Virginia Books
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Excellent insight for SeamstressReview Date: 2004-07-09
Connecting Textiles and ScienceReview Date: 2001-05-21
Great textReview Date: 2007-07-02

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Important Work of Civil War ScholarshipReview Date: 2007-09-09
Hess reserves most of the technical details of entrenchment and breastwork design for an appendix, leaving his main narrative fast-moving and compelling. "Trench Warfare under Grant and Lee" is an important contribution to Civil War literature and should find a ready spot on the bookshelves of any serious student of the era. I look forward to his planned third volume, to examine field fortifications during the Petersburg campaign.
Inevitably, it must be asked how Hess views the Overland Campaign in balance. Was it a Union or a Confederate success? Although Hess does not absolve Grant of errors in too hastily ordering attacks or in failing to recognize the power of impromptu fieldworks, Hess concludes: "Grant's most significant achievement in the Overland campaign was not in capturing territory, or in positioning his army close to Richmond, or in reducing the fighting strength of the Army of Northern Virginia by 50 percent; rather it lay in robbing Lee of the opportunity to launch large-scale offensives against the Army of the Potomac. In laying claim to the strategic initiative, Grant won an important physical and emotional victory over Lee, and he did it with fewer losses than his predecessors had suffered in attempting the same goal ... Most important, he did not give up the strategic initiative and thereby brought the war to an end. The Overland campaign was as much a watershed in the strategic course of the Civil War as the Seven Days."
The War ChangesReview Date: 2008-01-02
Three years of the harsh reality of war changed all that, and by the time of the Overland Campaign, troops on both sides were digging in fast and furiously whenever they got the chance. Aside from the Vicksburg and Petersburg campaigns, nowhere was the entrenchment so obvious as in the Overland one. Most Civil War buffs know about the entrenchments at Spotsylvania and Cold Harbor. But many will probably be surprised (as was I) that entrenchments were also dug in The Wilderness and at the Bermuda Hundred.
Hess' account of the evolution of fortifications in this stage of the war is well-written and entirely accessible to the nonspecialist. He tends to protect Grant from the general's worst critics, arguing (much as does James McPherson) that the huge cost of federal lives in the Overland in fact did succeed in strategically defeating Lee.
The photographs are priceless. I've actually never seen most of them before. Moreover, the line drawings of fortifications and entrenchments are brilliant. All in all, highly recommended.
DIG, DAMNIT DIG!Review Date: 2007-10-10
The author continues working fortifications into the overall campaign giving the reader an excellent history of the Overland Campaign in the process. This presentation keeps the subject fresh while presenting the nuanced tactical differences in a logical sequential manner. This is very much a battle history but the emphasis is on how fortifications changed the campaign even as the campaign changed fortifications.
Earl Hess is one of our best authors. In this series and this book, he manages to give the reader a rich learning experience coupled with an enjoyable read. This is not a beginner's book but can be enjoyed by anyone with some knowledge of the Civil War.

A Hidden TreasureReview Date: 1999-01-24
A Hidden TreasureReview Date: 1999-01-25
PerfectReview Date: 2000-07-10
Orr's credentials are rock-solid, too: he is a citizen of Israel and a former member of the Israeli Defence Forces, so he knows that nation from the inside. While he believed at first in the righteousness of Israel's cause, as a soldier and member of civilian society he came to see the true, criminal nature of the state. He compares its siege mentality to that of the Nazis, a comparison only a Jew can make.
If you haven't time to digest great tomes on Israel and the Middle East, sift through this one-hundred page beauty and emerge a more enlightened man.

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The Best Gardening Book I Own!Review Date: 2008-08-13
The Book I Wish I'd Had When I Started Gardening, and Glad to Have NowReview Date: 2008-08-06
If you only get one book on mid-Atlantic gardening, make it this oneReview Date: 2008-08-05
For many years, my rite of spring has been to pour through gardening books, making lists, taking notes, and ordering plants from near and far.
The results in my garden hardly seemed worth the effort. Flowers bloomed out of their noted sequence; plants raved over in ink failed when in the ground; and my dreams of a lush, continuous display of interesting flora typically withered by mid-summer.
This book has changed that. It is specific, practical, knowledgeable and totally competent. Ms. Williamson gives accurate guidance on everything from selecting plants to dealing with pests.
She has also sought out expert advice from regional authorities - people who have years of experience and who work at Virginia Tech, the Virginia Arboretum, Chanticleer and local nurseries. Their comments add further credibility to a book that already has a strong foundation in fact and observation.
While even the most advanced gardener will gain from reading this book ... it is a treasure trove for those who have enthusiasm but who need to know more about how to do it well.
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AMAZING!!!Review Date: 2007-07-17
The best book I have ever read!!Review Date: 2005-07-09
A Truly Wonderful Story Tha Warms the HeartReview Date: 2007-06-26

Contents:Review Date: 2004-05-31
The University Press of Virginia
1969
Contents:
Part One: 17th Century Forerunners covers the First Germans in Virginia.
Part Two:
In the Piedmont
In the valley of Virginia
First Consolidation
Indian Wars
Revolutionary War
Part Three:
Distribution of Colonial Stock
Bilingual Politics
Slavery
The German Churches
Cultural Resources
Folkways, Crafts & Arts
Vanishing Traces
Part Four:
Isolation and Nativism
Civil War and Reconstruction
German Americanism
Prohibition and World War
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Maps:
German Settlements 1714-1745
German Congregations in 1810
What a ClassicReview Date: 2002-01-24
History in lieu of geneologyReview Date: 2000-11-08

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Enlightening, to the point, and beautifully doneReview Date: 1998-04-01
The book proves its own points via its own beautifully done "user interface".
Very good design bookReview Date: 1999-11-01
1.It is short and practical.
2.This book is surprisingly thorough. I thought that this book might be too tactical and too focused on Microsoft Windows. It turned out to be full of general principles that could be applied in any software design situation. In fact it is full of information that would help any type of design process.
3.This book is well written and easy to read. I enjoyed reading this book.
4.Most of the principles in the book are timeless. Even though the examples are dated the principles can be applied today.
5.This book is written by someone who has had a huge impact on lots of real world software. The book reflects a lot of successful experience with high profile products. It is obvious that the author knows how to work with engineers and designers under high pressure situations and still manage to ensure strong design.
Excellent materialReview Date: 1998-08-12

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An excellent travel companion...Review Date: 2003-06-17
I didn't actually walk any of the suggested walks, but did see many of the sights highlighted in this book.
This little book is packed full of information. It's arranged in a logical manner and it's inexpensive. What more can you ask for?
Excellent guide and needed resource!Review Date: 1999-05-15
great way to explore the va. beach a tourist will never seeReview Date: 1999-05-26

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The Garden of the Father of Our CountryReview Date: 2008-07-30
Beatiful and fascinatingReview Date: 2003-05-08
Lots of well researched interesting facts, useful advice, historical insight and pretty pictures make this book thoroughly enjoyable and I recomend it highly.
Beatiful and fascinatingReview Date: 2003-05-08
Lots of well researched interesting facts, useful advice, historical insight and pretty pictures make this book thoroughly enjoyable and I recomend it highly.

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Way Down Deep in Their HeartsReview Date: 2008-03-05
Way Down DeepReview Date: 2007-04-18
The cast of delightful characters include: a man who arrives with a goat which he offers Miss Arbutus in exchange for lodging and food; this goat loves to stand on a Studebaker to view his new town, Ruby's classmate Reese who loves to sing but sings off-key "In his own mind he was the second coming of Hank Williams, but to everybody else he was as off-key as a hillbilly slung up drunk on moonshine", Mrs. Thornton Elkins a "cultured lady" whose husband died in their first year of marriage so she moves into the Roost to recuperate for a few weeks, then a few months, then a few years; when she runs out of money, donations of food items and bolts of dress material are left for her so she could wear "simple but stylish dresses". One day an inept bank robber who is easily confounded, scared of real guns and so carries a plastic gun, cries when he tries and fails to hold up the town bank successfully. When it turns out he arrived in town on a bus and plans to leave on a bus, the townspeople are too polite to suggest to him a getaway on a bus was not the best idea. Nevertheless, the townspeople "adopt" his family since he is down on his luck. When Ruby is eleven years old, an uncle shows up to reclaim her; the interior motive proves to be that she is required to take care of a constantly angry and bitter grandmother. Ruby ingeniously starts telling her stories about the nurturing town where she grew up. Later when Ruby insists on returning to Way Down Deep, the grandmother wants to move there too where she might finally have some friends. This is a charming and uplifting story of a community that treasures its children (the adults put on a Kid's Day to celebrate all of them) and offers help to those in need. Yes, the residents are nosey and news travels fast, yet who would not want to live in this unique town where the residents are respectful of each other's idiosyncrasies and extend their love and care to residents and strangers alike. This is a powerful story of redemption and acceptance that is humorous and filled with interesting characters.
A fine story of bonds and community connections evolves.Review Date: 2007-07-10
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