Washington Books
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A Field Guide to Western WildflowersReview Date: 2005-06-11
Excellent Field Guide to help identify WildflowersReview Date: 1999-07-06
Pacific States Wildflowers.Review Date: 2001-06-21
A Useful ToolReview Date: 2000-04-04

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Not enough stars on Amazon�s scaleReview Date: 2001-02-12
ABA Book of the YearReview Date: 1999-05-12
Great read on Salmon as a cultural driver in the N.Pacific.Review Date: 1999-04-01
International perspectivesReview Date: 2000-09-21
This book is a collection of perpectives on salmon from representatives of the peoples around the pacific rim whose lives have centered on salmon for thousands of years. The contributors are talented indigenous writers from the United States, Canada, Japan, and Siberia. The engaging text is amply illustrated with historic and contemporary photographs, as well as drawings. The historic photographs are not the same ones that usually appear. For example, nearly every book on salmon in the nortwest has a twentieth century photograph of Indians fishing at Celilo Falls. Most books use the same photo. This book uses one that features in the forground the cable system that was used to get down to the fishing platforms, with the fishing platforms themselves in the background.
Some of the work in this book has been published elsewhere. But the context it is given here accentuates it in useful ways. For example, Sherman Alexie's poem, "The Place Where Ghosts of Salmon Jump," is engraved into a sculpture in Overlook Park behind the Spokane Public Library and is published in _The Summer of Black Widows_. But in this book it appears beside a nice photograph of the falls as it appears today, and a photo of Mr. Alexie standing on the footbridge above a section of the falls pointing downstream.

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Review for First Ladies' Fact BookReview Date: 2008-05-29
JQ
The First Ladies Fact BookReview Date: 2008-01-18
The facts are interesting and unusual and it's good to have an insight into the women behind the men that have been in office.
Quite frankly I think most of them could have done a better job than their husbands.
Would highly recommend this to anyone for a good read and quick reference.
Fascinating information!Review Date: 2006-11-09
Fascinating StoriesReview Date: 2006-03-18
The first ladies have had their own share of the making of history. In recent years, Jackie Kennedy did a lot towards the creation of the Camelot image of the Kennedy years. Hillary Clinton is certainly remembered for her efforts towards creating universal health care.
These are just two small details of the lives of two first ladies. This book has over 700 pages about their lives, their interests, their activities in the white house and the way that they worked with their husbands to assist in the governance of the country.
And yes, there is a color section of pictures featuring mostly the clothes they wore.

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A Very Useful GuidebookReview Date: 2008-07-25
It was just what they needed to help them enjoy their week in DC. The map that was included made my decision to buy this guidebook over others easier.
Great Book On Metro Washington D.C.Review Date: 2007-11-23
Very helpfulReview Date: 2008-07-30
"3-D" DCReview Date: 2008-04-15

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Impress Your FriendsReview Date: 2002-01-27
It's about time someone wrote this book!Review Date: 2001-11-20
My quarrels are w. what is left out. What happened to ethnic restaurants?? I know there are many of them & it would've added to the size of the book & the time it took to research it. But a food guide that leaves out restaurants has left out something very important.
Richard
Terrific reference bookReview Date: 2001-06-28
Food Lover's guideReview Date: 2001-05-31
A food lover's bible!!

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GET THIS BOOK!!!!!Review Date: 2003-09-06
A Must for Tree Lovers!Review Date: 2002-01-29
Fantastic book on trees of the Pacific CoastReview Date: 2007-11-14
Despite 35 plus years in horticulture, this book had much I could learn from. It is wonderfully written and illustrated.
I cannot think of no better book I could have gifted myself for my Christmas yet to come.
Secateur
A wonderful work of beauty, this is a classicReview Date: 2004-12-23


Fox IslandReview Date: 2000-09-14
Great local history Christian fictionReview Date: 2006-08-24
Good wholesome book where you love the characters.Review Date: 1999-07-06
The first in a super series of fiction.Review Date: 1999-09-15

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Original and Well-ResearchedReview Date: 2002-05-21
Though at first giving the impression of a screenplay, the payoff comes swiftly, heralded by the sense that you are really there during this hotel ballrom siege. As well, one of the terrorists, "The Colonel," a female, has a thing or two to say about the DC culture.
You know a writer has done something right when he expeditiously exctracts Stockholm Syndrome-like feelings from the male reader regarding said Colonel.
In the end, we are left with a great thriller, and an interesting tour of Washington. Recommended.
BrillaintReview Date: 2002-03-14
All in all a real great book.A Must Read .
Avid political fiction and historical readerReview Date: 2001-12-16
An exciting thrillerReview Date: 2001-09-24

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Wonderful story all kids to knowReview Date: 2008-03-08
George was born to a slave woman in southern Missouri, but when he was young his mother was kidnapped and he never saw her again. George and his brother Jim were raised by the farm owners, and treated as their own kids. In fact, Mr. and Mrs. Carver encouraged George to further his education when they realized how talented he was with plants.
George went on to go to school and colleges, eventually earning his master's degree in Iowa before being called to Alabama to work. When he first arrived there, he was shocked by the poverty and devastation. He quickly developed the motto "Make grass grow"-and he promptly did just that, made grass grow on the campus, and then in the agriculture department that he directed.
There are some facts that are misrepresented about George in public education--for instance, I always heard that George Washington Carver invented peanut butter. According to this book, he didn't, but did come up with several other imaginative uses for it.
I read the book in one sitting out loud to my 12- and 6-year-old daughters. I appreciated how educational it was, but it was a bit hard to read all at once. It didn't hold my six-year-olds attention long either. My older daughter, on the other hand, was fascinated by the story as this was more information than she'd ever seen on this interesting historical character.
George Washington Carver is highly recommended for public school teachers, and home school students alike. Stock full of information, your child (and you!) are sure to go away with little known tidbits about this wonderful inventor.
Armchair Interviews says: Most interesting and educational.
An outstanding coverage, not to be missed!Review Date: 2008-02-07
George Washington CarverReview Date: 2007-12-19
This very handsomely designed book chronicles the life of an extraordinary man. His story unfolds in clear informative text and fascinating archival photographs and other visuals including Carver's own scientific drawings and artistic paintings. It documents his heroic persistence to obtain a college education in a country laced with racism and then describes his impressive career as a researcher and educator. Carver taught and modeled a "waste not, want no" philosophy, believed that "every human need could be met by things that grow" and when he could no longer teach funded the creation of a foundation that would benefit students in the future. We need a teacher like him even more in the early twenty-first century. This absorbing, respectful and inspiring biography belongs on every library shelf.
So much more than a Peanut ManReview Date: 2008-03-05
Born during the Civil War, George was raised by a couple that had owned his mother before him. Quick to learn, if a bit sickly, George had an affinity for the natural world around him and was as interested in art as he was in working with plants. He got his schooling at the Neosho school and after a variety of jobs he attended college and became the first black professor at what is now Iowa State University. Booker T. Washington was quick to pick up on George's skills and convinced him to come to the Tuskegee Institute. There, Washington did everything he could to teach others about revering and respecting nature. He helped farmers learn how to yield better crops and make the most from their land. He found infinite uses for the peanut and the soybean. In 1943 he died, but his legacy of caring for the earth and its products lives on and is more important now than ever.
As I read through this book, it became pretty clear that I knew next to nothing about Carver aside from his peanut-related accomplishments. Right from the start Bolden sucks you into his strange and interesting story. Born during the Civil War, George and his mother were kidnapped by raiders when he was a baby. George was rescued. His mother was not and he never saw her again. I also didn't know that his notoriety as "the Peanut Man" was around even during his lifetime and that he had to fight against it, to some extent. I was particularly grateful for Bolden's Afterword too, which is not afraid to bring up criticisms of Washington that he was a "non-threatening Negro" because he did not openly protest segregation. I respect any children's book which isn't afraid to show a little of its subject matter's complexity. To me, this Afterword fits the bill.
If Tonya Bolden is known for anything, it may be for her remarkable ability to write visually stimulating, interesting biographies without a lot of photographic elements on hand. Her Maritcha: A Nineteenth-Century American Girl was an excellent example of this. With Carver she has had a slightly easier time of it. Somehow she was able to find great photos of many of the important people in Carver's life as well as images of him as young as thirteen or so. The book is designed to resemble a photo album both in its paper and in the lovely little corners that look as if they are holding each photograph in place. I also found it interesting that Bolden would sometimes, perhaps with space in mind, put interesting tidbits in her photo captions and not the proper text. For example, George was raised by Susan and Moses Carver who were opposed to slavery. Says the caption next to their photographs, "Some suggest that George's mother was a mercy purchase, but it is unclear why she was not therefore immediately freed."
Sometimes it's a lot easier to write a biography about a firecracker. Writing one about a quiet man who enjoyed painting flowers is heads and tails more difficult, but no less important. In one section Bolden says, "If he had had the temperament of a Frederick Douglass or an Ida B. Wells, he might have packed away that microscope and raised rallies for equality of opportunity and against night riders and lynch mobs. Carver was no magician, no Douglass, no Wells. He was his own unique self with much to offer flowing from his innate and studied insights into nature's ways and gifts." As such, I've read few biographies of quiet scientific people that quite compare to Bolden's beautiful 41-page title. She shows how our contributions to the world hinge upon the gifts we choose to use.


Archival Material from the Noted Architect of the Spanish Colonial Revival StyleReview Date: 2008-08-01
quality serviceReview Date: 2007-12-31
Fantastic collection..Review Date: 2003-02-21
SPANISH COLONIAL MASTERReview Date: 2006-09-25
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