Texas Books
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Texas Geology: One rock at a timeReview Date: 2008-11-10
Great Book for the Armchair GeologistReview Date: 2008-01-08
ExcellentReview Date: 2002-05-04
A Trusted Guide AlwaysReview Date: 2003-05-16
A must for roadcut rockhounds!Review Date: 2000-08-17

Used price: $17.95

Wonderful.Review Date: 2006-05-18
South Texas Entertaining!Review Date: 2001-07-17
South Texas Entertaining!Review Date: 2001-07-17
Ropin The Flavors Of TexasReview Date: 2001-07-15
Ropin the Flavors of Texas - JL of Victoria, TXReview Date: 2001-07-16

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The ultimate book on the history of the Houston Colt .45's/AstrosReview Date: 2005-11-02
One get's the feeling after reading this book a feeling of a little sorrow of not having the opportunity to have known some of the unusual personalities depicted in the book, especially pitcher Dick "Turk" Farrell whom obviously was an under rated but solid major league pitcher and a man of a thousand pratical jokes.
The power struggles between the men who helped bring major league baseball to Houston is a story that is almost too intriguing to be true yet is a story that is factual in every detail.
To the fan of the Houston Astros baseball franchise, this is the ultimate book on the history of the origin of the team.
Author Robert Reed definitely did his homework on this one.
Sweet and well doneReview Date: 2000-09-01
Best Uniform EverReview Date: 2008-02-16
In a word, the book was amazing. I would have been the ideal subject for a Norman Rockwell painting, as I sat outside the local drugstore anxiously awaiting The Sporting News to get delivered so I could read everything about my Colts. The book filled in so many of the missing pieces for me especially on the planning before they took the field. The photographs brought to life a lot of what was only mental images of my youth.
I would highly, highly recommend this book. I know my Sixshooter Club card is around here somewhere.
A real winnerReview Date: 2002-01-07
Hot Times In HoustonReview Date: 2004-08-07
Even as a young child I remember having an almost mystical interest in the Colt .45's. It was a marvel to me that they could actually play basball outside in the summers in Houston. I clearly remember my little leauge days in Houston thinking about the heat and humidity and the glare of the sun.
There was never an abundance of information on the Colt .45's or pictures of the old stadium unless you heard it about it from older Houstonians or former players that still called Houston home. This book is truly the Bible of Houston baseball. It is comparitive to the Old Testament's GENISIS. I swear if you curl up on a lazy afternoon and let your mind flow with the book you will feel as though you have travelled back into yester-year and you are there at Colt Stadium, mosquitos, humidity and all.
Sadly baseball in Houston now is a joke. The Astros are the epitome of over-paid, grossly under achieving, lazy athletes. I grew up with the Dome and I would have glady gone to Colt Stadium to root on a near last place team. AT LEAST THEY TRIED AND MADE AN EFFORT. The new ballpark downtown I have nicknamed "The Coffin". With it's retractable roof "The Coffin" is either opened or closed depending on what day you drive by. Most every player inside the place is alrady dead or just going through the motions.
This book celebrates the effort, the entertainment and the energy that once exsisted in Astros history but no longer does. This is the written account of the genisis of major leauge baseball in Houston. It also includes INCREDIBLE photographs in color and black and white.
This book is NOT to be missed ! Read it !

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WONDERFUL!Review Date: 2008-01-09
Wow!! This I have to say is a great book!Review Date: 1999-10-14
A wonderful book!Review Date: 1999-06-21
mermaid angelReview Date: 2002-01-09
It is a good book to read if you'r feeling really down and depressed and you just want a really good book to read to so totally boost up you'r spirit.
Under that mermaid angel at the danceReview Date: 2001-04-20

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Collectible price: $31.88

Walk in my SoulReview Date: 2007-01-10
Walk In My SoulReview Date: 2001-04-04
Wonderful Cherokee StoryReview Date: 2005-11-23
More fabulous historical "fiction" from this fine authorReview Date: 2004-08-13
My All Time FavoriteReview Date: 2001-10-29

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Not bad at allReview Date: 2007-07-07
Bo the fourth of a set of armadillo brothers, and gets himself into a pickle now and again, especially since (typical of armadillos) he can't see too well. In this tale, Bo wanders off after a lizard and ends up mistakenly following a red cowboy boot.
The boot wearer, like Bo, is a bit green around the ears. She's trying to make them look well worn.
Trailing the boot, Bo rounds his way into the rodeo ring, across a cook out, and into a dance hall. Finally he figures out that he's befriended a boot.
This was one of our least favorite Jan Brett stories. Still, it's better than a lot of children's fare making the store shelves these days, just for the illustrations alone.
A delightful adventureReview Date: 2006-09-29
Walking across TexasReview Date: 2006-03-16
Armadillo Rodeo by Jan BrettReview Date: 2007-03-12
Loriann Ringgold
Elko, NV
Armadillo Befriends BootReview Date: 2003-12-17
Bo is one of four armadillo brothers. He tends to be curious and wander so his mother tries to keep a close watch on him. Like all armadillos, Bo's eyesight is not very good. So one day while he is following a lizard, he sees a red cowboy boot and thinks it is a red armadillo.
The boot in question is being worn by a young girl who is trying to scuff them up so she won't look like a tenderfoot at the rodeo. But Bo does not see the girl, or the other boot for that matter. Instead, he thinks he has found a playful new friend.
Chasing after the boot, Bo has many experiences while his mother and brothers search for him (as seen in the side panels). Bo's adventure takes him across the rodeo arena, to a bar-b-que, into an encounter with a jalapeno, to a barn dance, a hayloft, and ultimately to the truth about his new friend.
In the end we learn that while Bo has learned the truth of his day's adventures, he knows just what to do when he feels a little mischievous.
I usually give Jan Brett's books five stars but gave this one only four. I did that only because of the heavy use of Western jargon that needs to be explained to young ears in order for the story to make sense. But it is still a very fun book with beautiful illustrations.

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One of the BEST books on government ever writtenReview Date: 2008-09-06
GREAT book!
Bizarre, hilarious, humorous, wonderful - Buy it.Review Date: 2002-11-27
A must-read for history buffsReview Date: 2006-10-30
I think this is my favorite book everReview Date: 2006-10-08
Read this book. You won't be disappointed.
"Bats Away!"Review Date: 2008-10-05
Jack Couffer was a 17-year-old senior at Glendale High School in California at the start of the war and worked part time in for Jack C von Bloeker, Jr., an authority on bats. Both men joined Project X-Ray under Dr. Adams, a group which included Louis F. Fieser, an expert on incendiaries, Patricio (Patsy) Batista, a "colleague" of Al Capone; and Tim Holt, an actor and flight-test bombardier.
There were millions of Mexican free-tailed bats in Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico, and experiments showed a bat could carry its own weight. Fieser produced a napalm bomb with a time-delay fuse. Bat and bomb weighed about an ounce.
Carlsbad Caverns proved too public and a Texas guano miner led the team to two caves containing about 30 million bats. One of the best sections of the books discusses these caves and how the bats lived in them.
Project X-Ray designed a sheet-metal bomb that held 1,040 bats. At 4,000 feet, an altimeter triggered a parachute, released the bats, and pulled the pins on the times fuses. A test worked perfectly, too perfectly in fact. Six bats burned down a new air base in New Mexico.
Couffer assembled many formerly classified documents to tell the story, but has to speculate on why the project was terminated in 1944. The closest thing to an explanation comes in this extraordinary passage from the book:
"I heard the damnedest thing while I was in D.C.," Doc [Adams] said when he got back from Washington. "Some general I met regarding appropriations confused our secret project with another secret project that's apparently going on somewhere. It's the silliest nonsense you ever heard of. And evidently this project has got the backing of the president and they're blowing millions of dollars on it."
Von Bloeker looked up through his smoke and frowned.
"This general practically threw me out of his office, he was so enraged at the waste of time and money. `Don't tell me you're the one promoting that crazy notion of making bombs out of atoms?'"
"I had a hell of a time convincing him I had nothing to do with that kind of fraud," Doc continued.
"What are atoms?" Frank Benish asked.
"The smallest particles of matter. You know, everything's made out of cells. You break down cells and you've got something even smaller--- atoms --- something like that."
"And they think they can make bombs out of them?" Benish shook his head. "Man, they don't know sic `em from come here."
"Can you imagine such an idea?" Doc said. "They're throwing away millions, and I can't get a staff car and driver!"
"Where's all this happening?"
Doc shrugged. "As soon as he found out I had nothing to do with it he clammed up. But he first got the idea I was involved when I said we had some work to do in New Mexico."
"Unbelievable!"
"Yeah! We got a sure thing like the bat bomb going, something that could really win the war, and they're jerking off with tiny little atoms. It makes me want to cry."
***
This book is a wonderful adventure story, but more than that, a true story of American ingenuity at war. I enjoyed reading every minute of it.
Robert C. Ross 2008

MCLC studentsReview Date: 2007-01-24
The Burning Plain is about fifteen emotional stories. The stories give the reader a lot to think about. Many of these stories are short interesting stories that give the reader what to think about, action, sad parts, and contains nasty events when people are killed. We recommend the book to the readers because it is a very interesting book because the way many short stories are put into one book. The book will make the reader feel grossed out because in the ways some people are killed. All of these stories take place in a rural place. For, example Talpa takes place in a village as well as Luvina. In the story Macario the setting is in a house.
A masterpice of short storiesReview Date: 2000-12-07
The perfect writingReview Date: 2001-02-01
Well, Juan Rulfo is a master of the highest sort and this book is NOT magical realism, but pure, hard realism. He only wrote two books, this one and "Pedro Paramo", another masterpiece which I also don't count as magical realism, although some do, as well as a few lesser works. He didn't need to write much. His is a literature worked and reworked restlessly, until reaching perfection. Every single word fits perfectly with the rest. There are no digressions, no philosophy, no theories or grand landscapes. All his tales develop in Southern Jalisco, in a poor, dry, vast, sunburned and sad land. The prose is also dry, precise, economical and to the point. The characters are ignorant, miserable, but conscious and courageous. The titles say much: "It's because we are so poor" is one of them. However, you will not find self-pity or corny sad tales. Only bits of human misery perfectly narrated. By the way, this is the first review I write for Amazon in which I use the word "perfect". Probably it won't happen again, with one or two exceptions.
give art a chance.Review Date: 2004-06-22
The shorts stories are chilling, incledibly well written. It's superb, and the english translation more than acceptable.
To me the highlights of the book are "Talpa" and "they have given us the land" (the opener on the spanish version, but some reason is not on this english edition)but the whole book is amazing.
I bought this book for my girfriend as an exorsism from jennifer Wiener's "Good in Bed" I was worried about the translation but it didn't dissapoint me.
the ideal way to read The Burning Plain is in spanish, but since this book is not that surreal as pedro paramo is, this tranlation works just fine.
I hope this brief note helps you to choose a good book.
strange but captivating writingReview Date: 2006-01-06
Whether you are interested in Latin American literature or not, if you are at all interested in prose, you should read this book.

Used price: $3.56

An Unusual and Lovely BookReview Date: 2007-07-22
An Unusual Book, July 28, 2007
By Ray "A Reader" - See all my reviews
This book is a somewhat dated, but nevertheless gorgeous, panorama of product design Sony's way, and with their distinguished record of outstanding design work for some half a century, they are certainly in the position to tell us something about design. Never mind Sony's missteps and forays into the world of media and movies - this book tells us all about the Sony WE know, the company that developed the Trinitron television, the Walkman player, the MiniDisc recorder, and brought both cassettes and CD-ROM's into mainstream use (with its co-partner, Philips of the Netherlands). Digital Dreams tells us not so much about products, but how products are envisioned, designed, and ultimately walked through a lifecycle. It's a fun-filled story, filled with stunning graphic designs, gorgeous pictures and artwork, and even a little on how Sony viewed its business at the year 1999.
Though this book is not intended to do so, the book actually serves as a great case study for the field of Knowledge Management. For example, we learn a little bit about corporation logos, how they are best used to leverage their tacit value, and even thoughts on protecting them. We peek into the world of tacit knowledge and skills at Sony, and see how they are implemented in product design and even in marketing efforts. We learn about the creation of a CONCEPT that is materialized in a product (i.e., the MiniDisk recorder, the Memory Stick, the VAIO computer) which is as much about the psychology of human beings as it is the design of the product. As such, the text could easily serve as a supplemental text for a KM course, as well as it's obvious use in a graphic arts, products design, or business-oriented course.
Much of this information is now no longer of great interest to today's consumer due to it's release date of 1999, but it is remarkable to see the "timelessness "of the many designs in the book, and there is really not a dull moment to be found between the covers. In some ways, this was a great date to release such a book, because the VAIO computers were just beginning to hit the market, CyberShot digital cameras where just becoming available, and the Memory Stick was also just showing up, as well. If you can still get a copy of this book and you are interested in product design, graphic arts, consumer technology, and yes, even Sony itself, this book should be just what you're looking for.
Digital Dreams : The Work of the Sony Design CenterReview Date: 2005-09-25
perfect for right and left brainersReview Date: 2000-06-20
But in no way does it sit on my coffee table - it's in my studio, in my home office - inspiring. The tight detail shots of real products to concept products make you wish all man-made objects had this attention to quality. This book is a must for designers because there are words that go with the pictures. They tell a wonderful story - whether you agree with the philosophy or not - it helps explain the design decisions, the strength of the Sony identity and their success. The timeline diagrams and text explaining the business trends of product entry to saturation really is a reflection of someone thinking and analyzing the system - something not really expected in pretty-picture books.
I can't believe the excellent price point too - most decent design books gouge you on cost. For those who appreciate beautiful form+function, get it.
A Great Balance of Imagery and TextReview Date: 2000-04-06
You can easily enjoy the book simply for the wonderful images of the ingeniously designed products that Sony has and continues to develop. But what sets this book apart from most in its genre is that it provides the reader with a surprisingly rich context within which to view the design work, not only with regards to industrial design, but also the history of Sony the company.
Reading the text, one gains a deeper appreciation for the level of thought put into the design of each and every product throughout its entire lifecycle.
Finally, the book also provides a unique look into the future of consumer electronics, at least from the perspective of the leaders at Sony. It's a rare opportunity to see the future as defined by a company which has much to do with the shape of our present.
This is definitely a great buy or gift!
Sony as an inspirationReview Date: 2000-09-05

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The Quintessential Ausitn NovelReview Date: 2008-10-04
The Best Novel on Politics Ever!Review Date: 2007-08-26
The Best EverReview Date: 2007-07-16
politics from a gimlet eyeReview Date: 2007-10-17
In the first novel, the governor has chosen a young legislator for an unaccustomed role in the spotlight: his life, like those of his cohorts, is a mess of alcohol and libertinism, but he is also struggling with his conscience to do the right thing. There are so many layers to what was really happening that it is impossible to explain, because the reader can only suspect what the governor is doing. The governor mixes the most intimate personal machinations, it appeared to me, with a legislative purpose and to depose (even destroy) a potential rival. It reminds me, of course, of LBJ, a politician without equal. One of the really interesting aspects is that the author describes many people just like GW Bush: priviledged, brash, debauched, and inadvertantly wondering what they should be doing. If you read this, you will understand GW Bush and his milieu much better - that is a sign of the timelessness of Bramer's achievement, truly a masterpiece.
The second novel is similar: the governor's enemies are defeated, while he stages and manipulates events to suit whatever his purposes are. It is at times brutal and sad, yet funny and even uplifting, particularly in the scenes of introspection, when the characters have flashes of insight and empathy. The plot, which is only a vehicle to expose cryptic motvations, is the governor attempting to get an appointed young senator to run for a true popular mandate - he is a complex and flawed character, whom the governor sponsors out of respect but also to keep him in his pocket. It is splendidly ambiguous, as is all politics. The third involves similar personal struggles and an ineviablle passing of power, again, very realistic and down to earth. Marriages are destroyed, while politics plays in, and the characters wallow in existential angst while working very hard and yet hardly understanding why. It is a unique combination of themes, a genuine work of literature.
One thing that really fascinated me was how similar this is to a Gore Vidal novel, a kind of comedy of the priviledged who inadvertently do politics while living their complicated lives. The political action is entirely off stage, but solved in their everyday actions and affairs and drunken parties. I have no doubt that Vidal carefullly studied the literary method that Bramer pioneered here, which resulted in his truly fine series of novels on American politics. Finally, tt really is where Bush came from, a reflection on the depth of Bramer's art, almost prescient in its intelligence and lack of facile scrutiny.
Warmly recommended as great art and a unique view into politics.
Fantastic BookReview Date: 2004-04-14
Anyone who loves writing and politics will enjoy this book.
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