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Florida Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Florida
I Speak For This Child: True Stories of a Child Advocate
Published in Hardcover by Crown (1995-01-24)
Author: Gay Courter
List price: $24.00
New price: $11.93
Used price: $1.51
Collectible price: $24.00

Average review score:

Advocate's Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-02
I Speak for This Child: True Stories of a Child Advocate Having been a child advocate, this book is more than the journey of one child advocate. From beginning to end, the author informs the reader of how she dealt with certain challenges, and how a child advocate can do more for a child in foster care than they realize.

As a child advocate this book really puts child abuse by our system in prospective!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
This is the best book I have ever read by a child advocate. Our system does not do right by abused children. If we don't get our system in better shape all these foster children will be in our prison system. And did you know it cost more to pay for prison than it does college!!

Thanks Gay and keep up the great undying work you do!!!

P.S. Everyone in the GAL office in Putnam County is reading your book and Ashley's

Read this book!
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-22
This chronicle of the author's experiences as a Guardian Ad Litem in Florida will alternately enlighten you, frustrate you, inspire you, and make you angry. Much, I would expect, like being a Guardian. Besides giving others a blueprint on "how to help," and serving as an education on some of society's problems that most people wish they could ignore, this book is great reading, chock full of emotionally-involving, often heart-rending stories. Prepare to be engrossed.

This book changed my life.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-03
As a freshman in college, I stumbled upon this book in the library, and soon after dedicated myself to improving the child welfare system. Courter's account is incredibly inspiring, emphasizing the responsibility we all have to speak up for kids who have been wronged by our systems. I have now been a court appointed special advocate myself, and it is the most heartbreaking (but rewarding!) volunteer experience of my life.

If you're looking for a book that will be difficult to put down, and stories of kids who are difficult to turn your back on, then this book is for you.

A look into the life
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-24
I picked up the book by Gay Courter and could not put it down. Inspiring! I can't say enough about it!

Florida
Look and Tremble; A Novel of West Florida
Published in Hardcover by Father and Son Publishing (2000-02-12)
Author: Jesse Earle Bowden
List price: $21.95
New price: $17.78
Used price: $15.99
Collectible price: $21.95

Average review score:

Praise for Look and Tremble and Earle Bowden
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-30
This book has a special meaning for me because I grew up in the same town as the author, and have known of his writing abilities for many years.

Look and Tremble
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-05
Jesse Earle Bowden's novel, LOOK AND TREMBLE, presents a vivid account of life in Ring Jaw, a gritty crossroads town in Northwest Florida, during the l940s and l950s. I was struck by the poetic rhythm of his writing, much like the ebb and flow of the river currents he portrays so graphically.

One comes away with the satisfying feeling of watching a boy, Chance Cahoon, grow to manhood in the bosom of a loving family; where he learns about loyalty and love, racism, hate, bullies and cowardice. The town of Ring Jaw is well portrayed, and the characters come alive with all their sterling qualities and damning flaws. One gets to know their kindness and generosity; their cruelty. He brings to mind the gossiping harpies who hate their lives and are stuck in the quagmire of sameness unending, yet are the first to rally when misfortune strikes their neighbors. There are the good churchgoing grannies who organize the cemetery workings and rain disapproval on those who don't attend the yearly ritual. Also, the church dinners on the ground and all day gospel singing under the hand-held fans provided by the funeral parlor.

Chance Cahoon's playmates, Will Buck, Ben Henry Swinnard and RC Hickey, form a tight bond of friendship and share the secrets and ghosts of the river. There is Rattler Ransom, who is rumored to be Chance's father. A rawhide of a man, he is a law unto himself. He keeps his own counsel and is quick to defend that right. The tension builds to near disaster when town bullies, Rooster Reddoake and Hunky Hogan, discover the boys boiling peanuts on the river bank one night and drunkenly attempt to settle grudges against Chance's grandfather, Solomon Chance Cahoon. The low key scene on the river is classic, in the vein of Harper Lee's TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD; no heroics, only frightened children who stand their ground against their tormentors, and their strength prevails.

Bowden evokes feelings, memories, of growing up in a long ago age, in a town called Ring Jaw, that still maintains the old values of sharing and caring for their neighbors. His love for the river is an integral part of who he is, and he writes from the heart with the nostalgia and love of a native son who learned all he needed to know at his grandfather's knee

LOOK AND TREMBLE is a book you will want to re-read.

Look and Tremble
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-05
Jesse Earle Bowden's novel, LOOK AND TREMBLE, presents a vivid account of life in Ring Jaw, a gritty crossroads town in Northwest Florida, during the l940s and l950s. I was struck by the poetic rhythm of his writing, much like the ebb and flow of the river currents he portrays so graphically.

One comes away with the satisfying feeling of watching a boy, Chance Cahoon, grow to manhood in the bosom of a loving family; where he learns about loyalty and love, racism, hate, bullies and cowardice. The town of Ring Jaw is well portrayed, and the characters come alive with all their sterling qualities and damning flaws. One gets to know their kindness and generosity; their cruelty. He brings to mind the gossiping harpeis who hate their lives and are stuck in the quagmire of sameness unending, yet are the first to rally when misfortune strikes their neighbors. There are the good churchgoing grannies who organize the cemetery workings and rain disapproval on those who don't attend the yearly ritual. Also, the church dinners on the ground and all day gospel singing under the hand-held fans provided by the funeral parlor.

Chance Cahoon's playmates, Will Buck, Ben Henry Swinnard and RC Hickey, form a tight bond of friendship and share the secrets and ghosts of the river. There is Rattler Ransom, who is rumored to be Chance's father. A rawhide of a man, he is a law unto himself. He keeps his own counsel and is quick to defend that right. The tension builds to near disaster when town bullies, Rooster Reddoake and Hunky Hogan, discover the boys boiling peanuts on the river bank one night and drunkenly attempt to settle grudges against Chance's grandfather, Solomon Chance Cahoon. The low key scene on the river is classic, in the vein of Harper Lee's TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD; no heroics, only frightened children who stand their ground against their tormentors, and their strength prevails.

Bowden evokes feelings, memories, of growing up in a long ago age, in a town called Ring Jaw, that still maintains the old values of sharing and caring for their neighbors. His love for the river is an integral part of who he is, and he writes from the heart with the nostalgia and love of a native son who learned all he needed to know at his grandfather's knee

LOOK AND TREMBLE is a book you will want to re-read.

Contributing writer for Pensacola News Journal & magazines.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-11
Spellbound. That's what happened to my mind after reading the first chapter of this novel by a country Florida boy, now grown to manhood, and putting words on paper that facinate readers across the world.
Bowden takes actual events from his boyhood memories and fictionalizes them into an overpowering story of murder, terror and ghosts that shadowed his own life, as well as recollections of tales told around the cracker barrel of an isolated country store on rainy days.
The book is a haunting novel of a young man who grew up fatherless in Ring Jaw, and now returns after the death of the man he never knew as his biological father. He encounters spirits from the past that cause him to wonder about his own life.
Bowden has the ability to put words on paper that come alive and take you to the place where he sets the scenes for his story. You see, smell, hear, taste and feel the things he felt when he wrote the novel.
If you like adventure, mystery and a life-changing experience, I highly recommend Look and Tremble.

Ghosts of the Panhandle
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-16
Set in the Panhandle of Florida several decades ago, this novel gives a gripping account of violence, race and coming of age in a small town. Jesse Earle Bowden, who was editor of the Pensacola News Journal for 31 years, writes with the authority reserved for someone who was there. The story revolves around the secrets of a nearby river that offers up boyhood memories, a headless man, ghosts and, eventually, a modern-day murder. The book is a flashback in time that will appeal to West Floridians as well as just about anyone who wonders how things once were.

Florida
The Missing Page: A Brenda Strange Mystery (Brenda Strange Mysteries)
Published in Paperback by Bella Books (2005-10-20)
Author: Patty G. Henderson
List price: $12.95
New price: $7.45
Used price: $5.50

Average review score:

Thank You Ms. Henderson!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-13
I have been a fan of Brenda Strange since the first book "The Burning of Her Sin". I was taken from my Midwest home to the warmth and the sea breezes of Tampa. But Ms. Henderson's latest installment of this series took my heart. From the opening to the unforeseen ending, I was walking with Brenda every step of the way. I greedily consumed this book in one sitting. When I was done I sat astonished.
Thank you Ms. Henderson for giving us Brenda Strange.
Please, please, may we have the next in the series SOON?

Another Visit with Brenda Strange
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-14
I was so glad when The Missing Page was finally published - It meant I got to have another visit with Brenda Strange. The main characters of series I really enjoy are like friends - you really look forward to seeing them again. I was not disappointed with this visit. Brenda is continuing a case she first heard about at the end of the last book. Trying to find a missing rare book. This case has many twists and turns and then theending is a shocker. Please take the time to visit with Brenda and all her friends. You will not regret it.

A Spine-Chilling Mystery That May Make You Lose Sleep
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-29
Tampa P.I. Brenda Strange often finds herself in the middle of weird cases, but even when she's in over her head she never loses hers. Not so for her client, a man in search of a lost manuscript, who is found decapitated. More heads roll as Brenda continues her search for the manuscript and it's author, a magician of the black arts.

Author Patty G. Henderson does not disappoint with this, her third book featuring private detective Brenda Strange. Ms. Henderson dares to go where many writers dare not go by taking readers out of their comfort zone and thrusting them into situations they only experience in nightmares. Now and then she allows you to take a breath, then she grabs you by the collar and drags you to the end of the story, with an unexpected conclusion that will make you gasp.

The Missing Page is a satisfying and heart-thudding read that will make you want to read more about Brenda and her strange investigations. I'll be impatiently waiting for Ms. Henderson's next book in the series.

A Spooky and Thrilling Read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-17
Private investigator Brenda Strange's cases always seem to start of normal, but you can be sure that they won't end that way. What with living with two ghosts - one who has a crush on her - and attempting to repair her on-again-off-again romance with her lover, Brenda shouldn't expect her life to be average. But when she's contacted by a potential client who wants her to find a missing manuscript, Brenda doesn't expect a string of decapitation murders, a creepy occultist, or a possible formula for immortality.

These mysteries read like an adventure series, with readers left itching for the next installment of the chronicles of Brenda's life. At a relatively brief 164 pages, the reader is sucked immediately for a swift and exciting ride and will be left heartbroken but wanting more. Henderson again delivers a wonderful and thrilling novel that will have readers demanding more Brenda Strange mysteries.

Heartstopping suspense
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-06
Brenda Strange's new adventure will take her deep into the strange and dangerous world of a man long thought dead who was working on a way to become immortal when he died. When Clifford Satterly calls Brenda from Spain wanting to know how his case was progressing, he sounded desperate and told her time was running out and she had to find the Malenko manuscript and then hung up the phone. As Brenda searches through all the mail that stacked up while she was off work dealing with her mother's death, she is trying to remember what the Malenko manuscript was. She had met Clifford last year at an autograph show in Ft. Lauderdale when he and another dealer, Hilda Moran got into a shouting match over the manuscript. She was interested in buying the manuscript and he claimed that she stole it from him and she was claiming she never received it, in spite of a FedEx signature receipt. So Brenda goes to see Hilda, who once again asserts that the signature is a forgery, who also explains to her that the Malenko manuscript is the last written record left by Conrad Malenko, a Russian occultist who was rumored to have studied under the famous black magician, Aleister Crowley. The manuscript is rumored to have contained a ceremony for eternal life but he disappeared after the Second World War. She then goes on to tell Brenda that there is a curse attached to the manuscript but she doesn't believe in curses.

When her client is found decapitated, Brenda thinks about dropping the investigation but then decides she has an obligation to him to finish the case. And then more brutal killings occur, with all of the victims decapitated but the heads taken. As Brenda digs deeper into the life of Malenko, she discovers that the heads are a part of the ritual and realizes that someone is trying to complete the spell. And this will be a discovery that will plunge her into the worst nightmare of her life and cost her more than she ever thought she could pay. Henderson has once again created a top notch story with an ending so shocking it will take your breath away.

Florida
Mmmmiami: Tempting Tropical Tastes for Home Cooks Everywhere
Published in Hardcover by Henry Holt and Co. (1998-10-07)
Authors: Martin Kotkin and Kathy Martin
List price: $27.50
New price: $9.99
Used price: $5.00

Average review score:

I am cooking my way through now. Love the flavors..
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-25
We've been cooking the pork dishes with the salsas and chutneys. Easy to do several at a time and have nice summer food without reheating the kitchen. An even better collection than I first thought.

Mmmmmm Good, Really Good
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-13
Mmmmiami is one of the five best Florida/Gulf Coast cookbooks out there. Well, that's my opinion. I've been updating my Amazon "So You'd Like to Guides" and I have one on Key Lime Pie. Take a look at it if you want. Anyway, I've included fifty cookbooks (the maximum Amazon will allow) in all my guides, so I've had a chance to go through my collection. And quite a collection it is, I've got hundreds of cookbooks and I go through them all the time. That's my problem, how to organize them. While going through what I wanted to include in my guides, I started separating them into piles, the ones I couldn't live without and the ones, if I absolutely had to, I could give away as gifts, you know, like if we moved into a very small place.

Mmmmiami is one I could never part with. I love the food and the atmosphere of Florida and the Gulf Coast, have spent a lot of time there, as I'm a sailing lady. I'm also somewhat of a gourmet chef. I spend a lot of time in the kitchen, or galley, depending if I'm at home in the States or on our boat in the Caribbean. The recipes here will make your family, or even just yourself, if you live alone, drool. They are mouthwatering good and that's the truth.

Review submitted by Captain Katie Osborne

A beautiful book from a true food professional.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-24
A wonderful book if I still lived in Miami. The availability of some of the products might be limited to Florida and major metropolitan areas. I would love Carole to publish something from her early cooking classes. I rely on those recipes on a regular basis.

Mmmmm Mmmmm Good
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-18
Reading through MMMiami is almost as much fun as actually tasting the results. This readable collection of recipes showcases the best of Miami's tropical and latin cuisine with an emphasis on using only the freshest ingredients available. Sprinkled throughout with helpful hints, historical tidbits, and fun food facts, MMMiami is filled with easy to understand recipes that are sure crowd pleasers. The techniques and tips offer time-saving shortcuts that will help not only for the recipes contained here, but for all of your daily cooking tasks. The authors succeed in sharing their knowledge and love of Florida foods to the rest of us who (until now) have only dreamt of being able to concoct a coconut flan. The chocolate-pecan torte is worth the price of the book alone.

Delicious recipes/intriguing text give readers a taste of FL
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-21
As a former Miamian now living in Virginia, reading this wonderful new book was like taking a trip to my hometown. It has many delicious recipes that seem to me to capture the true essence of tropical cuisine. Try making the Hot and Tangy Black Bean Dip for an easy (and low fat) snack that will wake up your taste buds.I prepared the Calabazas and Sweet Potato Soup for company and received raves reviews from my guests.It's really simple to make and everyone will think you worked all day cooking it.Mmmmiami also offers the reade an interesting history of the growth of So. Florida and the influence that the influx of Latin tourists, businesspeople and immigrants have had on the culture.The book's witty and clever text explains why tropical cuisine is now the hottest food trend sweeping the country.I think this wonderful book should be a staple (like black beans and rice)in the house of any serious cook. I recommend Mmmmiami highly.

Florida
My Brother's Hero (Peachtree Junior Publication)
Published in Hardcover by Peachtree Publishers (2002-09)
Author: Adrian Fogelin
List price: $14.95
New price: $3.99
Used price: $0.05
Collectible price: $16.82

Average review score:

Great Story, but watch the language
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-02
Got this book because it was on the Sunshine State Readers list for 3-5 grade. Problem: author uses language that is inappropriate for this age group. Several uses of the word "bu**" another "fa**" and several "b**b", which I find inappropriate for 8 -10 year old kids. My local public elementary school won't even stock the book. Why would Mr. Fogelin do this to an otherwise great kids book?

Praise for Adrian Fogelin's Books and a reaction to a previous review
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-29
Both my husband and myself are educators and have had the pleasure of reading many of Adrian Fogelin's books. I felt compelled to write this review both in praise of Mrs. Fogelin's excellent stories, and in reaction the the posting below that complains of the offensive language used in My Brother's Hero.

First, let's make clear what we're talking about: the terms this individual is referring to are the f-word, and two b-words (that's "fart," "butt" and "boob" - yes, I wrote them out without the asterisks...gasp!). Of course, every parent is entitled to decide what is appropriate for their child to read, however, I would be deeply saddened to think that any one would be deprived of the opportunity to experience Mrs. Fogelin's wonderful stories because of (let's say it clearly) some extremely mild language.

Our children are growing up in a world in which anorexic starlets who flit in and out of rehab and forget their underwear are held up as role models; in which a University student can murder two people, compile and mail a deranged manifesto (which is later aired on national television), and then go on to murder 29 others and himself; in a country embroiled in war and fearful of an unknowable, ever-present terrorist threat; and yes, they are keenly aware of, and affected by, all of this.

Adrian Fogelin's stories, which are wonderfully written, are in direct contrast to all of the 'over the top' nonsense that has become our reality. Mrs. Fogelin's books are great because they show kids that it's OK to be who they are, even if what they are is chubby, or poor, or nerdy. They are tales of normal kids, leading normal lives, having friendships, confronting their problems and, here's the kicker, making the right choices, the hard, not the glamorous or instantly-gratifying choices. And yes, the characters do occasionally say things, like 'butt' or 'fart,' but isn't that what kids actually do?

So I guess in a long-winded way I'm saying that Adrian Fogelin's books are a great choice for any parent looking for something meaningful for their kids to read. The characters and situations are often funny and touching, sometimes sad or embarrassing, but always thoughtfully portrayed and in my opinion, completely appropriate for any reader of any age.

Friendship, Heroism, Adventure
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-12
As good as the author's award-winning CROSSING JORDAN, this book explores such serious issues as friendship, responsibility, and heroism then laces them with adventure and laugh-out-loud funny lines. The story is absorbing, and the characters will leave you hoping for a sequel.

Another Great Book by Adrian Fogelin!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-01
This book is the 3rd in a series ("Crossing Jordan", "Anna Casey's Place in the World", and "My Brother's Hero") about some kids from a North Florida neighborhood. They get a chance to spend time in the Florida Keys. The characters are terrific and very realistic! The story has things any 4th grade through early high school has experienced: The excitement and risks of adventure, the first dawnings of girl-boy relationships as well as the fun and anxiety of growing up, but don't tell the kids that! To them, it will be a great adventure story set in the colorful Florida Keys full of exotic ocean life! It has a great climax that will keep them riveted! I would recommend all the books in the series:: "Crossing Jordan", "Anna Casey's Place in the World", and "My Brother's Hero".

A Florida adventure that will stay with you for a long time
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-21
Adrian Fogelin has the enviable ability to spin an adventure tale in a strong character driven tale. She builds unique and fascinating child and teen characters and lets conflict build naturally with the characters and their circumstances bumping into each other. This is not the easiest way to build a plot in a young adult story--but it creates a bond between readers and characters that is seldom attained by most of today's young adult writers. "My Brother's Hero" not only has sea adventure and unique characters--it also has detailed nautical description of the Florida Keys. Adrian also captures the love/hate relationship between siblings with believability and humor.
This novel is enjoyed by both boys and girls in our middle school media center.
This is a good read. An adult reading it aloud with a child would
find much to enjoy too.

Florida
My Florida Alphabet
Published in Library Binding by Pineapple Press (FL) (2007-03-15)
Author: Annie P. Johnson; Russell W. Johnson
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.26
Used price: $17.82

Average review score:

Adorable book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
I love this book and have bought it for a few friends children. The CD of the song that comes with the book is wonderful! My husband and I are singing along to it in the car! The reason I gave it four stars, is I would have loved for the author to put the words to the song under each alphabet letter in the story. Overall, it has great illustrations and hand movements to go with it.

Wonderful book to accompany a fun CD
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-31
I purchased this book for my 5 year old daughter who is in PreK. They are singing the Florida Alphabet at their graduation next week. I got to see a practice round of the song at school and learned there was a book and CD package to have her practice at home too. The book is wonderful with beautiful illustrations and all the words for each letter of the alphabet. It shows the arm movements to accompany each letter to make it more fun. The song is very catchy and fun to sing along with. The only problem is the song will be in your head all day! I would recommend this set for any child learning their letters and sounds.

Amazing Book and CD
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
This was an awesome Book and CD set. My class of 4 and 5 year olds love it. We even performed it in our Preschool Graduatioin !!!!

My Florida Alphabet book with music CD
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-09
Kids love this book and song. It is really neat watching your child sing along and do the movements shown in the book. My granddaughter who is only 4 learned this song with movements in a day and never stopped singing it for a week. She loves it. I really think it is worth the money. We both sing it now and do the movements and she lets me know if I get something wrong.

If you want your kids to enjoy reading, start with this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-03
We picked up a copy of this book directly from the authors as a gift to my 3 year-old daughter about a year ago. Back then, she wasn't too crazy about books due to her short attention span, so we just read/sang that book and showed her the motions for each letter before bedtime.

Now, only 12 months later, she loves reading this book. We let her pick from her selection of about 60 books each night and this one pops up at least twice a week. What's cool is that she has a lot of fun singing the letters and now she will do the motions with us too. She is just now at the age where she is making the connections between letters and the sounds they make. I suspect she will hit three letter words within a month or two.

If you have trouble getting your kids to find enjoyment in learning their letters, this book will do the trick. But you have to go through all the motions, that's reading, singing and (literally) going through the motions. Pretty soon you AND your child will be having a blast as you teach them to read.

Florida
Natural Wonders of The Florida Keys
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Companies (1999-08-11)
Author: Deborah Straw
List price: $14.95
New price: $11.11
Used price: $5.14

Average review score:

an excellent guide
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-14
This book is a treasure for anyone planning to visit the Florida Keys, or even those merely interested in a vicarious experience with one of the country's most astonishing destinations. It also lists resources for people who might want to become more involved with environmental issues. Thoroughly researched and full of valuable insights, Deborah Straw's beautifully-written work resonates for readers who consider the ecosystem important.

A Wonderful way to explore the Keys
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-05
Deborah Straws book makes visiting the Keys a wonderful natural approach. This is not a book for high end, hotel and restaurant types - if you are looking for recommendations to such. But for those of us that want to view and explore the beauties of nature, this book is number one. No, not meaning it is a camping book. Instead, it is a book for those wanting to explore the Keys - stay where you may but use this book as a source of great and fun ways to see the natural aspect of the Keys.

Take Me to the Keys
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-08
If Deborah Straw ever leads a trip to revisit her Natural Wonders of the Florida Keys, I would like to know about it. In her book, she brought back many wonderful memories to me of my three years living in Key West, and traveling all over the keys with my family. It was many years ago, in the 50s, when the keys were more alive with flora and fauna than colorful humans who habitate there now. She made it come alive for me again. I read the book in a night, and am rereading it again. Yes, I think she would be a wonderful guide. Take me there, Deborah.

Informative and insightful
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-06
Natural Wonders of the Florida Keys is a friendly, informative companion for a leisurely journey through our country's sultry southern archipelago. Along the way we are introduced to a wide variety of animals, plants, and ecosystems. There are directions for finding beaches, parks, trails, and organizations dedicated to wildlife and habitat preservation. Thumbnail descriptions of various animals that inhabit the Keys pop up from the narrative like furry heads peering through the bushes. Leafing through the pages, one is surrounded by skinks and alligators. Herons and egrets take flight on our approach, and manatees glide gracefully by. We are introduced to forests, mangroves, reefs, and tropical gardens. There are also hints for observing and interacting with the human fauna, such as the quirky characters who inhabit Mallary Square in Key West.

As the days grow shorter and the temperature outside begins to fall, I can imagine myself hopping into a little sports car, cranking down the top, and pointing it south down Route 1. And who better to accompany me than the author, Deborah Straw? She clearly knows her way around, and sprinkles Natural Wonders with anecdotes, local history, and insider's info. Unlike dense travel guides crammed with useless data, Natural Wonders of the Florida Keys is good reading; introspective, humurous, and insightful. You'll enjoy it even if the closest you get to the Keys is Collins Avenue in Miami Beach.

Practical, friendly guide to wildlife of the Florida Keys
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-05
I liked this book so much I've already given it as a gift. It's aimed at those of us who simply want to enjoy wildlife in its natural surroundings without experiencing too much physical discomfort. In an appealing, conversational style Deborah Straw imparts a wealth of information including the history of each Keys area, tour opportunities, camping facilities, parks, wildlife refuges, etc. For example, in the Key West section you learn about walking tours, a glass bottom boat, the beaches, and how to get easily from Miami to Key West without taking an inconvenient car. You can feel in every page the author's deep love and respect for animals of all kinds. She has definite opinions with regard to their treatment and protection, and this compassionate current runs throughout. She tells the would-be visitor about the climate by season, and she even includes warnings about what NOT to do. And, she looks out for the cost-conscious travelor. At the end of the book is a short reading list and a good index. I haven't been to the Florida Keys yet, but when I go, I'll definitely take along this book.

Florida
The Rise and Fall of Dodgertown: 60 Years of Baseball in Vero Beach
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Florida (2008-03-02)
Author: RODY L. JOHNSON
List price: $24.95
New price: $13.00
Used price: $14.95

Average review score:

An engrossing history.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-06
THE RISE AND FALL OF DODGERTOWN: 60 YEARS OF BASEBALL IN VERO BEACH is a specialty item for baseball collections and Vero Beach area residents who enjoy game history. It charts the history of the Dodgers, who have been coming to Vero Beach every spring since 1948, and it tells of an entire culture and community which sprang up around the rise of 'Dodgertown'. Baseball fans will find this an engrossing history.

A history worth telling
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-25
This book really captures the spirit of Dodgertown and the special bond that grew and splintered between the community of Vero Beach and the Dodgers there. This book is packed with pictures and stories of Dodger greats, past and present. It's a shame they had to leave it, Spring Training will never be the same. But at least it's captured in prose!

A Great Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
This is a fascinating story, well researched by the author and laced with historic pictures. The book is full of anecdotes that vividly evoke the sixty years of Dodgertown and much more. Fay Vincent got it right: "It's a story that deserved telling. Rody has told it--and told it well."

A Fascinating Story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-06
Clearly a labor of love, this book tells not only Dodgertown's story, but baseball's and America's. I recommend it to anyone who enjoys forays into the cultural and economic evolution of the game. While baseball's players and facilities may have undergone dramatic changes through the years, Johnson's love of the sport clearly has not. A masterful work.

Tom

P.S. I also recommend "Spring Training Handbook" which goes to similar lengths to detail baseball's history in Florida.

Wish I'd Been There
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
At exactly the stroke of midnight last night, I read the last page of Dodgertown and laid the book aside. It was a wonderful read. I was sorry it ended.

The book is a winner in so many ways. Obviously, a tremendous amount of research went into it. But at the same time, it wears its research well, never becoming a tome. Knowing virtually nothing about Vero, the Dodgers, or the history of baseball, I kept learning on each page, while growing familiar with the place, the people, and the wonderful mystique of spring training. I really felt I was there.

And so, I was saddened, I mean really moved and at times angry, during those final chapters when everything seemed to fall apart. Your own last pages indicate that you, and probably others, have philosophically come to grips with the passing of the good old days, but for a reader like me, new to it all, it's terribly difficult to let go. I kept wanting to go back to the O'Malley days. I felt personal loss in that I'll probably never be able to experience the special nature of Dodgertown. Oh, sure - another team may come in. For a while it even looked as though it might be the Orioles. But even if the Os' had moved to Vero, the camp wouldn't have been the same.

Florida
Scenic Driving Florida
Published in Paperback by Falcon (1998-05-01)
Author: Jan Annino Godown
List price: $15.95
New price: $4.52
Used price: $0.24

Average review score:

In the path Muir, Audubon and Marjory Kinnan Rawlings
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-27
Notes from the road by author Jan Godown: Since age 13 I have criss-crossed Florida with my family, who never saw a rural route they didn't want to explore. Today I bring my own family to the places where Rawlings and Audubon fished and hunted, and where Muir camped on his 1,000 mile trek to the sea. This guide is informed by my background as a past director of the Florida Folklore Society and Florida Historical Society. It is for shunpikers. It takes you to places where you can renew your spirit. Visit along these routes, write in your journal about a Florida worth protecting, and go forth to teach about it.

In the path Muir, Audubon and Marjory Kinnan Rawlings
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-27
Notes from the road by author Jan Godown: Since age 13 I have criss-crossed Florida with my family, who never saw a rural route they didn't want to explore. Today I bring my own family to the places where Rawlings and Audubon fished and hunted, and where Muir camped on his 1,000 mile trek to the sea. This guide is informed by my background as a past director of the Florida Folklore Society and Florida Historical Society. It is for shunpikers. It takes you to places where you can renew your spirit. Visit along these routes, write in your journal about a Florida worth protecting, and go forth to teach about it.

In the path Muir, Audubon and Marjory Kinnan Rawlings
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-27
Notes from the road by author Jan Godown: Since age 13 I have criss-crossed Florida with my family, who never saw a rural route they didn't want to explore. Today I bring my own family to the places where Rawlings and Audubon fished and hunted, and where Muir camped on his 1,000 mile trek to the sea. This guide is informed by my background as a past director of the Florida Folklore Society and Florida Historical Society. It is for shunpikers. It takes you to places where you can renew your spirit. Visit along these routes, write in your journal about a Florida worth protecting, and go forth to teach about it.

Outstanding
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-12
This book offers all that you need to have a memorable vacation in Florida. There is no chance of getting lost and losing precious time as you drive through the Sunshine State. When I get my drivers license back, I will be able to use this book to the fullest

Don't Wander Through Florida Without It!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-24
There are so many instant books about Florida churned out by writers who have merely zipped through the state en route to their next publication date that it is a pleasure to read one by someone actually familiar with the area. Jan Godown is a veteran Tallahassee journalist who has traveled these roads many times, and the reader--whether Floridian or tourist--is the beneficiary. She knows the charms, the history, and the things that threaten these places--not just how many miles they are from the plastic worlds of Central Florida. This book is a keeper on my library shelf--when it's not traveling in the front seat of my car!

Florida
Seasons of Real Florida (Florida History and Culture)
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Florida (2004-04-08)
Author: Jeff Klinkenberg
List price: $24.95
New price: $13.50
Used price: $12.00

Average review score:

A Wonderful Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-04
The interesting Florida history written about in Peter Matthiessen's book, "Killing Mr. Watson" prompted further reading on the subject. Jeff Klinkenberg's stories capture that wonderful Florida background. Each chapter describes a different and quite unique Floridian person, place or thing, all spun into delightful true tales. Mr. Klinkenberg aptly chooses Florida history that displays "sense of place" so well. Like another reviewer, I'm a hard to please reader too. I couldn't put this book down, and I've never been to Florida. The cover photograph, "Loxahatchee River #30" by Clyde Butcher is so haunting, lovely and appropriate for this book. Fortunately Mr. Klinkenberg devotes an entire chapter describing the one-of-a-kind Clyde Butcher. This book is funny, very interesting and highly educational.

Loved This Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
I spent Winter '08 visiting my dad in urban Tampa, and looking for Old Florida, decidedly hard to find. Jeff's terrific narratives about so many interesting people and places augmented and often replaced my futile search.
I'm a hard-to-please reader, and this one completely satisfied.

Juicy Florida Reading
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-15
The book's editors (Mormino & Arsenault) invite us to sit down with Florida delectables, like orange juice, to read this book. My plan was to snag some recipes from Randy Wayne White's "The Fishing Guide's Guide to Tropical Cooking." Alas, Klinkenberg's book was in my custody for only a day when relatives spotted it on my table top and hauled it away for their reading pleasure. My half-a-book review: gimme my book back, I love this author!
"Seasons" real value is in the future when we read its stories of people and places and look back wistfully at Florida as it was. And it reminds me that Florida today is still full of charm. And charming writers like Jeff Klinkenberg.

Miami is NOT the REAL Florida!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-24
Jeff Klinkenberg has been out in his car on the back roads and he's found the reason everyone moved to Florida in the first place. When my great aunt moved to North Miami in 1927 her house was on stilts (floods and alligators); now it is surrounded by 6 foot chainlink fence topped with barbed wire (urban animals!). Jeff talks to people who tell him the stories in between those extremes. Excellent read for anyone who wonders what was there besides the weather.

A Miami Boy
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-21
If you want to know what real Florida is like, what it looks like, feels like, smells like and even tastes like -- fall through summer -- this is the book for you. Klinkenberg is a true original, a natural resource as valuable as the panther, manatee and black bear.


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