Travel Books


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

Travel
The Scream of the Butterfly
Published in Paperback by Giraffe Books (2000-01-02)
Author: Sean McGrath
List price:
Used price: $27.00

Average review score:

A metamorphosis
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-04
I liked the book, "The Scream of the Butterfly". Interesting insights into the political scenes of those different countries. At first, I didn't like the title, but then after I read it, the title had meaning to me. I think The writer is the butterfly. Butterflies start as larvae, and metamorphosize into a beautiful creature. This metamorphosis is something that they don't understand, nor particularly welcome / enjoy. But when it's over, they are infinitely better and more beautiful for having gone through it. Sean McGrath's adolescence was like that.

Touched me
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-06
We are all under hypnosis and of all the possible states of consciousness, we think in only one. This is the line we call normal and we only feel good, if we do not deviate from it.If, perchance, we step away from it in either direction, we get panicky and scare those around us.For in the moment of leaving this reality, agreed upon by humankind, terrible forces start to take effect. This book is about a man, who tries to defy these terrible forces.

Brilliant butterflies
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-15
I read this book and could not put it down. 'The Scream of the Butterfly' is very enticing. It is a glimpse into a world few have first hand experience with. One hears about the "Third Culture". Now I don't mean "World" but that of one being raised away from his or her traditional or national culture, hence the third culture. Being raised without definition always leaves questions. The narrator handles this transitory life well. As an army brat I have had some of these experiences - and we knew that the world we would be returning to would take some adjustments. However, we had been home for extended stays off and on and rarely exposed to true third world atmospheres first hand. This book offers a unique experience. We army brats always thought that we had the most unique life and tales - but none like this.

A very enjoyable book.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-16
This is a genre-blurring novel - part fiction, part autobiography, part travelogue. It flows directly from the author's experience. The narrator lives in exotic places and seeks his friends and acquiantances on the fringes of society. The scenes shift rapidly and are conducive to young people who need a constant change of scenery and stimulation.

The book covers a wide variety of interesting topics. It begins with an exorcism by a monk in Burma that transfers a magical bead and a powerful energy to the narrator, a house haunted by 'nats' - spirits who have died tragically in a past life, the 1988 student uprising and the Orwellian rise of dreaded SLORC (the State Law and Order Restoration Council), a meeting, in the isolated Kora camp in Kenya, with the white hunter, game warden and conservationist George Adamson of 'Born Free' who raises orphan lion cubs, tracking a lion that has strayed from the pride and the threat of ambushes by Somali poachers and bandits armed with AK-47s.

He lives in the Comoros Island run by a mad man-turned-messiah and his pot smoking teenagers, who is overthrown in a coup by the mercenary and international bandit Bob Denard. Since they control 'the means of destruction', the white mercenaries now control the island. They talk about bizzare torture techniques and install a puppet president who they later assassinate.

The narrator later attends a vegetarian love fest, deprogramming and orientation process at a religious cult in Bangkok called the Church of the New Messiah. The New Messiah who has been predicting the Apocalype for the last twenty years instructs his people to implant a microchip into their forehead so that they can gain entrance into the 'new paradise'. In Manila, the narrator meets the Filipino action star Joe 'Macho Man' Garcia and his entourage of models. In the 'red light' district he meets Bambi, Girlie and Baby at the Pink Lady and takes them to a suite in a love hotel.

He is seen beach bumming in Boracay, living with the Ifugao tribe, previous headhunters, who were extras in the film Apocalypse Now and living in the Himalayas of India. He goes to exotic night clubs in Miami, experiences crystal meth induced psychosis that leads to confinement in an insane asylum and has a secret meeting with a rebel alliance of rastas and Cuban revolutionaries that has established Rock Creek Park in Washington DC as a guerrilla base area in preparation for a liberation war against the U.S. government.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-08
I really do not love reading books. Most especially if it is a novel. Until my professor obliged us to read at least 1 novel and make a Critical Paper after analysis. I am lucky that I had chosen this novel. I had realized several things after reading "The Scream of the Butterfly"-- it's all about reality, about the youth...about life.

Travel
State by State With the State: An Uninformed, Poorly Researched Guide to the United States
Published in Paperback by Hyperion Books (Adult Trd Pap) (1997-04)
Authors: Members of the State and State (Comedy Group)
List price: $10.95
New price: $80.61
Used price: $43.36
Collectible price: $99.99

Average review score:

I never saw the state but this book rules
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-06
This is one of the funniest books ever written. I never even saw the show. I frequently quote the book. This is a great book for anyone who has ever left his home state. You can really relate to the depictions of each city and state. Even if you've never left your home town, you should buy this book. I haven't read Harry Potter yet, but I assure you that this is better reading. I would recommend buying a copy for every one of your friends, or two copies for yourself. It's that good.

The best book I have ever read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-24
This was the funniest and best book i have ever read. I was a big fan of the show and this book made me like it even more (if that's possible). You have to read it if you like the show or just in a bad mood. It will cheer you up. I read this book over 8 times during work. BUY IT!

Brilliant!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-06
Being a huge fan of the TV show, I greatly anticipated reading this book. Amazingly, the book exceeded all my expectations. It is without a doubt the funniest book I've ever read. I've found that opening to a random page and reading for a minute always leaves me laughing out loud. If you're into humor that is a little offbeat and subtle, this book is definitely for you.

THE most messed up book EVER!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-12
This is hands down THE funniest book I have ever read. I meant to just read a little bit, but when I picked it up I couldn't put it back down. I finished the whole book in a day.

It is totally unique. They certainly have a perculiar sense of humor, but I think that anyone who is not easily offended would find it funny.

The whole thing is written as if it were completely factual a completely factual account of a trip through the U.S., which of course it isn't.

If you enjoyed the T.V. show, you have to read the book. It is unforgetable.

If you can't hang, don't buy it.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-24
This book is crucial to every aspect of my life. Most importantly, it determines those with whom I "hang." When I meet someone new, I let them flip through my copy for a few minutes. If they aren't on the floor laughing and begging me to borrow the book for a day within just a few moments, they are automatically excluded from receiving the benifits of my friendship. (They don't know yet, but there aren't really any.) In severe cases, I will have offenders arrested. This book is my life.

Travel
Tea in the City: New York (Tea in the City)
Published in Paperback by Benjamin Press (2006-04-15)
Author: Elizabeth Knight; Bruce Richardson
List price: $18.95
New price: $11.00
Used price: $10.90

Average review score:

Tea in the City: New York City
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
We used this book on two recent trips to NYC as a guide book for planning 4 different afternoon teas. Excellent!

Take a Tea Trip!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-16
If you enjoy tea, why not take a tea trip in my hometown, New York? With this book, you can plan out everything. I have found the information provided by Ms. Knight to be accurate and have also learned a few interesting tidbits about tea culture. The excellent photos are worth noting as well. With more and more tea places popping up (and I've noticed a few recently), I hope they plan to put out updated editions. But this is by far the best tea guidebook I've seen, and a necessity for any tea lover who spends time in New York City.

A unique perspective on NYC
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-26
What I really love about Tea in the City is the breadth and depth of Ms. Knight's profiles, especially when it comes to non-traditional tea rooms. This is the first guide I've seen that really makes an effort to incorporate the newer influx of modern East Asian tea destinations, rather than limiting itself to British and hotel teas (though these are here as well). Although I work in NYC, this guide may inspire me to try some new places in some neighborhoods I haven't visited in a while. I also find this guide more male-friendly than most tea books.

Perfect New York City tea guide
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-20
This is the perfect guide to tuck in your handbag or pocket when going to New York City. Color coded maps tell you the tea spots available in each area of NYC. Daily hours, phone numbers, subway stops nearby, websites, decor, approximate costs, and description of teas and food are included. This will be in my handbag anytime I take a train into New York City.

Worth every penny!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
I had slight sticker shock and hesitated to buy this book. In fact, when it arrived, I was a bit unhappy with the small size. Having perused this small tome (with a cuppa in hand, of course), I've come to realize that my reservations were in vain. What a great book for the tea lover! This guide is not only informative, but well written. I'll be reading it again and again, and I'm sure that many a happy afternoon will be spent in the City (and here in Brooklyn, too) thanks to Ms. Knight. The only downside is that the fifth NYC borough is not mentioned... sounds like a great opportunity for someone in Staten Island to rise to the occasion for a possible (and hoped for by this reader) 2008 edition.

Travel
A Traveler's Guide to Mars
Published in Paperback by Workman Publishing Company (2003-08-21)
Author: William K. Hartmann
List price: $18.95
New price: $2.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $18.95

Average review score:

A collection of fourteen original and unique works
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-06
Ian Tescee draws upon his more than twenty-two years of experience and expertise with creating electronic music to compose and perform "A Traveler's Guide To Mars", a collection of fourteen original and unique works inspired by space scientist William K. Hartman and utilized in the major planetarium production about Mars at the Carnegie Science Center's Duhl Digital Dome in Pittsburgh. Tescee utilizes keyboard synthesizers and electronic drums, analog guitars, and even sings on one of the tracks. Enhanced with a half-dozen NASA commands and a countdown, a cello solo by Nancy Snustad, the faint quoting of a line from the Ray Bradbury short story 'The Lost City of Mars', "A Traveler's Guide To Mars" also features music written by electronic musician Russell Story, and 'The Wooden Prince' based on a theme by Bela Bartok. The individual pieces comprising this flawlessly produced and highly recommended CD include The New World (5:27); Passport (6:01); Earthrise (4:01); The Lost City of Mars (4:16); Aquamarine (3:43); The Wooden Prince (2:24); Dust-Red Sky (2:02); God of War (2:42); Beneath the Ice (2:09); It's Time to Go Back: Part 1 (2:48); It's Time to Go Back: Part 2 (3:54); Space Tourist Mars (5:23); Life on Mars (4:50); Billions and Billions of Stars (3:54).

Going to Mars...take this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-07
This is a fun and exciting trek around the Red Planet. I absolutely love the "hike" format, and this book is probably the next best thing to actually being there on Martian soil. Tidbits like what to wear on Mars and how to tell time definitely give the book a light-hearted personality. Another great feature is the author's own "personal experiences" / Mars exploration observation sections entitled "My Martian Chronicles." Thanks to the author, a great guide, I felt so involved in my "trip" that I wanted to buy a souvenir T-shirt! LOL I love the Classic Martian Map and Topographic Map foldouts at the front of the book. I especially like the easy-to-read large font of the text. I didn't have to squint while reading the book, which is a good thing.

Nice pictures
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-31
In this book, we see Mars treated almost as if it was a tourist region. The author has divided Mars into areas of interest. He then discussed separately each area. Just like Earth, Mars has many different regions and scenery.

Although I am keen on space, somehow this book did little for me. After awhile I found it too much and lost interest in the details of each region. What I would have preferred on Mars is fewer notes and more pictures.

The other point is the book is full of interesting pictures unfortunately to appreciate them you need a large size book then this one.

Having said that if your interested in Mars geography though you will find this author knows his information, it is current and he explains his points well.

A fascinating look at the Red Planet
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-11
A Traveler's Guide to Mars is well written and quite fascinating for anyone with an interest in the planetary geology of Mars.

Hartmann breaks down the history of Mars into three geologic eras (Noachian, Hesperain, and Amazonian) based on the amount of cratering on the Martian surface. From there, he explores each one of these regions in detail.

From the majestic Mons Olympus volcano and 2500 mile long Valles Marineris Canyon to the probable glacial "melting mountains" of Promethei Terra and controversial ancient ocean shorelines of Vastitas Borealis , Hartmann provides the reader with a sweeping scope of Martian history, replete with stunning aerial photography and images, that is simply quite amazing. He even discusses the "microbial fossil" Martian meteorites as well as the notorious "Face on Mars" in the Cydonia highlands.

Take a trip to Mars ... you won't be disappointed

May I Kindly Say This Book Kicks Some Serious Butt?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-08
This is a really cool book! I didn't know we had the so-called red planet (a better name is the butterscotch planet) mapped out to the extent that we do. I've always loved geography and to take a tour of the features of another world is thrilling. If you like astronomy, geography, or have an optimist's bent on human destiny being among the stars, read this great book!

Travel
Walking on Ice: An American Businessman in Russia
Published in Paperback by Outskirts Press (2007-09-22)
Author: Frederick R. Andresen
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.12
Used price: $11.15

Average review score:

Walk Softly but Culturally
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-09
"With new leadership in Russia, many Westerns still do not fully understand how history and politics have shaped the commercial landscape for the largest country in the world. At the crossroads of Europe and Asia, doing business in Russia requires a keen curiosity into the beliefs and values of the varied ethnic groups living and working there. In his book, Walking on Ice, Fred Andresen has accurately captured what it takes to economically thrive in Russia. His formula includes: patience, perseverance, perspicacity, professionalism, and perspiration.
Patience is required in order to wade through the bureaucratic mazes implemented by governmental officials. Perseverance is necessary to wait until a business decision is made against a backdrop of political dealings. Perspicacity requires discerning the difference between what is being said and what is actually being meant. Professionalism necessitates adherence to standards in order to derive the full value of any potential opportunity. Finally, perspiration means realizing that one must work hard across virtual borders, multiple time zones, and multiple cultures in order to be successful.

As a professor of international business and marketing, I highly recommend Walking on Ice by Fred Andresen. Without reservation, I have found it to be a concise, personal view into the intriguing, and lucrative world of Russian business.

- E.S. Wibbeke, Author of Global Business Leadership"

Insightful and fun to read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-16
I loved reading "Walking on Ice." It's an easy-to-read fun book full of important insights into the Russian (and at times, American) culture.
For every Rusophile out there, I highly recommend it!

Walking on Ice
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-13
Andresen, an American doing business in Russia, has written a lovely book in a most UNbusinesslike style. It's quite literary, filled with surprising and poignant and insightful phrases. I'm not a business person, but am a "Russia" person, and love the warmth rising from this book about slippery, icy negotiations in a rather fluid environment. I'm also not a Russia expert by any means, but have been there many times and found myself nodding and smiling in appreciation while underlining passage after passage in this book. His comparison of Moscow, St. Petersburg, and Nizhny Novgorod is wonderful, and makes it clear why we must become well acquainted with all three great cities. His use of music and literature to explain cultural (and business) practices is most enlightening, and the essay collection is simply outstanding. This book will be of great help to all who wish to understand Russia and her people better.

Excellent read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
This is an excellent read which provides a detailed and insightful guide to the nuances of perhaps the most misunderstood, enigmatic and complex country to grace the earth. It's a survival guide to contemporary Russian culture.

Stellar
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-18
Having lived, worked, and personally invested with the Russian people, Mr. Andresen clearly has a first-hand vision on building lasting relationships with people we often don't appreciate or understand. Clearly, he has invested a good part of his life in learning and expressing to us what it takes to succeed in this part of the world.

Travel
West of Last Chance
Published in Hardcover by W. W. Norton (2008-01-14)
Author:
List price: $49.95
New price: $27.95
Used price: $27.11

Average review score:

West of Last Chance
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-19
This is a beautiful and interesting book. Peter Brown and Kent Haruf have resisted the simply pretty to go deeper with the images and text. The book conveys the beauty and emptiness that is really the great plains. It also shows the hardy people who still inhabit the land in spite of its challanges in an honest, but sympathetic way.

West of Last Chance
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03
This book is about the interaction of man and land. It is simple and yet profoundly touching. The images show the stark beauty of the land, and how it has, at times, been abused by man. It is a storybook of what the land has witnessed throughout the years - events of use, misuse, and sometimes even crime. And, it tells you how a land can change a man by its harshness or its beauty.
In these pages the reader will see that Peter Brown, and Kent Haruf have created a beautiful, moving, and altogether unique book.

An Appreciation of an (Almost) Lost America
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03
West of Last Chance
Kent Haruf has long been one of our favorite fiction writers, and we love Peter Brown's sensitive photography of the majesty of the West. In this book the two combine and show us the 'beauty', not necessarily the 'pretty' of the high plains.
Reading this book, prose and images, makes one want to go out there, get off the Interstate, and wander the back roads to also be able to see what they show. An America that we have feared lost to urban and exurban growth.
This book is a song to the West.

Worth reading agin and again
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03
Much more than another gorgeous coffee table book, West of Last Chance begs to be read again and again. As you begin to decipher Brown's images and Haruf's words a sense of what the high plains, and perhaps by inference, what this country is all about emerges. Clearly the product of two artists with both a passion and a calling.

Back roads plain dealing
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-03
Like Kent Haruf I first came across photographer Peter Brown years ago through his excellent book 'On the Plains'. This latest book with 151 photos continues the theme with the same vigor and passion. I thought it was a wise choice to stick to the back roads of the Plains, so much more interesting visually than the cities. The photos really convey the hugeness of this area of the Nation though about a third of the photos are of small towns in Texas.

The photos that I think work best are of the buildings. Shot in the classic tradition stretching back to the FSA photos of the Depression: no-nonsense straight on at eye height and mostly they are framed in the composition, too. I would have been satisfied with the book with just the building photos. Brown's composition framing really does bring out the best in so many of the images. For instance there are a couple of wonderful shots taken in Buffalo, Wyoming (plates 118 and 119) that just grab when you turn over the page, full of shapes, color and what appeals to me: plenty of signage.

Throughout the book there are signs and lettering, again very reminiscent of the thirties FSA photos. Now, many photographers (in rather elitist thinking) would deliberately avoid photographing hand-made signs, billboards and commercial lettering but these seem such a part of America that I think it would be foolish to avoid them. Fortunately plenty of photographers go out of their way to capture this silent form of communication because of its visual appeal.

There was a possible interesting theme that could have made the book even more enjoyable: the center of town image. On page eighty-five Brown has positioned his camera in the middle of the main street in Apache, Oklahoma, to take a stunning shot looking to the horizon with the shops and other buildings diminishing into distance. To avoid the highway leaving a huge open space for a large part of the image there are a couple of vehicles filling up this area. I would have liked to have seen more of these in the book. In 'On the Plains' there was a similar wonderful photo but taken from the first floor of a building and looking down the center of Duncan, Oklahoma.

As with any book with over a hundred photos there are bound to be some duds but surprisingly few I thought. The pork producing plant in Yuma, Colorado (page ninety-one) makes a nice horizontal shapes of sky, building and grass but lacks sparkle for repeat viewing, the same for the yellow marked road on page fifty-three.

The book's production, like 'On the Plains', follows the classic photo book style with large images (in 175 screen) centered on the page with generous margins. It does though, have the typical photo book annoyance of placing all the captions on a back page, so plenty of page turning to find out where some place is. This does seem so unnecessary because on many pages there is text by Kent Haruf and a one line caption centered under each photo would hardly spoil the editorial flow.

West of Last Chance does a wonderful job of capturing the Plains with photos as unique as the places.

***FOR AN INSIDE LOOK click 'customer images' under the cover.




Travel
Women in the Material World
Published in Hardcover by Sierra Club Books (1996-08-20)
Authors: Faith D'Aluisio and Peter Menzel
List price: $39.95
New price: $19.99
Used price: $6.77
Collectible price: $39.95

Average review score:

fascinating primary document
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
i bought this book for my aunt who is a single, middle-aged, jouyful southern woman. she is an exuberant believer in Jesus Christ who unfortunately doesn't know much of his world beyond the USA, and i thought this would be a good way for her to explore it while connecting (a word that is very near to her counselor's heart) with people.
i don't know how much she has read yet, but my sister and i devoured it in the few days that we had it. we came away from it feeling even more curious about life in different places and reminded of our privilege as women to live in a financially independent manner.
all in all, if you need an antidote to self, this book will help.

A fitting sequel for the Material World
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-13
I read the Material World several years ago and I was excited to see that Peter and Faith had published a "sequel" of sorts for the book. Women in the Material World is fascinating, especially if you can review it side by side to the Material World. I thought the questions regarding love in their marriage and their expectations for their children were so interesting. I am very happy with my purchase of this book and I recommend it to anyone who is considering it.

Women's work
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-03
A sequel to the authors' successful, "Material World: A Global Family Portrait," which interviewed 30 "statistically average" families from around the world and photographed them surrounded by all their worldly goods, "Women In The Material World," by Faith D'Aluisio and Peter Menzel, revisits 21 women from these families.

With interviews conducted by women over a period of days, even weeks, and 375 color photographs of women captured in their daily lives, this is an absorbing look into an overlooked world of marriage, women's work and families. From female circumcision to divorce, from finances to education, gender roles, work, and friends, women discuss every aspect of their lives - seemingly freely.

Two themes repeat through this largely agricultural world - women's work begins before dawn and ends long after dark and most women feel they have enough children - whatever that number may be.

This is a fascinating, captivating and beautiful volume, to be read, not just browsed.

Wow!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-25
This book is a superlative sequel to the early Material World by Peter Menzel. I have read the earlier book so many times that when this new volume came out, I bought it immediately sight unseen. In this book, Faith D'Aluisio revisits 19 of the 30 families featured in the Material World to find out about the women's lives.

The articles are organized alphabetically, together with short features on marriage, laundry, work, education, childcare, hair, food, water, and friends. At the back of the book, we find statistical charts about women, and a useful statistics glossary. Each article has an extended interview with the mother of the family that reveals parts of her life story as well as her attitudes towards topics such as marriage, child care, education, money, and possessions. The articles are of course filled with numerous color photos, large and small, of the women at work and with other family members.

The Material World itself is a monumental book, but it was hard to go back to it after reading this book, where we find that the details presented in the Material World were so incredibly superficial. For example, family life for Maria dos Anjos Ferrerira in Brazil or Carmen Balderas de Castillo in Mexico isn't nearly as rosy as one might guess from looking at their original smiling photos in the Material World. On the other hand, Zhanna Kapralova from Russia continues to be a survivor. No matter how much you learn from the Material World, it will be far eclipsed by this book with its extended interviews and additional photographs.

Outstanding book everyone should read
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-21
A companion to Material World: Portrait of the Global Family, this book is an incredible expose of the lives of typical, average women all over the world. I, as an American woman with everything I could ever possibly dream of, especially appreciate seeing how things may have different for me had God just decided to make me the girl child of a Vietnamese working family vs. my background. It really makes you take stock of your life, appreciate it, and feel blessed no matter what your circumstances may be. America is truly a wealthy and favored nation. Even our poor, compared with most of the countries in the world, are rich! We should all feel compelled to give back, not matter how much (or how little) we have. I've been giving this book to my friends for gifts (thank you, Amazon!) A MUST READ!

Travel
Albatross: The True Story of a Woman's Survival at Sea
Published in Hardcover by Chivers Large print (Chivers, Windsor, Paragon & C (1995-04-03)
Authors: Debbie Kiley Scaling and Meg Noonan
List price:

Average review score:

HARD TO PUT DOWN!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-06
I first saw this story on the discovery channel and could not wait to read the book.
I was so glad to find a copy on Amazon.
This story is true and very sad you will feel as if you are in that raft with Debbie and Brad they were lost at sea for about 5 days and had to fight off sharks and stay alive. It started out with 5 John Mark Meg Debbie and Brad.
only Debbie and Brad made it. This book will keep you reading well into the night to finish.
It is a great read!

Fascinating and very scary
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-21
ALBATROSS is a gripping story of survival and agonizing death at sea--the sinking with the loss of three lives of the yacht TRASHMAN off the Carolina coast. The author pulls no punches and tells a tale of human suffering, weakness, and malice that left this reader shaken by its bluntness, realism, and intensity.

The story is told in a direct and clear manner that inescapably draws one in to its nightmarish hell. Besides a sea story it is also a story of a young person's stuggle with her own demons.

Why read such a painful book? One important life lesson that we must learn from this account is not to leave port unprepared. In some ways, I would urge all boaters to read this book just to have that lesson hammered in. As a boater I came away with the deep conviction that I don't ever want to come anywhere near going through anything like what the crew of TRASHMAN went through.

As presented by the author, the tragedy was entirely the result of the incompetence, alcoholism, and carelessness of the captain and other crew members. I must confess, however, that when I reflected on the author's tale I could not help wondering how objective it was. She is so unremittingly critical--bitterly critical--of John and Mark that I began to doubt the clarity of her vision. I would love to get the account of the other survivor. There are several mysteries about the tragic sinking of TRASHMAN that remain troubling and unresolved.

Nevertheless Debby's tale is one that will move in and rearrange your mental furniture, especially if you are a boater or have ever been to sea in a small boat.

What an amazing story!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-18
I received this book today and have read it in one sitting, just couldn't put it down. It is both a fasinating and horrific true story of this womans fight for survival in the open seas. It is written in an easy to follow style. Definately worth the read!!

Interesting sea survival story written by a woman
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-02
Heard ALBATROSS: THE TRUE STORY OF A WOMAN'S SURVIVAL AT SEA by Deborah Scaling Kiley and Meg Noonan . . . it is the tragic tale of what was supposed to be a simple boat trip that wound up as a nightmare . . . several of the crew members perished; what was more interesting to me was the story of how the survivors made it.

I've read other "how I survived at sea" books before . . . this was the first one, though, that I've come across written by a woman . . . what I'll remember: when your instincts tell you something, listen . . . Scaling Kiley, unfortunately, did not.

I liked her special introduction at the beginning of the cassette tapes . . . I also liked the work of Karen Allen--a talented actress that I don't see nearly enough--who did an excellent job with the narration.

A Nightmare to be Sure!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-27
I couldn't wait to get my hands on this book. I had seen Deborah and Brad's story on "I Shouldn't Be Alive" series, where they showed re-enactments and now and then broke away to the two actual survivors telling their story. I just knew she had written about this, so I looked it up on Amazon.

The story is told in very colorful prose. I could hear the sailboat slicing through the water, could see the pewter waves and dark sky. I could almost feel the sharks bumping the underside of the rubber raft with their rough skin.

Debbie is brutally honest, which adds to the credibility and interest of her story. She opens up and really lets us into her ordeal, and adds extra bits of information and impressions, like when she had her head under water looking for sharks and saw the beauty of the school of doradoes. So descriptive, I could see it.

This is also a story of triumph, as Debbie deals with strong emotions in the months and years after the tragedy. I'm glad she pulled through it all and wrote the book. I recommend this book for teens as well as adults.

Travel
Alive on the Andrea Doria! The Greatest Sea Rescue in History
Published in Hardcover by Purple Mountain Press Ltd (2006-06)
Author: Pierette Domenica Simpson
List price: $27.00
New price: $17.77
Used price: $17.77

Average review score:

Alive on the Andrea Doria! The Greatest Sea Rescue in History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-31
Ms. Simpson, Thank you for not only the thrilling prose, but also for the objective research you did to compile your book.
It is amazingly constructed in so many aspects: the events as they occurred, the human stories from various witnesses, the later lives of some of the passengers. The quotations that highlight all of the chapters are apropos to the text. I like that.
The tribute you pay to Captain Calamai, and the later research/investigations done by marine experts as to the cause of the accident, surely vindicate him.
Mary Lou Rynski - Michigan

Riveting story of rescue at sea
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
I am a member of the Detroit Historical Society and other historical organizations and have read many history books. "Alive on the Andrea Doria" is not only an interesting factual presentation of the events of this historic sea collision, but also a well written and riveting drama describing the human emotions and reactions of passengers, crew, rescuers, the anxious families and friends of passengers and crew, news media, and others involved in this tragedy. It is also the author's fascinating personal story of a young girl pulling up roots in Italy, leaving her town, friends, and school behind to come to America, where all was new and different: family, language, food, school, etc. This book is highly recommended for all.

A story of hope, courage and pride for Italian descendants to read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-02
What a wonderful book (and story). I read it straight through and couldn't put it down. The author, Pierette Domenica Simpson, did a marvelous job especially in recanting so many details (sights, sounds, smells) - and I know how hard that is because an author has it all in their mind and memory but putting in the "reader's" mind, well, that's a different story. As a retired Navy pilot and haven't spent most of my life at sea (and in the air) I really enjoyed reading Chapter 10 and Part II in general for it was extremely detailed and complete about the circumstances surrounding the collision. Moreover, as a story teller, Part I was terrific and moving as well. I was especially enamored with the author's experience as an Italian-American and how we share the stories of our families and their courage in coming to a new land to live the American dream. I write of this as well in my latest book, My Father's Compass: Leadership Lessons of an Immigrant Son, found here on [...].
Again, wonderful story with a happy ending and a must read! Perry Martini, My Father's Compass.

A Validating Remembrance
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-29
Alive on the Andrea Doria! is a wonderful book. Ms. Simpson, an Andrea Doria survivor, is the new Walter Lord of maritime history. She skillfully uses a wide variety of survivor recollections to retell the story of the sinking of the Andrea Doria, Italy's premier luxury liner in the 1950s, after its collision with the smaller Stockholm. These stories are about a very diverse group of people, both a variety of native Italians settling in the USA and a group of Northern-European-Americans of a variety of backgrounds. Ms. Simpson very frankly and touchingly also shares her own story and developmental history, including the circumstances that led to her and to her maternal grandparents' immigration to the USA on the Doria's final voyage. The second portion of her book details a variety of scientific evidence that explains the sinking of the Andrea Doria from a technical point of view. She provides a strong rehabilitation of the Doria's Captain Calamai, much vilified at the time of the collision, and details frankly the realities of anti-Italian and anti-Italian-American stereotyping that influenced public perceptions of the Andrea Doria disaster.

The book has many strengths. Ms. Simpson includes a great variety of survivor stories, and allows her fellow survivors to tell of their lives in great detail (frankly exceeding the masterful Walter Lord's compelling but very abbreviated depictions of Titanic survivors and victims in A Night to Remember.) She makes an effort to make the technical descriptions of the disaster understandable, she readily acknowledges the influence of her own experience and her own biases on her final text, and she wisely does not translate every word of Italian she presents--this both makes the last moments of the Doria feel more as they actually happened, and is a pleasant challenge for those of us who love the Italian language but are rusty in using same and have to work to self-translate various phrases. Moreover, Ms. Simpson also does a very good job of portraying the symptoms of PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) suffered by a number of the survivors (at a time when we didn't yet have a formal diagnosis for that syndrome), and the books includes a number of excellent, evocative photographs. Most importantly, Alive on the Andrea Doria! is a validating remembrance, of the lives lost, the lives saved, the experience of Italian-American immigrants, and the tremendous heroism of those involved. Ms. Simpson, with whom I've had the pleasure of corresponding by email, stresses that this was the greatest sea rescue in history, and makes clear that just because the Doria disaster did not claim the massive number of lives that did the Titanic, the Lusitania, and the Empress of Ireland tragedies, the loss of the Andrea Doria is still a real and moving drama that should be studied and commemorated. Brava, signora, e mille grazie!

GREAT BOOK!! MUST READ!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-24
I knew little about the Andrea Doria until I read this book. Pierete Simpson has brought the Andrea Doria back to life with her book. This book was compelling and I truly enjoyed all the individual stories. The amount of research that went into this book is astounding. This book is a testament to human triumph and spirit. I highly recommend it for everyone.

Travel
Blue Fairways: Three Months, Sixty Courses, No Mulligans
Published in Paperback by Owl Books (2000-09-01)
Author: Charles Slack
List price: $14.00
New price: $2.99
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

A fun book for duffers or pros.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-03
When I read the description on the jacket I thought, "No way will this work. He's going to tell us about the 60 rounds he shot, stroke by stroke, such as.... and on the seventh, a tough par five, I got out my trusty three wood etc., etc., etc." It is that but it is more. Slack shares with us the feeling of what it is like to stand at the first tee of a course you have never played on a beautiful spring morning in New England. He introduces us to the people he meets on the course, from the potato farmers of Maine to the Florida "snowbirds" who flew South to escape the Northern winters. Did the book work? I'm getting my clubs ready to try a West Coast version.

Could have been better
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-14
Great book on golf. Gives a great look at courses up and down the east coast. There was, however, too much on the history of the towns instead of more on the history of the course and more on the actual rounds he was playing. Was "On The Road" for the golfing enthusiast.

Two Words for Charles Slack: "Keep Driving"
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-31
A perfect blend of of travel journal and salute to public golf. Anyone with a high handicap, who has played with bare-chested strangers with even higher handicaps, on crowded bald fairways with bumpy greens, will appreciate this book.

Even Bessie the Cow would Enjoy this Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-24
Blue Fairways is thoroughly enjoyable. Slack's sense of humor, coupled with his self-deprecating writing style, make this a must read -- golfer or not. I laughed out loud and also cringed as he described some less-than-stellar golf moments. For those of us who do golf, who couldn't identify with The Look of Pity? Non-golfers will enjoy the way Slack captures what most of us will never have a chance to witness first hand -- the essence of what remains of small towns and hospitality as they teeter on the brink of chain restaurants and cynicism.

Slack scores an ace
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-05
If you've ever topped a drive off the first tee or missed a three-footer on 18 while trying record your career low round, you'll be able to identify with Charles Slack's golf game. When it comes to writing, though, he's scratch. One brief example will suffice. Describing the contrast between the front and back nines at the Ponce De Leon course in St. Augustine Florida, he says, "The back nine plunges into the jungle with the suddenness of a Disney ride, into a lush, dark, secretive world of mangrove swamps and ponds curving tantalizingly like lost lagoons. Moving from the ninght to the tenth holes is like putting down a volume of P.G. Wodehouse and picking up Heart of Darkness, all in one morning."

The book is filled with wonderful insights like that one and reminds us on nearly every page of the real reasons why golfers love this sometimes maddening, often magical, game. For those of us who never will have the pleasure of sharing a round with Charles Slack, this book is a delightful substitute.


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