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Very well written, but with a misleading titleReview Date: 2008-12-03
I Agree WholeheartedlyReview Date: 2001-03-21
War of Canadian Independence Review Date: 2004-09-13
The War of 1812 was initiated by President Madison as a war of conquest against Ontario (or Lower Canada, as it was then known). The British forces were arrayed against various un-coordinated American attacks, and the Americans fared particularly badly in 1812-13, notably losing Detroit.
This instalment does not reach the later events of the war, in which more of a stalemate developed (and the Americans scored some big naval victories). But the Canadians never doubted that the campaigns covered in this book - of 1812-13 - had marked a long-term strategic victory, guaranteeing Canada's separate identity, and the inner leadership clique of English-speaking, ethnically Scottish Presbyterians who ran the war effort became the ruling elite of Canada for over a century (if not to this day).
Many key characters of American history come here: General (later President) Harrison; Indian chief Tecumseh; President Madison and President Jefferson. This volume, however, gives equal time (if not precedence) to the Canadian heroes of the campaigns, including in particular celebrates loyalist heroes such as Brock and Strachan. Superb account of the war's critical, indeed decisive, early years.
An excellent overview from the frontlines.Review Date: 2004-01-23
History comes to lifeReview Date: 2000-07-01

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Interesting historyReview Date: 2007-05-13
Well written, well researchedReview Date: 2003-08-14
Times haven't changed much....Review Date: 2003-06-21
This book shows me that the mentally ill are still treated like a human zoo just like they were back in the times of Bedlam in London. Just look at the movies and tv news reports....the public is made to fear mental illness instead of understand it.
Dr. Torrey's book tries to break down the walls of stigma and ddiscrimination to educate people.
The Insanity Plague!Review Date: 2004-04-24
PRETTY GOODReview Date: 2005-05-09

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joshua jacksonReview Date: 2005-06-03
xoxo
Josh J. Is the hottest guy on the planet!Review Date: 2001-02-09
The hot new star Joshua Jackson ! !Review Date: 2000-01-10
I really enjoyed this book! He is great as well as very cuteReview Date: 1999-11-07
Josh is a Creek godReview Date: 1999-10-29

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Collectible price: $39.00

Riveting,exciting,sad,and happy this book has it all.Review Date: 1999-06-16
Absolutely wonderful, you have to read it!Review Date: 2000-05-15
Riveting,exciting,sad,and happy this book has it all.Review Date: 1999-06-16
Kazan is for all wolves, dogs, and people out thereReview Date: 2005-08-07
He soon finds a wolf pack and makes it his own. As he fights to keep control he finds a safe place with his mate and she-wolf Grey Wolf.
As they fight to stay alive out in the woods Grey Wolf has pups which are soon killed by a lynx. To find out how Kazan takes his revenge try a different review or in my opinion get the book and read it. It is an exciting read filled with danger and excitement.
As i say everytime enjoy:)
Wonderful...Review Date: 2001-06-25

Used price: $11.75

Should be in libraries worldwide--twelve authors, twenty pieces that echo the whisper of history's silenceReview Date: 2008-06-14
Honored as a Canadian Ukrainian Woman of Influence and as an author of seven books for children and young adults, many of which have been nominated for numerous awards, Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch is editor of "Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukrainian Stories ("Kobzar's Children")" and contributor of two of its stories.
"As a child, she could only find one Ukrainian book written in English, so she started to read Russian stories, Polish stories, and Jewish stories. The more she read, the more she noticed a disturbing trend: `Ukrainians were often portrayed with negative stereotypes'--they were portrayed as buffoons, bullies, drunks, and murderers."
As an adult, she heard about the kobzars--blind, wandering minstrels of Ukraine who memorized long epic poems, which had been passed down generation to generation. "Those poems captured the rich history, the folk tales, and the cultural identity of Ukraine."
During Stalin's regime, kobzars intermingled the older tales with "contemporary stories of Soviet repression, famine, and terror. In the 1930s, Stalin called the first national conference of kobzars in Ukraine. Hundreds congregated. And then Stalin had them all shot. Stalin then rounded up Ukrainian journalists, artists, novelists, and playwrights, and murdered them, too."
For the Ukrainian, the word kobzar has special meaning--Kobzar is the title of (Ukrainian bard) Taras Shevchenko's first collection of poems, which was published in 1840. Shevchenko "is popularly known as The Kobzar. During Stalin's time, Shevchenko's writings were deliberately falsified."
The publication of "Kobzar's Children" was sponsored by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Government of Canada through BPIDP, and the Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko. The cover image is from the Library and Archives of Canada. Each of the twenty writings is accented by artistic design work by accomplished illustrator Fortunato Aglialoro, and photos throughout have been supplied in many cases by the authors.
Twelve Ukrainian-Canadian authors (from Quebec, Ontario, and Western Canada) collaborated on this anthology of memoirs, historical fiction, and poetry that chronicles the lives and struggles of Ukrainian immigrants to Canada during the past one hundred years (1905-2004).
"More than a collection, it is a social document that revives memories once deliberately forgotten." Events heretofore described in articles, come to life as characters take on a very personal persona. The topics are as varied as their lengths--the shortest being a poem placed prominently on one page, the longest being a story spanning twenty-two pages. The reading is engrossing, informative, and thought inducing.
"Kobzar's Children" begins in the early 1900s with a fascinating recital of a family's homesteading and concludes in 2004 with an engrossing historical fiction dealing with the very real, recent Orange Revolution in Ukraine. Although the recommended reading level is ages 9 through 12, nevertheless, the adult will also benefit from this rich reservoir of remembrances. To enhance your reading experience, each author (Kobzar's Child) is given a face by way of a photo and brief resume.
The days of Ms. Skrypuch's youthful encounters with hostile, derogatory portrayals of Ukraine and Ukrainians are slowly metamorphosizing, as the Internet exposes to the world the true beauty and culture of Ukraine.
On June 14, 2008, former Beatle, Sir Paul McCartney gave a free concert in Kyiv, Ukraine before a live audience of 350,000 fans--it was "simultaneously broadcast on giant screens in Odesa, Donetsk, Lviv, Kharkiv, and Dnipropetrovsk, and on television, with an estimated 10 million people watching." The concert ("a mammoth 33-song set") started a half hour late due to the heavy pouring rains--which didn't dampen anyone's spirits, though!
"McCartney has made mention of Ukraine in a song with the Beatles. In the well-known hit "Back in the USSR" the Beatles sing: "The Ukraine girls really knock me out." Also, several years ago during the concert in St Petersburg in Russia Sir Paul in response to a greeting of Ukrainian fans suddenly took the microphone and said: "I send all my love to you, Ukraine."
Sir Paul McCartney took Ukrainian lessons for an hour, "hoping to be able to talk to the audience." During his three-day stay in Kyiv, "Sir Paul McCartney will open a personal exhibition of his artistic works, which will include 40 of his works at the PincukArtCentre." And, he'll bike Kyiv's streets seeing what his friends told him is "a beautiful city with lots of historic places." His video is on YouTube--see it. Kobzar's Children who witnessed this concert will pass along their stories for generations to come.
"Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukrainian Stories" should be in libraries worldwide, both public and personal! A definite five-stars plus!--Mandrivnyk, Arlington Heights, IL
A Collection both Sad and SweetReview Date: 2006-09-24
Feeling EnlightenedReview Date: 2006-10-16
The challenges facing immigrants is a timeless message which has an unpleasantly real application for me today, since I live in a country where many people direct hostility toward Hispanic immigrants. Likewise, the internment of Ukrainian immigrants in Canada during World War I is reminiscent of the Japanese internment here in California during World War II. I was also reminded that, though the primary focus of the Nazi Holocaust was the Jews, other peoples, including Ukrainian and other political dissidents and resistance fighters, were also tortured and killed in death/slave camps.
It's nice that the book ends on a hopeful note, with a contemporary story about the Orange Revolution.
Kobzar's Children is not for young children, but for those Young Adult (and older) readers who are willing to consider the complexities of this world we live in and to focus on a less well-known era and people in history, I highly recommend this book.
Gripping and Memorable BookReview Date: 2006-09-22
Marsha Skrypuch has gifted readers with a mix of dark and light subjects that are intimate and totally absorbing. While enriching one's knowledge of Ukranian immigrant history, this collection gives testimony to the human experience unbounded by geography. Masterful!
A superb and gripping book about the Ukrainian immigrant experienceReview Date: 2006-07-10
"When you don't write your own stories, others will write them for you."
And in publishing this marvelous collection of stories she begins the process of putting the record straight. Like Marsha, I too grew up with the realization that I belonged essentially to an invisible and completely unknown ethnic group -- Ukrainians, whom no one seemed to have ever heard of, and if they had, they said things like -- "That's the same as Russian, isn't it?"
As Marsha explains in the foreword, the kobzars were Ukraine's blind, wandering minstrels, who in the ancient tradition of Homer memorized long epic historical poems that spoke of the great events of Ukrainian history, and in doing so kept a population that was largely illiterate in touch with their great heritage.
During Stalin's times they kept people apprised of the repressions and persecutions and famine in addition to their traditional role, and so they came to the notice of Josef Stalin, who called for a national conference of kobzars. Hundreds showed up, and all were shot. There are a few kobzars who survived to tell the tale, and a very few who carry on the tradition today.
Because Marsha does not speak Ukrainian, she did not have access to emigre literature that spoke of the immigrant experience, and of experiences in Ukraine. But Ukrainians are inveterate story tellers, and as fortune would have it, the writers of these tales are either witnesses themselves to the events they describe, or are children of parents who told vivid tales of their own experiences, and as such the works have a compelling and hypnotic interest.
I couldn't put the book down. I frankly had expected a charming work aimed at children, but how mistaken I was. Although this book is suitable for all ages capable of reading at this level, it is of no less interest to the adult reader as to the young reader. It never talks down to its audience. In the same way that I remember my own parents relating the many stories of our family, no punches are pulled. Harsh reality and horror and danger take their place alongside tales of humor, childhood pranks and misunderstandings.
Beginning in the early part of the century, the stories span everything from a memoir of homesteading in the early 1900's in the wilds of western Canada, to a first-hand horrifying account of a young child's suffering and survival during the Stalin-created Ukrainian famine genocide of 1933, in which at least seven million Ukrainians perished. Tales of helping out in a family grocery store take their place alongside a psychologically insightful meditation on the interior life of an elderly Ukrainian woman living in her memories while confined to a nursing home. One of the stories relates the shocking history of how Ukrainians were unjustly interned in hard labor camps by the Canadian government during WWI, and subjected to treatment that is sadly reminiscent of Soviet gulags. This is a chapter of immigrant history I knew absolutely nothing about. There's a delightful tale about the tragicomedy of attempts to move the grave of one family member from one cemetery to another, followed by a grim personal memoir of surviving Auschwitz. The stories span a century of experience, beginning in the early 1900's and ending with a charming Christmas time tale that takes place during the exciting days of the Orange Revolution.
Ukrainians do not talk down to their children. We do not protect them from the harsh realities of history and of repression. Perhaps this is why Americans and Canadians of Ukrainian descent are generally highly sensitive to any encroachments upon their freedoms and dangers gathering in the world. We have experienced, if not first-hand, then through the tales of our parents, the kinds of things that can happen if people forget their history.
As such, Marsha Skrypuch has done a great service by publishing this book. Not only has she introduced the literature and history of Ukraine to immigrants who may no longer be in touch with the language of their ancestors, but also she exposes the stories of these people to a wider American and Canadian audience.
This book must and will, by its very nature, find a wide audience. It is gripping, well-written, well-balanced, and paced with a mixture of lighter and darker topics, and in the end is a testament to the basic humanity that binds us all into one common human experience.
History comes alive when we read about the lives of individuals. What once existed only as a page in a history book or a phrase with a date attached, suddenly becomes a gripping personal drama that anyone can identify with.
Buy this book, read it. You don't have to be Ukrainian to thoroughly enjoy it and to profit by it. We are all enriched by enlarging our knowledge of history and the very human stories that make up that history.
The kobzars indeed live, and this book carries on that great Ukrainian tradition. Every country needs its kobzars.

A few good manReview Date: 2003-10-25
Regardless of the so-called hidden agenda behind the rush to the democracy before the handover, the truth was back then none of the patten's predecessors had the political reforms in agenda. They were all diplomats and they only really concerned to kowtowing Beijing. Patten was a politican and he tried to work and fight for the benefits on behalf of HIS constituents i.e. people of Hong Kong. He got unfairly smeared by Beijing in return just because the truth hurts.
The bottom line was Chris Patten did leave a legacy way better than Tung che-hwa, the chief executive of Hong Kong SAR (Special Administrative Region-not the disease) could ever dream of. What an irony it was when the white Anglo-Saxon master who make Hong Kong prosperous and better than the mainland Chinese themselves.
When the Union Jack lowered the last time on June 30, 1997, it symbolized not only the beginning of the fall of Hong Kong, but also spell the death of Hong Kong. Hong Kong-the beacon and the crown jewel of what a Chinese society ought to be back then ceased to exist.
Great book for Hong Kong junkiesReview Date: 1999-02-07
Excellent!Review Date: 1998-07-31
This is definitely a good book.Review Date: 1998-04-20
Patten struggles for Hong KongReview Date: 2000-07-29


An excellent bookReview Date: 2004-02-15
powerful goth taleReview Date: 2002-08-26
Socking view on how our society works as a whole!!!Review Date: 1999-05-30
An incredible look at human nature in dysfunctional familiesReview Date: 1999-11-26
This Canadian author should be read by more AmericansReview Date: 1998-08-22

Used price: $5.50

Great book!Review Date: 2001-03-08
AwwwwwSomeReview Date: 2004-02-27
A fascinating story of the Underground Railroad.Review Date: 1998-12-04
Superior in Every WayReview Date: 2001-07-18
What makes this book so special is that it is so much more that just a young adult novel. Yes, there is a fictional story being told here, but mixed into the fictional story are non-fictional side bar stories. So for example when the story starts to tell of a nefarious slave catcher, the author stops the fiction and starts giving us a real background of slave catchers and how they operated. Basically the footnotes for her story become part of the story. And believe me it is not distracting at all. It's almost like Barbara Greenwood is sitting us next to a fire and telling us the story and pausing every once in a while to more fully explain some things.
I also loved Heather Collins's illustrations. We are not talking the fine art you occasionally see in juvenile books, but we are talking very functional drawings that not only add to the story but to our general understanding. I would love to have a poster size picture of her drawing of "A Cotton Plantation."
In addition to the great design of this book, there are some story details that are often skipped over in many other similar type books. First off, she tell the story that slaves were still not completely free even if they made it to Canada. Also while Canada may have been the land of the free, it was not completely free of prejudice.
I collect books about the underground railroad as a hobby. And Barbara Greenwood's "The Last Safe House will be one of my most recommenced reads.
Snip, snap, snout, my tale is told out . . . . :-)
Sensitive and SensibleReview Date: 2000-02-27
In my opinion, this book is award-winning material...it has solid worth, and the illustrations and activities combine with the adventure in the story to produce a captivating whole (for children and adults alike). Bravo to Greenwood and Collins!

Used price: $5.19

A shaker!Review Date: 2003-11-28
--John Burns for the Georgia Straight (Nov. 28, 1996)
wicked!Review Date: 2003-11-28
--Lorna Jackson for The Malahat Review (Summer, 1997)
a masterful achievementReview Date: 2003-11-27
In
virtually every generation, in the realm of literary activity, there comes along a
book that, by the very
nature of its subject matter and place and the sheer exuberance
of its utterances reverberant of the place
and people depicted, introduces not only a
little-known terra firma and people, but sometimes becomes the
definer of that era in
which it is produced. Not surprisingly, these books are usually the products of younger
writers. Wordsworth's and Coleridge's Lyrical Ballads, Jane Austin's novels, the
work of the Brontes, Stephen
Crane's stories, Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises
ushering in the Lost Generation, Kerouac's Beat Generation
introduced in On The
Road, Salinger's Holden Caulfield wandering through Catcher in the Rye, the jaded
"me"-obsessed teens in Bret Easton Ellis's Less Than Zero, Native American
sensibilities in Momaday's House
Made of Dawn, and a generation later, Alexie's The
Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven-all these books
and writers burst forth
in such dynamic ways that not only defined their respective eras, shook the accepted
literary standards of their day, but expanded and extended the English lan-{78}guage,
while at the same time
occasioning the debut of sometimes extraordinary new literary
talents.
In my view,
Richard Van Camp, a Dogrib Nation writer born in Fort Smith,
Northwest Territories, Canada, in 1971, is accomplishing
virtually the same thing in his
first novel, The Lesser Blessed, as Hemingway, Kerouac, et al. did in their
times.
Given the smaller spectrum of Native American literature within (or without, as many
Native writers would have it) the larger context of American, British, and Canadian
literatures, Van Camp's
novel introduces a new terrain and language that nonetheless
has roots in the fiction of Momaday, Leslie
Marmon Silko, and James Welch, while
simultaneously exploring the same subject matter as the contemporary
stories of
Sherman Alexie, Adrian Louis, and Lorne Simon.
In The Lesser Blessed,
a Dogrib Indian teenager named Larry Sole narrates his
story and thus invites the reader into the little-examined
world of contemporary Dogrib
(a part of the Dene, or Athabaskan-based, tribal people of the Northwest Territories
of Canada). More specifically, Larry embodies a modern Indian teenager's view of his
particular tribal culture
and of the Indian world in general, acknowledging them and
appreciating them along with his fondness for
Iron Maiden, Bruce Springsteen, Ozzy
Osbourne, occasional pot-smoking, getting "hamburgered" ("Raven" talk--Larry's
own
take on his tribe's trickster figure's language for "drunk," Larry tells us), and trying to
get closer to his own particular Juliet (and, incidentally, the girl's actual name in the
novel) whom Larry
remembers as "the first girl in grade school to swear at a teacher."
A North of 60 Romeo, Larry is in love
with Juliet while she throws her sexual favors
to Johnny Beck, Larry's best friend, who is scornfully casual
to her attentions.
Van Camp's method of characterization is strikingly vivid. At seventeen, and tall
and skinny, Larry describes himself as having "spaghetti arms and daddy longlegs,"
and at one point he visualizes
himself as a Dogrib hunter of an earlier time as he
watches Juliet, "seen in his sights as a white caribou,
pure, but (whom) he let go out of
respect and awe." Larry and his mother, a night school student at Arctic
College, live
in Fort Simmer, a north-of-the-60th parallel town near the border of Alberta. Jed, his
mother's on-again, off-again boy friend, is a traditional Slavey Indian trapper whom
Larry identifies as
a father-figure, and who promises to take Larry out "on the land" for
a season of trapping. Larry is amenable
to this, but he is still comfortable in his
high-school world of hanging out with Johnny, lusting after Juliet
from afar, {79} trying
his best to avoid the numerous school-ground fist-fights, and playing his tape deck
"cranked up" with AC/DC, Judas priest, and Iron Maiden.
Slowly, through a number of finely crafted,
fragmented flashbacks, the reader
learns of Larry's past, in which his biological father physically and sexually
abused him
and later died in a cabin fire that Larry himself may have started. Like Welch's
emotionally frozen nameless narrator of Winter in the Blood, Larry gradually awakens
to love and affection--after
he surprisingly (to himself most of all) consummates his
sexual desire for Juliet in a brief relationship--and
learns to retrust his mother and to
give himself fully in a father-son relationship with Jed. The Lesser
Blessed, incredibly
funny and wise-cracking in many places, is nonetheless filled with the genuine
ingredients of a well-wrought tragi-comedy.
The Lesser Blessed is also the harbinger of a sophisticated
Arctic literature, and
of a bold new direction for contemporary Native literature. And while it is perhaps
not
the first novel to come out of the Canadian Northwest Territories, it is certainly the first
work of fiction by a Native writer from that vast region. By all accounts, it is a
masterful achievement.
Dr. Geary Hobson
Coming of Age is Never EasyReview Date: 2004-08-22
Writing from the sensibility of a Canadian aboriginal artist, a First Nation author speaking from within the experience of life as a member of the Dogrib nation, Van Camp imbues his novel with a definite sense of the indigenous culture situated within the history of Canadian social colonization. His 16-year-old narrator and primary protagonist, Larry, is comfortable with the First Nation culture passed down to him by his family. However, Larry truly finds himself coming alive in the stories told by his mother¡¦s firefighter boyfriend, Jed.
As the novel progresses and we discover the dark ¡§devil¡¦s kiss¡¨ secret that weighs so heavily upon Larry¡¦s heart, it becomes increasingly clear that Jed the firefighter is there to save Larry from burning in the flames of guilt and shame. The quenching waters that he offers the tormented teen are his stories, histories and mythologies. Indeed, the chilling influence of Adrian C. Louis and Leslie Marmon Silko is recognizable in this novel at its darkest moments. This is certainly not a childhood story of nostalgia and happiness, but neither is it a tale overwhelmed by sadness and self-destruction.
The sharing of stories helps Larry survive the challenges thrown at him as a North American teenager: experimenting with drugs; dealing with bullies; controlling sexual urges; getting into fights; and making friends. Scattered across the pages of almost every chapter is the music of the period, as Larry also draws strength from his favorite band, Iron Maiden. Band names and song titles are peppered throughout the novel. Most post-teenaged readers will probably smile as they remember how very important music was to them as teens.
Especially satisfying is Van Camp¡¦s playfulness with language and his creation of a jargon that is both pleasant and jarring, such as the hyper-speech that Larry calls ¡§Raven talk.¡¨ The dialogue is often fast and funny, although the humor tends toward the darker edges of comedy. Most intriguing are the flashes of memory offered up in dreamlike and psychedelic patterns. Watch out for those blue monkeys.
If the novel has any failing, it is the brevity of the work. The story takes place in the space of a few weeks, and though ¡§manhood¡¨ or ¡§adulthood¡¨ remain far from Larry¡¦s grasp, he revels in his life experiences and fancies himself lucky to be alive. For the cynical adult reader, Larry's joy represents his naivety; his faith in love seems misplaced. Poor Larry just doesn¡¦t know what kind of mud the world still has in store for him, for us all. But maybe, just maybe, he¡¦ll survive better than the rest of us because he¡¦s got stories, Jed¡¦s stories and his own, to keep him going.
Timothy R. Fox
Kui Xing: The Journal of Asian/Diasporic and Aboriginal Literature
http://www.kuixing.panopticonasia.com
Join the Kui Xing Discussion Group
Awesome!Review Date: 2001-11-07
-Joseph Bruchac
Collectible price: $15.00

How Women Are HumanReview Date: 2007-05-29
At Last!Review Date: 2002-07-26
At Last!Review Date: 2002-07-26
lip serviceReview Date: 2002-01-08
Interesting TalesReview Date: 1997-11-25
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I would have given the book five stars, instead of four, if it were not for a very misleading title, which gives a false impression of the content of the book. I think that the title is misleading on two levels. It is more about the invasion of America by Canada than the other way around. True, the Canadian invasion occurred in order to forestall a probable invasion by the US. The fact remains, however, that the first breach of the border occurred by Canada invading US territory when the local US forces did not even know that the US had declared war against Great Britain. Except for a brief US incursion, rapidly followed by a quick retreat back across the border, all of the fighting described in the book was on US soil. Thus, a more accurate title should have been the 1812 invasion of the US by Canada. This is not however my primary objection and had this been my only objection I would have completely overlooked it.
My second objection to the title is, in my opinion, much more important. The subtitle is 1812-1813, yet except for some actions that carried over into January of 1813, everything takes place in 1812. This is very important because the fighting between the US and British\Canadian forces can only be adequately understood if the events of 1813 are also covered in some detail. I felt cheated because I invested time and only got half of the story. Not only that, the half that is reported only covers the woeful blundering of the US forces. The narrative stops before the eventual redemption of the American land and Naval forces. It does not describe the 1813 fighting on land that pushed the British and Indians from Fort Detroit, nor the momentous naval victories on Lakes Champlain and Erie that led to the actual invasion of Canada and the capture and burning of the provincial capitol of York (modern day Toronto). The burning of York is never even mentioned, even though it occurred in 1813 and, in part, led to the retaliatory burning of Washington DC. The net effect is to produce a partial and very misleading picture of the US-British\Canadian fighting during the initial phases of the War of 1812. Had I known that I was to get only part of the story I probably would have invested my time in a more complete history. It was only the high quality of the narrative of the events of 1812 that prevented me from giving the book less than 4 stars.