University of Nebraska Books
Related Subjects: Kearney Lincoln Omaha
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GrittyReview Date: 2001-06-09

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Great read! Davy is a corker!Review Date: 2000-04-06
BONUS: Read how Davy was a true Small-government conservative in the Jacksonian (read that "Proto-Clintonian") big-government epoch! It's the true hero tale of the book!
Al

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Collectible price: $24.50

Great stuff!Review Date: 2004-04-27

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Required readingReview Date: 2007-08-04

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An Excellent Book for Those Interested in Cherokee HistoryReview Date: 2007-01-13
Each chapter of the book deals with a different challenge faced by the Cherokees during the 1800s. Denson looks at their thought and responses to Removal (the infamous "Trail of Tears"), the American Civil War, the post-Civil War period when war was made on the Indians in the plains, the incursion of the railroad into Cherokee land, and the devastating event of "allotment" in the late 1800s which dispersed and disorganized the tribe until years later in the 20th century. There is a chapter devoted to "The Okmulgee Council," perhaps the closest the Cherokees ever came to complete autonomy. Another chapter illuminates the International Fairs, unique events which allowed the various Native American tribes to display their culture to the rest of the country. Again, for those not overly familiar with Cherokee History, the epilogue provides a concise summary of events of the 20th century, with an optimistic view of the condition of the tribe in the present day.
For the more serious historian, Denson's work is replete with footnotes and an extensive bibliography, along with some of his recommendations for further reading. Though Denson's writing is not at all esoteric, nevertheless the book contains many ideas which show his extensive thought on the subjects and his effort to examine every side of the Cherokee arguments with the U.S. and among themselves. It is an important book in terms of understanding the aims, objectives, hopes and desires of the Cherokee people in the 19th Century.
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Wonderful little gem!Review Date: 2002-02-09
Everyone in Asgard has a personality and a private agenda. Odin is very much the distant father who, at the same time, aches because his duties simply will not permit him to have a closer relationship with his family. Loki, while certainly a trickster character, does possess flashes of regret for things as they come to pass with Ragnarok. Balder is just trying to get others to be decent to one another. Thor, while portrayed as a bit of a "redneck", is one of the most interesting characters. You can't help but admire his tenacity, especially over the retelling of his fishing expedition against the Great Serpent.
Another plus with this book is the author's afterword about why he chose to end the book with Ragnarok, and not to write about the paradisical remaking of the world.
Definitely worth keeping!
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stunningReview Date: 1999-01-25
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MASTER REFERENCE BOOK BY A MASTER ORNITHOLOGISTReview Date: 2007-11-18
Each subject (goose, duck or swan) is written about within the following sections: Other vernacular names, Subspecies and ranges, Measurements and weights, Identification and field marks, Natural History (subtopics are Habitat and foods; Social behavior; Reproductive biology, Status, Relationships, and Suggested Readings). So the information related is quite thorough and extensive.
I recently completed reading a wonderful book by Bob Tarte called Enslaved by Ducks, and used this reference guide to research the many pet ducks and geese that Mr. Tarte and his wife, Linda, have adopted and care for in Western rural Michigan. It came in very handy and brought the species closer to home for me.
The author states in the chapter "Introduction to the Family Anatidae" that "the primary purpose of this book is to provide information on each of the species of the waterfowl family in a standardized format and easily accessible manner."
He certainly succeeds, and I highly recommend this work.
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Strong faces of people made famous.Review Date: 2002-04-26
Of the hundred and eighty-nine photos in the book just over half are from the FSA files, the rest are the result of Ganzel's searching out the original locations over a five year period. Amazingly he found several people who had become famous (though still anonymous) because their photos were widely reproduced in newspapers and magazines in the thirties.
One of these was Florence Thompson who was the Migrant Mother in the world famous 1936 photo by Dorothea Lange. I think it is the greatest photo ever taken and Roy Stryker head of the FSA photo section said it was THE image of the collection. This is what he said in 1972 ...''After all these years, I still get that picture out and look at it. The quietness and the stillness of it...Was that woman calm or not? I've never known. I cannot account for that woman. So many times I've asked myself what is she thinking? She has all the suffering of mankind in her but all the perseverance too. A restraint and a strange courage. You can see anything you want to in her. She is immortal. Look at that hand. Look at the child. Look at those fingers--those two heads of hair.'' So it was a wonderful surprise for me to see the photo Ganzel took in 1979 of Florence and her three healthy grown-up daughters on page thirty-one facing the original Migrant Mother photo of her on page thirty.
He also found Darrel Coble who was the young boy running after his father in the well known 1936 Athur Rothstein photo 'Fleeing a dust storm', taken in Cimarron County, Oklahoma. Another unknown yet famous person who survived the Depression and prospered.
Other photos show railroad crossings, houses, tractors in 1936 fields with combines in 1977 fields, cowhands at dinner, churchs, gas stations, county fairs, court houses. Everyday life and people on the Plains separated by forty years.
This is a wonderful book capturing the feel of the thirties on the Plains and again in the Seventies. If you collect books of documentary photos this one must be in your collection. A gem.
***FOR AN INSIDE LOOK click 'customer images' under the cover.

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A Must Read Texas MemoirReview Date: 1999-10-15
Related Subjects: Kearney Lincoln Omaha
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