Kentucky Books
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Excellant Hunor at its BestReview Date: 1999-10-02

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A new (and much needed) look at the Ohio River ValleyReview Date: 2006-02-10
Drawing primarily on secondary sources, Bigham finds surprising similarities between the north and south shores during both the antebellum and postwar eras. He explores the wide ranging forms slavery (and freedom) took in various areas...for example, it seems that some slaves in Louisville possessed greater liberties than free blacks in Cincinnati. He examines the development of churches, schools (both integrated and segregated), benevolent societies and the social strata within black communities and across racial lines. He explores the evolution of free labor. And he shows that the fight for civil rights and suffrage knew no boundaries.
At times I felt statistics stalled the narrative, but this is a minor complaint and I'm not sure it could have been handled differently; there is simply an overwhelming amount of information packed into this fascinating book. I recommend it to Ohio River history buffs as well as to African American Studies.

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Space 101 -- a primer on how to retain America's dominance in SpaceReview Date: 2008-05-18
Lambakis provides descriptions of the space capabilities for each of the major publicly-declared satellite systems. What started as purely governmental programs from the 60s through the 80s, Operation DESERT STORM marked a new beginning for space products for the commercial sector. From tomorrow's weather forecast, live telecasts from the Superbowl, or the GPS devices commonly found in automobiles, Lambakis details the developments of these systems commonly found today.
After America's victories in DESERT STORM, NOBLE ANVIL (Balkans in the 90s), and ENDURING FREEDOM, adversaries are well aware of the capabilities of America's space program. It would be inconceivable to believe future combatants to allow their opponent to have unrestricted access to space capabilities. Lambakis reviews the satellite capabilities and anti-satellite capabilities for other countries that have space ambitions.
With the current capabilities and threats defined, Lambakis adds summaries of each President's American space policies issued during their administrations. Ranging from the visionary (Eisenhower/Reagan) to maintaining status quo (Bush 41 / Bush 43) to too much openness (Clinton), he offers a candid assessment of how each administration affected the US space capabilities of today.
To complete the book's calculus equation, Lambakis offers recommendations on how to fix the problem of American space policy. He contends American space policy presents a "Janus" to the world. He states that American space policy presents the face that space is a medium to be dominated by the military, versus "space is a peaceful preserve, a sanctuary that man must not despoil." He asserts that this lack of strategic vision is affecting the acquisition strategy for space programs today.
Lambakis did an outstanding job of reviewing policy documents and interviewing personnel involved in developing America's space policy. However, I could not find any references in his book to the military budget documents submitted annually to Congress. These documents identify each service's requested funding for Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation (RDT&E) programs , and for system acquisition. Ironically, he asserts space policy determines acquisition strategy, yet it appears he failed to review the documents that could factually defend his theory.
My second criticism is that the recommendations do focus on eliminating adversarial satellites. The focus needs to be on the operational effect which is eliminating the ability to use the data provided by the satellite. There are a number of asymmetric options available that achieve the same effect, without having to physically destroy a satellite. Jamming the communications links or hacking the terminals that manipulate the data would have the same effect, and would cost substantially less than an ASAT system.
Criticisms aside, Lambakis did an outstanding job defining the problem set and identifying recommendations on how to retain America's dominant position in space. General T. Michael Moseley thought so highly of this book, he identified it on his 2008 Reading List for all Airmen.

Perlman is the bestReview Date: 1997-03-20
Don McNay...

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Terrific CollectionReview Date: 2007-07-10
Collectible price: $45.97

Cooking The Old-Fashioned WayReview Date: 2005-08-30
Confession time: I've never actually made anything from the recipes here, but it sure is a fun cookbook to read, with its delicious assortment of foods and anachronistic terms for measurement ("peck" "bushel" "half-dollop"). This eighty-year-old cookbook full of hundred-plus-hundred-year-old dishes is a regional secret and a favorite for fans of the Mason-Dixon Line sort of southern cooking found pretty much only in a place like Kentucky. I have one of the rare first editions of this classic that my grandmother acquired on a trip to Louisville during a Derby week in the 1950's. It's the sort of book I wouldn't sell for almost any price. I really love the idea of the dishes in here, and like to think back on the era when cooks actually had the abilityto make these sorts meals with their all-day preparation times. This is a low-fat fan's worst nightmare with its meat and gravy heavy, fried food loving tone, but you know, its author lived well into her nineties and ate like this every day, so today's modern nutritionists really don't know as much as they like to lead on. Out of Kentucky Kitchens is full of charm and vanished Commonwealth graces. It augments any pantry bookshelf, whether for a serious cook or casual fan like me.

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Beyond myths and beyond statisticsReview Date: 2000-12-24
The book is full of photos: of children hungry; children playing; a pregnant young woman on a park bench; a mother in a homeless shelter cradling two toddlers close to her, with a determined look on her face; a teenage girl nodding off to sleep at a coffeeshop table with dawn lightening the window. Fourteen University of New Hampshire photography students worked with homeless children and families for six months in 1991. The results are incorporated into this book. Also available is a twenty minute, award-winning, videotape, "I Want to Go Home"
Just as the book goes beyond the statistics to show human beings suffering, it goes beyond the suffering to show solutions. Vissing spoke, in her initial study, with about three hundred people from school and community groups about programs to help the homeless. The first results were discouraging; for example, "Almost none of the communities had special summer programs for homeless children. I became convinced that 'homelessness' was not a term that most agencies used when serving children." But by the end of the book, Vissing has a program for rural communities to "'take the bull by the horns' and rely upon themselves to address the causes and consequences of homelessness." In the back of the book is a lengthy personal story -- fourteen pages -- of a child who grew up in poverty, abuse, violence and a rootless existence. Her story is searing and heartbreaking. But it has a very short postscript. ".. employed full-time and planned to attend college the following fall. Each member of the family seemed emotionally, financially, and socially secure, because of their own determination and because they had found help when they needed it."
This book vividly illustrates how our families and our communities have been shattered. It also vividly illustrates how they can be mended.

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A fascinating, engaging, candid, informative autobiography.Review Date: 2000-04-04

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Book for MemoriesReview Date: 2008-03-07

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Excellent review of Heaneys work with keen insight.Review Date: 1999-05-12
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