North America Books


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North America Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

North America
Other Council Fires Were Here Before Ours: A Classic Native American Creation Story as Retold by a Seneca Elder, Twylah Nitsch, and Her Granddaughter, Jamie Sams
Published in Paperback by HarperOne (1991-09-27)
Authors: Jamie Sams and Twylah Nitsch
List price: $17.95
New price: $5.95
Used price: $0.98
Collectible price: $17.95

Average review score:

Other Council fires were here before ours
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
I love Jamie Sams style of writing, and she opened many doors that were closed lifetimes ago.
Other Council Fires Were Here Before Ours: A Classic Native American Creation Story as Retold by a Seneca Elder, Twylah Nitsch, and Her Granddaughter, Jamie Sams

Worth a look
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-12
Provides thoughtful insight into a much retold Native American story of previous yugas. Ought to be required reading for the future leaders of our world.

History Lesson
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-25
I came to this book due to my interest in Jamie Sams and Twylah Nitsch. For people who have questions about the First through the Fifth Worlds from reading other books by Jamie Sams, this book fills in the blanks. For those who have no knowledge of Sams and Nitsch, this book is so playful and delightfully written that it could be underestimated by the reader.

FASCINATING!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-04
This book is fascinating from cover to cover. Jamie Sams and her grandmother, Twylah, are master story-tellers. This book is a must-read for anyone interested in Native American beliefs! It is the Seneca version of creation and history, our relationship with Mother Earth, and events still to come! Thanks Jamie and Twylah!

GrandMother's Gift
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-11
As always when reading books by Jamie Samms or hearing the teachings of Twylah Nitsch, we find the gifts that we need too. The Medicine is always pure and healing.

North America
The Owl Who Was Afraid of the Dark
Published in Audio Cassette by Chivers North America (2004-10)
Author: Jill Tomlinson
List price: $9.95
Used price: $17.99

Average review score:

Magical
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-04
I was eight years old. I read the paperback edition of this book every night, cover to cover. The story of the effervescent Plop and the conquering of his fear of the dark is as enduring now as it was when it was first published over 30 years ago.

This version is abridged and illustrated from the one that saw me safely to dreamland as a child. No matter. The spirit is preserved and the illustrations are wonderful. Great for any kid with any phobia. A magical book.

Delighful but not "unabridged"
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-27
The CD in English IS abridged. We first discovered Plop on cassette, and it ran 1 hour. This CD runs 20 minutes. It remains a delightful, short bedtime story for my 6 year old who has it memorized, but it IS abridged. I still would love to locate a truly unabridged CD that has the detail of the cassette.

the best book ever!!!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-03
I totally loved this book when i was little and still do now (I'm nearly 21!). I've lost the tape so I'm looking to get another one so I can show my boyfriend how good it is too. i would highly recommend that every child should have a copy of this book.

A lark in the dark
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-14
Originally published in 1968, "The Owl Who Was Afraid of the Dark" is considered a classic in England. Now reissued with a whole new illustrator, we members of the United States finally get a chance to read this rather adorable tale. Though not a cutesy story in and of itself, illustrator Paul Howard has drawn a book that has perhaps set the standard for adorable barn owl tales everywhere.

Plop (an unfortuanate name, but whatcha gonna do?) is a small barn owl. Plop is also afraid of the dark. Though his parents attempt to inform him that there is nothing to be afraid of, he remains unconvinced. Finally, they tell him to ask various people and animals for information about the dark. From a boy the owl learns that the dark is exciting, with fireworks and such. From an astrologer he learns that the dark is wondrous, allowing us to see the many constellations in the sky. And so forth. In the end, Plop is convinced and is able to safely fly in the sky with his mother and father without fear.

If you'd like to read something to your little one that doesn't contain much in the way of tension or drama, this book's your ticket. Though Plop does partake in various escapades, none of these ever become dangerous. I was particularly interested in a section where he asks a black cat about the night. Considering that a cat would undoubtedly view a baby barn owl as a yummy snack, I was a bit amazed that nothing bad happened between the two. Nothing so much as the cat licking his chops or thinking to himself, "Boy could I go for a little fowl right now". Nuthin'. Which is fine. Illustrator Paul Howard has added pictures drawn with pastel pencils. The result is that Plop is the fuzziest, cutest, cuddliest little fluffball of an owl to ever flutter across the pages of a picture book. In addition to being a useful book for children that are afraid of the dark, it is also a good story for convincing children that owls are nothing, in and of themselves, to be afraid of. Just don't pair this story with Avi's "Poppy". All in all, this is a sweet little story with fuzzy-wuzzy pictures. Cuddly and adorable all at once, it is certain to be a child's favorite as the years go by.

The best childhood book
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-11
I am now 13 years old, and I still listen to this classic tape when I have nightmares at night. When I was little I used to listen to it every single night. I listened to it so much that I almost broke it. If you are a parent looking for a good childhood book for your child I highly recommend it, from firsthand experience of being a child. Thanks

North America
The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved
Published in Kindle Edition by Chelsea Green Publishing (1905-06-28)
Author: Sandor Ellix Katz
List price: $20.00
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Great Real Food Solidarity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
This book provides lots of good info on what's really going on in the food supply, as well as suggestions on getting good food.
It also made me feel better knowing that there are lots of other people who care about the quality of our food.

the best book about food I've read in 20 years, even though I don't agree with all of it
Helpful Votes: 35 out of 36 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-12
"What is for supper?" is a short question with a long history of many answers. "Why is it for supper?" is more recently and less frequently asked. One long answer is The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved, a fresh evaluation of how the other half of America eats, that is, the other half of one-percent.

Sandor Ellix Katz, author also of Wild Fermentations, examines our food choices, challenging us as would a moral philosopher, and inspiring us as might a romantic poet. But unlike poetry and philosophy, his texts are thoroughly researched and extensively footnoted. Scholarly without being stuffy, he ponders the social, political, ethical and environmental consequences of the foods we choose to eat, of the foods we choose not to eat, and of even our very acts of choosing. Food for thought about food.

Each chapter offers a wholesome essay that can be read independently of the others. Though inexpensive for a book of nearly 400 pages, its binding is especially durable. If separated physically from the whole, the leaves of each chapter stay bound together. This reviewer speaks from experience, having extracted entire chapters in this manner to distribute among friends.

Such portability is an appealing feature precisely because the topics are so diverse that few readers could possibly find the entire book relevant to their lives. Chapters such as these: Seed saving as political statement. Seeking and drinking raw cow's milk as acts of civil disobedience. The corporate takeover of natural foods, and the USDA makeover of organic foods. Whole food as healer, and processed food as killer. Medicinal herbs, including marijuana, as not just alternatives to pharmaceuticals, but their very basis. Pure and free water as birthright, now imperiled by pollution and privatization. Gardening as a means of reclaiming Eden. Vegetarianism as an act of compassion in contrast to carnivorous cruelty.

Vegetarians will be especially sensitive to and maybe even appreciative of the author's discussion of vegetarianism. Katz, a lapsed vegetarian, weighs the significance of life as a vegetarian among omnivores. The reasons for his own vegetarian apostasy are especially edifying. The chapter "Vegetarian Ethics and Humane Meat" begins almost with a confession: "I love meat. The smell of it cooking can fill me with desire.... At the same time, everything I see, hear, or read about standard commercial factory farming and slaughtering fills me with disgust." Whether filled with desire or with disgust, the author writes with humility and clarity. And charity. He continues: "I hold great respect for the ideals that people seek to put into practice through vegetarianism."

Katz acknowledges that vegetarians will brand "humane meat" a contradiction of adjective with noun, yet he nobly and duly presents the gist of vegetarian ethics and effectively distills into a few pages what we'd expect from an entire book.

This emerging moral vocabulary is one whose etymologies can be attributed to vegetarian evangelists and animal liberationists. Their shouts of protest and their cries of lamentation have been heard. Many meat eaters grown uneasy with their own complicity now seek the lesser of several evils. Michael Pollan, the eloquent author of The Omnivore's Dilemma, too deserves credit for expanding this lexicon.

Pollan, however, is less forthright about his own omnivorism than is Katz. Instead, Pollan applies his considerable intelligence merely to rationalize and bolster his considerable decadence. For Pollan, meat's taste trumps its waste. Rather than renounce meat as a superfluity, he chooses to denounce its cruelty. So thanks to Pollan and to his readers whom he has rallied to the cause, many herds of open-pasture cows and many flocks of free-range hens are now being spared the horrors of the feedlot and the factory farm. But that is small comfort to the cows and the hens still prodded on their death march to the slaughterhouse.

Pollan hunted a feral pig to write about it. Katz slaughtered a farm-raised pig to eat it. For Katz, writing is an afterthought to eating, as when he describes in necessary detail the physical difficulties of slaughtering a pig or a chicken. And Katz's book, in contrast to Pollan's, is one of few about food in which narrative use of the first person is welcomed and warranted. This is because Katz's life experiences and his resulting perspectives both are so very unique.

For instance, Katz expresses disillusionment with the pharmaceutical industry, yet he admits to his dependence upon their pills and potions for treatment of his AIDS. He even chronicles the long struggle of his unsuccessful attempt to survive and function without those pills and potions. Such candor about being poz is rare, and a testament to the author's integrity. Let's hope that Katz copes well with AIDS, and that he lives a long and healthy life, long enough to complete his third book, and fourth and fifth and sixth.

- Mark Mathew Braunstein [[ the reviewer is the author of Sprout Garden and of Radical Vegetarianism ]]

This is a great read.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-26
I loved reading this book and feeling like a radical because of my food choices! Sandor Ellix Katz writes well and has great stories relating to food. This is a great book for those interested in healthy fermented foods and local, seasonal eating.

textbook for the revolution
Helpful Votes: 42 out of 42 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-16
in a time when spinach could be deadly, and cloned animals might be ground into that next Big Sandwich,
there is an underground revolution happening, and it's happening all over the world. folks are making possibly-unnoticed-but-radical choices about food. they choose not to let corporations and government dictate what and how they must eat, because when food choices are taken out of the hands of the people, the people lose.
in this textbook for the revolution, Sandor Ellix Katz examines the intricately interwoven web that is our food supply. from water and land rights to bake sales, "free trade," and free food, he shows the damage done when big government (big brother) and big business make our food choices for us. the book uncovers a whole lot of the story that they would prefer we not know, and shows how tied together it all is ~ history, ecology, economy, ethics, civil rights, big vs. small, corporate vs. community, seed laws and plant prohibitions, down to even the most basic right of putting in your mouth something you feel like eating, and maybe sharing it with a friend. the picture seems mighty bleak. but that's where the revolution comes in; people everywhere continue to join around the table ~ the very basis of culture itself ~ not to let the powers-that-be separate them from their food supply. for survival, for nutrition, for connection, for charity, for protest ~ for pleasure (!), folks are keeping food traditions alive, or exploring them for the first time. they're holding onto age-old agricultural practices (like seed saving), and creating new solutions to food waste (like dumpster diving and road-kill salvage!). but Katz doesn't stop there; each section (as well as including extensive resources for further study and connection) extends a personable and encouraging, do-it-yourself helping hand to guide the reader to take steps to becoming a revolutionary herself. because choosing to be aware about food at all has become an act of rebellion.
The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved is concentrated, intelligent research as well as compelling, passionate storytelling. it is manifesto, cultural catalyst and cookbook, promising a place for each of us at the revolutionary table.
a fan of Katz as soon as i opened Wild Fermentation, i highly recommend this book. if you are interested in food politics at all, or even just love to eat good food, this is a must-read textbook and reference tool for our time.

Charming & Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-14
Katz has a charming style of writing - frank, yet humble and highly readable. His book "The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved" is a well-documented compilation of the issues we face with regard to our food, and an account of those individuals and groups who are making positive steps toward curbing an erosion of culture and nutrition. If you only read one book about food and activism, this should be the one - I wish I could afford to give a copy to everyone I know.

Along with "Wild Fermentation" Katz's books are both inspiring non-manifestos, and practical guides to revolutionary living. Katz has quickly become one of my favorite authors and persons.

North America
River Rising: A Cherokee Odyssey
Published in Hardcover by Wohali Press (1998-08-28)
Author: Frank Stewart
List price: $34.95
Used price: $9.89

Average review score:

"Best Book"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-13
My grandmother loved River Rising and said it was the "best book".

Thank You For Writing Such A Well Researched Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-13
I am not Cherokee, or even Native American, but I have always felt an affinity with the Cherokee especially. The characters in your book came alive for me and I went on the Trail of Tears just as they did. I felt their sorrow and grief, their joys and triumphs, and felt as if I knew each one. A superbly written book!

Thank You For Writing This Wonderful Fiction!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-13
I finished reading River Rising just the other day & must let you know how much I enjoyed it. I thank Mr. Stewart for writing this wonderful fiction. Although aware of the tragedy of the "Trail of Tears" I had very little knowledge, if any, of behind the scenes maneuverings, conspiracies, etc., prior to the roundup, during the forced trip and finally the settling in new territory. Fiction can show a human side to suffering where non-fiction only gives facts. I resented each interruption during my reading...as I neared the end I wanted to slow down knowing once I read the last page that was the end of this take as written here...From the heart, all I can say is "Wa-do".

Thoroughly Enjoyed Reading "River Rising, A Cherokee Odyssey
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-13
I have to tell you that I thoroughly enjoyed reading "River Rising". Your thorough research was very evident throughout the book. I am proud to own a copy. It is very good reading.

Riveting, informative, humorous, adventurous, romantic, sad,
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-14
All of the above and more. I found it to be educational and moving. Don't let the number of pages scare you. Large easy to read print. If you like historical fiction, romance, humor, adventure, surprises and just a plain good story this is a must read book. For me, an eye opening account of the truth of the white man's encroachment into a culture, a people and a land. We can't change the past but we can be changed by it. Read and learn.

North America
The River Where America Began: A Journey Along the James
Published in Hardcover by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. (2007-03-15)
Author: Bob Deans
List price: $24.95
New price: $12.46
Used price: $12.49
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

A must for anyone interested in America's beginnings
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-17
Having just visited Williamsburg, I read The River Where America Began. It brought to life all of which I had just seen, but in clear vivid and historically correct detail. I was instantly immersed into the culture and events of the time. Bob Deans writes beautifully and I can't wait to see whats next.

The River Where America Began : James River
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
This history book was very informative. I was born in the area. Very detailed summary of landscape in early times. Well written from political and historical point of view. Easy to comprehend and fully factual. Good book to read more than once.

Really Good
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-10
Hi,

I am reading this book right now and am on page 238 of 287. This is the most readable "history" book I have ever read. I would give it a 4 1/2 out of 5 really. He gets into the baptism of Pochohontas and gets a little sharp with the tongue. Don't pass up on this book though because of a few pages. Everyones opinion still matters. I do like how it's in a storybook format and I do like the authors opinion most of the time. I would say the book is 85% fact, %15 opinion.

Very knowledgable writer. A book that gives you the framework to be educated about American history in discussions with your friends. No thanksgiving story and they lived happily ever after. America was founded by immigrants and freedom fighters, criminals, slaves, and Native Americans obviously.

Thanks. God Bless.

Aaron.

Reclaims your lack of American history knowledge
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-10
If you didn't take or do well in early American history class, this book will go a long way to help. Bob Deans, informatively and entertainingly, chronicles the first foreign footprints on American soil. In doing so, he sympathetically gives the natives their due, while exploring with reportorial acumen, the inexorable march, good and bad, toward democracy, all of which started "along the James," in Dean's beloved state.

Wonderfully written
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-17
This is a wonderfully written, informative book that focuses on the history that happened on the James River from 1607 to 1865.

Like any good storyteller, Deans illuminates specific characters (John Smith, Pocahontas, Powhatan, Patrick Henry and Abraham Lincoln among them), to shed light on the whole. And the whole is this: That the two original sins of the American experiment -- our near-genocidal treatment of the Indians and our institution of black slavery -- began here, early in our formative years, on the banks of the James River in Virginia. At the very same time and in the very same place, began our very real belief in a democratic government of laws and not of men.

On this river was nurtured the the notion that all men were created equal, even as those who proclaimed liberty and equality denied it (and increasingly codified that denial) to a whole race of men and women.

That such schizophrenia of national psyche could not long endure seems obvious. And the fever that provided the cure finally broke here, too, on the banks of the James in April 1865.

This is a terrific book. However, the publisher, I believe, has let the writer down in two respects: It could use more maps. When Deans writes of someone rounding this point, exploring this tributary or inhabiting that island, I want to have a map close at hand to see for myself. There are a few maps, and they are good, but I would like more.

And here's a thing sure to rankle any West Virginian ex-copy editor: In the chapter on John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry (then Virginia, today West Virginia), it says he was hanged in nearby Charleston. As any Mountain Stater (and probably even some Virginians) know, Charleston, the state capital, is in the south central part of the state. Charles Town, where they have horse racing, is in the Eastern Panhandle. Charles Town is close to Harper's Ferry, not Charleston. (And as any newspaperman knows, Charleston, Charles Town is an AP Stylebook entry. I presume the error is an editor's and not Deans'.)

North America
Rumored to Exist: The Teachings of Islam in North America
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2002-06-24)
Author: Jon Konrath
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.62
Used price: $9.61

Average review score:

After reading some of the other reviews.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-04
After reading some of the other reviews, I found that I did not agree with some of the opinions told. Now, I'm not going to be talking about how much I hated the book. Rumored To Exist was a very interesting read. However, I didn't see this book as surreal or as a book show weighing the inner workings of a psycho mind. This book seemed to be more absurd than surreal. It was a very dark absurdity, but not what I would say to be showing insanity. But, it was definitely experimental. The first 20 or so pages really made me think of Ulysses by James Joyce. However, the rest of the book (after the first 20 or so pages) lost its similarity to James Joyce. Per out the rest of the boat I spot it a lot of influences by John Barth. Now, I'm not sure if the writer intentionally or knowingly wrote that a fiction in the style of John Barth, but it's it was still done very well. One really good thing that the writer did was make the narrator very involved in the plot. In most upsurge of novels, from what I have seen, the riders tend to make the main character more of an observer than anything else. This writer didn't take that easy route. And finally, about the annotations and footnotes. The footnotes to route the bug added to the absurdity of it all kept any potential monotony from happening. At times it seemed that the writer was trying too hard with the footnotes. Sometimes the footnotes to away from the store in. Personally, I failed that the footnotes should have been pressed more so as to outdo the great story. But, the footnotes fell short in that respect. All and all, the book was very good.

I love this book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-15
When I purchased this book, I was wholly unprepared. This book takes your conception of reality, twists it, bends it, and takes you for a very strange and very interesting ride. It's a fast and furious black comedy unsuitable for those with no appreciation for the absurd.

The inner workings of a psycho mind...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-02
This book is a complex and recursively spiraling journey through the mind of the author, refracted through the shattered lens of postmodern society.
Plus it comes in handy bite-sized chunks!
The best of Konrath's books, "Rumored to Exist" is easy to pick up and read thanks to the engaging over-the-top depravity and general sensory overload of the sci-fi tinged text. And despite the fact that the "chapters," if you will, can often be less than a page long, this is a difficult book to set down, since anything can, and often does, happen, including the strangest things that you're likely to ever read.

Super Glue and Sheep make a perfect Weekend!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-02
An alcoholic hit bottom and remembering the past August 27, 2003
This book is a new concept compared to Konrath's usual "fiction," in that it's a short series of seemingly related bookettes, almost like a long stream of consciousness that you can buy for cheap and read in one pass. I read this during the New York blackout, but I was in Chicago, and it hit the spot because it immersed me in another world, of a Navy dropout at the end of his rope, drinking mouthwash for alcohol and trying to think back as to what went wrong. It's like a good short story, but long enough that you feel like you got your money worth. You'll get more detail and depth about female sheep anatomy than you would in vet school. I also like how he tied it into his book Summer Rain, but also described another side of the demented Konrath world. This is great stuff and well worth the price. PS Jon, congrads on your recent win before the MA supreme court!

Detritus and Despair!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-02
This is certainly the most bizarre book that I have read since _Catch-22_. Back then I was somewhere in Germany sitting in the driver's hatch of a main battle tank, hypnotized by the enchanting text. Now I'm sitting in the Republic of Djibouti somewhat dazed as if reading _Rumored_to_Exist_ had caused an ethereal brick to be slammed into the back of my psyche.

The twisted adventures of John Conner take unimaginable paths. Most readers would find it difficult to separate this fantasy reality from the hallucinogen-induced ramblings of an autistic author. I took all the facts presented at face value and was cursed with the feeling of anti-euphoria that aroused in me a personal feeling of complete freedom as the bottom dropped out of every roller coaster ride in this novel.

I was genuinely pleased that each of the 272 pages in this beast contained a new idea, a fresh scent, an alien aura. I could identify with John and found myself intimately acquainted with each of his friends in his convoluted life.

Before I picked it up, nothing like this book had ever entered my hands.

My life is better for reading it, but life for my colleagues has just taken a drastic turn for the worse.

North America
The Sacred Path Workbook: New Teachings and Tools to Illuminate Your Personal Journey
Published in Paperback by HarperOne (1991-12-06)
Author: Jamie Sams
List price: $18.95
New price: $8.47
Used price: $2.63
Collectible price: $18.95

Average review score:

worth the money and effort to read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-12
im glad i got this book i have a better understanding of the cards.
it is worth the money you put out for this book.
you will enjoy reading it and learning from it.

Wonderful Workbook
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-18
This is a great add-on to the Sacred Cards. This workbook helps you also in understand the meaning of each card and how to take this knowledge and put into practice. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in Native American Practices.

Grounded Guidance for the Soul
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-08
Jamie Sams is an excellent teacher for people of all ages and all colors. This book takes your soul on a hand-held journey through the many aspects we all encounter in life that challenge our growth. Full of the wisdom of the ages, Sacred Path opens awareness of archetypes that only the author's deep understanding of human nature can help us discover in ourselves. A beautiful journey of self exploration in a wounded world.

Gives more depth to the Sacred Path Cards
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-24
This book allows the seeker to move forward in exploring the Shamanic Traditions more completely.

Wise and Wonderful
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-02
What a wonderful way to start a day: Picking a Scared Path card and then reading that specific chapter in this fine book! Clear, easy to read, it is an excellent tool for walking the Native American spiritual path, or any spiritual path for that matter. It may be out of print, but get a copy -- no matter what condition. A rare and wonderful book.

North America
Society of Six: California Colorists
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (1997-03-30)
Author: Nancy Boas
List price: $50.00
New price: $31.49
Used price: $28.69

Average review score:

A joyous, exciting and informative book ...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-11
Ms. Boas has put together an exceptional book on the Society of Six Painters. It is generously illustrated with carefully chosen examples, most in full color. Close ups, with full bleeds, lead each chapter and will take your breath away. In addition, the book contains many black and white images of the artists working and hanging out.

I'd say roughly half of the book is on Selden Gile and why not? He was likely the most prolific and arguably the best of the group. Ms. Boas describes how the group got together and how they were influenced by European artists, a few California painters as well as Bellows and others. One gets some idea of the personality (even drinking habits!) of each of "the six" as well as their camaraderie, working methods, palettes and materials. On page 97, there is a reprint of the group's manifesto (primarily Clapp's handiwork). It may be the best description of "what makes a painting good" that I have ever come across. In addition, the book is littered with quotes and excerpts from letters. One thing I particularly enjoyed were the many quotes by Diebenkorn and Thiebaud describing the Society's work. I highly recommend this book.

Wow! Early California Art!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-16
Hazou Gallery, Elie (art dealer) San Diego, CA
This has been a great reference book for me. I own three artists in this remarkable group, The Society of Six. In addition to all the information in this valuable book, the price was great.

Excellent Book! As a collector of Society of Six paintings.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-17
I give this book 10 stars! Nancy Boas did a superb job cataloguing the history of this unique & historical California art movement. As one of America's foremost buyers of the Society of Six paintings, I can say this is a "must buy" book. www.LawrenceBeebe.com

Move over Impressionists
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-13
While many books and much attention has been given to the Impressionists, little mention has been offered to the Society
of Six - California Colorists. The beautiful illustrations and enlightening text provide a case history for the needed aware-
ness of these talented and innovative artists. Nancy Boas has
obviously done a tremendous amount of research resulting in a
spectacular and much needed work on our California art history.
A perusal of this title will be richly rewarded.

Six unique artists who deserve more attention
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-06
Nancy Boas has done the American art scene a great service by producing a beautifully illustrated and printed book about six rugged individualists who did much to build a California school of painting in the early 20th Century. While they are often referred to as impressionists, their paintings are generally far more adventuresome, ambitious and challenging to the viewer than the relatively tame and accessible impressionist school. Whether they had any direct influence from the Fauvists or the Blaureider colorists, they have more in common with those post-impressionist Europeans. Ultimately, it doesn't matter much how they arrived at their approach to color and painting, it was the California landscape and climate that determined their subjects and color they used to interpret them.
Boas' handsome book does particular justice to the work of Selden Gile, who was the most aggressive and and insistent in his use of primary colors.
This is a terrific and important addition to any artbook collection.

North America
South of the Color Barrier: How Jorge Pasquel and the Mexican League Pushed Baseball Toward Racial Integration
Published in Paperback by McFarland (2007-10-10)
Author: John Virtue
List price: $29.95
New price: $29.95
Used price: $34.29

Average review score:

¡jonron!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
Mr. Virtue's book is well-researched and well-documented look at the early days of the Mexican League. There is a lot of historical data that I've never seen before, as well as interviews or quotes from players who played in the league, especially during its classic 1937-1946 period.

A Home Run of a Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-18
I thoroughly enjoyed John Virtue's recent book, "South of the Color Barrier". The insights into how Jorge Pasquel, and his role in the Mexican League, played a vital role in the integration of baseball was eye-opening and insightful.

Virtue has written a great baseball book, that has been thoroughly researched, and offers a fresh perspective on Negro League players and the obstacles that they faced. In addition, it captures the personality of a charasmatic man (Pasquel) who died much too young and has been otherwise ignored by baseball historians.

Bravo! Mr. Virtue.

Sam Zygner
Co-Chair, South Florida Chapter (SABR)

Highly recommended reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-07
"South of the Color Barrier" is a wonderful book that shows the great influence of Jorge Pasquel in achieving racial integration in the United States, starting with Baseball. It is a book full of very interesting facts uncovered through a thorough and careful research by the author.

To me, as the daughter of the last Negro Leagues player brought to Mexico by Mr. Pasquel, this book has been a journey of discovery. "South of the Color Barrier" helps us to understand the entire picture about the hard times these players had to endure in the United States versus the many opportunities they found in Mexico and the rest of Latin America. It would be great if we could have another Jorge Pasquel in Mexico to boost baseball again.

Congratulations to John Virtue for such a work well done!

A very good read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-31
For the history buffs on Baseball's past a definite addition to your library. Jorge Pasquel's story concerns the last major threat on Major League Baseball. Like the others - Players League and Federal League it was a failure also. Unlike a prior book this tome paints a broader picture and more complete story of the life of Jorge Pasquel. For most American we did not know about him and his contributions to Mexico. A very good and plausable theory how Jorge Pasquel helped breakdown the color barrier in organized Baseball. A very good and easy read. Except for two minor errors Mr. Virtue has a very good well researched book. Some very good historical pictures also included.

A Mexican George Steinbrenner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-11
Virtue has woven the facts and faces of historical figures from Mexican and American baseball of the 1930s and 1940s into dynamite read. In the process, he's uncovered a character that few people know about -- Mexican multimillionaire businessman Jorge Pasquel. Described as a Mexican George Steinbrenner, Pasquel raided the US Negro Leagues to strengthen the Mexican League.

"A man's man," Pasquel is compelling to watch. His drive to create a Mexican team that could bring about a real World Series, coincidentally brought light on racial inequalities in the US. Virtue puts us in the shoes of these great African-American players, who at one time couldn't get served in a dingy Texas diner, but across the boarder were treated liked gods. Willie Wells exclaims: "Here in Mexico I am a man. I can go as far in baseball as I am capable of going. I can live where I please."

Virtue has put Wells back on the field - along with other future members of the Hall of Fame like Monte Irvin, Roy Campanella, Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, Ray Dandridge, Cool Papa Bell, Leon Day, Hilton Smith, Willard Brown and Cuba's Martín Dihigo -- and we get to be in the bleachers. Enjoy!

North America
Stolen Continents: The "New World" Through Indian Eyes
Published in Paperback by Mariner Books (1993-02-08)
Author: Ronald Wright
List price: $16.00
New price: $7.99
Used price: $1.87

Average review score:

hi
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-19
Although the material in this book is probably covered in greater detail elsewhere, it is pretty unique that the experiences of indigenous groups as diverse as the Iroquois and Incas, are presented here with equal detail. One learns interesting facts about each of them. While I knew about Manco Inca's revolt and establishing a mini-Inca state in the jungle, I had no idea that this was followed by a sort of "Inca Renaissance," with plays, histories and poems written in Quechua. In addition, the five groups that Wright chose either had their own written language or quickly learned one after European contact (and the Cherokee even had their own newspaper), so this history is genuinely "through Indian eyes." The unifying thread (in addition to the resilience of all 5 groups) is that the colonization of the New World by Europeans was not significantly different that of Africa and Asia- without the disease factor, the Americas might today be wholly governed by their original inhabitants.

Simply a "must" read
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-27
Simply a "must" read for the Americans (talking about the whole continent for those who are geographically challenged LOL), the Europeans and anybody else interested in the "discovery" of America.

Well-researched and full of interesting facts concentrating on the 5 significant native cultures of the Americas: The Aztecs, the Mayas, the Incas, the Cherokees and the Iroquois. It is easy to read as well !!!

IMO it should be part of every high school history curriculum. Guaranteed to dispel many of the myths that are taught in schools today and reinforced by Hollywood.

Bravo Mr. Wright !!!!

Add this to your Curriculum
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-26
My emotions, while reading this book, ranged from disbelief to outrage. Do not read this book on a full stomach.

For me, Ronald Wright exposed the faulty notion of America's 'virgin wilderness'. Before I read this I did not appreciate the size or sophistication the Native American nations he has profiled in 'Stolen Continents'.

Though this is a tragic history, it is one that should be told. The section on 'Rebirth' is encouraging, for some nations. For others it seems like the relentless attacks, that have deprived so many of so much, will never end.

I hope Mr. Wright profiles other aboriginal nations with this all too rare perspective.

Very accurate history
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-14
I can't speak for the history of all the five nations, but my wife is Cherokee. Her family predates the arrival of the white race. She has a big thick book documenting the family genealogy compiled by her father, a true researcher. The words of Dragging Canoe, a realitive, are comprehensive and exact. Some quotes are new to the family, so Mr. Wright really did his research.

Mr. Wright painted an eye opening view of the real American Indian history, not what I learned in school and saw on TV.

An essential book in the history of the Americas
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1998-05-19
As a native American whose people came perilously close to being wiped out completely, I welcome and applaud the care, consideration and integrity with which Ronald Wright has addressed the history of five native nations in the Americas--the Aztecs, Maya, Inca, Iroquois and Cherokee. By selecting cultures from north, central and south America, he shows, unequivocally, how pervasive disease and the voracious appetite for gold, land and vassals were in the nearly total devastation of the peoples of this land.

This book should be a "must" read for high school and college students in every nation in the Americas. It is phenomenal in its exploration of past and current circumstances of native Americans.


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