Sports and Recreation Books
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Used price: $10.43

Blueprint for fishing the ChesapeakeReview Date: 2007-12-23
Excellent Chesapeake fishing guidance!Review Date: 2007-05-07
It's a keeper!Review Date: 2006-05-23
Excellent workReview Date: 2006-05-17
Not All I HopedReview Date: 2007-01-02

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Awesome Resource!Review Date: 2008-05-03
Expert jobReview Date: 2005-08-12
An Adventuring Racing ClassicReview Date: 2005-07-26
Readable, informativeReview Date: 2005-08-17
He is also a good writer. The book is clear and readable. Most of the material will not be new to you if you have significant experience already, but there are tips and tricks and anecdotes that are both entertaining and illustrative.
The sport is so varied and demanding that no book, and certainly not one as brief as this one, can be complete in its coverage of it. However, there is a lot of good, accessible information here and you will not regret including this book in your AR library.
Note that as to gear recommendations, the equipment available is changing very quickly, and some preferences are just personal, so update your information before spending a lot on gear if your only reason for buying was because Ian likes it.
OUTSTANDING BOOK!Review Date: 2004-06-22


The Ultimate Players ManualReview Date: 2003-02-27
The Book to have on golfReview Date: 2002-04-20
All in all, probably one of the best books I have read on shot making and shot shaping.
Buy this as your second golf bookReview Date: 2003-11-27
If you are not confident being able to get the ball into the air on the golf course you need a book on basics. Otherwise, this is a really good, valuable, actionable, short read. David Perz take note (please).
A roadmap to rapid improvementReview Date: 2003-05-23
years, but none have given me insight on what shots I need to
concentrate on most.
This book outlines the twelve most important shots and
describes in detail, how to go about accomplishing them.
This book is making me a better golfer in record time!
I highly recommend it!
Help to Get It Up and DownReview Date: 2001-02-21
From playing a fade to draw, to flyer lies to flop shot to restricted swings, this book gives chapter on each of these and seven others. In each is hints on setup, swing and strategy, followed by practice drills and what I find especially useful to learning it, competitive drills, i.e. drills which give you games to get the adrenalin going and groove the shot.
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Excellent for beginner or seasoned kayakerReview Date: 2008-01-03
Any level kayaker will learn something hereReview Date: 2007-08-31
One of the best books on Sea Kayaking that I have ever read!Review Date: 2007-03-17
Great bookReview Date: 2006-08-08
He gives a very informative overview of the sport and its locations from polar kayaking to the tropics. He also gives a reassuring overview of a sea kayak's `sea worthiness' (dependent on the paddler) explaining some hurricane force winds he has personally endured in a kayak. He also discusses at length the issue of kayaking alone and concludes that one can kayak safely alone, in fact he even suggests kayaking in numbers can give a false sense of security.
Dowd discusses buying a kayak and refreshingly advises `keep in my mind your original image - how you saw yourself with your boat' which I found to be excellent advice.
This book is a very good introduction to sea kayaking and an interesting read. It is also a bible-like source of information. As Paul Theroux said on the jacket "quiet simply the best book available on this wonderful sport"
Essential kayaking bookReview Date: 2001-01-25

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Collectible price: $130.00

Great addition to any library!!Review Date: 2003-09-02
Step back in time and stand with the crowds to watch the Biscuit fly down the track. Beckwith takes you there again as he did when he wrote this book more than 60 years ago. The writing style, the photos, and the fabulous drawings all help immerse the reader in the late 1930's time period. I particularly enjoyed seeing the real Seabiscuit and hearing what the owner, trainer, and jockey had to say at the time.
If you enjoyed the movie and/or Laura Hillenbrand's book, you will treasure this wonderful piece of tangible history. I recommend this edition highly. Don't miss your opportunity to own this gem!
Timeless inspirationReview Date: 2007-07-16
As a child I often dreamt about having a horse, hoping I might even be fortunate enough to have one like Seabiscuit. I ended up with four, all of whom indelibly changed my life. I took care of them as if my life depended upon them; even sleeping with them in their stalls when I could get away with it. Bingo, Scamper, Scully and Crackerjack have permanent places in my heart. With them is a picture of Seabiscuit from Mr. Beckwith's book. They always gave their very best and showed me mine. Anyone who reads Seabiscuit's story will come to understand that the innate ability to recover and succeed resides in every person and all life. Opportunity to find and use that power of heart and energy is always available.
I am infinitely grateful to Mr. Beckwith for recognizing and writing Seabiscuit's story and especially to my father for making a vital, life changing dream come true.
Beck Was ThereReview Date: 2003-09-27
Hard to put downReview Date: 2004-01-07
Nothing to find fault with here. Terrific read.
Inspiration for allReview Date: 2003-09-18
www.ponderpublishingcompany.com

Used price: $19.50

One of the bestReview Date: 2007-11-20
Excellent instruction manual for the full swingReview Date: 2007-05-21
Downside is the production quality is not great and the photos look a bit old fashioned, hence not a full 5 stars. But in the end its results that count and this book will help you develop a quality full golf swing.
Best Golf Book I Have Ever ReadReview Date: 2006-05-01
Highly RecommendReview Date: 2004-05-18
Best Sing Book Ever WrittenReview Date: 2003-06-08

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buy it if you're a seekerReview Date: 2007-08-20
Ruminations of a Ninjutsu Teacher....Review Date: 2003-02-13
There is also the enjoyably opinionated Chapter 11, "Mud and Water, Purity and Power" where Morris allows his biases against other well known (sometimes questionable) martial artists of our time, to hang out in the wind. Among them Harunaka Hoshino (originally known as Chi Yuan) who created his own ninpo art from Japanese karate and kobudo during the ninja boom, Choi Hong-hi of Taekwon-Do whom he lambasts as having earned only shodan (1st black belt) before his return to Korea from Japan (now, now--nobody promoted Hatsumi sensei to 15th dan), and Genbukan Ninpo's Shoto Tanemora, once a student of Ninja Great Masaaki Hatsumi (and others) whom he dismisses as "...another cop..." with robotic movements (page 244). Some of the criticisms are fair, some are not...Morris doesn't bother to share his sources.
I don't accept Glenn Morris's interpretations and claims concerning the many things supernatural/psychic which pepper his writings--but if I only read things I agreed with, I wouldn't be living! I am, I admit, a cautious skeptic. I find Morris to be overly generous in the way he doles out his faith, often optimistic in accepting theories and studies which have not been scientifically counducted or checked, although even he draws the line at things like Alien abductions (see Chapter 13, pages 312-316). On the other hand, his insights are honest, and personal. In sharing his beliefs, he hides nothing, holds back nothing. Reading between the (esoteric) lines without any adaptation or interpretation, I find much of the advice he offers on this volume to be homespun, and often sensible.
Morris seems a cross between a scholar-warrior and a pseudo-intellectual hippy. This book is entertaining and fun to read. You don't have to share the man's opinions or beliefs to enjoy his adventures. If you enjoy martial arts autobiographies, or reading the personal thoughts of other people, this volume is just the thing.
Yet another mind-expanding book by Glenn MorrisReview Date: 2002-06-09
And, to make matters even better, check out his reading list / bibliography for an even more intense mind screw! :)
A must read!Review Date: 1998-12-02
Home run, again.Review Date: 1999-12-24

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Great insight into women's game and top coachReview Date: 2005-04-30
But not only does this book offer a wonderful historical perspective, and some great stories and inside anecdotes on many top players past and present, it also provides insight into the mind of one of the college game's top coaches.
Even for those close to Stanford basketball, Tara Vanderveer is a very private inividual. That's why I found this book especially helpful in providing a better understanding of her personal history, philosophy toward the game, how she feels it should be played, and how that all filters down to the teams she puts on the floor today.
Because Tara is often softspoken in public and not one to actively seek the limelight or TV cameras like some of the other big names in her profession, there may be a tendency by some to think she is more of a hands-off coach. And despite the occasional glare from the sideline, a calm and quiet presence. Nothing could be further from the truth. This book does a good job of uncovering the intensity that boils deep inside and her unbending desire to win.
Inspirational For Any Female AthleteReview Date: 2001-04-07
An interesting insider view of high-stakes basketballReview Date: 1999-07-29
Really fascinating!Review Date: 1998-06-16
Shooting from the OutsideReview Date: 2001-12-12
This novel is pretty much an overview of the Women's Basketball team throughout their Olympic season. The novel starts out with Tara Vanderveer talking about her child hood days and how she developed a love for the game. She talks about how she use to be a mascot for the school, used to write down every new play she heard in a notebook, and how she went and watched the men's basketball team to learn any new play on offense or defense she could pick up. The story then proceeds to Coach Vanderveer discussing her thoughts and concerns for the year that lay ahead of the eleven woman that have been selected as the national team. She talks about her past failures like the 1994 World Games that have pushed her and motivated her to win the gold medal. She promised that the embarrassment and disgrace that she felt from the World Games will never happen again. One can easily feel the strong determination and motivation that Coach Vanderveer feels, and how she uses this as an ally and works the team harder than they have ever been worked before.
This book was undoubtedly worth reading from my point of view. This book taught me information about Title IX that I had previously never even heard about. The book showed me the true struggle that a woman must face and has taught me a sense of respect for woman who have succeeded in the past.
One issue the book brings up is that woman are not given enough opportunity to succeed in life. A woman's determination and motivation can easily be destroyed or brought down by the cruelness and unfairness of discrimination towards woman. Therefore, since woman can do all jobs just as productively as men, the book suggests that woman should be given fair and equal treatment and equal opportunities to men.
In conclusion, Shooting from the Outside is an excellent book that teachers lessons and values that should be known and followed by all of society. The story teachers discrimination is pointless and by not allowing woman to perform to their full capacity we are truly ruining our own opportunities to further succeed in life.

Used price: $37.95

A Superb book on Shotguns, Shooting, and the Love of the DoubleReview Date: 2007-12-31
Great for newbies and experienced shootersReview Date: 2007-12-20
Bedside ReaderReview Date: 2001-12-11
Michael 's The ManReview Date: 2004-07-02
Basic information about guns, loads, and especially good section on shooting techniques. Jack O'Conner wrote a lot about rifles, but McIntosh's speciality is the sxs shotgun. However, he has taken over the position that O'Conner once held.
You are what you read, and for the last several years I have been reading Michael's work in "Sporting Classics". I have been mainly a rifle guy for the past 25 years, but have now started back with shotguns. I blame Michael for this.
Not really anything new in this book; just more McIntosh. But in his case, more is better. I especially like his lead-ins to the chapters. Classy!! Classy guy !!
Add this book to your libraryReview Date: 2006-10-04

"Yakyuu" is different from "Baseball".Review Date: 2000-07-28
Stranger in a Strange Land... Baseball in JapanReview Date: 2002-10-29
It is amazing how some people look at Japan and see what is not there. For instance, one reviewer on this book said how most "Japanese players never had much real education, as high schools were more like minor leagues, so the player mostly read mangas (comic strips) on bus rides."
Mangas are much more than comic strips. They are books, written by adults largely for an adult audience. Business people with degrees read mangas.
In fact, the ignorance of Japanese culture reflects in many unfortunate incidences between Japanese citizens and American citizens. Mr. Cromartie's slugging of a pitcher more than illustates this point.
Baseball in Japan is brutal. They burn out their pitchers, for instance, rather than rotate them. In this book you'll see that Warren Cromartie started out his first season first as the hero that was going to save his team, then as the first half of the season wore on he was viewed by the press as a bum who wasn't worth the money they paid for him (Japanese players were, and maybe still are, paid very low salaries for the receipts they bring in for their owners). He then became a hero who batted very well on the second half of the season. Did Mr. Cromartie improve his batting? Perhaps. But more than likely by the second half the season the pitchers in Japan had worn out their arms, and could no longer throw as well.
Get this to learn Japanese culture, Japanese baseball, and one man's confusion and eventual acceptance of both.
Fun, insightful, and candidReview Date: 2002-01-12
Cromartie came back to the States and played his last season with the Royals as a pinch hitter/1B and finished the season with a .307 average as a part time player.
Get this book. It's worth it.
Fun, insightful, and candidReview Date: 2002-01-12
Cromartie came back to the States and played his last season with the Royals as a pinch hitter/1B and finished the season with a .307 average as a part time player.
Get this book. It's worth it.
Excellent account by a courageous player in a foreign landReview Date: 2001-08-30
I grew up watching Warren Cromartie play for the Tokyo Yomiuri Giants during the late `80s. Cromartie was one of very few gaijin players who left a great impact, not only by the way he played the game, but also by his cocky attitude and behavior. For the Japanese media who love to stereotype American players as brashly self-arrogant, lazy, and powerful, Cromartie was such a perfect fit. Of course, they would not report on his side of story, this biography may be of a greater interest for those who viewed him as a gaijin those days. To me, the reader may miss the most interesting points if she just reads this book just as an account of "bizarre" experiences that an American went through in one of the most exotic places in the world.
With the presence of such colorful personalities as the manager Sadaharu Oh (whose career homerun record of 868 surpasses the American counterpart), his teammates, and old-fashioned traditionalists who would be labeled downright racists in many other civilized nations, the story never seems to bore the reader.
Unlike many other player biographies ghost written by mediocre sport writers, this is surprisingly an engaging book. Robert Whiting does a great job of incorporating his own views on cultural disparities between Japan and America into Cromartie's endeavor as a gaijin player. Many opinions expressed in the book overlap Whiting's other works on baseball, such as "You Gotta Have Wa" and "The Chrysanthemum and the Bad," but "Slugging It Out in Japan" is probably the most emotionally involved pieces of all.
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Over 300 pages long, and if you are serious about fishing the world's largest estuary (over 180 miles long) and its tributaries, this book is a "must buy." Published in 2005, it has locations of spots to fish on charts collected from head boat captains and other knowledgeable sources.
The book is divided into three parts - Part 1: Chesapeake Bay Regional Guide in four chapters; Part II regarding Tactics and Tackle, Part III the various game fish of the Bay with identification of 17 different species of fish and their habits. The Table of Contents is a good one but the book could use an index because of the wealth of information served up on a platter for the reader. Use a yellow highlighter and post it note tabs for your favorite parts.
If you would like read an excerpt of Rudow's Guide to Rockfish, a companion book, go to: http://www.geareduppublications.com/freergrtipspix.html
Both books make great gifts.