Montana Books


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

Montana
Forty Years' Gatherin's
Published in Hardcover by Lowell Press (OR) (1977-06)
Author: Spike Van Cleve
List price: $19.95
New price: $17.50
Used price: $4.99
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

A book for my permanent libary
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-13
I've met Spike's decendents, stayed at their ranch, and this is how I discovered these books by Spike Van Cleve around ten years ago. They are so good, I had to share them with friends and I loaned them out. Since they have disappeared, I need to buy them again! These are timeless stories that show the true flavor of the people and the country. I don't buy many books--but these I will buy twice.

HOME AND HUMOR ON THE RANGE
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-31
THIS IS A VERY FUNNY AND DANG GOOD READ IF YOU LOVE HORSES
AND THE WIDE OPEN COUNTRY OF MONTANA AND WYOMING. HE LETS YOU IN ON HOW HE UNDERSTANDS HORSES AND TELLS OF SOME WILD DAYS IN THE SADDLE.THERE ARE SOME GREAT DUDE RANCH STORIES ABOUT DIFFERENT GUESTS.IF HE WERE STILL ALIVE I WOULD DEFINITELY WANT TO GO TO HIS.HE IS A SPECIAL,COLORFUL AND DOWN HOME, HILARIOUS GUY.

Outstanding
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-21
I lived in Montana for two years and a friend suggested I read this book. I bought a copy and could not put it down. After I finished it two days later, I bought his other book "A Day Late And A Dollar Short". Ten years later, I am still reading them. Spike doesn't just tell you a story, you live it. If you have any interest at all in ranch life, horses, family, humor, or Montana history; these should be on your list. You'll learn what "slaunchwise" humor and "going to the mountains" is all about.

It's unfortunate that he only wrote two books.

As your friend and fellow author put it, I too, "hope God gives you a horse" Spike.

In one book or less.......
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-02
This book describes the people, the attitude, and the lifestyle of Montana - from 1870 until today. The Crazy Mountains continue to evoke the same vast, colorful emotions from those of us who have had the priviledge to grow up beneath them. A must read for anybody who has lived in Montana - and a "should read" for anybody else. A colorful, vivid reminder of home - one of my favorites.

An excellent story of everyday life in Melville, Montana~
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-17
This book is an excellent piece of work. I probably am somewhat biased as like the author, I too spent my formative years in the Big Open of Eastern Montana. I can certainly sympathize and relate to alot of what old Spike says about nature, family and ranch life in general.

Montana
HUNGRY FOR HOME: A Wolf Odyssey
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (1997-01-13)
Author: Asta Bowen
List price: $22.00
New price: $2.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $22.00

Average review score:

Very nice.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-04
Marta is a wolf whose mate dies in the early spring. She has to support three pups with the help of oldtooth, an elderly male. Its the modern age in society, and Marta and Oldtooth travel into a further and more dense area...just to be captured and relocated. It was late summer when she last saw the Dahl Lake, but when she is sent to Alaska, she flees and leaves her pack behind. Without her, her pack dies, will she be next?

I like the broad language use and the many comparisons with things. I also love the plot, and how its based on a different point of view; one we seldom understand. THe survival theme will put readers on the edge as one thing after another unfolds.

4 stars, for good language use, suspence, and plot. Very realistic and eye-opening, with a non-anthropormorphic point of view. If you like the Oddessy-type books, you will love Wolf.

Amazing, Simply Amazing!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-01
This is a great book! I would highly recommend it. 'Asta Bowen depicts these wolves lives so realistically that you might think she had walked right along with thwm. It is as if she can think like a wolf, live like a wolf, feel like a wolf, BE A WOLF! This tragic tale is an amazingly moving and catching drama that I would recomend to any one! On a scale of 1-10, it's a 20! I loved it and I hope she writes some more!:-)This book should be included in everyone's home library. I have read it over and over and I have loved it more every time I read it! All I can say is that 'Asta Bowen is an amazing author, simply amazing!

wonderful book, wonderful author
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-18
This book is amazing. Having 'Asta Bowen, whom I was a student of, read this outloud it was incredable to hear Marta's voice and experience through the person who gave that to her. I hope she will write more books about herself because she has many tales to tell that haven't been told. Great job Ms. Bowen, you're a great inspiration, an excellent teacher and a wonderful writer.

It is a tragic, but a must-read book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-28
An alpha-female wolf named Marta lived in an almost perfect home in Pleasent Valley with her new litter of pups, but are soon "rescued" and relocated to a place where Grizzlies rule. Marta is then confident to return home-with or without the rest of her pack. She then struggles for her life, trying to find enough game to survive. She then finds a place which has much game, few humans, and just an all around great place to live. She then finds a mate and gives birth to her second litter of pups. Soon she...oh, I can't say or I'll ruin the book. You have to read this book! It's a sad book but a good one, too. This is a must read book.

wonderful and heartbreaking
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-12
This book is a must-read for animal lovers. Live inside the mind of a she-wolf and discover their thoughts, fears, and terrors. It will break your heart and take your breath away and you will think about it for YEARS to come.

Montana
The Last Gunfighter: The Forbidden: The Forbidden (The Last Gunfighter)
Published in Paperback by Kensington (2001-10-01)
Author: William W. Johnstone
List price: $12.00
New price: $2.95
Used price: $0.61

Average review score:

The Continuation of a great series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-10
I really enjoyed the fourth book in the Last Gunfighter Series. The action is fierce and the book is one that is hard to put down. The main character, Frank Morgan, continues to try and put his guns up and settle down. but Fate won't let him. Great reading!

Just a Little Peace Please
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-03
Frank Morgan would rather put up his guns and live in peace, but outlaws have smashed his life, seriously injured his wife, and taken his son. Now he rides into a valley busy with a range war. Fortunately for Frank his reputation has preseeded him. The battle is on and Frank needs to make some quick hard decisions in order to confront all the danger.

Great Western Novel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-26
I was so impressed with this series I e-mailed the author to let him know just that.

Frank Morgan, is at it again and won't back down from some pushy ranchers that think they're above the law. As well as some wantabe famous gunfighters looking for a reputation.

You won't be able to put it down once you get started. It keeps you on one heck of a ride and Mr. Johnstone did an excellent job as before putting together a outstanding western novel.

It's a must read!! For true western readers or those with interest good ole fashion manners.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-06
I now own all 3 of "The Last Gunfighter" series. In my opinion, they only get better, and this last one was the tops! I enjoyed counting the dead and wounded Frank Morgan left behind in all 3 books of this great new series.

"You picked the wrong side in this fight."
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-28
When it comes to Westerns this one is excellent.Johnstone has that special knack of being able to tell it like it is, at the same time as being able to tell it like it was.Once you get into the story,and that takes only about 2 pages, it is hard to put down.I don't know what it is,but Johnstone breaks up this story of 240 pages unto 32 chapters.That approach results in him having to keep something new coming and the story moving right along.Hey,he isn't the first to use this approach,after all,wasn't the Bible written this way?If you want an example to follow,it's not a bad choice.The copy I have is a Collector,s Edition and included a 6 page Afterword by the author.I enjoyed it immensely and he tells us a bit about himself and why and how he got into writing Westerns.Along with great stories,Westerns usually have some excellent artwork on their covers;this one is super.It would be good if a little about the artist was included.
I once read that all novels really fall into two types:
A-- A man went on a journey
and
B-- A stranger came to town
This one seems to fit both bills;but is really type B.
As I read this story I was reminded of the verse:

"Yeah,though I walk through
the Valley of Death
I fear no Evil
'cause I,m the meanest
S.O.B.
in the valley!
It didn't take Colonel Trainor,Gilmar,Bullard and their gunhawks long to find that out, when they decided to mess with Frank Morgan.
A couple of good lines Johnstone gives us are:
"Stand still and listen and live or grab iron and die,Morgan,"the voice said,"It,s your choice."How little he realized what was in store for him.
"Think about death,boy," Frank told him."Give it some hard thought.Dead is forever,boy.Do you realize that?"
While some novels seem to need steamy encounters,Johnstone can say it all with:
"Frank grabbed her and pulled her down on the sofa.One thing led to another..."
"Frank once read about some fellow way back centries ago who was asked if he was afraid of something that faced him.No,the man said.He wasn't afraid of anything in the future,only what was behind him."
Frank knew that would be true as he continued his journey out of the valley.
If you want to read a good Western,you'll not go wrong with this one.






Montana
The Ecology and culture of Montana huckleberries: A guide for growers and researchers (Miscellaneous publication)
Published in Unknown Binding by Montana Forest and Conservation Experiment Station, University of Montana (1992)
Author: Nellie Stark
List price:

Average review score:

Pleasant revelation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-26
I enjoyed this book immensely, but probably for the wrong reasons. The book is a bit chewy in places, but stick with it, as it's surprisingly enjoyable on it's own merits. On a more selfish, sadistic note, I had been mecilessly bludgeoned on a regulary basis by a work colleague, a second generation descendant of the Emerald Isle, with tales of Celtic martyrdom and Anglo tyranny, and none of which I felt I had the right to dispute. Then I read the book. After ten minutes of lively debate, challenging all he knew as 'fact', he has not spoken to me since. No-one had ever shut him up before. Heaven. But back to the point, I found this to be a rather good read.

Baby Cromwell, Nottingham, England

Brilliant-Making Up Irish Tales of Past & Present
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-06
R. F. "Roy" Foster author of 'W. B. Yeats: The Apprentice Mage,' 'Charles Stewart Parnell: The Man and His Family' and 'Modern Ireland,' has written this experience and interpetation into Irish history and literature. He does a fine job of it. His bravery in massacring every sacred Irish cow as one would have fun reading it. It leaves you with a warm, passionate, giggly feeling. It's entertainingly brilliant look at the past and present Ireland. I particularly love the chapters and passages on Theme-parks & Histories (with some warning from Foster on expliotation); the chapters on Yeats; When the Newspapers Have Forgotten Me: Yeats, Obituarists and Irishness; Selling Irish Childhoods: Frank McCourt & Gerry Adams; and, Remembering 1798. They're totally smothered in clichés and lots of traditional tidbits of fond or fatal memories, known to some as the Irish experience.


Foster cleverly works moments of Ireland's past into narratives of Irish culture on myth, folklore, ghost stories and romance. The result is from a varied interpetation of opinionated and right down funny interlinking essays. In Theme-parks and Histories-Foster writes of the Irish are to remember or commemorate anything. It is worth remembering the upward curve of Irish cultural achievement-referring to W. B. Yeats, Hugh Leonard, Ezra Pound, Cashel Heritage Society and the 2,000-acre Famine Theme Park in Knockfierna Hill west of Limerick. Irish history, the most distinctive achievement for it. His suggestion to form a monument to Amnesia and forget where they put it. As a historian he would be shocked, but as an Irishman he would be attracted to the idea. Foster shows no mercy on his view of manipulating Irish history on political places and Irish poverty and oppression as a commerically packaged heritage park. His exploration of Yeats' authority of the Irish story's fitting moments as the voice of his Ireland countrymen.


Foster leaves teeth-marked criticism of Frank McCourt (Angela's Ashes) and Gerry Adams and their devil may care attittude of taking hostages for fortune. Transcending into the bestsellerdom of Irish childhoods. Simply a technique of marketing where Irish version brag and whimper about the woes of their early years' experience. I find this to be an entertaining reading. In some places a bit wordy, but good telling of Irish culture. You may hate or love it. But, if your interest is in Irish history and literature it's quite essential.

Fact and fiction
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-12
Irish people of all persuasions and in all walks of life have developed a talent for building up a national history to their liking and drawing conclusions from it. Roy Foster's essays are about some of the ways in which Ireland's history has been interpreted, embroidered, exploited and packaged. I think everyone will agree there are cogent reasons for preserving the distinction between history and "national fiction". Ultimately, poor history makes poor propaganda, and propaganda in any case is a shabby use to put something as precious as a nation's history. This book is essential reading for people with an interest in Ireland. (I also recommend strongly the same author's earlier "Modern Ireland 1600-1972".)

Excellent read for all who are serious about Irish history
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-20
This book ought to be on the shelf of anyone with an interest in Irish history. Foster has done an excellent job at making his points about the various 'uses' that history in Ireland has been employed for. From downright propaganda to 'memoirs' masquerading as vague truths he unleashes the power of clear thinking and valid sources. For so long Irish history has been treated as 'story' and this book attempts and succeeds in telling the difference. It is so refreshing to see something sensible in print! It is a great source book or reference and could also be read by delving into the different subjects in the index. I would recommend this for all who are involved in getting to know the real history of Ireland and the Irish and how some Irish 'history' came to be written in the first place.

THE MARKETING OF THE EMERALD ISLE-TONGUE-IN-CHEEK STYLE
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-29
Porter's tongue-in-cheek treatment of the marketing of Ireland is refreshing after an avalanche of Irish hype came from unscrupulous little publishers.The Disneynification of Ireland ,apparently propelled by American ad agencies for the Irish Tourist Board,is treated by Porter correctly as hype to snare innocent Irish-Americans.Porter gets almost every hilarious Irish twist of recent decades in this collection of exposes, including the hilarious, almost unbelievable marketing of the potato famine in Disney-like theme parks.Unfortunately, he closed his collection of revionist chapters without pointing to the biggest Irish hype of all -the invention and collapse of " The Celtic Tiger", based on runaway inflation and a Dublin stock market bubble that aped the rise and fall of America's Nasdaq.Foster's book is a must if you wish a clearer view of the Irish .

Montana
Montana Gold
Published in Mass Market Paperback by HQN Books (2006-05-01)
Author: Genell Dellin
List price: $5.99
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Montana Gold is a prize book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-11
This book Montana Gold is a great book. Its a romance but also a western theme. Chase is a rough stock rider who also is very attractive. Elle is the rodeo clown who gets the riders out of a pinch with the bulls. These two have some serious connection but have there own ways of doing things. Will love over come this relationship? Read and find out.

#2 of the MONTANA SAGA - CHASE LOMAX story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
We met Chase Lomax in Montana Blue - now he has a story of his own which includes his "claimed" son, Shane.
Poor old Chase is 38 years old - which apparently is getting on in years for a bull-rider, bronc-rider, rough-stock rider.
He wants just 3 more championships before he retires.

We have already learned of his "love" or attachment to Andie Lee Hart and her son Shane. Andie is marrying Blue and that sets Shane off. He takes off to live with Chase. Shane, 16, tries to put the make on Elle until Chase steps in. What the devil is Chase going to do with a kid when he is on the road?

Chase is getting lonesome so he stops at Larry's Steak House where he runs into his buddy Robby, a Brazilian and Robby intoduces Chase to Elle Hawthorne, the bullfighter.

Elle Hawthorne is 24 and determined to gain a championship in bullfighting on the rodeo circuit. She is also trying to bolster up her nerve after getting a divorce from her husband,
Elle is hanging out and traveling with her very good friend, Missy Jo. Missy Jo would like to promote a romance with Elle and someone.

Romance shows up unannounced and takes a bit of time to come out of hiding.
In steps "Fate" and brings about a nasty wreck that lands Chase in the hospital with serious wounds. Spin Master, the bull that wrecked Chase also practically threw Elle out of the arena. That treatment shattered her nerve.

After Chase gets out of the hospital he starts to worry about how slow he is healing and if he will still have a career left. He retired to his ranch, the Great Divide, with Shane who wanted to wait on him hand and foot.

Chase comes to the decision to raise rough stock and thinks about making a deal for a bucking bull for his herd.
His right hand man Tucker helps keep the building and ranching going for Chase and helps handle the bulls when Shane wants to try to ride them.

Elle still hasn't gotten over Lon Tyler and leaves fast when Chase tells her to try the arena again. She runs scared and then heads for her brother, Jake's place. Jake loves his sister and tells her to stay as long as she wants.

Elle finally heads back to Chase's ranch [because of Shane] and Chase finds a way to help her get back her nerve and into the arena.

This certainly is a hard to put down book - the story keeps the interest ever active - the characters and their fears keep a fast pace - This is another keeper - and turning out to be an excellent trilogy.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED --m -- save for another rainy day and read again.

Montana Gold
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03
I Love Plots which flow from one book to another. This is one Such. Good story line- although there are very few rich rodeo hands. Nice follow up from Montana Blue with regards to the teenager. Really like her style of writing.

Montana Gold
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-22
This book was highly entertaining and I could not put it down. The characters are wonderful and endearing. I wonder who will be the next hero in the series, Shane or Jake? Linda R. Smith

A story as big and majestic as the Montana sky
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-04
Montana Gold by Genell Dellin is pure gold. Ripped from this horse-loving girl's dreams, Chase Lomax is a hard-riding, sexy rough-stock rider working towards more of those championship buckles to which the buckle bunnies on the pro rodeo circuit seem to be drawn. Ellie Hawthorne is a young, tough bullfighter, and it's her job to keep cowboys like Chase safe. But when a bull gets the best of them both, and Chase has to take a long look at his career as a rodeo cowboy, and Ellie has to face her demons, these two characters are thrown together in a drama far more exciting than a night at the rodeo.

With vivid characters, descriptions that place the reader in the heart of the action, and a depth of emotion that is staggering, Ms. Dellin's story tugs at the heart strings. Add in a down-on-his-luck dog named Kodiak, and a teenage boy trying to live up to his image of his hero father, and you have a story that's worthy of the big screen.

Reading this book was pure pleasure. I found myself rooting for the characters and falling in love with Chase as he came to his own realizations. Ellie's past, including a visit from her brother Jake, whom I hope we read about, make her a heroine with whom this reader could sympathize. It's rare for me to be swept off my feet by a book, but swept I was, and I will certainly be looking for this author's other stories as soon as possible. Thank you, Ms. Dellin, for one heck of a read!

Montana
Montana Match
Published in Hardcover by Avalon Books (2001-10)
Author: Fran Shaff
List price: $23.95
New price: $7.95
Used price: $1.74

Average review score:

Wonderful love story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-03
A wonderful book to curl up and read, sigh at the end and wish for another peek into Becky and Jake's future. Lovable characters all the way around. A book a teenage girl would love; a ninty year old grandmother would adore; or anyone in between could get right into the middle of. Good job, Fran Shaff. Looking forward to your next book.

Montana Match
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-19
If you ever want to take a few moments to visit Montana, especially at night under a beautiful sky, then pick up the book Montana Match. You will simply fall in love with Jake Ruskin and Becky Montoya. From the moment she lands in his arms after arriving at his ranch, you know there is going to be something going on between the two. The book was enjoyable, and many times I wanted to reach inside and shake some sense into Becky. The character of Jake was great! We need more men like him. Sam, the housekeeper was a great addition to the book, not to mention Catherine and Lucas. I really enjoyed this book by Fran Shaff. I look forward to more of her books to read. Montana Match deserves five stars! A love story drawing two people together that were indeed meant for each other. I bought the book to add to my collection of Avalon romances. There are some stories that you read and just forget, this one you will read and always remember. I really enjoyed this story and you will too!!

Stand back Dolly Levi, here comes Becky Montoya!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-07
Mrs. Fran Shaff, originally from South Dakota, published her first novel in October of last year. She now resides in Hutchens, MN and is a full-time writer splitting her writing time between Romance novels and children's novels for middle readers. Montana Match was the third book to be featured in the new romance book club at Chapter a Day, the on-line book club. .... She states, "The feedback from club members was very positive." This is Fran's third Romance novel, and finally the one that paid off, and I am here to tell you why.

Her intriguing characters, Jake Ruskin and Becky Montoya are not your typical pair. Jake is a one-time-Wall-Street-Whiz who found his way back home to Montana and a ranch he grew up on. However, he was reluctant to leave all of the financial fiascos of New York behind. Through today's technological advantages he discovered he didn't have to. He lives and works on the ranch, but stays plugged into Wall Street via the Internet and continues his investment portfolio progress without skipping a beat.

Realizing that he lacks the valuable commodity we all know as time, and deciding he definitely does not want to grow old alone, and that an heir for all he has established would be a wonderful perk, he hires the services of Miss Becky Montoya. The founder and owner of "A Match Made in Heaven" matchmaking service she takes Mr. Ruskin's case into her own delicate hands and flies west to Montana to discover his lifestyle, characteristics, and what he is looking for in a wife.

Sound a bit familiar? I immediately thought of the excellent musical starring Barbara Streisand and Walter Matheau, "Hello Dolly!" However, unlike our clever Dolly Levi, Miss Becky is the one avoiding matrimony and refuses to interfere whereas Mr. Jake Ruskin is all too eager to get on with the next phase of his well-planned life.

They realize they are setting each other on fire each time they bump into each other, but Becky refuses to allow these animalistic feelings to encroach upon her well-laid-plans of her own life. Seeing first hand how devastating marriage can be, she vowed to not get married herself and to help those who are determined to marry, to marry the right person, a person they really could spend an eternity with.

Jake tries once, twice, but gives up after a third attempt to convince Becky she is his Miss Right. He accepts the lovely lady Becky and her database have found for him and goes about making wedding plans.

I won't give away the ending, but we all know the best laid plans tend to go amuck without much help from anyone, and perhaps this is especially so with the help of one old codgity cowboy turned house keeper for Jake Ruskin who sees how right Becky and Jake are for each other.

Just when you think all will go according to plan, and so obviously the wrong plan, well, the plans change and the book takes a wonderful twist in bringing about the conclusion.
This book is a wonderful short read. The style is simple and the words are not minced. It says it like it is, or stammers over it until someone figures out what it is and sets things to rights in this Career Romance from Avalon. It validates the point that we could all use a little help from our friends from time to time. And my new friend, Fran Shaff, has helped me turn a blah day into a fun one with her book, Montana Match!

Wonderful Story!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-23
If you enjoy a traditional love story, Montana Match is for you. Boy meets girl, falls in love, career woman can't let love get in her way...no, no, no! That's not the way it's supposed to go!

Rancher Jake Ruskin's biological clock is ticking. He wants offspring to leave his empire to, but marriage candidates are sparse so he hires a big city matchmaker with a proven track record. The raven haired beauty whose spiked heels are stuck in his yard isn't what he expected.

Becky Montoya came to do a job. The fee was generous and the situation intriguing. The man himself is too gorgeous to be believed. This job should be a snap. She contacts three candidates, and one of them shows up unannounced. Attractive, farm raised, enthusiastic - what's not to like? Match or mis-match? Fran Shaff keeps you guessing. An entertaining tale of love and a struggle of wills. Enjoy!

MONTANA MATCH
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-26
A FUN TO READ BOOK. AS YOU READ THIS STORY, YOU PUT YOURSELF IN THE SITUATIONS AND DREAM. ALL OF THE CHARACTERS ARE THE KIND OF PEOPLE YOU WOULD LIKE TO HAVE AS YOUR FRIENDS. MONTANA IS A GREAT SETTING AND I LOVE COWBOYS.

A BOOK YOU CAN GIVE TO YOUR DAUGHTER OR YOUR GRANDMOTHER AND EACH WOMAN WILL ENJOY FRAN SHAFF'S STORY.

Montana
The Nature of Midnight
Published in Hardcover by Forge Books (2003-06-01)
Author: Robert Rice
List price: $25.95
New price: $22.28
Used price: $1.00
Collectible price: $25.95

Average review score:

strong thriller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-15
Postal Inspectors are the law enforcement branch of the US Post office and have full police powers for cases within their jurisdiction. Max Dombrowski is a Postal Inspector who is forced to work in Internal Affairs by Constance Barton, finding the dirt on people she wants out of the service. He is forced to obey her orders because she has something on him that if revealed could send him to jail.

Connie is sending Max to Norris, Montana for two reasons. A postal worker and a customer were murdered in the rural post office. Max is to serve as the lead investigator on the case but he is also ordered to find some dirt on the resident agent Gillian Loomis so Constance can legally fire her. When Max arrives in Norris, the duo conduct their investigation and find that there is information about the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915 that someone doesn't want to surface. Max and Gillian race against the killers to see who can get their hands on the documents and in the process two more innocents are murdered.

Conspiracy buffs are going to love THE NATURE OF MIDNIGHT a thriller that portrays a realistic scenario on how the Germans knew where the Lusitania was located. Robert Rice has plenty of action and chase scenes but what makes this novel stand out in the crowd are the two protagonists who make a great team despite the demons that are haunting them. It is to be hoped that Mr. Rice will have more novels starring this dynamic duo.

Harriet Klausner

Mr. Rice Had Me Completely Gripped!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-19
I started reading The Nature of Midnight at 5:00 this past Saturday afternoon. At 1:30 Sunday morning, I had to FORCE myself to turn off the light to get some sleep. I have never read for that long a period straight, but I was absolutely enthralled!

The characters are marvelously believable -- each has his own quirks, and that's what makes them so human and real. The plot moves in ways I certainly wouldn't have thought of, but Rice manages to make flow easily and smoothly.

The only thing I might possibly say against it is that it kept me so gripped that I finished it in two days, so NOW what do I read??

I recommend this book highly to anyone who enjoys any kind of mystery or thriller. And if I had to pick one word to describe it, I would say, "MARVELOUS."

strong thriller
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-15
Postal Inspectors are the law enforcement branch of the US Post office and have full police powers for cases within their jurisdiction. Max Dombrowski is a Postal Inspector who is forced to work in Internal Affairs by Constance Barton, finding the dirt on people she wants out of the service. He is forced to obey her orders because she has something on him that if revealed could send him to jail.

Connie is sending Max to Norris, Montana for two reasons. A postal worker and a customer were murdered in the rural post office. Max is to serve as the lead investigator on the case but he is also ordered to find some dirt on the resident agent Gillian Loomis so Constance can legally fire her. When Max arrives in Norris, the duo conduct their investigation and find that there is information about the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915 that someone doesn't want to surface. Max and Gillian race against the killers to see who can get their hands on the documents and in the process two more innocents are murdered.

Conspiracy buffs are going to love THE NATURE OF MIDNIGHT a thriller that portrays a realistic scenario on how the Germans knew where the Lusitania was located. Robert Rice has plenty of action and chase scenes but what makes this novel stand out in the crowd are the two protagonists who make a great team despite the demons that are haunting them. It is to be hoped that Mr. Rice will have more novels starring this dynamic duo.

Harriet Klausner

Great Historical Thriller but a few loose ends not tied up
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-04
Postal inspectors, one of America's most succesful law enforcement officers, rarely get their due in American mysteries but here Robert Rice has created a great team that doggedly searches for the killers of a postal employee and customer in Montana. Inspectors Loomis and Dombrowski uncover an 85 year old mystery and a clever fictional twist on a major historical event - the sinking of the Lusitania, which helped propel the U.S. into WWI. Rice has created great characters and a great puzzle. The only negative I can mention is that some of the action at the end seemed pretty silly and there were a few loose ends about how the whole plot was put together at the end. The answers to these open questions can be assumed by the reader but it would have been nice if the author put them on the page.

A Riveting Page-Turner--Hope To See More Of These Characters
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-28
Robert Rice's _The Nature of Midnight_, features Postal Inspectors Gillian Loomis and Max Dombrowski and could be the start to a very successful series. When a postal worker and a customer are found dead in a rural Montana post office, the case is given to Loomis, an inspector who travels around the state. Dombrowski, a former pro football player, is flown in from Seattle and is the primary on the case, but he lets Gillian take charge of the investigation. Gillian is a former Seattle policewoman who quit after accidentally killing a young boy while on duty, and, since then, she has refused to carry a weapon, which is a breach of duty for a postal inspector.

The deaths appear to have some connection to a cache of old letters, found when an old safe and other equipment was moved from the old post office to a new one. The letters were written by a man named Sharpless Walker, who was lynched way back in 1918, and appear to have something to do with the sinking of the Lusitania. As Max and Gillian investigate, they begin to uncover a conspiracy that at first appears to reach to the highest levels of both the American and British governments.

This was a great, old-fashioned page turner. Rice does a great job of creating his conspiracy and then doling out the clues bit by bit, ratcheting up the tension and suspense. Max and Gillian are interesting characters and we come to care about them as they are besieged on all sides, by assassins and by higher-ups in both the Postal Inspection Service and the FBI, who may or may not be trustworthy. Rice also does a good job of drawing the scenery of rural Montana, as the two drive from place to place, pursuing the investigation. This was a riveting book and I for one would like to see another book involving these characters. Highly recommended.

Montana
Physician: The Life of Paul Beeson
Published in Hardcover by Barricade Books, Inc. (2001-03-01)
Author: Richard Rapport
List price: $24.95
New price: $14.83
Used price: $0.49
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

A magnificant life in medicine
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-18
With great writing skill and a deep understanding of his subject, Dr. Rapport has managed to capture the essence of the life of one of the most influential doctors of the age. At the same time, the book describes many of the major clinical developments in medicine over the past one hundred years. A fine book that will interest not only doctors, but their patients as well.

A great doctor
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-19
Dr. Rapport has written an excellent and readable story about one of the most influential figure in modern medicine. At the same time that he has told us a facinating story about Dr. Beeson's life, he has explained some of the history of medicine during the 20th century. A wonderful book of interest to doctors and patients; here is hope for the medical profession.

Accurate portrayal of a great humanist-scientist-physician
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-30
I was a resident training under Dr.Beeson during his tenure as Chairman of Medicine at Yale. Many of those quoted in the text are old friends and colleagues. The qualities they describe, I can assure any reader, are not exaggerated. This is a compelling and readable account of a great man. Rapport has come close to identifying his essence. This is must reading for anyone trying to understand what makes a supremely good physician in a society undergoing profound social and complex technologic changes.

A pleasant surprise.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-17
Read this book if you want to know what a real doctor does, if you want to know why health care is going down, if your other bedside books are putting you to sleep, no kidding!

20th century medicine
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-03
dr rapport has done a great job. It's easy to read, and thoughtful. It's a grand history of medicine in the 20th century

Montana
Research Design: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches
Published in Paperback by Sage Publications, Inc (1994-04-19)
Author: John W. Creswell
List price: $39.95
New price: $12.70
Used price: $0.29

Average review score:

If you are doing research read this
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-19
Do not start your readings about qualitative or quantitative resreach somewhere else. This book will tell you what your supervisor did notl. Its a must a must for your research. It gives you a step by step approach on how to conduct and write up your research.

Best reference for a dissertation!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-06
If you are writing a research paper of any kind, this book gives you a step by step approach. Highly recommended

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-10
A must have for educational researchers - both graduate student, classroom instructors, and professional investigator.

Superb Coverage of Research Design
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-23
While written for those preparing a dissertation or thesis, the book proves extremely useful for the undergraduate discovering the world of research. Unfamiliar terms are thoroughly explained along with a clear illustration of many potentially obscure methodologies. This book is a "must have" for anyone preparing for a research project.

Highly Recommended
Helpful Votes: 37 out of 38 total.
Review Date: 1997-03-01
Excellent introduction to both qualitative and quantitative research methods. Useful for beginning students and for those with more experience in research methods. Especially useful for reporting research. If I were teaching a methods class, I would use this book without hesitation.

Montana
Return to Travers Corners: Stories
Published in Hardcover by The Lyons Press (2002-11)
Author: Scott Waldie
List price: $22.95
New price: $15.48
Used price: $4.45

Average review score:

One of these stories will move you
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-09
I discovered Scott Waldie from a fly shop owner in Nashville one Saturday when I stepped in to buy some flies. He told me that Travers Corners was one of the best book that he'd ever read. Then he told me that Return to Travers Corners was even better. I was skeptical because Travers Corners was amazing. The second book in this series lives up to the first and surpasses it in some ways.

It is not a series of fishing essays that only an angler would pick up but a series of deeply moving stories about small town life in rural Montana. The stories are loosely based on a real town and people. However, fly fishing and the laid-back philosophy that often accompanies it find their way into every story in an unobtrusive way. One of them will move any reader, regardless of his or her feelings on fishing.

This book reads quick and if you want to read it, you should get all three of Scott Waldie's books because you want to read them one after the other.

Another quality read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
This book makes you want to pack up and move to Travers Corners. The small town, closeness with the characters is what makes this book. Like a Norman Rockwell painting this book brings to the reader what most want, a slowed down, easy going pace in a hectic world.

return to travers corners
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-21
What a fantastic book. Didn't know wether to laugh or to cry most of the time. Being from Montana it makes me long to be back it the little town i came from. Waldie is able to truly capture the small town feel and make you feel like you are right there in the middle. Congrats again to Mr. Waldie

return to travers corners
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-14
the book being short stories I can pick it up and read a great tale before going to bed. The charactors in this book are so real you can't help but love them!

Poor Scott Waldie
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-11
Poor Scott Waldie. He is one of the gifted writers of our time but he has been relegated to the backwater of fly fishing stories. Not a huge potential audience there. Especially, not a large feminine audience (i.e., the ones who actually buy books). Furthermore, he doesn't compete well with Gerach and Holt in terms of, "and then I caught a 26 inch brown but Jack caught a 27 inch rainbow," which appeal to the guys who buy these books.
BUT
Waldie is alone in being able to weave together stories about a semi-fictional town with its visitors, part-timers, and residents that truly capture the good and bad about the popularization of the Northwest.
His stories would lose no relevance if he would write them using tennis, polo, or canasta as the common thread because they are really about people and how they interact. They expose the good and the bad and how they intersect in a delightful and thoughtful manner and in the process his writing flows with more memorable lines than you can count.
Hopefully, he will soon find an agent or publisher who will market him for the gifted writer that he is, rather than pushing him into an eddy that he cannot row out of (pardon the dangling participle).


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Education-->Colleges and Universities-->North America-->United States-->Montana-->9
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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