Nebraska Books
Related Subjects: University of Nebraska Creighton University Chadron State College Wayne State College College of Saint Mary Dana College York College Peru State College Concordia University Nebraska Hastings College Doane College Midland Lutheran College Nebraska Wesleyan University
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A disturbingly twisted account of true crime in hard timesReview Date: 2006-06-08
Evil Obsession The Annie Cook StoryReview Date: 2005-04-13
A shocked teenagerReview Date: 2003-01-09
Evil on the Great PlainsReview Date: 2001-08-08
Evil ObsessionReview Date: 2002-07-13

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SuperbReview Date: 2005-10-28
Memory issuesReview Date: 2005-09-04
I deal with a lot of clients suffering from memory loss of one kind or another and had ordered the book for several hands-on caregivers. They may get enough out of the book to understand how memory loss shrinks a persons world and their frustrations with that shrinking world.
Wonderful Family MemoirReview Date: 2003-09-09
Skloot never flies the victim banner with his physical condition -- on the contrary, it seems to have given him a greater understanding of others. In his forties, he was hit with a virus that left him with some of the same brain malfunctions as his Alzheimers-afflicted mother. The story of his recovered relationship with his brother -- a compulsively over-eating, severe diabetic, and his once terrifying mother, are healing for anyone to read.
This is real soul food.
What it's like "to be geezered overnight"Review Date: 2003-07-05
Inspirational without being cloying.
a remarkarkable, insightful, loving bookReview Date: 2004-09-24
His description of his own condition is extraordinary. I cannot think of another volume in which neurological illness is described so vividly "from the inside." His integration of relevant scientific literature within his account is always accessible and informative. And his setting all of this in the wider context of his life story makes terrific reading. He is candid, insightful, evocative, and poetic. We get to know him, not only as a writer and as a patient, but as a person--and he's a mensch. Although he lives far out in the country, he becomes our neighbor with this volume. This is of the most honest, perceptive, and well crafted books that I have read in a very long time.

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Lakota/English DictionaryReview Date: 2007-05-14
Very detailed and informative. Review Date: 2006-02-05
Lakota DictionaryReview Date: 2007-01-09
An aid to the study of American languages.Review Date: 2005-08-26
Not totally accurate but a good attemptReview Date: 2008-03-21
Also, in the back of the book they list THE SIOUX NATION, Seven Council Fires but the way it is listed is innacurate.
It says that under TETON(LAKOTA) there is only Oglala, Sicangu, Mnikowoju.
Under Saones,(Yankton/Nakota) there is Hunkpapa (Unkpapa), Sihasapa(Blackfeet), Itazipco, Yankton, and Yanktonais.
And under Santee(DAKOTA) is Mdewakanton, Wahpeton, Wahpekute, Sisseton. This isn't totally accurate. The Dakota is accurate,
BUT
IT SHOULD BE
Lakota(Teton) = Sicangu (Brule), Minnecanjou, Oglala, Hunkpapa(Uncpapa), Blackfeet, Oahenumpa (Two Kettle), and Itazpo (Sans Arc).
Nakota (Yankon) = Yankton, and Yanktonais
Dakota (Santee) = mdewakanton, Wahpekute, Wahpetan, Sisseton.
{spellings can very a little but the auther put some people in a completely incorrect group.}
I am still giving it three stars because overall it is still pretty accurate (as far as I know, but I haven't had the book for a long time and have only had time so far to flip through it). But, because I am worried about how much I can trust it I will only give it three stars max. Otherwise I would have given it four. I hope you could read the review without getting lost. It's difficult to type and keep track in this tiny window. :D

Feed your Little House CravingReview Date: 2002-09-10
Rose's interview with her father drives me nuts! You will find yourself wishing, after reading this and other snippets on "the man of the place" that Laura and Rose would have spent more time writing about him.
Loved this Book!Review Date: 2003-04-17
What a Treat!Review Date: 2001-10-01
This was my first taste of Rose's work and she is an excellent writer and as we already know, Laura is as well! My favorites are ~ 'Let's Visit Mrs. Wilder'; 'How Laura Got Even'; 'Grandpas' Fiddle I & II'; 'It Depends On How You Look At It'; 'The Sunflower' and 'Object, Matrimony.'
An extra treat are the many photos and the commentary by William Anderson. I seem to have a neverending curiosity about Laura and her entire family. This book was very enjoyable because I learned about Laura's life after what she covered in her children's books.
I am acquiring quite a wonderful collection of Laura Ingalls Wilder books and this one shines brightly! Worth every penny.
A little pricey for a paperback but still worth itReview Date: 2002-01-16
I really enjoyed the photos throughout this book because while Garth Williams' representation of the Ingalls family is lovely, it is nice to see what they really looked like. Even though they are in black and white you can imagine Pa's eyes twinkling.
Rose and Laura have very different styles, but both styles are very good. I especially liked Laura's articles because they paint a picture of farm life. The sections range in length so if you one have a few moments of reading time here and there it isn't necessary to worry about reading it in one sitting (though you may want to!).
Other things I recommend are the Little House series (of course!), and the series about Rose that was published recently (it has its slow parts but it was written by someone close to the family so there is a lot of accuracy). If you want to read more of Laura and Rose's writing this book is the perfect solution even considering the high price.
Life after The First Four YearsReview Date: 2000-11-09

powerful and important, but simplistic and one-sided Review Date: 2005-05-11
However, this book is written from a perspective which I cannot agree with -- a black and white worldview in which violence is the exclusive domain of men and patriarchy is the sole cause of domestic violence.
I believe that patriarchy is still strong, and does much to contribute to the problem of battering. However, if we stop here (as Jones does) we fail to explain why only a minority of men are violent. Psychological explanations are necessary in order to account for the difference between violent and non-violent men, and Jones ignores or in some cases even derides psychology, sticking to socio-political explanations.
"Blaming the victim" is a real problem, and Jones has plenty of real-life examples where the victim was blamed and lost her life because of it. However, the idea of "blaming the victim" can turn into a blunt weapon in the wrong hands, used to suppress alternative ideas the way McCarthyism suppressed dissent by calling people communists. Jones, unfortunately, does just this. For example, she makes the very good point that many people ask "why didn't she leave" even if the victim did, in fact, leave (or try to). However, many women stay with their abusers for months or years. And, according to Jones, if you ask why they stay, you are "blaming the victim".
In perhaps the most misguided example of this tendency, Jones refers to the literature on co-dependency as "victim-blaming at its most pernicious." It's ironic that one Amazon reviewer attacked Codependent No More for (supposedly) encouraging people to leave their spouses, whereas Jones seems to think that the book encourages battered women to stay and get beaten some more. In fact the idea of co-dependency encourages people to grow into self-responsibility, which might involve staying or leaving depending on circumstances. But to Jones, the very idea of self-responsibility, applied to a battered woman, is tantamount to "blaming the victim".
Jones has a point. There are plenty of examples in her book of women to did everything they could to take responsibility, leave, get help, only to be turned away by police and eventually murdered by their husband or boyfriend. However, Jones throws the baby out with the bathwater, concluding that because some men will go to any lengths to possess and control a woman, the idea of co-dependency is just another excuse to blame women for their own problems.
Finally, Jones insists on casting the problem as one of "male violence", reinforcing the oppositional gender split in this culture which I believe contributes to the very patriarchy which Jones purports to critique. Jones says that "the assailant in almost all heterosexual and homosexual violence is a man". However, some studies (which Jones doesn't mention) suggest that domestic violence is more common among lesbians than heterosexuals or gay men. If Jones believes these studies are inaccurate, she should critique them, not ignore them.
Ultimately, Jones does a great job of presenting the patriarchal aspect of domestic violence. The problem is that she not only stops there, but unjustly condemns other important perspectives on this grave social issue.
High Impact!Review Date: 2001-01-19
enraging on all aspects but excellent, recommend to allReview Date: 2000-06-25
An Excellent Learning ToolReview Date: 2001-01-27
Very informative! If only it were fictionReview Date: 2000-12-29

Essential reading in Texas historyReview Date: 2006-06-17
SuperReview Date: 2003-03-01
Life of a Texas RangerReview Date: 2006-06-02
Top-notch Western History Review Date: 2005-01-05
Six Years With the Texas Rangers, 1875 to 1881Review Date: 2000-08-22

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Very interesting.Review Date: 2008-04-06
Preaching to the choirReview Date: 2008-03-29
Too often this book goes too far to the extreme in the reverse direction - making those on the coasts out to be elitist snobs who rely on big government and lack the "common sense" and morality held by those in the heartland. What Boyles' book really boils down to is a comparison of small town vs. big city. In fact the people he describes as those living on the coast also fits the description of urban people living in a heartland city (such as St. Louis for example). "Heartland" doesn't automatically equate with "small town" just like "coast" isn't always synonymous with "big city". This truism is overlooked in order for Boyles to disassociate the negative aspects of urban living from that of small-town heartland living. These are examples of how Boyles over-stereotypes in reverse.
While I think this book is fairly well written, and I do like the chapter on education, it is clearly meant to preach to the choir. Small town conservative/Republican types (who perhaps have never gone to the coasts) will like this read because it will stroke their ego to have someone speak their mind and write things they'd like to be true. I, on the other hand, could do without Boyles' turnabout insults. After reading this pontificating self-righteous book, I'm still left to ask the question "What's the matter with Kansas?"
Excellent readReview Date: 2008-03-28
Increases the level of thought in common senseReview Date: 2008-03-24
Politics in the HeartlandReview Date: 2008-03-10
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Good readingReview Date: 2008-01-27
No 1. The Arctic Grail by Berton
No 2. Endurance by Lansing
No 3. Last Place on Earth by Huntford
Weird and Tragic is Right, Particulary WeirdReview Date: 2000-12-23
Farthest North?Review Date: 2003-11-08
Hall took his Christianity very seriously. All of the crew of Franklin's famous expedition of a decade past were lost and Hall decided to dedicate himself to help, even though his limited means meant that he must hitchhike a ride out on a whaling ship, then set himself ashore alone, and live cheaply on the polar wasteland among the Eskimos from whom he meant to learn Franklin's fate.
Indeed Hall, way way out there in icy nowhere land, after learning the Intuit language, did find out valuable clues from conversations from native elders while spending a few winters sharing this people's dangerous way of life, their igloos, their hunger in bad times, and their raw meat diet in better times.
Because he kept a daily diary we get whole amazing story.
Hall managed to learn enough of the truth to allow him to lead a dangerous trek for to collect valuable Franklin expedition artifacts. Upon returning the second time to civilization, his book and lectures were enough for him to win commandership of an official American expedition to hopefully attain the Pole itself, President Grant in enthusiastic support!
Farthest North? Well the tale of Hall's third trip is a very good one and a final mystery is produced for our consideration thanks to the author's own modern day travel up the High North where he takes samples whose later medical analysis yields astonishing results.
Arctic FascinationReview Date: 2002-08-04
When I was in Cincinnati, I talked with a local librarian who said that Charles Hall used to camp outdoors in a local park in a tent in the dead of winter, just to toughen himself up for Arctic exploration.
As noted in the book, Hall should also be remembered for working closely with the Native peoples of the Canadian Arctic, as he searched for traces of the Franklin expedition. Many other Arctic explorers had only fleeting contact with the local people, if that. And Hall had to hitch-hike on various ships during his early exploration. When he finally got a ship of his own, then he died under mysterious circumstances. That is tragic and a dreadful way to end one's lifetime dream.
So read this book, and enjoy its excellent perspective on the Arctic and its people, and the dreams and determination of one man, who did all he could to learn more about our northern lands.
4 1/2 Stars - Well Done Accounting of American ExplorationReview Date: 2002-01-03
The author Loomis trys to convey the environment of thought that created the appeal the Arctic had for Hall. The sentiment was much more pervasively Christian during the 1860-1870s when Hall made his 3 trips to the north and was able to get farther north than any Westerner had until then. In the Afterword, Loomis describes some of the appeal the vast, unexplored Artic must have had for Westerners. The Artic was both magnificent and terrifying, it was as Byron wrote "All that expands the spirit, yet appals." Loomis explains that the public had an asthetic of the sublime and this went a long way to explain to me the attraction Polar exploration must have had for Hall. But as a modern day mountaineer Fred Beckey said, "Man is not always a welcome visitor in a kingdom he cannot control."
The American explorer Kane, who died at age 36 was so revered by the American public for his exploits, that when his body was brought to New Orleans and then went up the Mississippi to it's ultimate burial location, people lined the river the entire way to bid him farewell. This helps explain the regard the public had for explorers (especially the ones who wrote accessible books).
Hall leads the first two expeditions in search of one of the overriding mysteries of the time, what happened to the members of the British expedition led by Sir John Franklin. The last and fatal voyage was in search of the North Pole. However, because of the funding by the US government of the expedition, the loss of Hall and loss of the ship itself, there was a US Naval inquiry. Because of the quasi-Naval nature of the expedition, there was insufficient discipline on the expedition and the loss of the leader under strange circumstances caused most discipline to evaporate thus dooming the expedition.
Loomis undertook his own mini-expedition 97 years after Hall's death in 1871. He visited Hall's gravesite and performed an autopsy with very interesting results.
The book is well written so that during the narrative when the details might seem tedious, they are not. Exhaustively researched and well presented with essential maps, photographs and a list of the crew on the last voyage.
Read and enjoy.

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From the Editor of the American Association AlmanacReview Date: 2007-01-29
A Book Long OverdueReview Date: 2004-12-31
A Seminal Work in the History of Native American SportsReview Date: 2004-12-23
Surveying the careers of more than 120 athletes of Indian ancestry, Powers-Beck argues that professional baseball was "a crucible of both racial and cultural prejudices" against Native Americans. Caroonists made them popular objects of derision on the sports pages. Fans taunted them with war whoops and vitriolic jeers. Even teammates insulted them with nicknames like "Chief," "Nig," and "Squanto." "This was not simply a 'cultural prejudice' towards someone who looked differently," insists Powers-Beck. "It was a starkly racist prejudice towards someone who looked different."
Powers-Beck adds that the roots of discrimination can be traced to government-sponsored boarding schools, like Carlisle and Haskell. These off-reservation boarding schools used baseball as "a tool for assimilation as well as for the prestige and profit of the school." His coverage of Carlisle, in particular, offers insightful information that rivals only David W. Adams' work, "Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1923."
The biographical vignettes of Charles Albert Bender, John Meyers and Jim Thorpe, culled from a wide variety of sources demonstrate the kind of painstaking research Powers-Beck completed. Like the larger biographical treatments of Louis Leroy, George Howard Johnson, and Moses Yellow Horse, Powers-Beck offers a refreshing new perspective of these Native American ballplayers as "integrators" who not only survived the discriminatory treatment of the white baseball establishment, but largely succeeded in shaping the game on their own terms.
As a result, the book is more of a celebratory treatment of the Native American participation and contribution to baseball, rather than a retelling of the "tragedies" of such players as Jim Thorpe and especially Louis Sockalexis, which have become all too popular in recent years.
My only criticism of the book is that it reads more like a collection of esays than a narrative history of this important topic. To be sure, each essay makes a very significant contribution to the larger story of the American Indian Intregration of Baseball, but not a "seamless" one. The danger here -- and my fear -- is that an excellent piece of research will be dismissed as a "reference work" and not be given the kind of credit it is due as a seminal work on the topic.
An important subjectReview Date: 2004-12-05
Seth J. Frantzman
American Indians Integration of BaseballReview Date: 2004-11-24
Pete Palmer, co-editor of The Baseball Encyclopedia by Barnes and Noble

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cell biology bookReview Date: 2004-01-16
i'd do business with seller again thanks.
Excellent basic bookReview Date: 1999-10-04
The cooper cellReview Date: 2000-08-30
Excellent introductory bookReview Date: 1998-08-28
New! Second Edition of Cooper text is available!Review Date: 2000-06-30
The new Second Edition was published June 16, 2000.
Related Subjects: University of Nebraska Creighton University Chadron State College Wayne State College College of Saint Mary Dana College York College Peru State College Concordia University Nebraska Hastings College Doane College Midland Lutheran College Nebraska Wesleyan University
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