Central America Books


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Education-->Colleges and Universities-->Central America-->28
Related Subjects: Guatemala Panama El Salvador
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Central America Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Central America
Brownsville, Brooklyn: Blacks, Jews, and the Changing Face of the Ghetto (Historical Studies of Urban America)
Published in Paperback by University Of Chicago Press (2003-12-01)
Author: Wendell E. Pritchett
List price: $20.00
New price: $12.00
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Formidable book about cities and race relationships
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-07
Don't be fooled by the first part of the title; for this book is really about Blacks, Jews, and the Changing Face of the Ghetto. Pritchett studies Brownsville in details, but never forgets to see the bigger picture, which should be of interest for any historian or social scientist. Pritchett is very good at giving you the facts, the analysis and the feelings as well. This book is not just about a ghetto in Brooklyn, it is indeed about urban change and inequality.

Intersting, thoughtful and highly accurate
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-25
As someone who lived not far from Brownsville in the 1950s and early '60s, I can say this is an exceptionally accurate book. It is well-written and is the best attempt I've seen yet at explaining the phenomenon of the changing urban neighborhood. Not only does Pritchett provide many well-reserached, well-thought-out answers but, just as important, he raises insightful, penetrating questions. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in American urban history, particularly as it relates to New York City.

A fascinating case study of one changing neighborhood
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-01
New Yorkers see constant small changes in their city, and the cumulative effect of those changes can remake the character and composition of a neighborhood almost overnight. That is what happened in Brownsville during the late 1950s and early 1960s. What had been an entirely Jewish neighborhood of sidewalk synagogues and old-world customs became an entirely black and Latino neighborhood. Pritchett captures that period of change and the various players -- community activists, business interests, government agencies and politicians -- masterfully. He tells a poignant story of idealistic neighborhood leaders who fought for integrated public housing to meet the needs of their community and were instead given massive projects built to house the city's poor who had been displaced by urban renewal. This is a great book for anyone interested in New York or urban history generally.

Central America
California Rising: The Life and Times of Pat Brown
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (2005-01-24)
Author: Ethan Rarick
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A very entertaining read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
This is a very nice read. Soft biography of Governor Brown and descriptive overview of the times. You really cannot miss on this one.

Governor Edmund G. Pat Brown The Democratic Party in CA
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-07
Ethan Rarick has written a great biography of a man who was to be one of the most well known of California Governors.Edmund G. "Pat" Brown came on the political scene as DA of San Francisco County. He would follow the path of Earl Warren as State Attorney General and then Governor. Brown in 1959 became only the second Democrat elected governor in the 20th Century; Culbert L. Olson served 1939-1943. "Pat" Brown picked the right time to run for governor when US Senator William F. Knowland figured to use the California governorship as a stepping stone to run for President. Popular governor Goodwin J. "Goodie" Knight was forced by Knowland to seek his vacated Senate seat. This broke the GOP is California. Then, Knowland endorced Proposition 18 "The Right To Work Law." This lost the labor vote for the GOP totally. Brown would win in a landslide. Four years later, the governor's race in 1962, Brown defeated former Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Nixon made the famous remark to the press: " You won't have Dick Nixon to kick around anymore."
"Pat" Brown, in 1966 faced in a run for a 3rd term, a washed up actor from Warner Brothers, in the 1950's the host of General Electric Theatre and now the host of television's Death Valley Days. Ronald Reagan running on the platform to "Clean Up the Mess in Berkeley." Ronald Reagan defeated Pat Brown as he tried to do what Earl Warren had done be elected to a 3rd term.
Governor Brown has many accomplishments the State Water Project; Freeways and many others.
UC Berkeley, Watts and many problems of a changing time came at Governor "Pat" Brown, during his second term.
Since 1958 except for a few years during the term of Gov. Reagan; the Democrats have controled the Legislature.
In the book we see Browns fellow party members infighting famed Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty and Speaker of the Assembly Jesse "Big Daddy" Unruh. The Brown family continued with Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. 1975-1983 present Mayor of Oakland. "Pat" Brown's daughter Kathleen holding statewide office and being defeated in her bid for governor. This is a great book on a man of California Edmund G. "Pat" Brown.

Well-told, overdue story of a Governor and changing times.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-19
First I'll disclose that the author, Ethan Rarick, is a friend of mine.
Having said that, I'd have quickly bought and read this biography whether I knew the guy or not.
Secondly, as a lifelong Californian of 50, I guess I'm exactly the right demographic for appreciating this book--Pat Brown is the first governor I can remember. Having childhood memories of the events in this book certainly made learning more about them that much more satisfying.
But what makes this book so fascinating is how drastically the political landscape changed during the years of his administration, and how the changes ruined him politically--for a while.
When elected in 1958 Brown was a forward-looking liberal with an ambitous agenda for improving California, one at which he was remarkably successful: banning racial discrimination, expanding a great university, and building a massive project to transport water unprecedented distances from wet parts of the state to dry ones.
But by the time of his loss to Ronald Reagan in 1966, time had passed Brown by. Events like the Berkeley free speech movement and Watts riots pushed middle America into a sharp right backlash. The fact that he genuinely anguished over whether to have men executed or to spare their lives, unlike successors who adopted a safe, knee-jerk, blanket pro-death approach, injured him further at a time of increasingly pro-authoritarian attitudes.
By '66, Brown seemed a hopeless relic. Damaged by a rough primary against Sam Yorty, L.A.'s racist demagogue mayor, and by his own inept scheme to sabotage the Republican primary, he was creamed by Reagan in his quest for a third term.
Yet, by the time of his death 30 years later, Brown had again become an icon, hailed as the most effective governor ever by political wannabes of both major parties.
A great personal story and an interesting slice of California history.

Central America
Casa del Mar / Houses by the Sea
Published in Hardcover by Amaroma Ediciones (2003-04)
Author: Mauricio Martinez
List price: $50.00

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Mexico Vacation Retreat
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
This is an excellent book. It has something for everyones taste. I highly recommend Villa Vista Magica. It is the one on the cover and is fantastic!

These houses are sick!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-09
I went and visited at one of these houses. It was the most amazing place I had ever been. I recommend anyone to go there. It is heaven and the area is great not yet insanely americanized like Cancun. 5000 a night to rent these places check it out.

A Gorgeous Book of Dream Houses
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-17
This book was enough to start me dreaming of retiring to Mexico--or maybe just taking a looong vacation there! The photographs are stunning--really incredible. I also enjoyed the writing style in the sections where they discuss the goals for each house and the owners and architects input toward the whole project.

Central America
The Chalk Doll
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (1999-10)
Author: Charlotte Pomerantz
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Great Book!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-25
This is an awesome book. I like how it talks about the differences in living in the US now and Jamaica when the mother in this bood was growing up. The mother in this book grew up in Jamaica, and didn't have as many things as her daughter, who is growing up in the US. The Mother, growing up in Jamaica, didn't have alot of things, but she was happy with whatever she had. Her mother made her dresses, and she made her dolls. The only dolls that the mother could afford to make were rag dolls. I especially like this book because, at the end of the book, the daughter wants to make and have a doll like her Mom used to make in Jamaica.

The Chalk Doll
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-05
This book is an endearing story of a little girl who is not feeling well and her mother tells her of a doll she had as a child. I am using this book as a part of a reading program for First grade. It fills the need for a book about family and feelings. Your child will love hearing this book read to them and will probably become one of their favorites. I teach grades 1, 2, 3 & 4 and I know what children love. This is a winner!

Chalk one up for the Chalk Doll !
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-02
I live in the Caribbean and am starting a Caribbean book collection for my kids. I really liked this book because it wasn't just another very colorfull book, it had a moral to the story. It is about a mother telling her little girl about the kind of doll she had when she was a child and how much she loved it because she made it with her own hands. It teaches a child the meaining of self gradification.

Central America
The Chosen Shore: Stories of Immigrants
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (2004-09-13)
Author: Ellen Alexander Conley
List price: $22.95
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This is a must read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-26
I love it when I get find a book that I can't stop reading, and this is one of them. Each chapter is as good as the last and Ms. Conley writes in such a way that you feel as if you are right there with the subjects. I was especially moved by Tommy, the Korean street child. No two characters are the same and this book really opened my eyes to the everyday struggle of immigrants in this country. Go get it!!!

Can't put it down...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-25
These stories are addictive in their drama and passion. Each time you wonder how the next chapter can match up to the last one, you are surprised by the poignancy of the voices of these immigrants, which Conley preserves in their original forms. You can almost smell the herbs and cheeses from the various corners of the world from which her subjects hail. Required reading for any citizen of our now-globalized society.

Poignant and compelling
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-25
Ms. Conley's collection of stories offers a vivid insight into the lives and experiences of recent immigrants into the US. As a recent immigrant, I found I could identify with many of the experiences and feelings lived by the actors in this book. I felt like finally someone had given voice to my own emotions.

I strongly recommend this to anyone who wishes to understand the plight and struggles of immigrants into contemporary America.

Central America
The Civil War Collection (Topics Entertainment-History (Cassette))
Published in Audio Cassette by Topics Entertainment (2002-11-01)
Authors: Jimmy Gray and Jan Gray
List price: $29.95
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The Civil War Collection
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-21
An excellent overview of the four years that shaped a lot of America's values and changed America's character. The 8 volume series was never boring and I found it especially valuable in that I could break it into 1-hour commute times. The introduction cassette covered some often over-looked tidbits of history and I found it most interesting. I would certainly recommend it.

The Old West Collection
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-09
An outstanding collection on the Old west. The format is well thought out, editing is good overall, and content is about right. The series use of actors to read material (diaries, letters,and newspaper articles) gives you a good idea of what life was truly like during the period. Though the editing is very good, I can't help feeling that they should have either spent more time on fewer categories, or spent more time on the materials covered in this set. Prices vary, so be careful (I saved $10 per set on MSRP), but still will be donating sets of this (and other titles in the series) to the local school's libraries. The kids will love it! A great gift!

The Civil War Collection
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-21
An excellent overview of the four years that shaped a lot of America's values and changed America's character. The 8 volume series was never boring and I found it especially valuable in that I could break it into 1-hour commute times. The introduction cassette covered some often over-looked tidbits of history and I found it most interesting. I would certainly recommend it.

Central America
Climatic Change and the Intra-Americas Sea: Implications of Future Climate on the Ecosystems and Socio-economic Structure in the Marine and Coastal Regions ... and the Northeast Coast of South America
Published in Hardcover by Hodder Arnold (1993-06-17)
Author:
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I enjoy this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-09
A must have for anyone interested in Bone and Soft Tissue Pathology. I'm not sure when the new edition is coming out, though. You may want to look into that.

Two accounts by amazon.com
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-02
Dear Sirs,

I have returned the book "Pathology and genetics of tumors of the soft tissues and bones" because I have already bought by amazon.com in my other account (vencio56@hotmail.com). My mistake.

The book is very good (5 stars).
Sincerely,
Eneida Franco Vencio

Pathology And Genetics of Tumours of the Soft Tissues And Bones (World Health Organization Classification of Tumours S.)
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-25
This is a great book to review bone and soft tissue tumor.

Central America
Cold War Orientalism: Asia in the Middlebrow Imagination, 1945-1961
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (2003-03-10)
Author: Christina Klein
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Collectible price: $47.50

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Key To Understanding the Baby Boomer Generation
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-13
This book is a knock up the side of the head! Now I understand the disconnect between what I was brought up to believe about the United States and the non-western world, and what is happening now e.g. US policy is really that of Britain before 1942!
Must read for all us old hippies!

New Understanding Of East and West During the Cold War
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-08
Edward W. Said convincingly argued in his 1979 masterpiece, Orientalism that the West (mainly America) traditionally had a rather monolithic view of the East. This perception, according to Said, was based more on fantasy than in fact - and that the West saw the East in terms of the `other.' MIT Literary Professor Christina Klein re-visits Said's conclusions in Cold War Orientalism: Asia in the Middlebrow Imagination, 1945-1961. In this work, she successfully argues that "while many American representations fit comfortably with Said's model of Orientalism, many post-war representations of noncommunist Asia do not, although they do not contradict it entirely"
(p.11).

Essentially, Klein illustrates that various cultural mediums in post-WWII America actively engage Asian topics to bridge the cultural divide between East and West. In her powerful and well written work, Klein masterfully explains "the relationship between the expansion of U.S. power into Asia between 1945 and 1961 and the simultaneous proliferation of popular American representations of Asia" (p. 5).

There are numerous examples cited in this work that provide evidence to support her main claim that America and the Orient (the East) "could learn to understand each other" (p. 200.). For instance, she brilliantly illustrates that America reached out to post-WWII Asia through films such as The King and I and The Bridges of Toko-Ri; and through magazines such as the Readers Digest and Saturday Review. These cultural mediums, asserted Klein, educated America about Asian topics - and advanced the American Cold War interest of "economic globalization" (p. 268).

Although Klein wisely stops her study in 1961, her conclusion draws parallels between recent U.S.-Asia relations and those of post-WWII such as the revival of the King and I in 1996 and a 1991 speech by Dole Foods CEO who "praised Asian Americans as a National Resource" (p. 269).

A cursory query of reviews for Klein's work resulted in an abundance of praise and admiration for her scholarship. Klein, noted one reviewer, "is not content to simplify the complexity of the time period in order to schematize things too neatly. Rather, she seeks to dig into the richness of America's expectations for Asia, including the countervailing currents within that relationship" (review by Jespersen T. Christopher). The blend and overall comparisons between cultural mediums provides the reader with a rich and compelling story.

The passages, scholarship, anecdotes, and readability of this work are impressive. But the real value of this work is that it advances a new understanding of the East and West during the Cold War - where the former educates the latter in a mutually beneficial platform. In this reviewer's opinion, there are no obvious weaknesses to this work, nor are there any harsh criticisms from other reviewers about Klein's overall thesis. This is an important work for students of the Cold War and expands nicely on Said's research on Orientalism.

The Cold War Was Much More Than Containment and McCarthyism
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-03
Christina Klein contends that the paradigm of the Truman Doctrine can not offer a complete understanding of Cold War American culture or policy. She juxtaposes its policy of global communist containment with a 1957 speech by American diplomat Francis Wilcox that harped the need to educate Americans about the world beyond the national boundaries. This contrasts what the author terms the "global imaginary of containment" with the "global imaginary of integration." Both of these are educational projects. The first teaches the global politic as a heroic crusade against communism, the latter teaches it as a sentimental connection with the cultures of non-Americans. While acknowledging the abundance of quality scholarship that investigates the former project, Klein positions Cold War Orientalism as an investigation of the policy of Cold War internationalism and its related trope of "sentimental education." In doing so, she aims to dichotomize the discourse of history by proving that integration of the capitalist world went hand-in-hand with Soviet containment.

Klein begins by documenting the Federal policy initiatives that promoted cold war internationalism in the American populace, like the United States Information Agency's people-to-people program. These initiatives rose in the wake of McCarthyism because the Truman Doctrine had a basic rhetorical disadvantage when promoted to the American public. As shown in her analysis of National Security Council directives, a foreign policy of communist containment has the public relations problem of being defined by that which it opposes. The integration of "free" people and commodities becomes the necessary positive to imbue the ideology of containment with original purpose.

The author then considers how "middlebrow intellectuals"-the author's term for the editors of mass periodicals like Reader's Digest, claimed Cold War internationalism as a public pedagogy and instructed readers about the American commitment to cultural difference. The text importantly contends that "middlebrow"-an adjective and Klein's subtitular term-has roots in cultural populism of the 1920s. It functionally describes a process of repackaging diverse culture for mass consumption. This "offered [upwardly mobile immigrant] consumers the cultural capital that would make them feel more secure in their new class identity (Klein 64)." It also appropriates the cultural inadequacy that permeated the Untied State's post-WWI uneasiness with the global mantle. It translates this inadequacy into a call for individuals to claim the authority of widely informed knowledge. Finally, Klein contends that the "middlebrow imagination" conflated education with enjoyment and moral purpose, ironically couching human difference in the trappings of soothing universalism. To show the connection between Cold War Internationalism as public policy and middlebrow cultural project, the author compares novelized travel accounts (like James Michiner's The Voice of Asia) to policy documents like NSC-48. Both envision an Asian communism that is rabidly expansionist and interstitial states that teeter on the verge of being "lost" or safely preserved in the bloc of the free world through cultural understanding (Klein 126).

While Klein's scholarship is original, taking policies that have been discretely engaged by multiple works and disciplines (like, for example, the propaganda policy considerations of Jacques Ellul), her lexicon of sentimental internationalism also offers a fresh critique of liberalism. It remains an unfinished project to extend this exciting paradigm into wider considerations of American conflict and axes of difference.

Central America
Colt Single Action: From Patersons to Peacemakers
Published in Hardcover by Chartwell Books (2007-05-30)
Author: Dennis Adler
List price: $29.99
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"The" photo book on Colt single actions.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-13
Forget R.L.Wilson, this is the book you want. Adler is a fine writer and authoritative on Colt single actions. Some of the best photos of old Colts and factory engraving anywhere.

Great Dennis Adler Book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-12
I must say I expected a good book following the purchase of Metallic Cartridge Conversions, what you get with Colt Single Action: From Patersons to Peacemakers is a superbly produced book covering this genre. Not only informative as you would expect but written so well, not over technical just sheer good interesting subject reading, add the brilliance of Dennis Adler's photography you have one of the best books on the market. If you are a devotee of R L Wilson's books as I am, he now has some very serious competition.

A pleasanto surprise for a "coffee-table book"
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-28
This book is chuck-full of information; the opening chapters, particularly those pages dealing with Patterson rifle conversions are unique in my experience! Mr. Leavett has some fascinating pieces.

The illustrations are of the highest quality; I was happy to see the coverage given to the engraved versions of the "second-generation" black-powder revolvers, having owned a few myself.

This is right in there with the best $19.99 you can spend on a gun book.

Central America
Contested Ground: Comparative Frontiers on the Northern and Southern Edges of the Spanish Empire (Southwest Center Series)
Published in Paperback by University of Arizona Press (1998-04-01)
Authors: Donna J. Guy and Thomas E. Sheridan
List price: $25.95
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Major contribution to Latin American & frontier studies.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-07
This book should become a major contribution to Latin American studies, because it provides fresh perspectives on topics we'd thought we already knew well. It does so by relating Latin America to vital issues in history, notably recent research on frontier history, "the new Western history," & themes of race, class & gender. The chapter by Susan Socolow, discussing Argentine frontier women & thus engendering the history of the gauchos, is particularly strong, but so are most of the others. One drawback is that coverage is largely limited to the far margins of Spanish America (northern Mexico & Rio de la Plata regions), when there is plenty of work to do on the frontiers of core areas of Spain's New World empire, e.g. Peru & Bolivia. (There is some fine material on Brazil, but the book's main emphasis is on Spanish America.) Nevertheless, this work definitely advances understanding of important aspects of Latin American history.

Major contribution to Latin American & frontier studies.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-07
This book should become a major contribution to Latin American studies, because it provides fresh perspectives on topics we'd thought we already knew well. It does so by relating Latin America to vital issues in history, notably recent research on frontier history, "the new Western history," & themes of race, class & gender. The chapter by Susan Socolow, discussing Argentine frontier women & thus engendering the history of the gauchos, is particularly strong, but so are most of the others. One drawback is that coverage is largely limited to the far margins of Spanish America (northern Mexico & Rio de la Plata regions), when there is plenty of work to do on the frontiers of core areas of Spain's New World empire, e.g. Peru & Bolivia. (There is some fine material on Brazil, but the book's main emphasis is on Spanish America.) Nevertheless, this work definitely advances understanding of important aspects of Latin American history.

Major contribution to Latin American & frontier studies.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-07
This book should become a major contribution to Latin American studies, because it provides fresh perspectives on topics we'd thought we already knew well. It does so by relating Latin America to vital issues in history, notably recent research on frontier history, "the new Western history," & themes of race, class & gender. The chapter by Susan Socolow, discussing Argentine frontier women & thus engendering the history of the gauchos, is particularly strong, but so are most of the others. One drawback is that coverage is largely limited to the far margins of Spanish America (northern Mexico & Rio de la Plata regions), when there is plenty of work to do on the frontiers of core areas of Spain's New World empire, e.g. Peru & Bolivia. (There is some fine material on Brazil, but the book's main emphasis is on Spanish America.) Nevertheless, this work definitely advances understanding of important aspects of Latin American history.


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Education-->Colleges and Universities-->Central America-->28
Related Subjects: Guatemala Panama El Salvador
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