Montana Books


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

Montana
One Night In A Bad Inn: A True Story
Published in Hardcover by Pictorial Histories Publishing Co. Inc. (2006-04-10)
Author: Christy Leskovar
List price: $24.95
New price: $20.95
Used price: $13.28

Average review score:

One Night in a Bad Inn: A True Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
This is quite a book. Admittedly, it has some problems but they are few and the quality of the book far surpasses any negatives. Addressing one of the problems up front; someone noticing the book in their favorite book store is apt to think of it as a novel. It is not. It is a family biography and a fine bit of history. A different title and dustcover would have helped avoid the problem. An exacerbating factor is that opening the book at random may bring one to something that sounds like a novel and the writing is good enough to be the envy of any good novelist.

The book arrangement is in six parts that resemble a series of separate books. Most parts would stand alone, certainly as well as do many related sequences of novels. A first impression was to question the arrangement, but after competing the book it seems that the general chronological organization was the correct choice. Variations in writing style and focus from part to part may well indicate that the parts were drafted separately over a span of years.

From a history standpoint, Part One provides a good description of the unique lifestyle around small communities in southeastern Montana in the first part of the twentieth century. This part also contains an amazing story that leaves a person wondering if indeed they did buy a novel. Part Two opens with as fine a short summary of Butte, Montana, as the reader will find anywhere. That is quite an achievement as the people and events of Butte were so complex and unique at that time as to have been a separate, diverse-culture country in a different era. Likewise, integrated into Part Three is the best short overview of World War I in Europe that this reader has ever seen. The other parts have similar qualities; Part Five contains another story nearly as remarkable as that of Part One. Throughout, the book is illustrated with photos that are interesting and useful contributions to the text.

This author is a skilled writer. The book cover says that she worked as an engineer. The book has the clarity of a good technical writer and is easy to read aloud. However, engineers who can write this well are few and far between. Just imagine an engineer or history professor writing; "...Denis built a simple, wooden coffin and laid both mother and babe in this their last earthly shelter. Now Denis faced the daunting task of raising his six children alone." This is in a chapter that had to resemble the Book of Genesis, but the writing keeps it from dragging. In another part she provides her image of her grandmother Aila; "...the Phoenix rising from the ashes. Indeed, out of this ash heap of scandal and debauchery emerged no mythical bird but a rose - an exquisite blossom, beautiful and delicate in appearance, yet hardy and resilient enough to withstand the bitter cold of sorrow and blistering heat of adversity." Wow!

At its heart, the book is a bibliography of Aila (born in 1901 and lived to age ninety-one), someone that the author greatly respected and nearly worships. It begins with Aila's ancestral family in Ireland and keeps track of those relations as they concern the people and events of the main theme.

The notes and bibliography at the back of the book are excellent. It is too bad that there isn't an index. In fact, careful readers would be wise to develop a timeline and family tree as they read, or perhaps during a second reading. There is some additional information on the author's website, including a travel guide to the physical locations of importance in the story. The amount of time, travel, and expense that went into the research and writing of this book was obviously great. It occupied the author for eight or nine years. It was obviously a labor of love and undoubtedly she feels repaid by a sense of fulfillment, satisfaction from the knowledge gained, and pleasure in the quality of this book. We the readers can be very glad that she brought it to the marketplace.

Highly recommend
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-07
I became interested in this book because the author, Christy Leskovar, is a former student of my husband's. It is a wonderful book, not just a family history. It contained US and world history as a background for introducing the family members so rather than just being a "family tree", it was also a very well written history book. Christy's love and respect for her Grandmother was apparent through the book, but she wrote it in such a manner that it was interesting to an outsider. It is a very good read!!

Needs serious editing
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-09
Although this was an enjoyable read, as my title suggests there are some minor problems with this book. There are a few sections that seem to have been thrown in as an after thought with no proofing whatsoever. Also,I felt the story got lost in the details at times. Examples are the authors blow by blow account of her Grandfather's war experience and in the extensive genealogical background given on just about every person mentioned in the book. While I can understand her devotion to her Grandmother, she lacks an author's objectivity regarding her family, presenting them simplistically as either all evil or all good. That got old. Despite these noticeable flaws, it was still an interesting read, especially the story of her Great Grandparents shenanigans.

Wonderful book about a Butte Montana Family's History
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-22
I enjoyed this book a great deal, and only partly because I lived in Montana for many years and spent some time in Butte. For those who don't know, Butte was home to 'the richest hill on earth' a hundred years ago, sitting on top of the world's largest copper reserves. The town pulled in thousands of Irish, Polish, German, Chinese, English and more and became, in a sense, a smaller version of a typical eastern industrial city. Leskovar set out to write a family history and combines it with a great depiction of Butte and Montana from about 1900 to about 1950. Not all family histories would be interesting, but how many families can say that their great-grandmothers were jailed for murder, or tried to induce a daughter into prostitution, or had a grandfather who fought in some of the toughest battles of World War One and a grandmother who lived a life of purity and purpose though surrounded by weakness and debauchery?

The story skips from Leskovar's great-grandparents' early life as pioneer settlers near Forsyth, Montana to their move to Butte, and does a little preliminary work on family origins. The characters come to life as she tells her tale. She obviously spent many years researching background for this book. Equally obvious is her interest in her grandfather's WWI experiences, which appear to have taken on a life of their own in mid-book and which are almost a story unto themselves. Those who are not interested in WWI may find this section to drag a bit, but as a WWI and WWII enthusiast, I enjoyed the section greatly.

The book is also packed with excellent photos of Butte back in the day, as well as photos of the various characters which people the book. The obvious hero of the book is Leskovar's grandmother. Some of the characters don't do much with their lives, but she does from an early age. And there are plenty of dark characters, with the prime villainess being Leskovar's ammoral/immoral great-grandmother. Leskovar's grandfather, an Irish miner who quit one job after another while raising a large family, comes off as irresponsible and self-centered, but with a tender side as well.

This is a good book, of interest to anyone who enjoys western mining history, Montana history, or a well-turned family saga (that's true to boot). It may be of less interest to a general reader who does not have any of these interests.

Four and a half stars. Thank you, Ms. Leskovar, for an enjoyable and memorable trip back in time.

Fascinating
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-07
This book is fascinating. The plot is riveting, the research impeccable and the characters memorable. The narrative is clear and the descriptions are intricate. Whether detailing turn of the century immigration, the Great War or the settling of the American West the author uses the characters to guide the reader through some of America's most tumultuous times. This book is a must read for any student of history and anybody who appreciates a well crafted story.

Montana
Paper or Plastic: Life in the Check-Out Lane
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2008-03-24)
Author: Bobbi Erhart
List price: $19.95
New price: $19.94
Used price: $27.41

Average review score:

"Laughter is the best medicine".
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-01
A very entertaining and funny book. The only reason I couldn't read it quickly was because I was laughing so hard. You will just love the recipes at the end. What a great gift this book will make for friends and family also.

Shocking Reality
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-23
What a GREAT book! It's an easy read that's hard to put down. Makes you re-think what you blabber about to your check-out person. You just never know when that person will make notes about your personal quirks and write a book about it. Why will we tell strangers things that we won't tell even our best friends?
I LOVED Ms. Erhart's "straight-on" approach to life's everyday trials. She certainly found humor in them. She tells life like it is--through other people's eyes. I laughed. I cried. I certainly can relate. Just a really fun book to read, PLUS the recipes at the end are an added bonus. Can't wait for her next book to "hit the shelves".

Charmingly comic book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-01
Bobbi Erhart's book "Paper or Plastic: Life in the Checkout Lane" is a funny, charming first title (the sort of book many people probably plan to write about the "you-wouldn't-believe-it" nature of their workplace escapades yet never execute). This book is great fun to read and while the narrative isn't the voice of a seasoned writer, it IS the voice of a great story-teller. I stayed up late reading this book because I couldn't stop turning the pages and that is high praise for ANY book no matter how lauded the author. In fact, there were times when I felt like I was listening to her tell me stories! Erhart certainly attains the mark of any great writer: she can make just about ANYTHING engaging and can breathe life into the most simple scenario. The book is a mixture of autobiography and a collection of stories about her years behind the check-out-stand and the colourful (to say the least!) supermarket denizens who landed in her queue.

There is a lot of heart and warmth to the humour in these quirky stories and you can immediately tell that the author is a keen and compassionate observer.
Never sardonic or cutting, Bobbi Erhart manages to tug at your heart strings and make you laugh without self-conscious ploys or the strained sophistication a lot of auto-biographical humourists employ. She's true blue and the most effective (and funny) passages come when she nails the art of truthful and even self-exposing observation. The passages where she talks about her love affair with cheesecake is one of the best "battle with the bulge" expositions in ANY book. The stories about her quirky customers are fascinating and I can attest to the reality of some of the ones which describe local celebrities as I live in the town she fictionally describes as "Gunbark, Montana" -- What a great book. As an extra treat there are recipes at the end of the book and even a unique use for a dishwasher. I was sad when there were no more pages left.

If you are looking for a clear, warm and honest example of 'truth is stranger than fiction' -- look no further than this collection of stories from behind the check-stand.

I will never think of the supermarket in the same way again! I'm looking forward to her next book.

Paper of Plastic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-31
I loved this book. She is a great storyteller who knows how to keep your interest up. I can't wait for her next book. I've recommended it to all my friends. They should make a sitcom out of her life, except no one would believe it.

An extra entertaining look at a very ordinary occupation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-28
Ms Erhart's account of her, and other people's lives from the perspective of the checkstand is very entertaining and enlightening. Her funny, lighthearted, Erma Bombeck style, makes for a book that I would recommend to anyone.

Montana
Piping Down the Valleys Wild
Published in Paperback by Yearling (1999-04-13)
Author: Nancy Larrick
List price: $5.99
New price: $2.35
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

All The Best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-19
This is, by far, the best book of children's poetry I've ever seen. I've owned my copy for over twenty years. I read almost every poem in the book to my children while they were growing up, and we memorized many of the poems. I used the book extensively in my classroom when I was an elementary teacher. Now, as a college professor, I read from the book often to inspire my student-teachers.

A sentimental favorite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-26
My mother gave me this book when I was about five or six, and I learned many of the poems by heart. I still have my (very battered) copy and intend to pass it on to my own son, in the hope that it will inspire in him the same love of poetry that it did in me. An excellent introduction to poetry for any child - I am thrilled to learn that this wonderful book is still in print!

Classic poetry for everyone
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-16
This collection has been a favorite of mine since I was a child, and now that I am teaching I use it frequently for my 1st grade class. It is a good mix of poetry, classic, enchanting, silly, and sophisticated. Highly recommended.

Having trouble giving it up
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-05
We bought this in November for a precocious three-year-old friend of ours. She'll get it for Christmas... or a little after... if we can manage to let go of it by then. I've been reading it out loud to my husband while he's washing dishes. It's just the right mix of old favorites and things that are new to me -- and a remarkably low number of poems where you're left scratching your head and saying "Why'd they waste the ink on that one?"

The book itself is the cheapest of newsprint with a basic paperback binding. We may someday need to find a more beautiful copy, but in the meantime, "cheap" means that normal damage won't precipitate a crisis, and that's always an appropriate choice for a preschooler.


One last thought: If you're looking for a collection of poems for a family that strongly objects to Halloween or "magic," then you need to keep looking. While this book has many poems which refer to God and/or the Divine in one way or another (without being the least bit preachy), it also has a chapter of poems which talk about witches and goblins and other Halloween characters, as well as a few about fairies or other fanciful creatures. I found none of them offensive, and individual poems are easily skipped, but a few people on my gift list are particularly sensitive on this point, and it's well to know what you're getting into in advance.

Outstanding
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-04
This is a wonderful collection of poetry. Our children, ages 2 and 4, look forward to hearing selections from this book every night. It strikes a balance between poetry written for children and poetry written for adults without getting into anything too dark for young children. I highly recommend it.

Montana
Refuge (Full Circle Series #1)
Published in Paperback by WaterBrook Press (2001-06-19)
Author: Lisa Tawn Bergren
List price: $9.99
New price: $181.69
Used price: $4.89

Average review score:

Lisa Tawn Bergren is awesome!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-21
Refuge is my all time favorite books from Lisa Tawn Bergren. I couldn't put it down. I've read this book too many times to count. If you love a good romantic story, then you'll love Refuge. I strongly suggest on buying it. You won't be disappointed.

Lisa Tawn Bergren is awesome!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-21
Refuge is my all time favorite book from Lisa Tawn Bergren. I couldn't put it down. I've read this book too many times to count. If you love a good romantic story, then you'll love Refuge. I strongly suggest on buying it. You won't be disappointed.

Across "The Bridge" is worth the trip!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-10
I just finished reading The Bridge. I thoroughly enjoyed it! I was surprised to find myself liking the characters so much in such a short time. I especially loved how the author described Eden getting her visions and sculpting them. It really sparked the creative juices in me and made me wish I was an artist! It was more than just romance or entertainment for a few hours. I loved the message. I appreciate the author's gift to communicate to the heart on many levels. I learned this in her Northern Light Series also. They're all excellent.

Lisa's descriptions of Montana were awesome. I can certainly see why it holds such a dear place in her heart. I loved the fly fishing parts, especially teaching Nick. It endeared me to Eden even more and exposed her nurturing side. I could imagine Eden in her prayer spot or sitting on the dock with her feet in the water. It really made me want to spend my summers there!

I was also delighted to find Lisa's web site and get to know her better. Lisa is in my top 10 of about 30 favorite authors. I'm looking forward to reading her anointed and inspired writing for many years to come. I'm eager to read Christmas Every Morning.

J.K.Jones Oklahoma City, OK

A great story!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-04
I really enjoyed this book and very highly recomend it, I would
give it more stars if I could.

Two stories in one - Fantastic book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-15
Comedy, Romance, Drama - Lisa writes so well - I felt like I was right alongside the characters living out the trials, hopes, dreams and fears right alongside them. The first book is about Rachel - a city girl visiting her Country friend Beth. She finds love in the sticks but it is interupted by a man who think Rachel is right for him and kidnaps her, can Dirk save her and keep her? You'll have to read it.... The second book is about Emily and the fears and tragedies of her past and how they make it so hard for her to love in the future. The book also includes Rachel and the characters from the first book.

Montana
Sketches from the Ranch: A Montana Memoir
Published in Paperback by Bison Books (2008-11-01)
Author:
List price: $17.95
New price: $12.53
Used price: $11.89

Average review score:

An engaging compilation of the thoughtful writings
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-06
Sketches From The Ranch: A Montana Memoir is an engaging compilation of the thoughtful writings of Dan Aadland. Sketches From The Ranch is about living on a western American ranch (which was founded in 1892), experiencing the turn of the seasons, rejoicing in the birth of colts and calves, embracing simple means of life even as Thoreau did at Walden. Superb black-and-white sketches by artist Nik Carpenter add a visual and emotional touch to this moving memoir.

A moving memoir
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-11
Sketches From The Ranch: A Montana Memoir is an engaging compilation of the thoughtful writings of Dan Aadland. Sketches From The Ranch is about living on a western American ranch (which was founded in 1892), experiencing the turn of the seasons, rejoicing in the birth of colts and calves, embracing simple means of life even as Thoreau did at Walden. Superb black-and-white sketches by artist Nik Carpenter add a visual and emotional touch to this moving memoir.

Another excellent book on western life by Dan Aadland.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-31
Dan Aadland's memoir includes many wonderful stories of hard work accomplished in the beautiful ranchlands of Montana. I enjoyed learning about the true bravery required to bring a string of ponies hundreds of miles over wild terrain. The joys and sorrows of daily ranch life are artfully depicted, along with the history and culture of southern Montana. An excellent read.

An intimate and engaging view into ranching life
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-02
I am an unlikely reader of a book about ranching, a city professional within minutes of the Mall of America. Yet, Dan Aadland brought me intimately into his world and not only let me taste the experience of ranching, but like all good writing, let me feast on life. The sensual quality of the author's writing moved me to respond with my senses. For example, I found that I most enjoyed reading the book on my deck overlooking the woods, feeling the breeze against my face. It was in this setting that I read about cattle buying. Here is a subject I definitely would not have pursued on my own. But Aadland brought the scenes and participants to life and had me so engaged, it was one of my favorite "sketches." I relished his description of the feast he prepared on his private moose hunt. As he wrote about storytelling over Yukon Jack and grapefruit juice, I was compelled to pour my personal version: Cuervo Gold on the rocks with lime juice. I sipped as he told his stories. Dan Aadland not only illuminated the world around him. He effectively brought me into his private world of thought and emotion. I felt right with him as I read his disclosure, "I wonder what I would be psychologically without this space around me, shudder, and force myself to think happier thoughts." I shuddered with him. His emotional honesty was particularly striking as he describes an emotional catharsis toward the end of the book. Aadland's ability to expose the most private--and enlivening--aspects of human experience helped me to identify with him and feel less alone. This was particularly poignant when I recently experienced an emotional reaction similar to the author's. I called up the experience of the author and felt soothed. The isolation-breaking quality of Aadland's writing is a real gift to his readers. I came away from Sketches with a deep respect for ranching, and for a life well lived.

The year's round of seasons on a Montana ranch
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-29
Montana has produced so many fine writers. Here's another one. Aadland is the son of a Lutheran minister, growing up in south central Montana between the Beartooth Mountains and the Crow Reservation. His "memoir" is mostly about the present, with flashbacks to the past, which include stories of his wife's forebears, who emigrated from Norway in the late 19th century to set themselves up as ranchers. And there are memories of his boyhood, working as a hired hand, a tour of duty in Vietnam as a marine, and raising a family.

The particular achievement of the book is its description of daily life on a modern-day ranch. Of the many books on ranching, this one conveys better than most the seasonal routines of labor from spring calving and breeding to fall roundup, sale barns, and feeding during the months of snow. There are descriptions of haying, fieldwork, irrigation, keeping machinery running, and visits from the vet. The book also describes well the evolution of ranchwork from when ranchers used horses and hired men to get the work done, and neighbors pitched in to help each other with harvesting. Today, much of the work is mechanized, ranchers work alone, and the undependable seasons, slow markets, and razor-thin profit margins require second incomes for both rancher and spouse. Besides raising cattle, Aadland and his wife are school teachers. He travels 60 miles each way to the high school in Bridger (pop. 724), and in winter months sees the ranch in sunlight only on weekends.

He's also a horseman, raising and training walking horses, and much of the book is devoted to this subject. There are descriptions of patiently working his horses, including a team he uses to harrow a field for no other reason than to experience the pleasure of this old-fashioned method of farming -- no deafening engine to block out the sounds of the natural environment, or to damage hearing. He's a literate rancher, quoting Robert Frost and Thoreau, and both thoughtful and articulate. He's also informative. You learn about practices of breeding horses and cows and how a vet tests for pregnancy. You learn the tentative relationship between weather forecasts and the timing of cutting and baling hay. He has a steady eye and a sense of pacing that makes his book a graceful and unhurried cycle through the seasons. You become so intimately involved in Aadland's life that the sudden tragedy that occurs in the final chapters is both a jolting surprise and thoroughly heart-breaking

It should also be mentioned that this is a handsomely designed book, illustrated with many fine drawings of ranch life by artist Nik Carpenter. I recommend this book to anyone with an interest in working ranches, the Big Sky country, horses, and the making of not just a living but a life. As a companion volume, I suggest "Some Horses" by Thomas McGuane, another Montana writer, as well as Linda Hasselstrom's "Windbreak," which recounts a year on a cattle ranch in South Dakota.

Montana
Ski Trails of Southwest Montana: 30 of the Best Cross Country and Snowshoe Trails Around Big Sky, Bozeman and Paradise Valley (Greater Yellowstone Ski Trails) (Greater Yellowstone Ski Trails)
Published in Paperback by First Ascent Press, LLC (2007-10-12)
Author: Melynda Harrison
List price: $16.95
New price: $15.25
Used price: $32.55

Average review score:

Clear and informative
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
This is a wonderfully written guide book! The descriptions are clear and informative. Great tips for families! Can't wait to use it again next season! I hope this author continues to write more!

wonderful resource
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
This book is a must for people who like to explore the xc trails around Bozeman and Livingston. I've found many new fun trails to check out thanks to this guide and it's descriptions. Thanks for providing us with this much needed resource.

Gets you Skiing In Paradise
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
Great Trails with Excellent maps that gets you out skiing in some incredible places. Thanks for this great resource guide.

Ski Trails of SW Montana
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
An easy to use trail guide to cross country skiing and snowshoeing near Big Sky, Bozeman and Paradise Valley. Good maps, accurate details, nice size.

Finally! A great ski guide...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
I LOVE this book! Thanks for filling a void that wintertime backcountry enthusiasts have had when trying to explore new regions of Southwest Montana. Everyone deserves to get out and play on skis - and this book is the perfect resource to throw in your pack with your water bottle and lunch to get ready for an adventure on a new trail. Thanks for providing such a user-friendly resource for all of us snow-lovers! I love the maps, too.

Montana
Taste of Colombia
Published in Hardcover by Villegas Editores (2001-10-05)
Authors: Benjamin Villegas and Antonio Montana
List price: $65.00
New price: $185.92
Used price: $49.97

Average review score:

An Incredible Presentation of Columbian Cuisine
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-28
I found this book to be simply and utterly fantastic! The photography is absolutely magnificent, and the recipes contained are authenticly Columbian. The layout of this book is a work of art, and it makes you incredibly hungry just to fan through the pages. A comprehensive and broad presentation of Columbian cuisine is presented here in a collage of photography that will marvel your eyes. The historical material was very well presented and the book itself very well researched. If anyone is wishing to explore the depths of Columbian cooking, this book will take you there. If you merely want to explore a colorful and culinary tour of Columbia and its riches in all that is tasty, then this book would be a great place to start.

Incredible collection of traditional Colombian recipies
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-14
Annyone interested in Colombian cooking should pick this book up - the recipies are representative of a Colombian meal and the photos are outstanding.

a wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-04
I got this book in Bogota and I really love it. The pictures are absolutly great. I do not get most of the ingredients here in Japan but I love to see the pictures and to remember the good and friedly meals I shared in Colombia. I think it is also a great present.

Fantastic display of photography, information, and recipes
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-08
This is exactly the kind of book i was looking for. Something that would give me examples of regional Colombian cooking, along with info and great photography of the people and country side. So far, i've only tried a few recipes, but I know that my guests are eager for more spanish cooking soon! It's a beautiful book, that I hope will be passed down to my children and their children one day.

It has the best Colombian cooking recipes.beautiful pictures
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-21
The book has the famous Colombian recipes with great pictures and it makes a review of all different regions.

Montana
The Vigilantes of Montana
Published in Paperback by TwoDot (2003-04-01)
Authors: Thomas Dimsdale and Ruth Mather
List price: $12.95
New price: $2.85
Used price: $2.84
Collectible price: $12.95

Average review score:

Deadwood Language
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-23
The writing style / language is like that spoken in the HBO series Deadwood. A bit hard to get used to but then an interesting read and a very clear glimpse of what it was like in Montana during the 1800's.

Bringing order to the Wild West, maybe
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-15
After gold was discovered in the Bitter Root Mountains of present-day Montana in 1860, lawlessness followed the rush of miners into the region. Bannock and Virginia City became important centers within the mining districts, and by 1862 were typical western "shoot-em-up" towns teaming with unsavory characters, racked by violence, and basically "removed from the restraints of civilized society" and its laws. It's in that context that the Montana Vigilantes were created, a group that, according to the author, brought order out of chaos by offering "a shield of protection" to the citizens while wielding "a sword of retribution" against lawless marauders. An interesting development occurred in Bannock, however, in that the elected sheriff (Henry Plummer) apparently at the same time was the leader of the most notorious road gang (thieves and murderers) in the territory. Thomas Dimsdale, an Englishman who had gone to Viginia City in 1863 for his health and who shortly after operated the first newspaper published in Montana, wrote a series of articles for his paper about Plummer, his operations and agents, and the work of the vigilantes to bring to justice (often by hanging) these criminals, and these articles were later collected to make this book.

In 1987, a new biography of Plummer by R.E. Mather and F.E. Boswell threw Dimsdale's book into the realm of controversy by declaring a belief that Plummer was innocent of the crimes Dimsdale accused him of and that Dimsdale praised the work of the vigilantes too highly and uncritically. There is no doubt that Plummer had a criminal past before coming to Bannock (he was hanged there by the vigilantes in 1864), having served time in San Quentin for murder. Who is closer to presenting the truer picture is hard to say, but Dimsdale's work is a thrilling and dramatic account, a fascinating narrative that is as lively as a Max Brand western story.

Fact or Fiction? Who cares, it's a great read!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-15
This was first given to me 1976. What I would do with this one, I don't care about vigilantes, I have no interest in Montana, and time is too precious to take it away from the 19th century, my favorite. It suddenly dawned upon me, this is the 19th century, and if someone is going to understand the mindset of the century, you will have to examine the mindset of the whole population. Reluctantly I picked the book up and began reading. Some hours later I set the book down sorry that the author had run out of words.

Thomas J. Dimsdale was an Englishman who settled in 1863 and Virginia City, Montana and in 1864 took over as editor of the Montana Post. The newspapers served as the first publisher in serial all of The Vigilantes of Montana and perhaps some of the writing in this book, some of the romantic element, some of the color of the book is explainable artifact it was first written for the newspaper. In this century that has arisen some question about the true facts surrounding the "villain" of the story. Henry Plummer arrived in the gold camp in Nevada City in 1852 and very soon participated in the wholesome disreputable houses when he saw fit to murder two men. By 1862 former was notorious as a boss of the gang of criminals. In 1863 moved to Montana and news was elected sheriff. This is the story of the vigilantes who tracked down, tried, and executed plumber and his gang of desperados. Some modern researchers who tried to prove Plummer innocent of the crimes for which he was executed.

The author describes this event in colorful detail and very readable narrative as you see in this excerpt:
"seeing that the circumstances were such as embedded of neither vacillation nor delay, the citizenry here, summoning his friends, when up to the party and gave the military command, "company! Forward march!" This was at once obeyed a rope taken from a noted functionary's bed and had been mislaid [more was immediately sent for and soon they were hundreds of feet of good hemp] ....
"The order to `Bring up Plummer' was then passed and repeated; but no one stirred. The leader went over to this `perfect gentleman', as his friends called him, and was met by a request to `Give a man time to pray.' Well knowing that Plummer relied on a rescue on other than Divine aid, he said briefly and decidedly, ' Certainly, but let him say his prayers up here.'"

And, "Soon after, the party formed and returned to the town leaving the corpses stiffening in the icy blast. The bodies were eventually cut down by the friends of the road agents and varied. The `Reign of Terror' in Bismarck was over." The book continues for another hundred and eighteen pages of the same where only the names and places are changed to condemn to posterity the guilty. At the end, the author provides a section of short biographies of the leading players.

This is an easy reading book, well worth what you might pay for it, and whether all of the factual information is an is factual is somewhat immaterial here because it does give a picture of these decades in the West India and Hollywood would be afraid to imagine.

Terrific reporting of crimefighting in early Montana
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-05-10
This fascinating document is an account of the notorious "road agents" operating in Montana in the early 1860s during and after the Alder Gulch gold strike. These men took over the towns of Alder Creek, Virginia City and Bannock and ran them as criminal enterprises. Eventually groups of ordinary citizens formed secret vigilante organizations to combat the road agents. Taking the law into their own hands they pursued, shot or hanged as many of the road agents as possible. On Virginia City's Boot Hill there are presently gravemarkers with the names of a number of the men mentioned in the book who were captured and hanged by the vigilantes. Dimsdale, the author, was born in England and took over editorship of the Virginia City paper. Some of the events he witnessed, but more he relates from the testimony of those who participated in them. The accounts are a bit confusing -- they read as newspaper reports and lack a historian's distance and clarity. But they make up for all faults in the immediacy of their telling. This is a very valuable document of life in the old west, and gives an extraordinary sense of what life was like in a raw mining town, too new to have any legitimate law enforcement. Mark Twain cites Dimsdale and quotes him copiously in "Roughing It," his account of his adventures in Carson City, Nevada, and other places in the West.

The true meaning of "vigilante" is clearly defined.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-07
Dimsdale writes of Montana history in a clarity not often appreciated by some history authors. "The Vigilantes of Montana" brings, page after page, the gold-rush era of Montana Territory to the memory and eyes of the reader. This fascinating text tells the story as my ancestors told of living in Montana during this period. It is an excellent choice for any reader interested in a true account of the romantic and hostile West.

Montana
Bird Feats of Montana: including Yellowstone and Glacier National Park (Farcountry Explorer Books) (Farcountry Explorer Books)
Published in Paperback by Farcountry Press (2008-05-01)
Author: Deborah Richie Oberbillig
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.41
Used price: $7.49

Average review score:

Full of Facts and Fun
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-15
Deborah Oberbillig's fascination with birds lures us into an amazing world of feathered friends who have been been given much by nature for survival and brightening our world. Bird Feats of Montana is a colorful book - full of facts from the fastest and highest flying birds to the smartest. How and where do they live? How and what do they sing? Which builds the most interesting nests? Along with everyday facts, we find out how a curlew catches a toad, how a woodpecker extends his five-inch tongue to scoop up insects and the mystery of the leaps and dances of mating Sandhill Cranes. Did you know that ospreys and owls have a reversible outer toe so that they can perch on a limb and hold on to a newly caught fish at the same time? Eagles have binocular vision which enables them to spot a pigeon three miles away.
The book is well illustrated with excellent photographs and drawings along with lively text, highlighted with colorful titles. Children will learn their birds by name and even more exciting, the amazing things that they do, not only in Montana but in other parts of the country where many of the same birds are found.
Written for children ages 8-12, this book will enchant and educate all ages. I highly recommend it for libraries and personal collections. It's a great grandmother's gift and grandmothers too will love reading it.

Not just for Montanans
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-30
Though it's called Bird Feats of Montana, this book will appeal to kids in any state. We live on the other side of the country, in Vermont, and a some of the birds featured in the book don't live here. But that doesn't make it any less enjoyable for my kids--what kid wouldn't want to know about the best dung collecting bird, wherever it's from? The format (one superlative bird to a page) makes it easy for kids to just open up to any page and learn something new. Great addition to the family bookshelf!

Bird Feats - A Feat for Birders
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-26
Packed with an array of anecdotes and research, written in an accessible style children and adults will enjoy - I learned many new things, e.g. the language of chickadees and the magnetic compass birds use to migrate by the stars...as a resident of Colorado, I recognize a good many of the birds in my geography.

David C. Richie
Wilderness Monitoring Coordinator
Wilderness Workshop, Colorado

Neat book for kids!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-06
I think this book is great for kids. There is so much information on birds -- the reader will really get to know them. The illustrations and layout are fun and engaging. It would be great for any family visiting Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks -- or families like ours who live in a city but dream about the wide open spaces.

Bright fun fact book for kids and adults
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-21
This book is a great source of fun facts about many common birds in the northwest. Colorfully designed and illustrated for kids, adults will enjoy it and learn from it too. I'm a naturalist guide in Alaska, and I discovered lots of "gee whiz" facts I can share with my clients.

Montana
Building Your Career Portfolio
Published in Paperback by Delmar Cengage Learning (2001-05-01)
Author: Carol A. Poore
List price: $15.95
New price: $4.90
Used price: $4.86

Average review score:

Investing Your Mental Energy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-06
When Bill Gates said "human imagination is our only real asset here at Microsoft" he could just as easily have said "here in the universe." Carol Poore, unlike most personal improvement writers, understands this profound shift in wealth and knows how we can take advantage of it. If you are an imaginative human being, (and her book shows you how to get that jump-started if you're not) your most precious resource is your time, and when you treat your time like an investor treats money, your life becomes a creation. BUILDING YOUR CAREER PORTFOLIO is chock full of exercises to do and lists to make that will clarify and enhance your future. When I first skimmed through it, I didn't realize(until I sat down and really read it) what else was there: a series of wonderful short stories, real life examples of real people who have done exactly the things Poole recommends, and the great results they got. This book can be read many times at many levels. HOW I WISH I HAD THIS BOOK TO WORK WITH WHEN I WAS IN MY 20's!!!! (and if you have any loved ones in their 20's, what a gift this book would be.) I'm in my 50s (just finishing the first half of life) and this book is still a treasure. The workbook aspect is for the left side of your brain, and the marvelous stories are for the right side. The final result is a whole brain delight. I don't recommend going forth into the 21st century and trying to create your career without it.

This book got it right.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-02
I've long believed that the most important investment you can make is in yourself. Here is a book that shows you how. In very easy instructions the author helps you understand your goal, and how to get there.

It's astounding how many "investment" ideas the author provides to help you shape your career.

I've never seen a book with a mission statement before, but seems like a great idea, and it makes a good summary: "This book is designed to help each reader develop a dynamic CareerPortfolio of wise career investments-- investments that pay off in the ability to fulfills personal purpose and navigate lifelong career transitions."

This book is about controlling your destiny, or to re-purpose a term by Dr. Allan Kay, "inventing your future." I know some people who will greatly benefit from this.

From the author
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-30
As the author of "Building Your Career Portfolio," I spent four years researching and writing a book to help you discover your personal purpose and align four, important career investments to help you achieve that purpose. The book will help you figure out ways to minimize your career risk and maximize personal rewards and purpose. In my research, I've not yet seen a book that helps readers consider their career as a "portfolio" of well-chosen investments.

Find your life purpose!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-16
Building your Career Portfolio could just as easily be called, finding your life purpose. This book understands that it's not just enough to have a job and work hard anymore. You must do something you love, have outside interests, participate in your community and continue learning throughout your life. Unfortunately, too many people (even those with successful careers) have forgotten that there is more to life than just earning money. In this book, the author reminds us all that not only do we need to have a primary job, we also need to become dynamically involved in our community in other ways. She promotes finding a second source of income, which because it comes from something you love to do, could eventually either take over as your primary source of income or at least give you the semblance of control over your life that so many of us tend to lose in our regular jobs. She also encourages spiritual growth through volunteer activities in your local community and personal growth through continuing education. By following the steps and guidelines in this book, you can become a better, happier, more well-adjusted person - and isn't that what everyone in today's self-help culture is striving for.

Investing Your Mental Energy
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-06
When Bill Gates said "human imagination is our only real asset here at Microsoft" he could just as easily have said "here in the universe." Carol Poore, unlike most personal improvement writers, understands this profound shift in wealth and knows how we can take advantage of it. If you are an imaginative human being, (and her book shows you how to get that jump-started if you're not) your most precious resource is your time, and when you treat your time like an investor treats money, your life becomes a creation. BUILDING YOUR CAREER PORTFOLIO is chock full of exercises to do and lists to make that will clarify and enhance your future. When I first skimmed through it, I didn't realize(until I sat down and really read it) what else was there: a series of wonderful short stories, real life examples of real people who have done exactly the things Poole recommends, and the great results they got. This book can be read many times at many levels. HOW I WISH I HAD THIS BOOK TO WORK WITH WHEN I WAS IN MY 20's!!!! (and if you have any loved ones in their 20's, what a gift this book would be.) I'm in my 50s (just finishing the first half of life) and this book is still a treasure. The workbook aspect is for the left side of your brain, and the marvelous stories are for the right side. The final result is a whole brain delight. I don't recommend going forth into the 21st century and trying to create your career without it.


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Education-->Colleges and Universities-->North America-->United States-->Montana-->8
Related Subjects: University of Montana Montana University System Carroll College of Montana Montana State University Rocky Mountain College University of Great Falls Two-Year Colleges
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