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New Hampshire Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

New Hampshire
Gods in Granite: The Art of the White Mountains of New Hampshire
Published in Hardcover by Syracuse University Press (2001-02)
Author: Robert L. McGrath
List price: $49.95
New price: $37.96
Used price: $28.95

Average review score:

DECEPTIVE COVER PAGE
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-25
Except for about 16 color plates, all the reproductions are in black and white. Would not recommend if you are interested in the color plates. From the front cover, it looks like all the reproductions would be in color, which is not the case.

GODS IN GRANITE
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-15
I have listened to Bob McGrath lecture on this famous school of landscape painting in the White Mountains of NH. I also wrote a paper for MacIntosh College in my Art History course. It is about 20 pages+ long, and reflects my knowledge of the Passaconaway area of the National Forest, where I attended the last UNH Forestry Camp in 1964, and first learned of this legend and lore from Dr. Clark Stevens. Now, there is a resurgence of interest in this old art form of seeing the creator in these works of nature--for which this beautiful area is so famous.

Congrats to Dartmouth's Bob McGrath for producing such a painstaking piece of work on this school. Also look for Catherine Crawford's book on indexing all the available paintings she could note in her book for the Forest Society. John Henderson has a great web page on them, too.

I produced an article for the MountainEar newspaper after this course, in time for the annual sales of these historic paintings by enthusiastic collectors. There will also soon be an exhibition and interpretative display in a newly constructed Intervale Overlook building in North Conway, where this scene attracted many of the old artists in its time.

New Hampshire
Mobil Travel Guide 2000 Northeast: Connecticut, Maine,Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, ... Guide New England (Ct, Me, Ma, Nh, Ri, Vt))
Published in Paperback by Consumer Guide Books (2000-01)
Author: Mobil Travel Guides
List price: $16.95
Used price: $0.81

Average review score:

Mobil Travel Guide 2000 - Northeast
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-27
I highly recommend this guide to anyone who will be traveling in the Northeast as well as Canada. This guide gives you everything from upcoming events for the year to where to stay & eat. The maps are easy to read and follow. I have been a reader of the Mobil Guide for many years and it is continuing to give the most accurate, up-to-date travel information. This is the MUST-HAVE for the Northeast traveler.

Mobile Guide
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-03
The book gives a good overview of the areas with many addresses. Anyhow I found it a bit too black and white. It gives useful maps, but no coloured pictures from the areas, which would make it a bit more pleasant to read.

New Hampshire
Muskrat Courage
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Minotaur (2000-06-07)
Author: Philip Lawson
List price: $23.95
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Average review score:

A good read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-18
Will Keats is an unemployed school counselor, but lives welldue to the money he has inherited. Will lives with his significantother Adrienne and her eight-year old daughter Olivia in Tocqueville, Georgia. Will loves Adrienne and seems to care deeply for Olivia. However, he soon learns how much he loves the child too when she is kidnapped. The police are stymied by a lack of clues and no ransom note.

Everyone initially thinks that Adrienne's former husband Byron committed the act. Byron, who detests Will, has a perfect alibi and passes a lie detector test. Through a few lucky breaks, the police identify and locate the abductor, but find him dead execution style. Olivia remains missing. Acting on an unusual tip from an unlikely source, Will risks his life to go out on his own to rescue his "daughter."

MUSKRAT COURAGE is a fast paced, moving drama that focuses on the impact a kidnapping has on the remaining family members. The characters are well drawn and likable, making it easy for readers to care what happens to them. As time (and the pages) passes, a growing sense of horror and despair for the safety of Olivia grips the audience. Phillip Lawson tells a superb story that keeps reader interest at the highest levels.

Good beginning but slow
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-16
I had no trouble getting into this book and was looking forward to a good read, but about a third of the way through the plot slowed down and I grew increasingly bored until the ending, which I read but found implausible. All in all, I thought the writing and style were good but I didn't get attached to any of the characters and didn't find myself caring about the outcome.

New Hampshire
My Wilderness: Stories of Adventure And Disaster in the White Mountains
Published in Paperback by Booksurge Llc (2005-12-12)
Author: Matt Lacroix
List price: $12.99
New price: $12.99
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Average review score:

Good light read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-30
This book was a good, quick read. While I wouldn't endorse all the activities of the author from a safety standpoint it's nice to see at least some kids and young adults actually get away from their TV's and video games and explore the outdoors.

My wilderness
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
It was a pretty good book I am glad it wasn't any longer than it was because I was really losing interest.

New Hampshire
Body Surfing
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Anita Shreve
List price: $29.07

Average review score:

A Sequel of Sorts
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-04
Can a house be a main character? It is in this book, which features the same New Hampshire beach house that appeared in The Pilot's Wife, Fortune's Rock and Sea Glass. The house remains steadfast, but the lives of the people who occupy it are as stormy and unpredictable as the Atlantic Ocean it faces.

This time we meet the Edwards family, consisting of genial Mark, impossibly snobbish and nasty Anna, and their "slow" daughter Julia, who, nevertheless, is expected by Anna to pass her SATs and go to college like her two older brothers, now successful adults. To that end, the family hires Sydney, a young widow, as a live-in tutor for the summer.

The personalities in the house mesh in strange and unpredictable ways, and when the two brothers come to stay, a love triangle begins that predictably ends in disaster. Along the way, Julie breaks out of her family-imposed torpor in surprising ways, and to continue the ocean analogy, everything is as predictable as the tides, and as unpredictable as a sudden squall.

I loved this book. I loved the spare use of language, the careful unfolding of the personalities, the strange twists and turns of each life, and the predictable--yet not--ending.

If you like Anita Shreve, you will ike this book, one of her best. But for those who do not like her, it is quintessential Shreve, and judging by the wide range of reviews, not to everyone's taste.

Body Surfing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-17
A friend who gave Body Surfing a rave review recommended it as a must read. I have only read 30 pages and I am really not interested in finding out how it ends. It is half screenplay, giving directions, "She leans against the railing". The other half is written like a telegram just missing the "stop" at the end of a sentence. Short broken sentences that reveal little to nothing about the intensity of the characters. The blurb on the back of the book makes you feel as though you can relate to Sydney, and yet when you open the book the cover doesn't match the inside. This is a tough book to get into. I feel as though I don't know the characters nor do I care. This book so far is the least impressive book I have read in a long time and I can't believe I actually bought it. Thank goodness for library cards!

My least favorite Shreve novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
I have to say this is my least favorite and I have read them all. I have never classified Shreve's books as mere romance novels, as some of my friends do, but this one comes close to being just that. It was too predictable and lacking the usual richness in historical context and intrigue.

"The family never stays after Labor Day. Never."
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-25
There are very few books in my life that I picked up and read all in one day. Body Surfing is one of those books. Sydney, age 29, has not had a terribly easy life thus far. She has had two marriages, one of which ended when she divorced her husband and the other ended when she was widowed. We meet her as she tries to start anew working as a tutor to the teen daughter of a well-off couple spending their summer in a beach home in New Hampshire.

The story wends its way through three years of relationship changes and emotional stories before its conclusion leaving Sydney in a better place... or at least a hopeful one.

One of the passages bit me as I read it for it's truth in description... Sydney is riding in a boat with the two sons of the family whom she has just met the day before... "There is a low-throated rumble of an engine and an instant breeze. She puts on the sweatshirt, which covers her tank suit but leaves her legs bare. She feels more naked than she did with just the suit on." (emphasis mine - exactly how it feels to be dressed this way...)

Complicated Lives.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-25
The setting is a beach house in New Hampshire, the summer home of the Edwards family. Sydney is hired to be the tutor for their "slow" daughter, Julie, while Mr. Edwards is an architect who enjoys his rose garden and collects historical documents on the house they're living in. It is the same house that was featured in several other Shreve novels, like "The Pilot's Wife". Mrs. Edwards strikes me as a snob and a bit of a racist with her remarks about Sydney being half-Jewish. The brothers, Ben and Jeff, who arrive a little later in the novel are the catalysts to a big change in Sydney's life.

Sydney is 29, divorced once and widowed once. She is floating through life, not sure what to do or where to go. She accepts the job as a tutor for the summer and builds a good relationship with Julie even discovering her artistic flair. In the midst of this summer she falls for one of the brother's and a relationship begins, rather suddenly.

The whole story is based on this relationship and its outcome.

I enjoyed the clean writing and the lack of overdescriptive paragraphs that tend to drive me crazy in some novels. I like to be able to picture the characters in my own way. Having said that, I would have liked a little more background or information on some of the characters, most notably the two brothers. I think we could have used a bit more fleshing out of their characters. I still do not completely understand why Jeff acted the way he did. There are so many internal struggles going on with this family that each character is a story unto themselves. Also, I had hoped for more of an ending but I guess I will have to make some assumptions as to Sydney's future life.

Overall, an easy read that kept me hooked.

New Hampshire
A Gathering of Days
Published in Unknown Binding by Perfection Learning Prebound (1983-01)
Author: Joan W. Blos
List price: $11.19
New price: $10.00
Used price: $0.40

Average review score:

A Unique Historical Account
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-27

Blos, Joan W., author. A Gathering of Days. (1979).
A Historical Fiction Chapter Book. This is my 7th chapter book reviewed.
Winner of the Newberry Honor
Time Period and Setting: New Hampshire: 1830-1832

Written in the form of a journal, it is a story about a thirteen year old girl who finds courage within after her mom dies. In her journal, Catherine tells of her experiences in keeping house for her father and sister, the events of living in pre-civil war days, and the changes that take place in her life. She discusses many of the historical events of the time period.
On the "Author's Note" page at the front of the book, the author writes, "I worked with documents and books and newspapers of the region, visited museums and small collections, and even explored old graveyards in search of further clues" (page unnumbered). It is with this care that the author is able to present a largely authentic story. Unveiling the time, settings, and events appear to be done with care. It is a way for readers to understand more about "Young America."
Late elementary and early middle school students would find a personal connection to the story through its "journal" form. The entries are intriguing and they build up each other. In as much, students would find connection socially and personally to the character, Catherine. Some of the events in the story are much discussed. Looking at the world from her viewpoint could advance student's discoveries and help them to gather their own personal opinions of the valuable circumstances.

Ok for school not for fun
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
It was an ok book. I think that it takes a very special talent to write a historical journal and this author didn't have it. With a journal you are suppose to write your personal feelings and thoughts. But this author never really wrote Catherine's feelings, which misses a big opportunity to relate to the character. Also with journals normally that have one big problem and then small every day problems. The one big problem is resolved at the end of the book and the small problems are resolved in about a week. A Gathering of Days didn't have every day problems and had three some what big problems that were never drawn out. It is a quick read and great if you are doing a lot of research on that time period with other books. If you are reading this for fun don't bother its not entertaining.
~Kenz

"not the best book"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-05
I read this book for school. It is the journal of a 13 yr. old girl.
Why is it "not the best book"?
1. The story is fairly dull. Most of it is about her everyday life (some people might find that interesting, but I didn't AT ALL)
2. The most exciting things that happen in the story, aren't that exciting.
3. There is not really a "climax" to the story.
4. Sometimes, she starts to write about an event in her journal, but never finishes it.
5. It is written in 1800's style English, making it hard to understand sometimes.
6. It abruptly ends; there isn't really a "conclusion" or a wrapping up of her thoughts.
These are the reasons that this isn't the best book. I would NOT read it again or for pleasure.



A Gathering of Days
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-08
I did not enjoy reading the book, A Gathering of Days. The entire book uses odd phrasology that detracts from the overall effect of the story. The word choices throughout the book make it very difficult to read and understand. The story is fine in and of itself but I was unable to enjoy the story because of the heavy word usage and poor sentence structures.

Was it worth it?
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-09
I found the book "A Gathering of Days" interesting and filled with small pieces of history, but it was hard to comprehend and hard to read. The format of the book, journal entries written by a young girl, is neat, but her usage of out-dated words is odd and it takes time to grasp her meaning. Although this book was directed to a younger audience, I believe that older kids would better understand the phrases and words used. If you are interested in reading and seeing for yourself how life was and how people spoke in the 1800's, this book is perfect. The story was sweet and descriptive, but in my opinion, it is a one-time around book, and did not leave a huge impact on me.

New Hampshire
Big If
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Press (2002-11)
Author: Mark Costello
List price: $29.95
New price: $29.95
Used price: $0.96

Average review score:

a cynical author who hates animals
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-28
I decided to give this book a chance, but wish I hadn't. The author has a hateful attitude toward animals that is simply offensive. That, combined with his extreme cynicism, really prevented me from enjoying the book. Not recommended.

Disappointing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-13
I picked up this book thinking I was going to get great inside dope on the secret service and a compelling plot. While Costello certainly includes some great nuggets here and there, overall he's more concerned about trivial, everyday occurances that don't advance the story. By the end of the book, I was left with a big "is that it?" feeling. Skip it or borrow it.

Fun and well-written...if a bit overambitious and unfocused
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-18
Note: this is not an action/adventure tale about the Secret Service. I suspect some of the reviewers here were expecting that, and "Big If" is not that kind of book.

It is a neat, unusual novel. It's fun and funny. I live in Washington DC and know New Hampshire--and the book is set in both of these places--so I particularly appreciated how well the author captured the sense of place. He also draws his characters well.

I got the feeling reading this book that Costello started and stopped writing this book several times over a number of years, and eventually updated it and got it published. As a result, it's rather uneven. For example, the Secret Service member characters hail from the Carter and Reagan eras. They are protecting an unnamed VP who is running for president. It seems--given the frequent mentions of Carter and Reagan--that the VP would be Gerorge Herbert Walker Bush, but it isn't, since the book is supposed to take place in the present or recent past. Characters have cell phones and surf the web, But no mention is made of 9-11,al Qaeda, or Muslim terrorists--and I imagine Secret Service focus, protocols, procedures, and culture and have shifted since and been shaped by 9-11. That's not a deal-breaker for this book, but possibly noteworthy for some readers looking for realism.

As said, Costello develops his characters nicely; however, he dives first into one character, their foibles, troubles, thoughts, musings, background, family life, and related plot--and then jumps to another, dives into their situation etc.--then jumps to another character. This can be an effective device, but it felt like Costello was reaching. The transitions were rather abrupt, and I was slightly impatient to return to the plot line involving the character who had just been fleshed out. But Costello ties it all together at the end pretty effectively.

If you're big on dramatic plotlines and/or suspense, "Big If" won't be for you. Costello seems to have fun delving into the minutiae of everyday thoughts, life, the ins and outs of the workday. And if you're into going there with him, you'll enjoy "Big If."

Beyond Boring
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-15
I read the first 20 pages of this snorer and couldn't continue. NOTHING happens! Why would I consider reading on? What's the first rule of writing a compelling novel? GRAB THE READER ON THE FIRST PAGE! This book never did. I'm not sure how people can rave about the great writing - it just isn't there.

Funny, Smart, Brisk, Trenchant
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-05
One can easily go schizoid reading the reviews on amazon. I just finished this book a month ago and the reader who said he'd never want to read it again astonishes me--I'm keeping it handy so I can, yes, read it again and soon. This book has everything I look for--insider dope, laugh-out-loud insights, brisk pacing, brilliant comic timing, stunning moments, great characters and a very real sense of the pulse of life as it's lived. People bemoan lack of plot, and yets it's exactly the seeming aimlessness of events that roots them in reality and then betrays the secret interconnections among these fascinating characters. Meanwhile, the writing itself and the pacing keep the reader hustling along at a breath-taking pace. And readers who called this "cold" simply missed some of the richest moments I've read in a book lately--read the scene between Gretchen and her son in the batting cage and tell me that's cold. Bunk. I love this book and love this writer and have been telling all my friends to pick it up and his first novel, Bag Men, which I also thought was an utter kick. And no, I'm not a friend of the author's.

New Hampshire
The Witch of Exmoor
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt (1997-09-15)
Author: Margaret Drabble
List price: $23.00
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Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $30.00

Average review score:

Author uses old-fashioned style for new look at society
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-03
If you read James Wood's review in the New York Times, you would get the wrong impression of this novel. The reviewer, I think, completely misunderstood it. The book is a attempt at a genre novel, notably a gothic romance where the main character hides away in an isolated mansion and behaves in a somewhat crazy fashion, at least in the view of her family. Drabble writes in the fashion of a 19th century omniscient author who intrudes and comments on the action; to return to the fashions of long ago in this case is an experimental approach to the work. What she's trying to do, I think, is jolt us into seeing contemporary England much like the 19th century writers like Dickens offered a social critique of their times. Woods calls Drabble's characters caricatures, but unlike Dickens' portrayals, these characters are not types nor are they exaggerated. They are indeed individuals, but we see them more from the outside than the inside. There are many characters in this short novel; thus they can't be as well rounded as Drabble's usual characters.

The main character, the so-called witch, is not insane as Woods says, but merely eccentric. She alone seems to escape from the strictures of modern English society and finds a meaningful kind of freedom. Her grown children do not understand her or appreciate her because they are too caught up in the necessities of contemporary life in England: the materialism, the busyness, the indulgence of children, etc. The generation in the prime of life (her grown children) has forgotten all about endeavors to reach a just society because they are too well off and are distracted. Discussions concerning a just society are just a game to these people who have every material advantage, but something very essential has been lost and only the "witch," Frieda, has any idea what that might be. The novel is a sophisticated critique of contemporary life among the upper middle classes in England. This novel deserves to be read. Mr. Wood finds cliche where there is none in this unique work.

Too Difficult to get Into
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-23
This novel is written in third person present tense (like reading stage directions) with a fly on the wall perspective. I made it through three family dinners where the family intermittedly discusses the possiblity that their possibly just overly flamboyant mother may be insane and social philosophy (all the while bemoaning the position that most of the middle classes and superior cannot truly divest themselves of their self importance enough to discuss it objectively).

The third dinner was all that I could take and I quit about a hundred pages in. This won the Los Angeles Times award so it's somebody's bag, but not mine. I found absolutely no resemblance between Drabble's writing style and Dickens', as has been suggested. I can think of no other author to compare it to except possibly Fitzgerald or Conrad (without the descriptiveness).

Don't waste your time
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-31
Margaret Drabble is guilty of self-indulgent dribble. Her characters are lifeless at best and her story tiresome. The dialogue is unnatural, her descriptions needlessly wordy.

"If eyes were made for seeing"
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-03
I dislike most modern fiction and seldom read anything written after 1900. For a few writers, I make an exception. Margaret Drabble is one of those. As Emerson said, If eyes were made for seeing, then beauty is its own excuse for being." Enjoy Drabble for her writing. If her stories were completely uninteresting, she could be forgiven just on the basis of her wonderful prose. Read her slowly. Appreciate her ability to capture the scene, to paint the characters visually, to be inside the minds of her different characters.
But there is the story, and she never fails to create a fascinating one. Why? Because she absolutely observes people in their habitats as a biologist might study a species.
She is also an intellectual. Horrors. But the fact is, if you are not particularly well read and intellectually curious, you can enjoy her books but will miss a lot. She is a thinking person and writes about other thinking people and the issues of the present.
In some ways she is an old fashioned writer--telling a story. But her detached pauses, when she steps back and reminds you that she is a writer in control of the story with the ability to tell you what she wants to tell you--and not to tell you what she doesn't--is very postmodern.
Her characters may be unfamiliar to some. If you've never envisioned a better society or contemplated life without a VCR or considered paring life down to simple, solitary existance--or if you've never had a mother who might possibly decide to chuck it all in and do as she pleases late in life, you may not identify with her people, but you can still enjoy them, for running through Drabble is always a sly sense of humor, a feeling for irony, and the irristible impulse to show that for all our modern navel-gazing, we are almost always complete strangers to ourselves and each day is potentially a surprise.
Can we ask for more? Read all of Drabble's books and live a fuller, more considered life.

Now i REALLY want to go visit England
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-27
If i worked in the British Tourist Office, this book would be in the "Never Recommend this Book to a Prospective Tourist" list. The characters are despicable. The Witch, Frieda, is the most endearing character of all, and that is sad. Although she did a horrible job raising her children, she acknowledges no responsibility for how screwed up they came up to be. Ha! She plays both sides of the deck, claiming to be "green" and then profiting from industries that destroy the environment. Her son-in-law is a pretty boy politician, her favorite grandson has been brainwashed to believe he is the cat's meow, her own son is a self-important idiot who can't see beyond his own nose... Read it if you want to feel relieved at how your own family is not that bad after all.

New Hampshire
Survival Games: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Atlantic Monthly Pr (1997-08)
Author: Charles Gaines
List price: $23.00
New price: $1.11
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Collectible price: $24.00

Average review score:

A disturbing thriller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-31
This book was difficult for me to read not because it wasn't compelling, it was. I found myself getting more and more angry and wanting to jump into the book and take on Red Sizemore myself. As an avid outdoorsman it was very interesting to read the observations of the woods, the different "survival" skills that the characters employ. This is not a feel good, but certainly worth the read.

Good Entertainment
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-08
I found this book to be very entertaining. Red is an interesting villain with almost supernatural abilities. I began to wonder if he was going to be like Jason and not be able to be killed. The interaction of Bill and Claire is good, especially when he watches her after she has been kidnapped by Red. The book has a little bit of everything, romance, sex, violence.

Don't go in This woods......
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1997-10-04
Stay away... go watch the USA network movie of the week instead. This bomb of an adventure novel starts low (stalked women) and sinks lower (blowing away the bad guys private parts). How creative! Come on, I've read some really bow wow books in my time but this doesn't even attempt to be the least bit creative in its narrative. I've read more involving writings in the classified sections of travel magazines. Stay away, spen your money on the Everest non-fiction adventure "IN THIN AIR" instead. Compared to this "Survival Games" truth IS Stranger Than Fiction......

absolutely rivetting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-25
If this book had Stephen King's name instead of Charles Gaines, it would have sold a million plus copies. I haven't read a thriller this engaging in quite awhile. Since I spent a good deal of time around the New Hampshire area he writes about, I enjoyed it even more. On the surface, this novel is a suspense thriller, but farther down, it has a lot to say about couples, friendships and relationships. Red Sizemore is one sick character, but we understand why he is the way he is from Gaines' characterization. The author spends more time on Bill and Claire than he does on Dray and Portia, but I don't think that detracts in any way from the book. Survival becomes the central point of the book as the two male characters made their fortune by starting a survival games company years before the book opens. When two men kidnap their wives, they have to call upon these wilderness skills to get them back. While a bit gory in parts, the stalking parts of the book are fascinating. I can't believe this was not made into a movie -- it would be easy to capture on film. A thoroughly enjoying read from cover to cover.

New Hampshire
The Ice Chronicles: The Quest to Understand Global Climate Change
Published in Paperback by New Hampshire (2002-10-01)
Authors: Paul Andrew Mayewski and Frank White
List price: $19.95
New price: $8.50
Used price: $4.40

Average review score:

yesterday upon the stair.....
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 47 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-20
Primarily a history of an impressive project to analyse the layers of snow fall on the Greenland ice cap, the book suffers from lack of focus and from unfortunate efforts at being easily approachable and topical. It is strongest at revealing the influence of variation in earth's orbit on local Greenland (and nearby North American) climate, but even here the information is presented hurriedly and one comes away knowing little more of the various climaticaly significant orbital changes the data reveals.

At it's weakest point however, there is a sad attempt to relate the ice core data to global warming. This could be parodied as "there is no evidence of recent dramatic global warming in the ice core data, therefore global warming exists." To be kinder, the author feels "since I know global warming exists from other sources, the lack of data supporting global warming in my ice cores means this must be an entirely new sort of warming." There clearly is an easier explanation.

A cool look at the overheated climate controversy
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-11
If you're interested in global warming and climate change, you're probably aware of how politicized the area has become, and how much hot air has been spewed by proponents and opponents of the idea that we humans are changing the climate, perhaps to a dangerous or catastrophic degree. In The Ice Chronicles, climatologist and arctic explorer Paul Mayewski and author Frank White bring cooler heads and cold, hard facts to the controversy.

The book, published in the fall of 2002, centers on the findings from the two-mile long ice core that Mayewski's team pulled from the center of the Greenland Ice Cap. This ice core, labeled GISP2, allowed scientists to track a wide range of climate variables in exquisite detail over the past 100,000 years. It produced many important findings that can help clarify the highly politicized climate controversy. The core reveals that Earth's climate is far from steady. Even without any contributions from manmade greenhouse gasses, ozone-depleting chemicals or particulates, regional and global conditions have swung from hot to cold and wet to dry many times, often with dramatic suddenness. Mayewski repeatedly makes the point that the climatologically calm, benign Holocene--the time period during which human civilization appeared and has developed--is a myth. The ten millennia or so since the end of the most recent ice age have been marked by two large global climate shifts, the Little Ice Age and the Medieval Warm Period, and many less drastic but still potent changes. He also presents intriguing evidence that some of these changes contributed to the downfall of several ancient civilizations, including the Mesopotamian Empire around 1200 BC, the Mayan Civilization around 900 AD, and the Norse colonies in Greenland around 1400 AD.

My only real criticism of the book is that it may present more of the nitty gritty history and findings of the GISP2 project than most readers want or need. Still, most of this is put into boxes which readers can dive into or skip as they choose.

While the research findings and their implications are fascinating, perhaps the most important contribution the authors make is their perspective. The data Mayewksi himself uncovered show that the climate is a complicated and sensitive system, pushed from regime to regime by a variety of natural forces. But Mayewski is equally clear that human activities, most notably the marked and well-documented increases in carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses, have joined the party, and must be considered in order to understand current conditions or predict future climate change. And he is clear that unless we take sensible steps to reduce our impacts on the system, we risk not just global warming and whatever changes that would bring, but increased climactic instability and unpredictability. To the authors' credit, they attempt to bring some calm into the climate debates by propounding ten realistic, commonsense principles. The reflect that, "No matter what we do, the climate will change." But they also admonish, "We should strive more for climate predictability than control," and "If we cannot have global control of climate policy, we must at least have global cooperation."

The Ice Chronicles is well worth reading, both for the hard-won scientific facts it presents and explains so clearly, and for the constructive, down-to-earth perspective it provides.

Robert Adler, author of Science Firsts: From the Creation of Science to the Science of Creation. (John Wiley & Sons, September 2002).

Ice Chronicles Overview
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
I liked this book! It is a balance between a personal history of involvement and the scientific results obtained. The book provides an overview of the Greenland ice core/climate project and results obtained that point to long time climate variation, the mechanisms involved, and geologically recent warming. Important chapter references are provided for a scientifically oriented reader who might wish to examine details of the research and findings in more technical papers. After documenting climate change, the author explores human contributions to global warming in relationship to those caused by natural earth-sun systems, and discusses policy choices that we might make in the face of the new evidence about the history of earth's climate.


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