West Virginia Books
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Interesting sourcebook.Review Date: 2008-04-01
Great book for young and old alikeReview Date: 2007-05-06
Excellant ProductReview Date: 2006-02-22
This book is a classic!Review Date: 2005-11-16
Staying powerReview Date: 2005-06-11
My only dissapointments are, that it may be the most complete listing of paranormal stories on west virgina folklore, It can never house all the stories out there. Simply put, there just isnt enough room.
Another dissapointment, is that people from outside of the region, have no clue about this book, its existance, or just what a good read they are missing out on.
No matter the books current cost, its worth every penny and then some
Enjoy
Viro Los Diablos
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The bestReview Date: 2008-01-26
Deepwater MountainReview Date: 2003-01-02
Deepwater MountainReview Date: 2002-08-14
This book grabbed me on the first page and never turned me loose, I don't think I have ever gone through so many emotions while reading a book as I did with this one. The Characters were so real I had to keep reminding myself that it was a story. I kept hearing echoes of my Father, my Mother, my Grandma, my Grandpa, my Uncles and my Kin.
There is a unique mystique about being a West Virginian that few who have not been born and raised here understand. It is so hard to describe or explain, because it is spiritual. Rebecca has captured it and woven it throughout her book. It starts where her story starts and ends, well it don't end, it is still here in these hills and in our hearts.
If you have not read this book you are robbing yourself of one of life's good experiences.
I sure hope there is more where this came from.
Shirley Dawn Kincaid Walker's review of Deepwater MountainReview Date: 2005-04-17
"Had Thomas Wolfe grown up in the Appalachian Mountains of WV, as I did, I think he'd agree with me. NC doesn't hold a candle to WV.
"A Kincaid in Kincaid, next door to Camhi's Page, I remember my parents, Todd and Minnie Kincaid, taking me to visit Great Grandpa Poley, Great Grandma Lizzie, and Creedy in their little house with the toasty warm coal fireplace. They lived "just up the road a piece" from me.
I can't recall ever reading a book faster than this one. Saying I was mesmerized is a fact. Willa May and Daniel became my family in Chapter one and I simply felt overwhelmed emotionally when I had to leave them. I do hope Camhi will continue with their family saga. I recall feeling the same when I read John Galsworthy's first novel about the Forsyte Family.
"Camhi has that wonderful knack of capturing the reader and making her feel a part of history. Her characters are realistic and she teaches WV history, obviously having done her homework. I can see "Deepwater Mountain" becoming a required reading in WV English and History classes.
"In fact, I see Willa May as John Denver's Mountain Mamma in "Country Roads," which many people say put WV on the map. Anyone wondering about WV, the most Northern of the Southern states, the most Southern of the Northern States, and the most Western of the Eastern states, and the most Eastern of the Western states, should grab the opportunity to find out about Wild, Wonderful West Virginia by reading "Deepwater Mountain."
Shirley Dawn Kincaid Walker(formerly of Kincaid, West Virginia)
6309 Alderwood Bay
Woodbury, Mn 55125
Review of Camhi's Deepwater MountainReview Date: 2005-04-20
I grew up in Kincaid, West Virginia, which is right next door to Page, Robson and Deepwater Mountain, the places that Rebecca Camhi brings to life again in her book, Deepwater Mountain. I traveled through these small towns for four years while commuting to college at West Virginia Tech. Becky has brought back the memories of traveling that wicked road, dangerous to this very day.
This book brings back vivid memories of my great-grandfather Napoleon Kincaid and my Uncle Harry Cale. I can still see Napoleon, "Poley," as we called him, delivering his moonshine on Page Road just a few miles south of Deepwater Mountain. (By the way, Becky, we were always told that "Poley" never got caught by the Feds, but that he had a lot of close calls.)
I can still hear my father and grandpa Tibb talk about Poley, Lizzie and Creedy. When I make my annual visit to clean the gravesites at the Kincaid Cemetery here in Kincaid, and see the gravestones of Poley, Lizzie and Creedy, it brings back all those memories that Becky described in this wonderful novel. It is hard to explain how we West Virginians feel about our state: when we meet another West Virginian, no matter where we've traveled, it's as if both of us have come back to the hills. It's in our hearts!! Becky has truly captured this spirit throughout her entire book.
Those in my generation who were born and reared in Kincaid, WV, can relate to Becky's book because we actually lived the life of her characters from 1940 to present. And when we look back through Becky's eyes, we can see ourselves at the very beginning. Becky has truly captured the motto of West Virginia "Montani Semper Liberi" (Mountaineers are always free!)
Once you pick up this book, you won't put it down until you have finished reading the entire book. Becky Camhi is a truly remarkable author. Each chapter is a surprise, and you just can't wait for the next one.
I look forward to Becky's next book, but will be hard for her to top this one.
Douglas L. Kincaid, Sr. of Kincaid, West Virginia

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More Pleasure for Fans of CRUM!Review Date: 2006-02-05
Modern American Classic Review Date: 2004-09-14
Screaming With The Cannibals may even be better than Crum. Where Crum was a country boy's wild adolescence, Screaming With The Cannibals is a young man's cross country adventure. It's funny, sexy, adventurous, human, exciting, ...and a whole lot of other adjectives!
A modern classic. So much life and imagination is packed into this small book. Life in the country, road trips, strange Mountain folk, scary Southern folk, tent revivals, crazy preachers, skinny dippin', train jumpin', [hot] lifeguards, murderous cops, car chases, and sex smothered in home cookin'.
It has that timeless, country humour and atmosphere of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, with a bit of On the Road, Stand by Me, O Brother Where Art Thou?, and 9 1/2 Weeks thrown in the mix. All written in simple, straight forward, but still somehow poetic language. I didn't want it to end.
Great Sequel to CrumReview Date: 2004-05-21
Crum is a book that very few women would enjoy. If you're a guy with a sense of humor you should check it out. It's one of the funniest books I've ever read, about a kid growing up in a small town in West Virginia. The book is full of the adventures of this kid and his friends, and of his quest to leave the town of Crum. If you enjoy that book, you will also like this one.
Lee Maynard is an outstanding writer, and I'm constantly looking for anything new by him. I was thrilled when I found this book earlier this year and not at all disappointed when I read it.
Lee Maynard Rules!! Would make great movie!!Review Date: 2004-01-08
The Quest of Jesse StoneReview Date: 2004-01-02
The 2nd in a series, SWTC takes up where Maynard's first novel Crum left off. However, the author skillfully incorporates information from Crum in the form of flashbacks and each novel stands alone.
SWTC opens with Jesse, a rough and tumble 50s era football playing, book reading kid, finishing Crum High School. He is determined to see the world he has experience only through the books in the school's library.
Short on specific goals but high on self-reliance, Jesse packs his favorite book, a change of clothes and about thirteen dollars and "lights out" for somewhere.
He hitches a ride and briefly end up a farm hand in nearby Kentucky. There he gets interested (that's putting in mildly)in a neigbor's wife and contributes to a near riot at the farm community's yearly Fundamentalist revival. On the run, he heads south on an unlicensed Triumph motorcycle he rebuilt from used farm equipment parts.
Testesterone in high gear, Jesse finds more trouble with a South Carolina Sheriff before he lands a job as a lifeguard at Myrtle Beach.
Jesse runs smack-dab into racial trumoil and segregated beaches, the same Sheriff, responsible work, plus hoards of nubile girls and a Mrs. Robinson-type older woman.
If you ever wonder, "What goes on in the minds of teen aged boys?" this is the book to read.
The novel is extremely well written and easy to read. I especially like Maynard's writing style.
Readers who remember Myrtle Beach in the "old days" will enjoy the scenes set there.

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A first-rate thriller with a sense of humorReview Date: 1998-07-06
Wonderful Start to a West Virginia SeriesReview Date: 2006-11-09
Excellent first mysteryReview Date: 1998-07-24
Members of the Ladies' Literary League of Leschi loved it!Review Date: 1998-09-17
A first-rate mystery in the style of Carl HiaasenReview Date: 1998-07-13

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Excellent bookReview Date: 2007-05-21
Then the recipes are very appealing and mouth watering and they don't come accross as too difficult to execute.
And most off all, so far all the recipes I have tried turned out to taste great and also look good.
I live in the Caribbean and the recipes in that book really seem to represent the islands.
The best cookery book I have bought in a long time.
Chefs ReviewReview Date: 2007-08-16
Your Taste Buds will Make You Believe You're Really in the CaribbeanReview Date: 2007-02-16
Ms. Burke's EAT CARIBBEAN is, in my opinion, absolutely indispensable. Her Jerk Chicken is delicious, and coming from me, someone who's had her own recipe for Jerk Chicken published, that is really saying something. You won't go wrong with this book. Ms. Burke is the marketing director for Walkerswood Caribbean Foods and they're the people who make the jerk seasoning that I, and so many others use, so it's not surprising that she really knows her stuff and if you get ahold of this book, you'll be cooking like you do to.
Review submitted by Captain Katie Osborne
Reminds me of home!!Review Date: 2006-05-16
The recipes are easy to follow and came out great. This is saying a lot for me since I just started cooking on a regular basis a year ago. What will instantly catch your eye about this book are the vibrant colors and the accruacy of the photos used.
I highly recommend this book for anyone who is either a novice or pro in the kitchen, or for anyone interested in trying their hand at cooking Carribean cuisine.
A Culinary Trip Through the IslandsReview Date: 2005-09-23

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goodReview Date: 2007-02-19
A must have for the serious collectorReview Date: 1999-11-03
Well written and presented; wonderful photosReview Date: 2005-04-02
Homer Laughlin A Giant Among DishesReview Date: 2000-07-20
Great book for Homer Laughlin collectorsReview Date: 2000-09-05

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Power and DeceitReview Date: 2008-03-13
WOWReview Date: 2008-01-31
Exceptional new authorReview Date: 2008-01-21
Power and DeceitReview Date: 2008-01-20
Pencil To Print, MNReview Date: 2008-01-17
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The westward-ho pioneer's survival guideReview Date: 2008-02-09
So in 1859, Captain Randolph Marcy, under orders from the Department of War, wrote The Prairie Traveler. Marcy, who would later serve as a Brigadier in the Civil War, was an accomplished traveler in the west, and his guidebook was packed with useful information for the determined but inexperienced pioneer taking either the northern overland trail to Oregon or the southern Sante Fe one to California.
The book is great reading--and, not infrequently, helpful even today for the camper when it comes to advice about improvising shelter or lighting a fire from damp wood. For the mid-19th century reader, it provides essential tips on provisions, wagon-packing and animal-care, first aid (large doses of whiskey are the best remedy for rattlesnake bite), identifying good water (alkaline ponds are surrounded by yellow-reddish grass), improvisation (red willow bark is a good substitute for tobacco), collapsible camp furniture, and gun safety. The food section is especially interesting. Marcy recommends carrying lots of dried vegetables (one ounce of dry vegetables, when wettened, equals an entire ration), "cold flour," a concoction of flour, cinammon, and sugar which, when mixed with a bit of water, provides a pick-me-up (not unlike today's energy bar), and jerked meat (no need for salt; the prairie sun will dry buffalo strips in short order). He also provides a rather gruesome recipe for pemmican (powdered buffalo meat saturated in raw buffalo fat, sown up in a hide bag with the hair turned outwards).
Marcy distrusts and indeed actively dislikes Plains Indians, although he admires Delawares and Shawnees, and writes quite warmly of a Delaware friend of his named Black Beaver. So he spends a fair number of pages warning prairie travelers to be wary of approaching Indians. To better prepare them, he teaches the rudiments of sign language, teaches how to track Indians (scattered mustang manure rather than whole mustang manure indicates Indians on the move rather than just a wild mustang herd), and gives detailed instructions on how to sleep with cocked and primed rifles. It never seems to occur to Marcy that Plains Indians were a diverse group, or that their animosity might've had more to do with the white pioneers' presence than with the natural meanness he attributes to them.
A fascinating read!
Time Travel to 1859 Frontier AmericaReview Date: 2007-01-25
This book is essential to any author, movie director or Living Historian who wants to "get it right". THE PRAIRIE TRAVELER is chock-full of information about overland travel in the mid-19th century, and covers almost any possible, practical, useful subject related to wilderness travel. Although it is written in 1850's American English, it is actually a fairly easy read with very little "culture shock".
For those of you with the cerebral agility to remove the mental straight-jacket of "Political Correctness", THE PRAIRIE TRAVELER will accurately picture the Frontier society as it existed at the time. It was a very good society in most ways, with the limitations that 19th century people were born into and educated with. Those pioneers did advance themselves, bit-by-bit, away from the limitations they were born into, and the result is the 21st Century America we live in today. We stand on their shoulders, advanced as far as we are today, because of the small advances they made in their generation.
A 21st century man condemning a 19th century man for being the product of his times reflects the mental and educational limitations of the 21st century man.
Gain a new understanding Review Date: 2006-08-07
For those who love American history, esp. the old west I highly recommend this book
Wordy but informativeReview Date: 2002-10-16
Eye opener to westward emigrant survivalReview Date: 2003-06-09


Just to correct some misguided factsReview Date: 2005-03-08
Hail The Mountaineers!Review Date: 2000-12-06
Part of WV is N of part of NY state, part is W of Pt. Huron, Michigan, part S of Richmond, and it extends E to within 39 mi of Wash., DC. So it might be called a northern, midwestern, southern, or eastern state! (And has been.)We present just about everything you'd want to know about the Mountain State, including tables showing each county's percentage of women, minorities, income, home values, etc., and "Notables" for each county. There's a map of the whole state, and maps of every county.Actually, this book is probably the first popular history of all the counties of a state.
The Notables are quite interesting -- from Governor Cecil Underwood (imagine, elected WV's youngest governor in 1956, and her oldest in 1996) and Senators like Robert Byrd, Jay Rockefeller, and Jennings Randolph to sports stars like Jerry West and Sam Snead, writers Pearl Buck, Alberta Hannum, and Mary Lee Settle; military leaders Stonewall Jackson, Jesse Reno (Nevada's city of Reno is named for him)... well I'm just scratching the surface here. We do have a comprehensive index...
I owe a lot to our wonderful relatives down in Wheeling, and to Ye Olde Alpha tavern, our perennial gathering trough. And to the good folks at West Virginia University Press and Library.
Hail The Mountaineers!Review Date: 2000-12-06
Part of WV is N of part of NY state, part is W of Pt. Huron, Michigan, part S of Richmond, and it extends E to within 39 mi of Wash., DC. So it might be called a northern, midwestern, southern, or eastern state! (And has been.)We present just about everything you'd want to know about the Mountain State, including tables showing each county's percentage of women, minorities, income, home values, etc., and "Notables" for each county. There's a map of the whole state, and maps of every county.Actually, this book is probably the first popular history of all the counties of a state.
The Notables are quite interesting -- from Governor Cecil Underwood (imagine, elected WV's youngest governor in 1956, and her oldest in 1996) and Senators like Robert Byrd, Jay Rockefeller, and Jennings Randolph to sports stars like Jerry West and Sam Snead, writers Pearl Buck, Alberta Hannum, and Mary Lee Settle; military leaders Stonewall Jackson, Jesse Reno (Nevada's city of Reno is named for him)... well I'm just scratching the surface here. We do have a comprehensive index...
I owe a lot to our wonderful relatives down in Wheeling, and to Ye Olde Alpha tavern, our perennial gathering trough. And to the good folks at West Virginia University Press and Library.
Only Popular History of Any State's Counties?Review Date: 1998-09-23
There's plenty about Putnam County, including the map showing Hurricane and the home area of Jack Whitaker, who won the biggest one-winner Powerball prize on Christmas Day 2002 ($314.9 million)... just the tax on Whitaker's winnings paid off one-third of the Mountain State debt for that year.
"The Fifty-Five"is the bible for West Virginia's counties.
55 West VirginiasReview Date: 2002-11-19

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Final closing: LTVReview Date: 1998-05-30
Sad, true, and cautionaryReview Date: 2001-08-13
The books feels like a Greek tragedy, in which the protagonists are doomed to a slow slide towards the edge of a cliff. Institutionalized conflict overcomes the efforts of people from both labor and maangement to halt, or at least slow the inevitable slide.
For people who think that the current dot.com crash is a serious downturn, this book offers a very good counter-perspective. When an area loses 100K jobs in 10 years, and whole towns essentially close, that's a *real* downturn.
On the other hand, there's always hope. Pittsburgh has bounced back, and has a much more diversified economy. The last time I visited, I could see the sky, which was more difficult in the steel days. To grasp those days, either see the early Tom Cruise movie "All The Right Moves", or for depth, read this book.
good bookReview Date: 1999-07-20
... and it ate voraciously and completely, like an avenging angel.Review Date: 2008-06-14
Mr. Hoerr tries to write a dispassionate history, but it is difficult in the face of such monumental stupidity and greed. "A vibrant forty-six mile stretch of river valley, providing primary jobs for over thirty-five thousand steel employees... would be devastated and expunged from economic memory in less than five years." "After that, the opportunities are limitless... from here to there where McDonald's needs someone to serve the one-trillionth burger." (p12-13).
The author was a reporter during this period, and apportions blame to both the steel company management and the unions, but clearly reserves his primary animus for management. They saw labor as an undifferentiated mass of dumb "hunkies", the pejorative term for people of Slavic origins, who only needed to take orders. That attitude was repaid, as Mr. Hoerr says: "I have known only two major corporations that actually engendered feelings of hatred among their employees, GM and US Steel." (p206) Management eventually acquiesced to the form, but not the substance of labor participation by forming "Labor-Management Participation Teams," but usually ignored their recommendations. There was also a willful neglect in spending the capital to modernize the operations - USX finally proposed building the first continuous caster plant in the Mon Valley in 1986! - at the very end. (p550) Instead it infuriated the labor force by spending its capital in buying Marathon Oil.
The author had access, and draws telling portraits of the principal actors involved, from the USW's I.W. Abel, Lloyd McBride, Lynn Williams, Bernard Kleiman and Edmund Ayoub. On the management side there was David M. Roderick, Thomas Graham and David Hoag.
I worked in US Steel's Homestead Works for two summers during my college years - '65 and '66. At the time I thought this work was the most "real", and those mills would be eternal - America would always need steel, and would obviously need to produce it. Fortunately the avenging angel passed me by, as I decided this work was not for me. Once again another "wolf" has finally come to America - this time high (and higher still) gas prices, which will force more economic dislocations that prudent planning could have avoided. Will American society be able to organize its economy prudently, to truly meet the real needs of its citizens, and minimize massive dislocations? This book is an excellent story of previous follies - can we learn from them?
Thank you!Review Date: 2005-08-04
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Musick presents us one hundred ghost stories from her extensive folklore collection. She makes no effort to doll them up (though she does say in her preface that she edited them, some heavily, to take out redundancy), and so they often read quite plain; those looking for a Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark-esque compendium will be disappointed here, as Musick chooses the stories she presents in order to illuminate a specific type of ghost story or a specific set of commonalities. I would think this would be of most use to a writer who's looking for an interesting subplot or the like; there's a great deal of primary source to be mined here. ***