Travelogue Books
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Nothing RoutineReview Date: 2007-05-14
Great gift for rugged dudes under 30Review Date: 2007-01-31
CAPTIVATINGReview Date: 2006-11-11
Swept AwayReview Date: 2006-07-03
ASTONISHING!!Review Date: 2006-04-17

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Amazing.Review Date: 2000-12-21
Amazing Courage!Review Date: 2000-11-16
Thank you Liz and Pete for sharing your wonderful story!
Nothing Is Impossible! Liz and Pete live it.Review Date: 2003-10-29
We all can get bogged down in our shortcomings and faults and then begin to mentally--and physically shut down. When this happens, I like to read about people like Pete and Liz Fordred--then I begin to remember that "impossible" and "possible" are states of mind. I met them last weekend (10/18/03) at the "Abilities Expo" while researching options for an exciting project for paraplegics called Eaglewings. ed.
Don't say, "You can't" to Liz Fordred, or her husband Pete. Paralyzed in her teens, Liz met Pete Fordred through her work at the same Rhodesian hospital where she had been nursed back to life. Pete was in a rollover at age 19, and some thought his career as an electrician would be over. Not Pete, and not Liz. Shortly after they were married, they hit upon an idea: Why not build a sailboat? Why not learn to sail? And why not sail the boat across the Atlantic?"
Many people thought they were daft and told them so. (There were no wheelchair ramps, let alone awareness of paraplegics' true capabilities in the late 70s in landlocked Rhodesia, which later became Zimbabwe.) With their families' amazing support, they built a boat from a concrete form in a huge hole in Mum's flower bed. The amazing couple worked day jobs and built every square inch of their boat at night and on weekends, using borrowed tools and improvized parts.
The part that amazed me in the detailed and often humorous narrative is the sheer willpower it takes to haul, grind, position, and weld heavy parts with only a wheelchair or arms for mobility. Moreover, the fiercest obstacles they overcame were not debt, bureaucracy, illness, lack of experience, or tropical storms. It was doubt and derision. Yet they overcame all these--especially the last, with wit and a will to show that disability is only the state of mind of those who think the disabled cannot do what others can. Read Liz's book--it will strengthen your resolve to cross the Ocean only you know you must cross.
(For more inspiration, learn about one paraplegic man's amazing invention, "Eaglewings," which allows paralyzed people the ability to traverse long distances with a handcycle that attaches to one's wheelchair. With no need to transfer to a separate vehicle, bruises leading to pressure sores are eliminated.
Undoubtedly a wonderful true story!!! A VERY MUST READ!!!Review Date: 2002-02-13
Reading the book (Liz FINALLY wrote it!!!) showed me parts of their personalities I never got to see as their neighbors!!! I visited them after reading the book and also re-visited the boat, "Usikusiku" who would love to have a new owner(s) take her out once again!!!
Truly a finely written autobiography from a great couple and Jane who is 16 years old by now!!! (I think!!!)
They are still as hard working and humble as they were in 1988, you would never know their story unless you read the book!!! As you would see from the book, they had (and still have!!!) a great sense of humor, some of which is known only to them!!!
ENJOY!!!! then...... pass it on!!!!!
Quiet Hero...Review Date: 2000-11-25

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The book you want to read about the countercultureReview Date: 1999-02-24
Great Book, Lots of Pictures of the PrankstersReview Date: 2001-06-19
a great one night's reading....i inhaled it!!Review Date: 1999-05-22
this is just greatReview Date: 2001-12-31
A must for any who wishes to travel further...Review Date: 2000-03-21

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Collectible price: $19.99

Baja through the eyes of loveReview Date: 2000-02-06
... the beginning of a literature of Baja...Review Date: 1999-07-28
I can't wait to pass it on to some friends...Review Date: 1999-07-28
... A wonderful reading...Review Date: 1999-07-28
It is a lovely read that possesse many aspects of the humor.Review Date: 1999-07-14
Sincerely,
Lorraine Holle, Resident of Seattle, WA

Used price: $12.75

The westward-ho pioneer's survival guideReview Date: 2008-02-09
So in 1859, Captain Randolph Marcy, under orders from the Department of War, wrote The Prairie Traveler. Marcy, who would later serve as a Brigadier in the Civil War, was an accomplished traveler in the west, and his guidebook was packed with useful information for the determined but inexperienced pioneer taking either the northern overland trail to Oregon or the southern Sante Fe one to California.
The book is great reading--and, not infrequently, helpful even today for the camper when it comes to advice about improvising shelter or lighting a fire from damp wood. For the mid-19th century reader, it provides essential tips on provisions, wagon-packing and animal-care, first aid (large doses of whiskey are the best remedy for rattlesnake bite), identifying good water (alkaline ponds are surrounded by yellow-reddish grass), improvisation (red willow bark is a good substitute for tobacco), collapsible camp furniture, and gun safety. The food section is especially interesting. Marcy recommends carrying lots of dried vegetables (one ounce of dry vegetables, when wettened, equals an entire ration), "cold flour," a concoction of flour, cinammon, and sugar which, when mixed with a bit of water, provides a pick-me-up (not unlike today's energy bar), and jerked meat (no need for salt; the prairie sun will dry buffalo strips in short order). He also provides a rather gruesome recipe for pemmican (powdered buffalo meat saturated in raw buffalo fat, sown up in a hide bag with the hair turned outwards).
Marcy distrusts and indeed actively dislikes Plains Indians, although he admires Delawares and Shawnees, and writes quite warmly of a Delaware friend of his named Black Beaver. So he spends a fair number of pages warning prairie travelers to be wary of approaching Indians. To better prepare them, he teaches the rudiments of sign language, teaches how to track Indians (scattered mustang manure rather than whole mustang manure indicates Indians on the move rather than just a wild mustang herd), and gives detailed instructions on how to sleep with cocked and primed rifles. It never seems to occur to Marcy that Plains Indians were a diverse group, or that their animosity might've had more to do with the white pioneers' presence than with the natural meanness he attributes to them.
A fascinating read!
Time Travel to 1859 Frontier AmericaReview Date: 2007-01-25
This book is essential to any author, movie director or Living Historian who wants to "get it right". THE PRAIRIE TRAVELER is chock-full of information about overland travel in the mid-19th century, and covers almost any possible, practical, useful subject related to wilderness travel. Although it is written in 1850's American English, it is actually a fairly easy read with very little "culture shock".
For those of you with the cerebral agility to remove the mental straight-jacket of "Political Correctness", THE PRAIRIE TRAVELER will accurately picture the Frontier society as it existed at the time. It was a very good society in most ways, with the limitations that 19th century people were born into and educated with. Those pioneers did advance themselves, bit-by-bit, away from the limitations they were born into, and the result is the 21st Century America we live in today. We stand on their shoulders, advanced as far as we are today, because of the small advances they made in their generation.
A 21st century man condemning a 19th century man for being the product of his times reflects the mental and educational limitations of the 21st century man.
Gain a new understanding Review Date: 2006-08-07
For those who love American history, esp. the old west I highly recommend this book
Wordy but informativeReview Date: 2002-10-16
Eye opener to westward emigrant survivalReview Date: 2003-06-09

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Pure EnjoymentReview Date: 2002-10-27
Pronto! ReviewReview Date: 2002-09-26
A unique and enthusiastically recommended selectionReview Date: 2002-09-09
Impressive StorytellingReview Date: 2002-08-29
One Night StandReview Date: 2002-08-15

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Peeter MayleReview Date: 2007-08-24
Mireille McKell
The Fantasy and Reality of ProvenceReview Date: 2008-03-16
~The Rebecca Review
Once I spent a weekend in Provence
A great book to learn about ProvenceReview Date: 2007-01-18
An easy read and quite informative.
"Provence4: A to ZReview Date: 2007-04-02
A 'Dictionary' Full of LoveReview Date: 2006-11-15
This started a trend with 'A Year in Provence' and 'Toujours Provence' being the best known. Like expats everywhere who have permanently moved from their homeland, Mr. Mayle is in love with his new chosen country. It shows through his selection of words to include in the book and in the dedication with which he has given these words their Provence meaning.
It's almost enough to make people who don't like France ready to go visit.

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Collectible price: $22.95

Rocky Stories: Tales of Love, Hope, and Happiness at America's Most Famous StepsReview Date: 2007-03-18
Very InspirationalReview Date: 2007-03-09
Stories of inspirationReview Date: 2007-01-17
Good Philly Publicity for once!Review Date: 2006-12-31
Yo! Buy this book!Review Date: 2006-12-29

Used price: $11.99

Great book!Review Date: 2008-07-13
Essential Read Before Relocating to the UKReview Date: 2008-04-05
this is a HOOTReview Date: 2006-05-10
An Incredibly Helpful Book!Review Date: 2006-06-20
Toni Hargis for Ambassador!Review Date: 2006-05-05
Having grown up on the other side of the pond, Ms. Hargis has spent sixteen years in the States and has a perspective that is most welcome from an American point of view. For those of us who have spent a good amount of time in England, reading "Rules, Britannia" tells one more of the things one doesn't know but probably should. This is not merely a collective glossary of word translations (although at the end of each chapter there is one, relating to that particular chapter) but a look at what every American needs to know upon visiting the mother country. From transportation and food to shopping and partying, the author is a gentle teacher, or perhaps more of a cultural ambassador.
What Toni Hargis does so well is relate things from an English viewpoint. I was surprised to see that the Brits find it very rude if you refer to another person in your midst as "he" or "she", or that if you cannot attend a dinner party it is essential (almost to a comical fault) that you let your host know exactly the reasons WHY you won't be there. I laughed out loud after reading about the fact that Brits never park their car leaving it in gear when the author then goes on to say, "if you borrow someone's car, for heaven's sake don't leave it in gear when you return it, or the owner will kangaroo straight through the garden wall next time the engine's turned on." Who can resist such advice?!
Occasionally, you'll find some repetitions in the book....what you're reading you just read a few pages ago. A couple of additions would be good also... (unless I missed them) when stepping off the pavement make sure to look right before crossing the street (there are reminders on London streets) and if trying to book passage on BritRail on Christmas Day or Boxing Day, forget about it. I suppose this is a way of saying there is probably enough material for another book by author Hargis.....one I would stand hours in a queue to purchase!
I highly recommend "Rules, Brittania". It's practical, down-to-earth and immensely enjoyable.

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What a great bookReview Date: 2008-07-14
The photography put me right there in the middle of it all too.
Even if you never have been or are not sure about going. I highly recommend this book.
K
ScrmptiousReview Date: 2008-06-05
Hope is a weed in the LebanonReview Date: 2008-07-18
The book itself is a wide format with heavy paper that handles the photographs and the expansive pages well. This book is not made for the kitchen shelf. Rather it is for exposition and enjoyment of the ample text. So for the cook, the book is not efficiently organized. This book is for a reader who will put it to kitchen use at will.
If you had to classify the book, you would call it middle-eastern. But Lebanon is highly developed on its own terms including their history of contact with many cultures. Chard, crisp-fried onion, lemon and all sorts of pickles and preserves await your inspection.
Try your hand at the yogurt cheese and be impressed with your results. Make Dijon feta dressing.
Beyond Lebanon, there is Syria, which has the oldest yeast cultures known. Damascus is the oldest continually inhabited city. I was heartened to see that Armenia is included because we forget how they were almost exterminated even before the word "genocide" was coined.
So with all the bounty, there persists the bitter twinge. Read, cook and grow.
Very InformationalReview Date: 2008-04-09
SahaReview Date: 2008-02-17
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