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

Pennsylvania
Conneaut Lake Park (PA) (Images of America)
Published in Paperback by Arcadia Publishing (2005-06-20)
Author: Michael E. Costello
List price: $19.99
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Average review score:

Large selection of photos
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-30
Anyone who visited Conneaut Lake Park in the late 60's or thru the Mid 70's such as myself will enjoy the large selection of photos, that tell the tale of this park from its early inception up to the present day. As the years went by I often thought of this Park and wondered if it even still existed. I was suprised to learn it was open many years, and yet sad to see some of the changes that took place, but ultimately gratefull, that it was still there. Many wonderfull childhood memories of this park. This book covers all from top to bottom, and I reccomend it for anyone who ever visited this unique and wonderfull park

Can't put this thing down!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-01
Literally, I can't put the book down. I was using heavy duty glue earlier to mend my coffee table and I guess I had some left on my hand. I can't put the book down w/out ripping off its back cover, so I decided to read it. It's pretty good! I think I'll actually go back to Conneaut Lake and check it out again some time. Sure, brings back some memories. Now, I'm hungry for cotton candy...

CONNEAUT LAKE PARK
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-11
I really enjoyed this book because it brings back a lot of happy memories from my childhood. Looking at the pictures from the early 1970's really brought a smile to my face. I'd forgotten how much I enjoyed and appreciated Conneaut Lake Park.

Pennsylvania
Cook Forest: An Island in Time
Published in Hardcover by Falcon Pr Pub Co (1997-04)
Author: Anthony E. Cook
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Average review score:

Nostalgia
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-03
Thoroughly enjoyed the gorgeous photography of my childhood haunts- I went to grammar school in the Cook Forest area and not long ago when a friend was planning to visit for the first time I handed her this book (I work in a library) as a preview-she was hooked. Mr. Cook has captured all the untouched magic of Pennsylvania forests and packaged it up so we can all carry about a bit of solitude in our busy lives.

Surprisingly Good
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-06
You'd never guess from reading this bookthat Anthony Cook was not a professional author or photographer. As a long time visitor to the cook forest, I can testify that the author has beautifully captured the spirit and history of these magnificent woods.

This book made me plan a trip there!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-17
This beautiful book of photographs is begun with a fascinating description of the forest's history. I didn't realize that Pennsylvania had such a dramatic history involving the early timber industry and later with conservationists. This book quickly makes you realize how lucky we are to have old-growth forests in America.

Pennsylvania
Crisis In Bethlehem
Published in Paperback by University of Pittsburgh Press (1994-08-16)
Author: John Strohmeyer
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Excellent book on the downward spiral of a once mighty company
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-18
I worked for Bethlehem Steel during the latter time period that this book covers and I knew some of the players Strohmeyer mentioned. No one could have better described the times and circumstances that brought down this mammoth company as well this book did. Unfortunately, Strohmeyer died before the bitter end of Bethlehem Steel and so was not able to chronicle it's dying moments. At 99 years old, Bethlehem ceased to exist on December 31, 2003. The company's plants and other assets were either donated to a historical society or purchased at pennnies on the dollar by International Steel Group, a newly formed steel company which successfully revived several bankrupt steel companies and merged them together into a cohesive business. International Steel Group was subsequently purchased by Mittal Steel of the Netherlands and designated Mittal Steel USA. The old Bethlehem plants continue to operate under the new owner. This book is a fascinating, easy to read chronicle of corporate blundering so profound that one wonders how the company lasted for nearly a century. Sadly, even in its last days, Bethlehem managers simply couldn't fathom the drastic changes that were needed to save the company.

A Sad Story... and a personal one.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-09
Bethlehem Steel is a huge part of my family history. My mother, father and both of their fathers all were employed for many years by this once-great company. Complacency seems too mild a word for what ailed this company. This book documents the fall of Bethlehem Steel [inventor of the H-beam... predecessor to the I-beam necessary for many of the tall buildings and skyscrapers we have today]. I really like this book but I am probably biased as I grew up in Baltimore, MD and Bethelehem, PA. Billy Joel even wrote a song about the influence of this company [not a pretty picture] in his song "Allentown". There's a lot of history here and a lot of explanation for why I had to leave all my childhood friends behind when the company started falling apart.

A Must-Read for US Industries - Now We Need an Epilogue
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-29
This was a fascinating page-turner, written by someone who was intimately familiar with Bethlehem Steel because he lived in its home town for decades, serving as the editor of the local paper. One of the best non-fiction (I almost didn't qualify this statement with that word) books I've read in a long time. Now that The Steel is gone forever, I'd love to be able to persuade Mr. Strohmeyer to write a companion volume to this one telling us just how the end came, in the same detailed analytic manner. We might be able to learn from others' mistakes. The failure of this once great company is a tragedy and is a sad example of what happens when American labor, management, and government all become too arrogant and complacent. Bye-bye profits. Bye-bye jobs. What's next? Bye-bye national defense? If steel was The Basic Industry, then everyone working in industrial America needs to read this book. Sooner or later, you'll probably deal with some of the issues raised here.

Pennsylvania
The Culture of Power in Serbia: Nationalism and the Destruction of Alternatives (Post-Communist Cultural Studies.)
Published in Hardcover by Pennsylvania State University Press (1999-11)
Author: Eric D. Gordy
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Universally significant - not just a book about Serbia
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-30
Gordy identifies the methods by which the Milosevic regime, which obviously provided few benefits to its people, nonetheless maintained its power. Gordy identifies these methods as the "destruction of alternatives-" the removal of alternative political ideas, or of cultural institutions, such as popular music, that would enable individuals to unite in thought in a manner distinct from, and therefore threatening to, the regime.

This is indeed quite valuable to students of Yugoslavia or Eastern Europe; its broader value, however, is its contribution to the larger issues of power studied by sociologists and political scientists. How is power maintained? We frequently assume that individuals will revolt if conditions are so bad they have nothing to lose. Gordy documents the ability of the powerful to actually take away this option. Most mechanisms, such as cencorship, make revolt more difficult, raising the pain level people will tolerate; however, by keeping the more politically savvy urbanites near starvation, the regime actually compromised their very ability to express dissent.

Gordy provides an academic and, to the degree it is possible in social science, empirical explanation of power that is profoundly disturbing; sometimes it may be impossible to displace the powerful. True, outside forces crippled the regime; but what does this suggest about the American line that local groups should revolt to demonstrate support for democracy and earn military support? Don't throw it out yet, but Gordy presents an important argument. It also helps explain the success of earlier brutal regimes; Haile Selassie used similar techniques far more adeptly, and therefore more brutally, in Ethiopia. This book is both an insightful analysis of the Serbian regime's tactics and a significant study of the nature of power.

Turbo Folk and the Cut-Out Bin of History
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-11
Struggling to understand how Slobodan Milosevic managed to tighten his grip on power in Serbia despite a disasterous decade of war and economic decline? Or would you just like to know why authoritarian regimes produce such terrible pop music? Eric Gordy's "Culture of Power in Serbia: Nationalism and the Destruction of Alternatives" is a good place to start for both questions. Though written before the war in Kosovo and Milosevic's subsequent fall from power, the book provides a useful framework for understanding both the durability of his regime and the fragility of its popular support. Prof. Gordy argues that Milosevic maintained power not through any skill in governing (the record on that score is pretty clear), but by systematically dismantling any alternatives that Serbian civil society could muster. As one would expect, Gordy covers in some detail Milosevic's attempts to co-opt, stifle and crush rival political parties and media organizations. What is unique about this book is the long chapter devoted to the underground music scene in Belgrade. The regime rightly perceived a threat to its political as well as cultural dominance, and rallied its forces behind a smarmy concoction dubbed "Turbo Folk".... This musical atrocity does not, of course, compare to those committed in Bosnia and Kosovo, but it is a chilling read nonetheless. Gordy clearly brings a mastery of Serbo-Croatian literary and musical idiom to this section. One wishes only that the book were accompanied by a CD. Though written from a sociological perspective, this book is full of lively if understated prose, and offers much to engage the non-specialist and general reader.

Top-notch research and writing
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-16
Gordy's basic premise is that the rather unpopular, corrupt and war-mongering regime controlled by Slobodan Milosevic in Serbia during the 1990s retained its hold on power by eliminating any meaningful alternatives to itself. He provides a very detailed account of how this was done in the fields of culture, politics, the media and the economy. Since the book was written and published in 1999, when Milosevic was still in power in Serbia, the basic question posed by the study, i.e. how does he manage to stay in power, should be replaced with how did he manage to stay in power so long? Otherwise, this is a vitally important study, as the matters Gordy covers here illuminate many aspects of political culture in Serbia during the 1990s - and help readers understand the country's current political malaise as well. Despite the many changes that have occurred since Milosevic's fall from power, the legacy of the `destruction of alternatives' he helped institute will continue to dog Serbian society for years to come (and, looking over the fence from Croatia, I have to add: just as the legacy of Franjo Tudjman still haunts and troubles Croatian society today and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future).

Pennsylvania
Disco Divas: Women and Popular Culture in the 1970s
Published in Paperback by University of Pennsylvania Press (2003-01-13)
Author:
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Average review score:

Great book for women's studies
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-14
My women's studies teacher assigned this book, and I loved it. I had no idea that there feminist ideas behind shows like Charlie's Angels. I would definitely recommend this book to anyone who likes to read about pop culture.

Examines the 1970s as an era of great social change
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-12
Compiled, written and edited by Sherrie A. Inness, Disco Divas: Women And Popular Culture In The 1970s cogently examines the 1970s as an era of great social change, especially for women. Illustrating the reverberations of cultural shifts in the 60's, the changing images of women in popular culture and mass media, and the changes that continue to evolve as those generations of women grew older, Disco Divas is a timely and insightful contribution to Women's Studies reading lists and American Popular Culture Studies reference collections.

Rethinking what it meant to be female in the 1970s
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-22
DISCO DIVAS, edited by Sherri Inness, is an excellent anthology of essays from a variety of popular culture critics writing about the much-ignored decade of the 1970s and the variety of ways the evolving definition of what is female was influenced by advertising, television, movies, and even recipes.

Of particular interest to me were two chapters: one on the relevance of CHARLIE'S ANGELS (the in-depth discussion by Whitney Womack of how the signified transcended Aaron Spelling's supericial signs is a revelation that takes all the fluff out of a Farrah Fawcett haircut) and the other on changing female images on American soap operas (the depth with which female characters were written, moving from the home and bedroom to the office and boardroom, gives contemporary soap watchers a very good idea why daytime (and for that matter, nighttime) soap operas have declined both in number and viewers; Thomas Petitjean, who wrote this chapter, has a good handle on why the 1970s were indeed the golden years of the American soap opera).

This book is not simply for scholars or readers of feminist studies; it's written with style and verve that make it interesting reading for the non-scholar who simply loved the 1970s or grew up in the period and wants to see just how popular culture shaped the new millenium.

Pennsylvania
Enguerran De Marigny and the Church of Notre-Dame at Ecouis: Art and Patronage in the Reign of Philip the Fair
Published in Hardcover by Pennsylvania State University Press (1994-09)
Author: Dorothy Gillerman
List price: $66.00
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Average review score:

Dorothy Gillerman has written extraordinary book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-26
I would like to thank Mrs Gillerman for the beautiful illustrated book on my Great Grandfather Enguerran de Marigny!Ialways knew about my Grandfather 11th century,I didn't know he had the Church of Notre-Dame at Ecouis built.I am the Contessa Anna Maria de Marigny,my brother is the Marquis,as the oldest son my Father became the Marquis Louuis Engurran de Marigny,our parents passed away many years ago my brother now is theMarquis!Iam doing a genealogy for my children and grandchildren seven to be exact!Through Dorothy I have been able to put a lot of pieces of my ancestors together!Iam now in the process of finding my Granfathers biography written by Jean Favier 1963 the book no is {call 901.6F272}Since Dorothys book I've heard from many profossors who talk about what a beautify written book it is !.Again the illustrations of the tomb of my Granfather,Iam trying to find information on my GreatGrandmother"Ailps de Mons".Also there is another book written before Jean Favier's written by Louis Regnier iam trying to find one any that aren't in french.I want to thank Mrs Gillerman for bringing alot of joy to me which well go on to my childrenand grandchildren.Iam trying to find info.on one of my aunts again11th century Ide she marriedGuiilaume de Tancarville,also ancestors from Bayeux,Chatillon-sur-Marne,doing a genealogy is so time consuming and help {at no Cost} would be appreciated.Again my thanks to Mrs Gillerman for her wonderful book beacuse of the book i think i have become part of my computer.I will be in Rouen in May I can't wait hopefully I'll find family in Normandy,Paris .

Sincerely Yours, Anna Maria Contessa de Marigny

have read the book on Notre-Dame at Ecouis! My Grandfather and his brother Jean who was "Archbishop of Sens" are intombed in the chior of Notre-Dame at Ecouis now and forever!

Dorothy Gillerman has written extraordinary book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-26
I would like to thank Mrs Gillerman for the beautiful illustrated book on my Great Grandfather Enguerran de Marigny!Ialways knew about my Grandfather 11th century,I didn't know he had the Church of Notre-Dame at Ecouis built.I am the Contessa Anna Maria de Marigny,my brother is the Marquis,as the oldest son my Father became the Marquis Louuis Engurran de Marigny,our parents passed away many years ago my brother now is theMarquis!Iam doing a genealogy for my children and grandchildren seven to be exact!Through Dorothy I have been able to put a lot of pieces of my ancestors together!Iam now in the process of finding my Granfathers biography written by Jean Favier 1963 the book no is {call 901.6F272}Since Dorothys book I've heard from many profossors who talk about what a beautify written book it is !.Again the illustrations of the tomb of my Granfather,Iam trying to find information on my GreatGrandmother"Ailps de Mons".Also there is another book written before Jean Favier's written by Louis Regnier iam trying to find one any that aren't in french.I want to thank Mrs Gillerman for bringing alot of joy to me which well go on to my childrenand grandchildren.Iam trying to find info.on one of my aunts again11th century Ide she marriedGuiilaume de Tancarville,also ancestors from Bayeux,Chatillon-sur-Marne,doing a genealogy is so time consuming and help {at no Cost} would be appreciated.Again my thanks to Mrs Gillerman for her wonderful book beacuse of the book i think i have become part of my computer.I will be in Rouen in May I can't wait hopefully I'll find family in Normandy,Paris .

Sincerely Yours, Anna Maria Contessa de Marigny

have read the book on Notre-Dame at Ecouis! My Grandfather and his brother Jean who was "Archbishop of Sens" are intombed in the chior of Notre-Dame at Ecouis now and forever!

Dorothy Gillerman has written extraordinary book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-26
I would like to thank Mrs Gillerman for the beautiful illustrated book on my Great Grandfather Enguerran de Marigny!Ialways knew about my Grandfather 11th century,I didn't know he had the Church of Notre-Dame at Ecouis built.I am the Contessa Anna Maria de Marigny,my brother is the Marquis,as the oldest son my Father became the Marquis Louuis Engurran de Marigny,our parents passed away many years ago my brother now is theMarquis!Iam doing a genealogy for my children and grandchildren seven to be exact!Through Dorothy I have been able to put a lot of pieces of my ancestors together!Iam now in the process of finding my Granfathers biography written by Jean Favier 1963 the book no is {call 901.6F272}Since Dorothys book I've heard from many profossors who talk about what a beautify written book it is !.Again the illustrations of the tomb of my Granfather,Iam trying to find information on my GreatGrandmother"Ailps de Mons".Also there is another book written before Jean Favier's written by Louis Regnier iam trying to find one any that aren't in french.I want to thank Mrs Gillerman for bringing alot of joy to me which well go on to my childrenand grandchildren.Iam trying to find info.on one of my aunts again11th century Ide she marriedGuiilaume de Tancarville,also ancestors from Bayeux,Chatillon-sur-Marne,doing a genealogy is so time consuming and help {at no Cost} would be appreciated.Again my thanks to Mrs Gillerman for her wonderful book beacuse of the book i think i have become part of my computer.I will be in Rouen in May I can't wait hopefully I'll find family in Normandy,Paris .

Sincerely Yours, Anna Maria Contessa de Marigny

have read the book on Notre-Dame at Ecouis! My Grandfather and his brother Jean who was "Archbishop of Sens" are intombed in the chior of Notre-Dame at Ecouis now and forever!

Pennsylvania
The Female Circumcision Controversy: An Anthropological Perspective
Published in Paperback by University of Pennsylvania Press (2000-12)
Author: Ellen Gruenbaum
List price: $27.50
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Average review score:

FGM from the scientific point of view
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-09
An anthropological viewpoint is vital to understanding FGM or female circumcision. Surprise, it isn't just an Islamic rite (some Christians in Africa adhere to this age old tradition) Surprise, it isn't mandated in the Koran. Surprise, strong village tradition makes it hard for parents to say no to the practice or even to marry off their daughters. Surprise, some women agree to have it done. It's important to have a researcher do the field work so that we can understand the origins, cultural background and practice of FGM for better understanding.

An excellent introduction to female circumcision
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-30
In "The Female Circumcision Controversy," Ellen Gruenbaum provides readers with a highly informative anthropological perspective on female circumcision that is not weighed down with anthropological jargon, making it highly accessible to the "average" reader. She takes on a cultural relativistic point of view, exploring female circumcision through the context of the different cultures in which it is practiced, highlighting how it can be affected by patriarchy, ritual, marriage, mortality, ethnicity, sexuality, and economic development. An important point that Gruenbaum stresses is that while female circumcision has been practiced by many cultural and ethnic groups, the practices themselves vary (i.e. what is removed in surgery, at what age circumcision occurs, etc.) and this point makes it hard to generalize and blame only one factor for female circumcision. She includes her experiences in the Sudan and at the end of the book discusses how female circumcision practices are changing and the how we in the international community can get involved.

Gruenbaum does not condone female circumcision but she believes that many anti-circumcision advocates have taken the wrong approach to fighting the harmful practice. She stresses the need for discussion (not one-sided lecturing) and the fact that other problems such as economic insecurity and education need to be addressed so women will not feel as compelled to continue female circumcision. While a lot needs to be done to ensure that women's rights are not infringed upon, Gruenbaum gives the reader hope by showing many cases of progress.

This book is a gem! It has also made me rethink some things that I thought were "normal" in my culture.

Anthropology
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-04
I had to read this book for an anthropology class in my freshman year at college. It's a real eye-opener. I had no idea before this book that FGM was practiced anywhere outside of Africa. The description of what can be done was enough to make me mildly uncomfortable (inserting a straw during the healing process to make an extremely small hole for urination and menstruation?) but I could not put the book down. I have a drastically different perspective of this practice now that I understand more of it's cultural significance, rather than seeing it as a cruelty carried out to keep women in a totally inferior state.

Pennsylvania
Field Surgeon at Gettysburg: A Memorial Account of the Medical Unit of the Thirty-Second Massachusetts Regiment
Published in Hardcover by Guild Press of Indiana (1993-10)
Author: Clyde B. Kernek
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Average review score:

Vivid, emotional story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-19
The book reads like a diary, but it's a fictionalized story of the real Civil War surgeon Zabdiel Boylston, and it would make anyone grateful for modern medicine. Amputation was pretty much the treatment for everything, and that he was burned in love a couple of times during his period as a combat surgeon puts a very human face on this story.

I got it at my local library; it was part of a display in advance of the 200th anniversary of Lincoln's birth.

Excellent Book Written by a Real Trauma Surgeon
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-25
I enjoyed this book tremendously. The research and realism was amazing. I was fortunate to see the author lecture on the subject in Indiana. Dressed in the full civil war soldier uniform I thought the author to be an enthusiastic Civil War Buff. I was amazed to find out that the author was a modern day trauma surgeon whose interest in the civil war goes beyond the superficial, dry information one reads in text. His interest draws on real life experiences with bullet wounds and infections that he has treated in modern times.

Excellent novel written by one who should know.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-09
An excellent novel of a surgeon who signs up to serve in the Union army during the Civil War. Written by a modern surgeon, Kernek obviously had researched his predecessors well. It might be a bit detailed for the squeamish, but for those who want a good "feel" for what a surgeon went through during the Civil War, I highly recommend it. It is a relatively short read, and the story line carries one right on through. This book belongs in every Civil War buff's collection, because it tells about an often overlooked part of the war and tells it very well. At this price, one can't afford not to buy it!

Pennsylvania
Fighting for Life
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Nelson (1996-05-21)
Author: Robert P. Casey
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Average review score:

Well Worth the Wait.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-04
Pennsylvanians had to wait 20 years for Governor Casey to come to office. On three separate occasions in the 1960s and 1970s, Bob Casey lost elections for the office of Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. On the third such occasion in 1976, many observers attributed the election result to voter confusion in which many Casey supporters cast their votes for another person named Robert P. Casey who was a candidate for Lt. Governor. In 1986, he made another run for Governor, this time as "The Real Bob Casey," and he won. In 1990, he was reelected, receiving 68 percent of the total vote. Shortly after his reelection, Casey learned that he was suffering from a rare, incurable disease that sometimes affects persons of Irish ancestry who live in the Appalachian region. Three years later, Casey underwent a heart/liver transplant that enabled him to finish his term in office and write this autobiography. He died in 2000.

This short (215 pages) book presents Bob Casey's vision of politics and government. Essentially, Casey believed that it is a function of government to help the weak and the oppressed in the community. Throughout the narrative, the Governor often mentions some segment of the population and then briefly describes the policies of his administration that provided that segment of society with assistance and support, be it in education, healthcare, job training, child support etcetera.

Especially important to Casey was the subject of abortion, which "excludes an entire class of fellow human beings from our care and protection." In Casey's words, "Who speaks for the child?" When Casey sought to "speak for the child" at the 1992 Democratic Convention the convention managers refused to let him speak, all the while putting pro-abortion speakers on the program. Despite that public insult, Casey chose to stay with his Democratic Party and try to change its present posture from within. The book sets out Casey's thoughts on that subject and also explains his evolving view on the relationship between the Supreme Court of the United States and the chief executive of a sovereign state with respect to interpretation of the Constitution.

Unlike most autobiographies, this one is not written in a sequential format. Instead, the heart/liver transplant is the main framework, spread throughout the book from beginning to end. From that main story, the book moves back and forth in time to cover Casey's family life, his early years in Scranton, his college years at Holy Cross, his law school years at George Washington, his early law practice and his political career. It is an unusual approach to an autobiography - but it works.

It is an excellent book.


A compelling, life-affirming story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-01
Governor Casey writes eloquently about his opposition to the violence of abortion, while trying to advance politically in a party that has wholeheartedly embraced unrestricted abortion on demand. His pro-life beliefs were only strengthened by his own life-threatening health challenges as he became even more convinced of the importance of protecting lives that others have concluded are not worth living (the weak, the disabled, the unwanted).

At the same time he makes the case for protecting and respecting the innocent unborn baby, he insists that society must have great concern and compassion for the young women who find themselves in the desperate position of having an unplanned pregnancy.

There are no easy answers to abortion, but Gov. Casey's prescription of love and compassion for BOTH mother and baby would certainly be a good beginning to a possible resolution to this tragedy.

Autobiography of a Governor, and of a Patient
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-26
"Fighting for Life" is a unique book of alternating stories connecting one person. One story is that of a man facing a fatal disease, undergoing and surviving a rare heart and liver transplant, and returning to productive life. The other is the story of a man who facing adversities reaching his goal of becoming Governor and, on his fourth attempt, is elected and serves two terms. Both stories are of the late Governor Robert P. Casey, and this book is his autobiography.

The one intermingled story is of Bob Casey's fight against Appalachian familial amyloidosis, a rare disease found only in a few people of Irish descent in Kentucky, West Virginia, Chicago, and then Pennsylvania. (Ironically, a similar disease would later prove fatal to both the Mayors of Pittsburgh and Erie.) It would be his Auditor General successor Catherine Baker Knoll who would get Bob Casey to read a book on transplants by Dr. Tom Starzl that would later lead Dr. Starzl to successfully perform this rare two organ transplant. This is a story of incredible medical work and a fighting patient who survived these procedures and not only would be only be return to work as Governor but continue to become a national leader on several issues.

The other story is that of Bob Casey, the State Senator, Auditor General, and then Governor. Bob Casey would arise from political death after losing three races for Governor. In his first race, he won the endorsement of the Democratic State Committee, failed to respond to his opponent's "man against the machine" campaign, and discovered too late the mistake in not answering the charges as that slogan helped defeat him. In his second race, he distanced himself from the political machines, only to discover the political machines such as that of Mayor Jim Tate's in Philadelphia, who then distanced themselves from Casey. In his third race, he was hampered by the inclusion of other Caseys running on the ballot which may have cost him some votes in the confusion.

Still, the name "Bob Casey" held some political magic, even if not initially for Robert P. Casey. Robert Casey, no related to the future Governor, was elected State Treasurer on the basis of having the same name. (Indeed, the Treasurer candidate avoided campaigning to allow the confusion over the two names to build.) Another non-relative named Robert Casey won the Democratic primary for Lt. Governor. Thus, when Robert P. ran for Governor the fourth time, he advertised himself as the "Real Bob Casey".

Bob Casey is to be credited with upgrading the office of Auditor General. Prior to Casey's tenure as Auditor General, it was mostly a lesser functioning row office usually held by a relatively inactive politician. Bob Casey turned the office into an aggressive auditor, not only of government finances, but of government functions. This not only provided a more powerful check on executive branch functions, but it also prepared Bob Casey to learn how to become a good Governor.

Finally, on his fourth try in 1986, Bob Casey hired Jim Carville, who had never managed a winning campaign, to be his campaign manager, believing that people who have tried hard without winning would work harder for victory. This proved to be the case as Casey finally won elected as Governor. Jim Carville went on to manage the successful Presidential campaign of Bill Clinton.

As Governor, Bob Casey writes that he is proud that he put "family formation" on a similar perspective as "capital formation". His Administration fought dead beat dads and made Pennsylvania the top state in child support collections. He fought for and won passage of laws making it tougher to get abortions. He stopped efforts at bringing legalized gambling to Pennsylvania. He created a program that eradicated water borne diseases that had plagued parts of Pennsylvania, providing us all with safe drinking water that today we all take for granted.

This book summarizes Bob Casey, the politician, and Bob Casey, the man struggling against a rare disease. This is a terrific autobiography that brings together Bob Casey, the person.

Pennsylvania
Folks in the Valley: A Pennsylvania Dutch ABC
Published in Hardcover by Bt Bound (1999-10)
Author: Jim Aylesworth
List price: $14.25

Average review score:

One of the BEST
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-11
My son still throws lines at me from this book from time to time! He is now 12 and remembers it well. We read it daily (sometimes more than once) for about 2 years between his ages of 3 and 5 and now, when we do the annual bookshelf cleaning, he still insists on leaving that one on the shelf! No, he doesn't pick it up to read anymore (boo hoo...they all have to grow up), but boy, on that bookshelf-clean-out-day, he likes to remember! Also, when someone brings a child to our home, its one of the first he chooses to read to him/her! This book is beautifully illustrated, reminds us of our hometown (Lancaster PA) and has a GREAT alphabet learning rhythym with this prose! I reccomend this book to parents with toddlers and to early readers!

A pleasant alphabetical trip through farm country.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-16
Better than the usual A-Z teaching tool in that it's a well-written piece of prose--how surprising. Lovely illustrations with an Amish theme. Will please adults as well as the young.

An understnading of the Dutch with use of the alphabet.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-12
I used the book with my students and they really enjoyed it. They learned about the Pennsylvania Dutch and their life style along with the alphabet. A new word, "row", was introduced and lead to a wonderful dictionary lesson.


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