Nevada Books
Related Subjects: University of Nevada
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Used price: $1.60

Exploring the Southern Sierra: East SideReview Date: 2008-07-14
Good . . . Review Date: 2008-06-02
I have found that members of the Kern River Valley Hiking Club, a group founded by Ruby Jenkins and accessible on a certain website, regularly take trips described in the book and respond to questions about current conditions, obscure directions and the like with good humor.
Informative but cumbersome.Review Date: 2002-11-28
This book is loaded with information on the geology, flora and fauna of the Southern Sierra. It also includes an excellent map of the region which is almost worth the price of the book. But the heart of the book is the descriptions of 150 trips in the Southern Sierra, and it is this part that is difficult to use. Unlike most guidebooks, trail descriptions and directions to the trailhead are in separate parts of the book. This necessitates a lot of flipping through the book. And, while the trips described by the book are broken down geographically, they are not separated by type. I would prefer to see climbs, drives, and bike routes in a separate section of the book than hikes. Still, this is the most comprehensive guide to the area, and very informative. Hopefully ease of use will improve in the next edition.
Used price: $5.49

Gem Trails of NevadaReview Date: 2008-11-02
This is an excelent guide book. I was impressed with the milage markers for locating sites accuracy. Some of the sites would have been very difficult if not impossible to find as they were in remote areas.
Good guideReview Date: 2008-11-01
Rock Hounders Must Have!Review Date: 2008-04-15
Used price: $8.68

The Skinner Family is "stuck" on their way to Dinuba, CalifReview Date: 2001-08-13
Dola Skinner is featured heavily in this book. Though still young and pretty, she is feeling old and ugly. Her physical stamina is tested in hard work, her Bible teaching and mothering skills are challenged in the town she hates. Twelve year old Rita is feeling her hormones with a new hired hand and hates working alongside the sixteen year old, shapely new hired girl. A suspenseful hunt occurs when ten old Corrie is lost for a complete day. A major surprise awaits the Rokker family. Famous visitors drop by to see the Skinners.
Dreams of California and grapevines seem a long way off, especially when the Skinners are thankful they finally have jobs, plenty of food and a sturdy roof over their heads. In addition, there are so many people to help out in the wild, greedy, lustful town of Goldfield, NV.
Book three, "Picture Rock" is bound to be a winner!
A rich find!Review Date: 2000-09-27
Sympathetic PerceptionReview Date: 2006-01-14
You definitely want to read "Fools Gold" to get a sympathetic perception of the Skinners plight of persisting in Goldfield, Nevada.
Though Bly does hold talent, some of what he pens gets on my nerves as it could never correspond to factual life. I was made ill over the Skinner baby's recorded message, "My mommy's pretty." It played over and over throughout the book till the concluding lines when Dola Skinner finally admitted she was pretty.
In this postlude the family has moved out of their tent and Dola Skinner is running a reputable restaurant with the family residing on the second floor. Though her husband O.T. has acquired a job, he is always absent from it chasing down Elias Rokker.
Elias and Nellie Rokker upset normal life in this novel, not being on the predictable side in any fashion. Unfortunately, Bly does not hold to any true pattern concerning their personalities and habits. In "Fool's Gold," Elias stayed fat while his family starved. In the happy conclusion, he repented and acquired a true concern for his family after his wife fell short of death. Conversely, in this sequel, he is flighty as a hen and not watchful of his family. It is as if the finale of "Fool's Gold" vanished.
There was over concern placed on Dola Skinners constant disgust over her figure and appearance, especially in light of the fact that her husband O.T. never put her down and always built her up.
I could not say I would recommend the book, but the characters do secure smiles at various times throughout the yarn.

Collectible price: $30.00

See BelowReview Date: 2003-05-11
Simply superb!Review Date: 2001-06-05
Anne Perry, the much-lauded author of two Victorian-set mystery series, has turned away from that time and place to produce a wonderfully humorous, charming story about a group of neighborhood detectives. Word has it that these creatures are based on her own menagerie of dogs and cats and other critters. This is, I believe, the third such episode featuring Daisy, a canine whose lineage is never quite defined, but who possesses immense common sense. In "Daisy and the Christmas Goose" she doesn't let the fact that she's not quite certain of just what is a goose slow down the hunt for one that is missing.
Frankly, I wish some enterprising publisher would produce an entire book of short stories about Daisy and her cohorts, both canine and feline, and other-ines as well. The voicing of these critters is impeccable, sort of an 'All Creatures Great and Small' but in reverse. They're nothing short of wonderful!
All the stories in this collection are eminently readable. Too bad they can't do more than one such anthology a year. Or else a bigger book, with more stories.
Exciting anthologyReview Date: 2001-02-16
Harriet Klausner
Used price: $11.00

Adventure in Southern NevadaReview Date: 2008-11-12
Good guideReview Date: 2006-09-06
Visitors to Vegas expecting to trip all over nearby ghost towns will be disappointed; there are fewer decent and interesting sites in the south than in the north. Still, the interested reader needs both atlases and Paher's full study as well.
Maps of Nevada's southern ghosts Review Date: 2006-02-07
Compared to its sister volume, which covers the northern half of the state, this atlas is a disappointment. I've spent quite a bit of time plotting all of the ghost town and mining camp sites from both atlases onto DeLorme topo maps, and felt I was really able to pinpoint sites in the northern book, whereas in this one there just wasn't as detailed enough information to confidently do the same. Distances, for example, were given in the northern book, but are missing here; likewise other identifying features like canyon names and smaller streams. It's still an excellent source, and the two atlases together locate all the sites detailed in Paher's classic NEVADA GHOST TOWNS AND MINING CAMPS. The atlases also contain quite a few photographs.
Used price: $3.79
Collectible price: $10.00

Sierra Story and Human InteractionReview Date: 2001-01-17
Sierra Story and Human InteractionReview Date: 2001-01-17
A tale of physical and spiritual enduranceReview Date: 2001-01-05
Intertwined with the thrilling adventure narrative are the author's personal thoughts and feelings on the foundations of friendships (which are certainly put to the test on the trip) and marriage, of the environment and its preservation. Alone in the wilderness, he has time to reflect. This makes very interesting reading and certainly made me assess situations in my own life.
The subject matter will be of interest to a wide range of readers. Stark's picturesque descriptions of nature are appealing to all ages. There is plenty of background on the places visited to feed the historian. Conservationists will empathise with the plight of areas of natural beauty which have stood untouched for generations but which are now threatened by commercialism. Also, expeditioners beware: the three friends made certain errors in preparation for their trip which novice hikers would be advised to take note of!
All in all, a gripping tale with plenty of food for thought. The narrative is illustrated with some nice stills which give you a good feel for the events over the course of the trip; although I thought that they would be even better in colour.

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Straight White Male.Review Date: 2004-12-12
It is a quick read. read it; disagree with me.
Straight White Male is a strange title, but it delivers!Review Date: 2001-02-27
"Straight White Male"Review Date: 2000-10-12

Used price: $1.77

Great bunch of maps in one simple bookReview Date: 2006-10-04
This is a must-have for anybody who enjoys a quick road trip or a real vacation.
Format is too smallReview Date: 2005-05-19
All of CA is right here for you to find and experience....Review Date: 2005-08-02

Used price: $6.90

effulgent effluvia of earthReview Date: 2003-02-24
The glory continues with the author adding a raucously noble essay on her own life. Nelson also contributes a fine essay on Ed Abbey's reading and suggested usage of Mary Austin's desert book. At last, I mention the political concerns churned up by Nelson's hearty ploughing. Much about land management, grazing rights, and habitat change finds sensible reappraisal. I do not have the expertise or experience to evaluate the suggestions of the author on this matter, but I find her suggestion of interest, that the government policies based on the research programs of some scientists are quite possibly informed by an erring sense of healthy land use and a mistaken foundational origin for the data they interpret. Overall, this book of essays wafts thoughtful chips into the air with relatively little theoretical marsh.
environmentalists ruin the westReview Date: 2001-05-27
Domestic vs. Wild -- some new ideas that INCLUDE womenReview Date: 2000-07-04


The book to read when you need to laughReview Date: 2008-09-28
That being said, I found this the funniest memoir I've ever read and found myself reaching for it again and again when I needed a little dark humor to pull me through frustrating times. I lent this book to several colleagues who teach in public schools that have the same wiff of craziness as Jimmy's institution and they, too, bought their own copies. Which makes me think we all have a little Jimmy Lerner in us: finding the lighter side of crazy situations to survive. Kudos, Jimmy, but I don't think you've really stopped being an alcoholic. The best line in the book...And Jesus wept.
Very enjoyableReview Date: 2006-04-01
Is it all true? The disclaimer at the beginning of the book says it is not. This did not make it any less worthwhile to read.
don't believe the hypeReview Date: 2005-11-27
ok, in places it's an engaging piece of writing, but as i read along, more and more holes in the (less and less believable) story popped up. anyone can tell that many of the characters are part truth and a big part fantasy, down to the full on 'cape fear'-styled pursuit at the end; it also seemed to me that the stories were probably enhanced a bit to make the author seem tougher or badder.
so i sure wasn't surprised to find in the author's foreward, an admission that his credibility was called into question in the years after the publication of the book, and all kinds of uncomfortable excuses and apologies as to how the 'emotional truth' gave him the permission to change not only events and characters, but also the factual truth.
hey, i'm sure he spent time in prison and there are some amusing stories about day-to-day prison life, but the credibility issue damages this as a 'memoir' and it's not otherwise really compelling; overall there's not much to take away from the book.
Related Subjects: University of Nevada
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