Oregon Books
Related Subjects: Eastern Oregon University Oregon Institute of Technology Oregon State University Portland State University University of Oregon Western Oregon University University of Portland Lewis and Clark College Pacific University Willamette University Concordia University Marylhurst University Southern Oregon University Cascade College Linfield College George Fox University Reed College Warner Pacific College Western Baptist College
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Great read!!!Review Date: 2008-04-10
Excellent BookReview Date: 2007-09-01
Terrific stories!Review Date: 2007-09-06
I have to give Bateman great praise for her novella collection. As a reader of heatsong presents and the barbour novella collections, I have many books to compare this to.
The biggest challenge with this type of book is that the writer is given only 130(ish) pages in which to develop characters and romance. It is difficult to manage and keep it believable. Bateman accomplishes this and much much more. She is able to create realistic, likeable characters, develop a romance that doesn't catch the reader totally off guard, and manages to weave in an element of intrigue or adventure.
This is a collection of wonderfully inspiring, exciting, hope-filled stories that will keep the reader wanting more with every turned page. Tracey Bateman- She has a gift for historical fiction and I hope to continue seeing her books around.
Oregon BridesReview Date: 2007-05-08
Still on my mind....Review Date: 2007-07-19


Oregon's Finest Landscape Photographer Makes His Mark.Review Date: 1999-03-26
Great book to find those hidden places.Review Date: 1998-05-01
Incredible photographs of Oregon's wild and scenic rivers.Review Date: 1999-02-21
Nature and Art UnitedReview Date: 2001-04-17
Book by an artist in love with his subjectReview Date: 2004-01-25

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PLEASE READ THIS BOOK!Review Date: 2008-01-08
I've been in love with horses all my life. That love has brought me into contact with many wonderful people, cowboys chief among them. I met my first cowboy at age 15. That was Glenn Burks, founder of the original Willow Tree Farm in Woodside, CA. I rode with Jim Black, over at Skyline Ranch in Oakland back in the 50s and 60s. I knew Harry Conley and the Rose brothers of Hollister, CA. Cowboys (and women) are as different from the shopping crazed, mall crawlers that now dominate our society as astronauts are from marshmallows. Facing down a stud that would just as soon take off your arm does it, as does shepherding a herd of cattle in an impossible situation--and bringing them through. If you don't have cowboys in your life, this book is a good way to bring them into it. Here, you'll begin to understand a world that's slipped away. Courage, humor, fellowship, compassion: Dayton Hyde demonstrates them all in this wonderful memoir that can teach all of us the meaning of integrity.
The old Wild westReview Date: 2005-12-22
Review of Pastures of BeyondReview Date: 2005-09-21
Delightful Stories, Well ToldReview Date: 2005-08-07
I guess this is more of a memoir. Tales told by a raconteur of no small skill. These are stories of the west from the thirties to the years after the war, and a bit on the times since. The stories improve over real life. Real life is endlessly riding a horse along a fence line in the cold, the rain, the hot, hour after endless hour. This is the good moments of the west.
Authentic and hauntingReview Date: 2005-05-21

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Good Book for PNWReview Date: 2008-03-23
this year's most used booksReview Date: 2002-04-03
One suggestion for future editions: I had Kinkos cut and spiral bind my copies of these two books so they stay open on the table when I am reviewing catalogs or making lists or planting seeds. This 8.00 investment really makes them perfect.
Great Focus - A Must Have HandbookReview Date: 2003-09-01
Last week I decided that would finally get around to planting in the rocks around my little backyard pond. It didn't take long for me to identify a number of plants suitable for the rocks that could be planted in fall. Sure enough, I was able to find them all at the local garden center! This would have been an overwhelming task if I were using one of my big, more complete garden reference books.
While most of the book is about the plants, the first sixty pages of the book has general information on gardening. The information is simple enough for the beginner, but comprehensive enough that all but the most advance gardener won't find something to consider. This section also has mini lists of plants suitable for some basic conditions, like sandy soil, or shade.
I have absolutely no problems recommending this book to every homeowner in Washington and Oregon, especially those west of the Cascades.
Better than most.Review Date: 2000-04-22
Excellent for novice perennial gardenersReview Date: 2000-08-09

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She Who WatchesReview Date: 2008-04-27
The characters of the McAllister Files are genuine and believable, the protocol and procedures followed by the detectives factual and realistic. Patricia's story telling ability and Harrison's personal experience in law enforcement makes for a superb story with great characters and believable twist and turns
Interseting and EnjoyableReview Date: 2007-08-25
Mac is BackReview Date: 2007-08-09
This was an excellent suspense novel. It was like watching a TV show, CSI comes to mind. The detective work is serious not cheesy with the police actually being competent and not bumbling characters. Mac and Dana make a good team and the secondary characters add more dimension to the story as well. The forensics team in this series is awesome. I've learned quite a bit from reading the descriptions of what the medical examiners discover. I will admit there are some grisly images but it keeps in with reality. Especially creepy was the scene where they dug up the body in the flowerbed. I honestly had no clue who the culprit really was and was quite shocked by the result. I had to flip back and catch up on clues. The writing is top notch with suspense, humor, and realism all blended together. I did like how Mac's relationships finally came to a agreement. Throughout the whole series you never knew who he was going to end up with. I also appreciated the explanations about Native American religions and ways of life. I'm really sad that the series is over. I love Patricia Rushford's novels and this series is definitely a favorite. I think it'd be really cool to have her four detectives get together in a book - Jennie McGrady, Helen Bradley, Mac, and Angel Delaney. She is one of the best mystery authors out there.
Great Book!Review Date: 2007-03-08
Not just a good read -- works through problems, tooReview Date: 2006-08-22
Scott Watson, Sara's husband, comes home with their daughter to find Sara's cousin, Claire, distraught and their kitchen in a mess! He immediately dials 911 and tries to control his emotions for the sake of his toddler, Chloe.
Detectives "Mac" McAllister and Dana Bennett of the Portland Police Department are assigned to assist the FBI in the suspected kidnapping. When her body is found near the Indian Reservation, it becomes their case. Was it a kidnapping gone wrong? Does it have anything to do with her uncle, the state senator's stand on the new Indian casino? What about this cousin who has moved in with Scott and Chloe "to help take care of them" for a while?
Meanwhile, Mac loses a good friend who is killed in the line of duty on the SWAT team, reminding Mac again of the dangers of his work. Then there is Phil, another detective, who is trying to get over a shooting by using alcohol. Mac's faith is put to the challenge both at work and in his personal life.
Rushford and James weave a great suspense story with realistic characters, illustrating the problems caused by their work - not only physically, but emotionally and psychologically. It is a good read and a true challenge for those who love "Who Done It?" novels. - Linda Demorest, Christian Book Previews.com

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I couldn't stop laughingReview Date: 2000-04-10
Absolutely charming!!Review Date: 1998-06-09
Great book--far too shortReview Date: 1999-05-18
Bad gardeners unite!Review Date: 2001-12-22
On my list of favorite booksReview Date: 2002-12-29
Meg DesCamp takes you on a journey from the beginnings of home ownership, with mild self depricating humor similar to author Anne Lammott. Through interior decorating mishaps, adventures with her cats, sisters and husband, and adventures in gardening, we're there as her first garden becomes part of her family.
I learned so much about gardening from this book, and especially appreciate its Pacific Northwest climate references-being set in Portland, OR. I enjoyed her approach and prose, and look forward to another book by this great storyteller.

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Deadly Rivalry Between Two Police SnipersReview Date: 2007-01-14
RivetingReview Date: 2005-12-21
A Police and Robber Story With A Major Twist!Review Date: 2006-06-06
My son is a police officer, so I had some idea of what that job is like. However, I did not have a clue as to what it might be like for officers on a special response team such as a sniper. The author writes with much authority and seems to understand the emotional liabilities that occupation might have on men under stress. The dialog is done well and does not feel contrived. This is a good old fashion adventure thriller to read and kill an afternoon or a night. Great suspense novel! A must read book!
MWSA's TOP BOOK RATING - FIVE STARS!
2005 Distinguished Honor Award for the MWSA!
AMAZING READ!Review Date: 2005-12-02
Action Packed Book!Review Date: 2006-08-18
sniper this is the book to read.Ozeroff calls upon his experience as a sniper to tell an exciting story.
The sniper squad is based in Portland Oregon.Your two primary characters are Ben Geller and Bob Slater.Geller is the primary sniper despite Slater's being a world class long distance shooter.Slater lacks the discipline and character to be the
primary sniper.They are both members of the Special Response Team.They are bitter rivals as well.
You are taken into several sniper situations involving the two main characters.It makes for an entertaining read.You finally are taken to a showdown between the twi snipers.One of the men is honest while the other man is a theif and basically
dishonest.To say the least this story has an exciting finish
This is a very good book.You will enjoy reading it.
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Manu's reviewReview Date: 2004-03-20
Amazing storyReview Date: 2000-04-26
Great for teachersReview Date: 2000-06-07
Excellent Historically-Based Ficion on the Oregon Trail!Review Date: 2001-04-27
While there are many good fictional accounts about the Oregon Trail, this is the one I'd recommend first for upper elementary grades, simply because of its basis in actual events.
I'd also recommend visiting the Whitman Mission in Walla Walla, if for no other reason than to see the wagon wheel ruts and the Sager names on the gravestone. Our family did this a few years ago as part of a quick 5-day trip along the Oregon Trail, starting in Independence, Missouri. If we ever go again, I'd prefer to take at least two weeks.
This book was great!!!Review Date: 1999-05-02

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A fascinating, thought-provoking study of small-town AmericaReview Date: 2004-11-01
Could have been a novel!Review Date: 2002-06-30
Manufactured Conflict Makes Real ConflictReview Date: 2001-05-21
Timbertown was hardly teeming with the sort of gay population that scared the OCA, those that could be found in the larger, more open cities of the area, the hypermasculine muscleboys in leather, who dared to flaunt aggressive sexuality. Though a spokesman for the OCA could warn that the intent of homosexuals "... is to take over the state of Oregon and turn it into Queer Nation," no one in Timbertown could have seriously thought that of any fellow residents. The idea that homosexuals were going somehow to ruin government, or that homosexuality somehow weakens marriages (whose?), were never shown to have any factual foundations. But the OCA put a petition to put an anti-gay civil rights measure on an upcoming ballot, splitting the community into sides. This had bizarre and unexpected consequences.
An exhibit based on the life of Anne Frank became politicized, with the OCA calling it "pro-homosexual propaganda." The valuable role of victimhood was sought by both sides, with the OCA unconvincingly arguing that they themselves were the persecuted minority, the equivalent of Jews in the Holocaust. The mayor of the town had to withdraw from the traditional annual prayer breakfast as it, too, became political rather than ecumenical. Children at school began to beat each other up depending on what sides their parents took on the issue. The few members of minority races in the town saw an increase in hostility, and although the newspaper and schools took an anti-racist attitude, the white majority who were losing jobs did what people always do, and found someone else to blame. There was no racial strife before the sexual issue started splitting people. Even more sadly, although the ballot measure passed with 57% of the vote, it accomplished little except the fracturing of Timbertown. In less than a year, there was an injunction against putting the measure into effect, a statewide antigay ballot failed, and U.S. Supreme Court ruled in ways that would make the measure a dead issue, but of course Timbertown could not be put back together again. Stein's well-researched book coolly recounts the agonies of Timbertown, and reminds us that they are national concerns, here merely writ small.
Anytown, USAReview Date: 2001-11-13
Trouble in TimbertownReview Date: 2001-04-07
Short, concise, compelling, Ms. Klein introduces us to Christian evangelical ministers and their flocks vs. mainline liberal Presbyterians, rednecks vs. yuppies, business owners vs. unemployed mill hands, long-time residents vs. recent arrivals from California, and takes us through an increasingly bitter political fight that eventually polarizes the town into two bitter factions, and sets neighbor against neighbor in a fight where sexual orientation, once private becomes public. Along the way she discusses the stratgies undertaken by the opposing camps, such as the too-easy invocation of the Holocaust and Nazism as analogous to the situation in Timbertown by the liberal elite, and on the other side, the invocation of the Bible by born-again Christians as the ultimate authority on sexual behavior. There is also a particularly trenchant chapter which clearly illustrates the tendency of the media to respond only the most divisive stories and events, and thus fan the fires of hatred higher.
Also worth the price of admission is a precise discussion of the various "creation tales" of homosexuality. For instance, there is the "essentialist" view of many liberals and parents of gays/lesbians, a view that insists that sexual orientation is purely genetic, a response that was perhaps partly developed to counter the conservative Christians' insistence that homomsexuality is a choice, and therefore a sin. She notes the essentialist view gets parents of homosexual children off the hook, and also, for liberals "normalizes" homosexuals as a natural category, thus making them worthy of political voice. Klein believes this view is a disservice to the truth and the multifarious ways in which sexual orientation may come about. For instance, she tells a lovely vignette of two women, both married with 6 children between them, who, without ever thinking through the "political" aspects of their attraction, leave their husbands and set up housekeeping in Timbertown. The peculiar and ironic tragedy of this couple is that until the trouble in Timbertown started, no one thought of them as lesbians, and neither had they ever gone out of their way to make it known.
A profoundly sad book in the end. The intransigence on both sides speaks to the declining possibilities for Americans to speak across class, race and sexual orientation, but, at the same this cleared-eyed report encourages us to believe that even if we can't talk across these battle lines, at least there are sociologists like Ms. Klein who can honestly describe the motivations on each side of the divide, and,perhaps in so doing help generate a bridge across the chasm. As a perfect companion to this book, read "Suburban Warriors" by Lisa McGirr, a history of the rise of the conservative right in Orange County, CA.
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I Knew This Guys Son & Met HimReview Date: 2007-08-07
REAL JAWSReview Date: 2002-04-24
REAL JAWSReview Date: 2002-04-24
A Thrill a Minuite with the Great White SharkReview Date: 2000-05-21
His love of surfing lead him to be in the right place at the wrong time: Cannon Beach, Oregon on a cold winter day in 1972. The shark, in excess of 15 feet, was also in wrong place at the same time and the two met.
The result was of this meeting near Haystack Rock was a tearing of the flesh, exposed organs, incliding the heart and lungs, and rescue bu surfing friends that ultimately save his life.
The book includes pictures and medical detail that indicated the severity of his injuries including the more than 500 stiches the doctors counted.
The writing is straight forward and comprehensive. It is a complelling short story that can't be put down until completed.
What it's like to be attacked by a shark - and surviveReview Date: 2001-07-26
His rescue and ultimate survival of his horrific wounds make for reading you cannot put down. I read this in one sitting. The black-and-white pictures of the wounds inflicted will take your breath away. That Kenny survived is a testament to his level of physical fitness at the time he was attacked. Lesser people, myself included, would not have lived to tell the tale.
Great reading! Just don't read it before you go swimming in the ocean on your summer vacation.
Related Subjects: Eastern Oregon University Oregon Institute of Technology Oregon State University Portland State University University of Oregon Western Oregon University University of Portland Lewis and Clark College Pacific University Willamette University Concordia University Marylhurst University Southern Oregon University Cascade College Linfield College George Fox University Reed College Warner Pacific College Western Baptist College
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