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

Kentucky
MASH: An Army Surgeon in Korea
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (1998-08-27)
Authors: Otto F. Apel and Pat Apel
List price: $27.50
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Average review score:

Content makes up for writing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-07
It's clear that the author is a doctor and not a writer. The book cries out for editing; writing errors and organizational issues permeate the book. That said, after I got about halfway through these things stopped bothering me. The story made up for it. The reality of the MASH is much more interesting than what's portrayed on the screen. It gave me a new respect for military medicine. If you can make it through the starting chapters it's a great read.

Good Read
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-09
This book is not about the T.V. show M*A*S*H. But the tv show did get many of its episodes from this book. From arterial transplants to make shift clamps these Doctors opened many new doors to the medical world. Chapter 6 "In the O.R." is pretty gruesome. Details of intestinal wounds abdominal wounds and pretty much everything a war could destroy on a body.

But its not all blood and guts. D.R. Apel talks of the korean's who helped around the camp. The use of the white rocks in the compund. Plus his first day at the MASH was spent on his feet for 72 hrs. operating. Amazing.

I would have ggave the book a five star rating but there was a section on a paper the D.R. wrote on arteral repair which IMO took away from the book. It might have worked better at the end of the book.

Nice pictures of procedures and Korea. This book is a must for people who like the TV show and would really like to see what went on in a real MASH outfit during the real Korean war.

"A Hit among hits!"
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-16
All i can say is at the end of this book you will be speachless, this a a timless classic that inspired a spawing fox tv series that is still shown today. I Don't want to give any of the book away so i wont tell you alot, but this book is a very highly recomennded book for those who loved the series and loved the movie (also found on amazon.com). "One of my favorites ever! "

An Excellent Tribute to the M. A. S. H. Units in Korea.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-07
Dr. Appell's book "M. A. S. H.: An Army Surgeon in Korea" is an excellent tribute to the men and women of the Mobile Army Surgical Hospitals by a veteran surgeon of the 8076TH M . A. S. H. unit. My only complaint is that the book was not a little longer. For any fan of the movie or t. v. series this book is a must-read. Dr. Appell (who was a consultant for the series), tells us what life was really like in a M. A. S. H. unit. The series took some liberties with actual events, but its overall portrayal was fairly accurate-though the series lasted 10 years compared to the three years of the Korean War itself, and the average length of stay for surgeons in a M. A. S. H. was about 8 months. Dr. Appell has written a very interesting book.

Kentucky
Multicolored Memories of a Black Southern Girl (Women in Southern Culture)
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2001-10-12)
Author: Kitty Oliver
List price: $35.00
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Average review score:

A Big Wow For This Heartfelt Journey To Find Home
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-16
I hoped MULTICOLORED MEMORIES OF A BLACK SOUTHERN GIRL would continue past its 173 pages. I just finished the book, and I want more. Kitty Oliver's journey from a small Florida town to her travels around the world feel very real. "When a trip is over for me, however, I enjoy observing the way life falls back into place. The toothbrush slides into the cup waiting empty on the sink."
Kitty's honest account of her childhood, her family, her personal encounters with integration and her journey to find "home" resonate with each description and heartfelt memory. I'm a fan of her writing and look forward to more, soon!

Review of Kitty Oliver's Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-27
Kitty Oliver has taken a changing time in our country's history and shaped it into a time of growth, understanding and exploration of herself and the multifaceted world around her. Her writing makes you sigh out loud as she takes you with her through colorful, sometimes sad, sometimes funny memories of her life. A compilation of essays, this wonderful book easily moves from one tale to the next as Ms. Oliver admirably exposes her pain and joy for the world to see. Ms. Oliver's skill as a writer is, without question, astounding. With such a poetic style to her writing, this book will bring one last sigh to your lips as you close the book at its end, only wishing for more.

The truth
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-23
For those of us who "came of age" during the time Kitty Oliver remembers so poignantly, her story is a great affirmation of our hopes and fears. In both Race and Change in Hollywood, and Multicolored Memories, Kitty writes down what some people knew and no one else cared about. The reviewer for Publisher's Weekly may dismiss the feelings of black reader's who grew up in the 60's, but Kitty Oliver doesn't.

THE FIRST
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-28
Picture yourself in a SUV roving through out the countryside. You take in the view of the countryside but are in such a hurry to reach your destination to the point of not appreciating what you've seen. Kitty Oliver's autobiography is very similar to the above experience. She takes you through the roads, streets, detours and valleys of her life never stopping to give you a full appreciation of this native Floridian.

As the first generation of Black students to integrate the University of Florida in Gainesville (1965)Oliver certainly has a story to tell. It is one of turbulent times and great transitions as she leaves the segregated community of her youth and enters into a whole new chapter in her life. Oliver shows us her fears, drive and hope that she has for the future that was denied her elders. Now it is up to her to make a difference.

Kitty tells of her quest in finding her roots from the exploration of her Geechee background to her attempts to become a bridge to her estranged father's family. You meet up with a varied mix of people in her community (train workers, cooks, teachers,etc) who held things together even in their limited world. She also dispels the myth of the united Black community during segregation. You meet with Black people who are class conscious, want to keep the status quo and are insanely concerned about skin color. Her Jacksonville home reveals a diversity of Blacks who have their own opinions and mores that are not necessarily what one would want them to have.

Such a coming of age story has great potential but Oliver lets us down. She takes us on an excursion of her stream of consciousness as we roam from one subject to another. Her thoughts appear disconnected and you do get confused as to how she gets into school in one moment and then is married in the next without anything in between. She rarely talks about her own family except to mention her biracial adopted daughter and son. What about her husband and the lives they shared together? Was it unable to survive in an integrated world?

Oliver goes on and on about multi-culturalism as if she just discovered it. You get a sense that she doesn't fully appreciate who she is and at times you wonder how much she has assimilated (her word) in the white culture.

Despite those flaws her work is an enjoyable read of one reminiscing about those FIRSTS who broke the racial barriers and ushered in a new era. Her story is one that should be read, reflected upon and appreciated for its one particular viewpoint of a time gone bye.

Kentucky
The Rediscovery of North America (Clark Lectures)
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (1991-06-18)
Author: Barry Lopez
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Average review score:

Very poignant in today's world of rapid development
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-04
Extremely good prose. A poignant testimony to the loss of the Earth's resources in the face of historical and current development. Highly recommend adding this to your book collection if you have any affinity to the natural world.

Speaks to our times...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-07
As eloquent as it is insightful. Barry Lopez moves us to see and question. A true gift from writer to reader.

The Rediscovery of North America
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-12
Time is a precious commodity, and it is hard to find time to do all that must be done. But, the short time that is needed to read this book will be well worth spending.

Same old argument
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-14
When I was taking my Native American History class I discovered that there were two types of history. The first type dealt with Native Americans in a negative way the common steriotypes Native Americans were protrayed as dirty durnken and savage even in the modern average world.

The secound type is the opposite end of the spectrum Native Americans loved the land and were at peace with it. Than the big bad europians came along and killed them. But even in the modern day they carry on stoicly in the face of insermountable odds.

The truth is somewhere in between the two extremes and it is not hard to figure out into which of the two catogories this book falls. It pretends to be a serious historical approach but really is just prograganda. What happened to Native Americans was awful but people hhave been getting loads of crap dumped on them since the begining of time. Just because one group has been through a lot doesn't make them any better or noble than any of the rest of us.

Overall-I have a problem with the price 72 pages for 9 dollars?? Come on. I also think the book fails both as a historical work and as call to arms(its never quite sure which it is)

Get this book if this is your thing but do your research first.

Kentucky
The Shadow of Death: The Holocaust in Lithuania
Published in Hardcover by Univ Pr of Kentucky (1992-01)
Author: Harry Gordon
List price: $22.00
Used price: $13.45

Average review score:

Very interesting read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-05
Although this book is not of high quality literary-wise, it is very interesting. As a reader you get a realistic glimpse of how life in the Lithuanan Jewish gettho's was during WWII. I was shocked to find out that not only Germans, but Lithuanians and Poles too were involved in mass-killings of innocent people. 'The shadow of death' is a very suitbale titel, because that is exactly how the jewish people must have felt: living in the shadow of death.

Please keep genealogy searches off the review page
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-13
While I know that genealogy searching can be difficult, please share this information where it will do the most good: with the author. As a Librarian, I depend on the kind of informative, concise, and relevant reviews that are shared on a regular basis by those kind souls who have actually read the book in question. Not having read the book, my stars are simply there so that I could post the messege. Thank you

Great Reading!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-06
I couldn't put this book down and didn't want it to end. Harry could easily write a sequel to this book of how he transitioned into American life. This book is very easy reading and insightful of the atrocities that happened in Lithuania. Harry I admire you.

Haven't read it yet! Just find out!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-16
Hello, Harry! I am your cousin, Leslie Hoffman Levenson (my mom's name was Ina Ginsberg, daughter of my grandfather Jack Ginsberg). I learned about your book on this title a while ago. I'd like to hear from you thru e mail shown at below (LEV10315@aol.com). Our cousin, Esther Ginsberg Cohen (daughter of Alex Ginsberg)also learns about you recently thru our cousin, Shelly and Marlee Ginsberg who went to the Museum of Holocaust in Wash. DC. Esther and I found each other by accident! Long story! We also found out there The Ginsberg brothers (Jack, Alex and Barney) did have sisters back in Lithuania we never knew ever existed). Please contact me and let you know that you have more cousins still living and well! Unfortunately, your book is out of print! Is there any way we can obtain that? Please don't put this on line as we the cousins are trying to locate you! :-) We are surely proud of your accomplishment for writing this book we want to read. We would love to know more about our descendents despite the history that happened. Thank you so much, Harry from your long lost cousin, LESLIE of Granada Hills, CA born in Buffalo, NY in 1948 daughter of Morris and Ina Hoffman (both still living).

Kentucky
Spitting Image
Published in Hardcover by Clarion Books (2003-04-21)
Author: Shutta Crum
List price: $15.00
New price: $4.99
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Average review score:

Wow!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-22
wow, this book was really quite extraordinary, i loved it sooo much. i read it a few weeks ago, and now i decided to do my book report on it! so i am excited....but this book is so wonderful. it is historical fiction, and it brings together the fealings of happiness, sorrow, laughing-ness (if thats a word. lol.)and i really enjoyed it...Jessie Bovey is a bright young girl, and she is an amazing character.i loved her personality. and her grandma really is awesome there towards the end. lol. she kicks bootie. LOL. ha ha. but anyways. i would suggest to anyone who wants to read a brilliant book! well gtg. bye

Creative!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-25
I liked this book because Shutta Crum had a very unique writer's craft. It was a real page-turner! It had many of a 'big idea' and was funny at the same time. I liked the way she described the setting and the characters, it really gave you a feel that you were there with Jessica and Robert and had all the same feelings and thoughts. I think any person can enjoy this, even if they are into mystery, action, comedy...anything. This book included all of it, that's why it was so great to read.

Creative!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-25
I liked this book because Shutta Crum had a very unique writer's craft. It was a real page-turner! It had many of a 'big idea' and was funny at the same time. I liked the way she described the setting and the characters, it really gave you a feel that you were there with Jessica and Robert and had all the same feelings and thoughts. I think any person can enjoy this, even if they are into mystery, action, comedy...anything. This book included all of it, that's why it was so great to read.

My Favorite Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-06
This is my all-time favorite book. It's so hard to put into words how great it is! Throughout the novel I learned to care for the characters SO much, and I found myself crying, so nervous my stomach fluttered, or so happy I had the most amazing feeling inside me, like everything was perfect. It's amazing what talent Shutta has with her writing. I am encouraging *everyone* to read this book. The only warning I have...is that you'll be glued to it until the very last page. There were parts in the book where I wanted to skip ahead and find out what happened next! It is a perfect book about family, history, and loyalty. I have never read a book this inspiring and amazing in my entire lifetime. Shutta's charming words are sure to capture your heart with this heart-warming story about Jessica Kay Bovey.

Kentucky
Thomas Merton's Gethsemani: Landscapes Of Paradise
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2005-06-10)
Author: Harry L. Hinkle
List price: $29.95
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Average review score:

expanding horizons
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-12
I'll admit. I bought this book because the photographer, Harry Hinkle, is my cousin's husband.BUT.. I found myself drawn past the incredible photography of both Merton Thomas and Harry to the moving and insightful writing. The sheer joy of life reflected in the words AND photographs of this book, make me want to look at everything with new eyes and heart.

Thomas Mertson's Gethsemani
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-23
Thomas Merton's Gethsemani, Landscapes of Paradise by Monica Weis was, for me, a worthwhile read on a number of levels. Her premise was fascinating namely that Merton expanded his soul and grew progressively in his relationship with God by embracing not only the rules and rigors of monasticism but the mini-universe of the physical monastery, the land of Gethsemani itself. Weis details Merton's apprehension of this "paradise" with deceptive simplicity - the hills, rivers, storms, birds, smells and rhythms not only beckon him to deeper solititude but lead him into expanding realization, prayer and praise. And that for me, was the core accomplishment of the book. Weis never goes over the top. Her writing is clear and definite without strain, puffery or poetry. Rather the poetry of the book is her step by step detailing of the changes occuring within Merton himself as he allows Gethsemani - its physicality and metaphor - into his mind and heart. She traces the contours of a dynamic, poetic soul and the book shares the movement. Haley's black and white pictures of Gethsemani are simultaneously homey and mysterious; each invites a second look, a revaluation of your first response. His photography and Weis's premise go hand in hand. I remember one shot of a night sky - a black expanse spangled with hundreds of stars. It is sweeping and dramatic, far more majestic than those of woods, sheds and farm tools. Yet it locked perfectly with Weis's final chapters on Merton's (mystic) experience of a palpable unity; his sense that the world's religions have a common source and his full embrace of the METAPHOR he lived at Gethsemani. The book was my summer's morning read - a chapter a day with a cup of Starbuck's! A good way to start a day.

Thomas Merton--being alive
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-11
Mr. Hinkles evocative and enduring photographs and Ms. Weis' lyrical
text complement each other in support of Thomas Merton's enormous life. This is a precious text largely because it celebrates the courage to
simply be. One can read about Merton's contemplative life and very nearly be with him--in his light under the trees and sky and birds which
are fundamental and which were so essential to his routine, his daily
habit. Weis' text in particular is a carefully crafted essay--both probing and reverential. The book is an acheivement.

"thomas merton, the icon"
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-11
Five stars for the stunning photography of Harry L. Hinkle, and the wonderful layout of this volume, with it's telling quotes from Thomas Merton's own nature writings. His nature oeuvre is substantial, and this volume fills a need. Unfortunately, the essay text by Monica Weis is unbalanced. One is left with a very misleading idea of what this man was really about. He was not just a Franciscan icon lost in the rapture of the forests. On one level, we do a disservice to this great man in constantly perpetuating this kind of mythology. Too many reverential, saccharine treatments have been printed already. Merton was so much more; and others, beginning with biographer Michael Mott, have brought real balanced treatment to the life of this extremely complex man.

In the Foreward, Brother Patrick Hart makes mention of pilgrimages to the the places of interest in the physical and spiritual odessey of Thomas Merton. Who are these dear people who feel the need to do precisely what Thomas Merton himself so often railed against? Please desist from attempting to create an Icon of this most complex of human beings.

Kentucky
To the End of the Solar System: The Story of the Nuclear Rocket
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2003-12)
Author: James A. Dewar
List price: $65.00
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Average review score:

A True Believer's History
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-03
I have been a big fan of the Nuclear Thermal Rocket for many years. In 1966 my family drove by the Jackass Flats test site and I still have vivid memories of the AEC carpools passing us at 100mph on their private freeway from Las Vegas, hard hats stacked next to the back windows of their government-issue Chevys.

As I learned more about this program in recent years, the advantages of nuclear rockets seemed less clear to me. Is the 2x reduction in propellant weight really worth the big increase in cost and danger of a white-hot nuclear reactor? This book confirms my growing suspicions that NTR was and is a bad idea. The bare facts make it clear that this technology wasn't worth the costs even in the nuclear-friendly 1950s.

One often sees the claim that NERVA had a flight-ready design at the time of cancellation in 1971. The detailed descriptions of the many reactor tests in this book make it clear that this really wasn't so. Despite a huge amount of research, the high-temperature graphite/uranium fuel elements in these reactors were still subject to considerable cracking, corrosion and erosion. It was considered a great milestone when a test reactor lost less than 100lbs of bomb-grade uranium blown out the nozzle, mostly in the form of gas or microscopic inhalable particles.

This shouldn't have been a surprise to anyone. The great nuclear physicist Luis Alvarez had pointed out the fundamental physical limitations of the H2/U-235 rocket engine in an obscure but unclassified journal as early as 1947. And the Rover/NERVA project was consistently opposed by every Presidential Science Adviser and every NASA Administrator right up to its final cancellation in 1971. Why then was so much public money wasted on a project that almost all competent observers thought was unwise?

This is the strongest aspect of Dewar's book. He has reconstructed in great detail the political deals that kept Rover and NERVA alive. It's a fascinating window into a past age of Congressional politics -- an age when a few powerful committee chairmen ruled the Hill with an iron fist, deciding billion-dollar research programs at all-night poker parties lubricated with large amounts of hard liquor. None of these men had any kind of technical education at all, and their decisions seem to have largely been based on pork barrel politics. It's no accident that the strongest supporter of NERVA was Sen. Clinton Anderson of New Mexico, home of Los Alamos where most of the NERVA funding ended up.

But I also wanted to learn all the technical details of the program, and in this area Dewar has come up short. He obtained a vast number of formerly-classifed internal project documents, but the information from them is not conveyed to the reader in a digestible form. Dewar has tried to water down the subject to make it understandable for a non-technical audience. This is really difficult to do in a complex field like fission reactor design, and some of his analogies and interpretations are oversimplified and downright misleading. A few tables summarizing the different reactor designs and their test histories would have been nice.

Dewar also adopts the annoying practice of summarizing lenghty policy documents in his own words, without including the original text in a appendix. On p.248-249, he even includes what seems to be a totally imaginary conversation between some of the major players in NERVA -- hardly an acceptable practice for serious historians.

Even worse, there are a few telling technical errors that make me doubt that Dewar understands nuclear physics very well. In an attack on anti-nuclear activists on p.209-210, he confuses Pu-239 with Pu-238. These isotopes have very different properties and safety problems.

But the biggest problem with this book is that the author is a true believer. He repeats as gospel truth all the claims made by pro-NERVA politicians, while expressing nothing but scorn for the opinions of highly qualified experts like Alvarez, Herbert York, and Jim Webb. When he states facts, he usually can be trusted. But his analysis and opinions are highly biased and untrustworthy. I hope somebody writes a better book on this topic someday -- but I'm keeping this one until that happens.

historical aspect in rocketry
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-03
Excellent book... a must read for anyone interested in space propulsion technology which needs a 'second look' to enable humans to bridge our Solar System in the future.

Definitive Narrative History
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-15
Six million horsepower from a reactor the size of a 55 gallon drum. This was the promise of the ultimate in all-American 60's muscle - the nuclear thermal rocket engine. With it, you could send jumbo jet sized payloads to the Moon, or send a crew to Mars in 3 months.

James A. Dewar's exhaustively researched work (there are 91 pages of footnotes) shows both the technical and political sides of the 18 year effort to develop the nuclear rocket. Like the space program itself, the nuclear rocket program was a creature of the Washington political process.

While lacking the polish of a David McCullough, Dewar does a good job of introducing the cast of characters and their competing visions for America's technologic and social future.

Dewar's thesis is that the nuclear engine was feasible and would have revolutionized space travel, boosting mankind into a 2001 Space Odyssey. I found his viewpoint to be refreshing, especially in contrast to the dour visions of historians such as Richard Rhodes. He devotes Appendix D of the book to "safety and environmental aspects of testing."

Perhaps the most poignant vision one gets from reading the book is that of the turning of a page in American history. With the end of Apollo and the nuclear engine project in 1973 we go from an era of limitless promise, to an era of sharply limited outcomes.

History in Limbo
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-07
To The End of the Solar System is an excellent primer on the nuclear rocket -- the history that might have been, and still waiting to be. It is a story even avid spaceflight fans may not have heard. Dewar presents a very readable account of the visionary engineers, project managers, and politicians who developed the first nuclear thermal rockets. The narrative covers the politics and engineering (with supplementary appendices) without being overwhelming. It explains why the nuclear rocket is superior to chemical engines, yet why the world failed to embrace it. The technology has lain dormant for decades, but is quietly making a revival in NASA's project Prometheus and elsewhere. Learn where it all started and where it's going; read To The End of the Solar System. It is well worth the price of admission.

Kentucky
Urban Guerrilla Warfare
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2007-04-20)
Author: Anthony James Joes
List price: $35.00
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Average review score:

It is not what it purports to be
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-05
The problem with this book is that it is not what it says it is. there is very, very little warfare described here--with the exception of the chapter on Grozny, Joes almost completely ignores urban combat as far as tactics, techniques, 1st person accounts of the combat, etc. It is all big picture stuff, and lots and lots of background about events leading up to the situations he describes--but again, not much on warfare itself.

Excellent book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-29
This is an excellent treatment of the subject, dispelling myths and misconceptions. A fine addition to my library; and I am now procuring more of his works. Accurate histories, much research in original sources and well documented. Highly recommended.

A Necessary Read for the Student of Guerrilla Warfare
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-16
I have read a number of books on guerrilla warfare, everything from the US Army's Field Manual on Guerrilla Warfare (FM 3-24) to Bard O'Neil's Insurgency & Terrorism: Inside Modern Revolutionary Warfare to David Galula's Counter-Insurgency Warfare:Theory and Practice to John Nagl's Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife: Counterinsurgency Lessons from Malaya and Vietnam. Dr. Anthony James Joes' Urban Guerrilla Warfare is a necessary read for the student of guerrilla warfare. In this book Joes covers eight different urban settings...from Warsaw in WWII to Grozny in the 1990's. As with his other books, Urban Guerrilla Warfare manages to execute that difficult dance of providing an enormous number of facts and figures yet is eminently readable. It is hard to imagine that the 164 pages of text actually contain the hundreds of notes that they do, as it is written in a manner that the facts and figures presented don't disrupt the flow of the reading.

My personal favorite chapter (besides the conclusion) is the one on the battle for Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City) during the Tet Offensive. It is impossible that, after reading the chapter on Saigon, you could still think that the US and South Vietnam lost the Tet Offensive, and that it was not a total disaster for the Viet Cong. In fact, you will walk away with the realization that the US did win the counterinsurgency battle in Vietnam...and that it was North Vietnamese regulars that defeated South Vietnam in 1975.

The conclusion chapter provides a number of critical ideas for both the insurgents and counterinsurgents in fighting in an urban environment. Ideas that would assist the US and her allies today in the insurgencies she is involved in.

In summary, this is more than a book to buy and have on your shelf. This is one to read - and to reference back to.

An In-Depth, Sophisticated Analysis of Urban Insurrections in Their Historical Setting
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-11
This work has a refreshing depth and understanding. It purview includes the insurgencies in Warsaw, Budapest, Latin American countries, etc. Owing to the comprehensiveness of the book, I limit my review to its first part.

Joes quotes Fuller, Tukhachevsky, Lord D'Abernon, and Carr as to the decisive nature of Poland's victory over the Bolsheviks in 1920 (pp. 11-12).

Joes unmasks the nature and extent of the Soviet-Nazi pact: "Stalin punctiliously sent great trainloads of food and materiel to Hitler so the latter could evade the consequences of the British blockade...Apologists for Stalin often maintain that Stalin saved Russia, and indeed all of Europe, by his pact with Hitler because it gave Russia time to prepare for war. True, he did get an extra year and a half of peace, but during this time he was helping feed the Nazi war machine...The `second front' for which Stalin incessantly clamored in 1942-1944 had already been there in 1939...What saved the USSR was not Stalin's cunning but Hitler's errors..." (p. 33)

As for the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (1943), Joes focuses on the very limited ability of Poles to render significant aid (p. 24). The Polish Underground was not yet deployed, and it possessed a meager stock of arms at the time.

Joes provides considerable detail about the Warsaw Uprising (1944) and the 63-day agony and defeat, all thanks to Soviet perfidy. There has been a tendency for writers to be wishy-washy about Stalin's conduct. Joes will have none of it. He quotes Air Marshall Sir John Slessor, RAF commander, who called it `the blackest-hearted, coldest-blooded treachery on the part of the Russians.'" (p. 35)

In conclusion, "The Germans were responsible for the deaths of a quarter of a million civilians in Warsaw, by mass execution and deliberate starvation, but no one was arraigned for these crimes (nor for Katyn) at Nuremberg." (p. 37). "For decades after Germany's surrender, punishment continued to be meted out to Nazi war criminals. Nobody has been punished for the countless thousands of deaths resulting from Stalin's deportations of Polish civilians in 1939-1941. No one has been punished for the murders of thousands of Polish officers at Katyn." (p. 21). Well said!

Kentucky
An American Iliad: The Story of the Civil War
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (2004-01-09)
Author: Charles P. Roland
List price: $35.00
New price: $22.70
Used price: $24.29
Collectible price: $40.00

Average review score:

Best Short Book on the American Civil War Available
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-26
Charles P. Roland in 263 pages of text gives the best overview of the American Civil War I have ever seen. Roland, in my opinion, gives the most unbiased, objective and comprehensive view of the Civil War including its origins. In "An American Iliad," he gives the major positions of the North and South on all important issues leading up to the war without being an advocate or judge.

His book is not "primarily an analytical study" but rather "a synthesis of the major writings on the war" (Preface xi). One quibble I had was his reliance on Clausewitz over Jomini, the latter being a greater influence on the war's strategy and tactics. I appreciated the academic format of the book, published by The University Press of Kentucky, which had, for me, required hallmarks including a preface, table of contents, maps and photographs, a bibliographic essay and an index. The absence of footnotes or endnotes was understandable due to the length of the book and its overview perspective, but I would have preferred being able to review his sources to enhance my understanding or for further research.

Roland's view is that the final impasse which the North and South came to in 1860 grew out of "political, economic, cultural, and social differences... [reaching] back to the very origin of the nation and beyond" (1). He does state, however, that slavery was the chief contributing factor to all these sources of tension which finally brought on war. He presents well the two, and sometimes more, sides of various arguments but concentrates on the political ones. He discusses not only the main stream ideas of the opponents but also the extremes of both sides such as the four attitudes the Senate had on the spread of slavery in the Mexican cession. Roland discusses the various machinations the politicians then went through to eventually produce the Compromise of 1850, the penultimate compromise.

My final example of his fairness is his discussion of President Buchanan's actions in 1860 giving reasons that his equivocating was not necessarily a bad thing if he was, in fact, trying to limit the damage secession of the lower South could cause. I do detect Roland's belief that war was inevitable although he never expressly said that. It may be that a logical and coherent presentation of all the actions leading to the war made it seem inevitable--a penalty of hindsight. I could find no evidence of sectional biases in his book.

Good introduction to ACW
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-30
American Iliad provides a well balanced introduction to the American Civil War despite its succinct length. It does glaze over the most important events, but still to limited to much more than a general introduction. For more in-depth research McPherson, Foote, Buell and Catton are the premiere scholars of the era.

A Good and Short Overview of the War.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-12
This book gives a solid overview of the entire Civil War but doesn't read like a just the facts book.The book focus on the key events in both theaters of the war and has chapters on the homefronts as well as the poltical aspects of the war.

Kentucky
Apples
Published in Paperback by North Point Press (1999-09)
Author: Frank Browning
List price: $21.00
New price: $15.78
Used price: $10.55

Average review score:

An engaging read, the commonplace made almost sacred
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-05
Browning's journeys through the world of apples are exhaustive, lyric and compelling. If you like NPR, or the old New Yorker, you'll love this book on the fruit of English Yeoman, Thomas Jefferson, French Nobelmen and Johnny Appleseed. You will never look at a grocery store Red Delicious the same again.

A good read and an intriguing look at the history of apples.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-29
Frank Browning perpetuates my belief that journalists are writing the best gardening and plant books. Gardeners are not typically interesting writers and there is such a proliferation of mediocre gardening books on the market. "Apples" is a delightful book. Anyone who wants to grow apples or simply go to the grocery store and buy apples would be enlightened by Frank Browning's book.

Essential To Keep Doctor Away
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-05
Frank Browning's Apples is fascinating. Until I read the book, I never knew the complexity of growing and marketing apples, nor did I fully realize the richness of the apple's botanical heritage. Where I buy apples, my choice is the usual six varieties; the passion of this book reawakened my experience, not long ago, of a bag of winesaps purchased at a farmers market in New York State. If you love apples too, you'll be inspired and frustrated by this book. Beware: it has some botanical sections that are highly technical; these could certainly have benefited by some illustrations or charts. Nevertheless, a culinary book like this one that leaves a lingering taste in your mouth is well worth opening.

Food writer Elliot Essman's other reviews and food articles are available at www.stylegourmet.com


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