her husband Elmo experienced life on a farm through two decades of prosperity, the bleak years of the Great Depression, and the impact of two World Wars upon their Midwestern farming community of friends and neighbors. Articulate, detailed, personable, "Days On The Family Farm" is the story of a farmer's life marked by description of what was bought and sold, the evolution of farming practices and technologies from horse drawn plows to tractors, what was planted and harvested, temperatures and rainfall, births an deaths, even the impact of wind on the work of farming. Simply stated, "Days On The Family Farm" is an engaging and articulate read and a highly recommended addition to any personal or community library collection.

Illinois
Democracy and Slavery in Frontier Illinois: The Bottomland Republic
Published in Hardcover by Northern Illinois University Press (2000-08)
Author: James Simeone
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A harbinger of the Civil War
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-07

James Simeone's fine history describes events, issues, and key people involved in whether to call a constitutional convention in Illinois in 1824. The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 prohibited slavery and the first Illinois Constitution (1818) did not alter the law. By 1824 the "white folks", as the poor upland southerners called themselves, wanted to make Illinois a slave state. The call for a convention was defeated by a vote of 6,640 to 4,972 on on August 2, 1824. The "big folks" saved Illinois for the Union.

The Missouri Compromise of 1820 allowed Missouri to become a slave state, and "white folks" believed they could compete economically with Missouri only by importing slaves into the fertile bottomlands in the southern part of Illinois. Professor Simeone argues that the "white folks" wanted slavery at least short term. They needed slaves "to ease the present labor shortage, to protect the commonalty, to enhance the status of the poor whites and, most essentially, to do the extremely difficult work of clearing the bottomlands to make agriculture possible."

The battle was bloody. 13 persons of a total population of 55,000 were killed during the period. "As conventionist battled non-conventionist, mobs, murders, and effigy burning became common occurrences and the sense of foreboding spread. Under these crisis conditions, the state's new politics struggled to get organized."

Simeone discusses many of the people involved in the battle and also discusses the role that religion and preachers played. Milk-and-cider Arminians (salvation by works) and Cumberland, Methodist and Presbyterian clergy were opposed to the Convention. Most whole-hog Calvinists (salvation by grace) and the largest religious group, the Regular Baptists, favored the Convention. Baptists hymns "signal(ed] God's special interest in the poor white folks."

Simeone's basic theme is that "an egalitarian social revolution motivated the reorganization of Illinois politics." Settlers came to Illinois for a better life and to escape the social strictures in the East. "White folks were concerned only with the rights and status of one class, race, and gender: poor white males."

After the defeat of the Convention, Simeone traces the development of the Democrat and the Whig parties brought about by "the clash of cultural styles and the redefinition of economic interests." He argues that in Illinois "the cultural division between Democrats and Whigs [was symbolized by the] dispute between the white folks and the big folks over the Convention."

The history of this battle is complex, with many players and themes, but Professor Simeone makes the story come alive, a harbinger of the Civil War and a much bigger stage.

Robert C. Ross 2008

A welcome contribution to 19th century American history
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-19
It was during the 1820s that Illinois experienced one of the earliest and most important battles between the slavery and anti-slavery forces that unleashed riots, arson, and mob violence across the state -- and that would eventually culminate in the American Civil War. James Simeone's supports his contention that the contest over slavery in Illinois prefigured the course of national politics that would lead to four racking years of war with meticulous and scholarly research, revealing and documenting the complexity of the slave problem in fragile American republic. In attempting to bring slavery to a free state, white migrants from southern states hoped to create a "Bottomland Republic" of free and equal white yeoman farmers who could own slaves on the basis of popular sovereignty. Abolitionists allied themselves with the governing class of "aristocrats" against the upstart, pro-slavery migrants in a struggle that would alter the state's political culture and foreshadow the Democratic-Whig cleavage in antebellum politics. Democracy And Slavery In Frontier Illinois: The Bottomland Republic is an impressive and very welcome contribution to 19th century American history in general, and the neophyte struggles between pro- and anti-slavery forces on the Midwestern frontier in particular.


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