Kentucky Books
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Very interesting readReview Date: 2007-02-05
Please keep genealogy searches off the review pageReview Date: 2001-04-13
Great Reading!!!!Review Date: 2002-03-06
Haven't read it yet! Just find out!Review Date: 1999-09-16

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Wow!Review Date: 2007-01-22
Creative!Review Date: 2003-04-25
Creative!Review Date: 2003-04-25
My Favorite BookReview Date: 2003-04-06

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expanding horizonsReview Date: 2005-09-12
Thomas Mertson's GethsemaniReview Date: 2005-11-23
Thomas Merton--being aliveReview Date: 2005-10-11
text complement each other in support of Thomas Merton's enormous life. This is a precious text largely because it celebrates the courage to
simply be. One can read about Merton's contemplative life and very nearly be with him--in his light under the trees and sky and birds which
are fundamental and which were so essential to his routine, his daily
habit. Weis' text in particular is a carefully crafted essay--both probing and reverential. The book is an acheivement.
"thomas merton, the icon"Review Date: 2005-10-11
In the Foreward, Brother Patrick Hart makes mention of pilgrimages to the the places of interest in the physical and spiritual odessey of Thomas Merton. Who are these dear people who feel the need to do precisely what Thomas Merton himself so often railed against? Please desist from attempting to create an Icon of this most complex of human beings.


A True Believer's HistoryReview Date: 2005-05-03
As I learned more about this program in recent years, the advantages of nuclear rockets seemed less clear to me. Is the 2x reduction in propellant weight really worth the big increase in cost and danger of a white-hot nuclear reactor? This book confirms my growing suspicions that NTR was and is a bad idea. The bare facts make it clear that this technology wasn't worth the costs even in the nuclear-friendly 1950s.
One often sees the claim that NERVA had a flight-ready design at the time of cancellation in 1971. The detailed descriptions of the many reactor tests in this book make it clear that this really wasn't so. Despite a huge amount of research, the high-temperature graphite/uranium fuel elements in these reactors were still subject to considerable cracking, corrosion and erosion. It was considered a great milestone when a test reactor lost less than 100lbs of bomb-grade uranium blown out the nozzle, mostly in the form of gas or microscopic inhalable particles.
This shouldn't have been a surprise to anyone. The great nuclear physicist Luis Alvarez had pointed out the fundamental physical limitations of the H2/U-235 rocket engine in an obscure but unclassified journal as early as 1947. And the Rover/NERVA project was consistently opposed by every Presidential Science Adviser and every NASA Administrator right up to its final cancellation in 1971. Why then was so much public money wasted on a project that almost all competent observers thought was unwise?
This is the strongest aspect of Dewar's book. He has reconstructed in great detail the political deals that kept Rover and NERVA alive. It's a fascinating window into a past age of Congressional politics -- an age when a few powerful committee chairmen ruled the Hill with an iron fist, deciding billion-dollar research programs at all-night poker parties lubricated with large amounts of hard liquor. None of these men had any kind of technical education at all, and their decisions seem to have largely been based on pork barrel politics. It's no accident that the strongest supporter of NERVA was Sen. Clinton Anderson of New Mexico, home of Los Alamos where most of the NERVA funding ended up.
But I also wanted to learn all the technical details of the program, and in this area Dewar has come up short. He obtained a vast number of formerly-classifed internal project documents, but the information from them is not conveyed to the reader in a digestible form. Dewar has tried to water down the subject to make it understandable for a non-technical audience. This is really difficult to do in a complex field like fission reactor design, and some of his analogies and interpretations are oversimplified and downright misleading. A few tables summarizing the different reactor designs and their test histories would have been nice.
Dewar also adopts the annoying practice of summarizing lenghty policy documents in his own words, without including the original text in a appendix. On p.248-249, he even includes what seems to be a totally imaginary conversation between some of the major players in NERVA -- hardly an acceptable practice for serious historians.
Even worse, there are a few telling technical errors that make me doubt that Dewar understands nuclear physics very well. In an attack on anti-nuclear activists on p.209-210, he confuses Pu-239 with Pu-238. These isotopes have very different properties and safety problems.
But the biggest problem with this book is that the author is a true believer. He repeats as gospel truth all the claims made by pro-NERVA politicians, while expressing nothing but scorn for the opinions of highly qualified experts like Alvarez, Herbert York, and Jim Webb. When he states facts, he usually can be trusted. But his analysis and opinions are highly biased and untrustworthy. I hope somebody writes a better book on this topic someday -- but I'm keeping this one until that happens.
historical aspect in rocketryReview Date: 2004-10-03
Definitive Narrative HistoryReview Date: 2005-07-15
James A. Dewar's exhaustively researched work (there are 91 pages of footnotes) shows both the technical and political sides of the 18 year effort to develop the nuclear rocket. Like the space program itself, the nuclear rocket program was a creature of the Washington political process.
While lacking the polish of a David McCullough, Dewar does a good job of introducing the cast of characters and their competing visions for America's technologic and social future.
Dewar's thesis is that the nuclear engine was feasible and would have revolutionized space travel, boosting mankind into a 2001 Space Odyssey. I found his viewpoint to be refreshing, especially in contrast to the dour visions of historians such as Richard Rhodes. He devotes Appendix D of the book to "safety and environmental aspects of testing."
Perhaps the most poignant vision one gets from reading the book is that of the turning of a page in American history. With the end of Apollo and the nuclear engine project in 1973 we go from an era of limitless promise, to an era of sharply limited outcomes.
History in LimboReview Date: 2004-09-07

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It is not what it purports to beReview Date: 2008-03-05
Excellent bookReview Date: 2007-07-29
A Necessary Read for the Student of Guerrilla WarfareReview Date: 2007-06-16
My personal favorite chapter (besides the conclusion) is the one on the battle for Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City) during the Tet Offensive. It is impossible that, after reading the chapter on Saigon, you could still think that the US and South Vietnam lost the Tet Offensive, and that it was not a total disaster for the Viet Cong. In fact, you will walk away with the realization that the US did win the counterinsurgency battle in Vietnam...and that it was North Vietnamese regulars that defeated South Vietnam in 1975.
The conclusion chapter provides a number of critical ideas for both the insurgents and counterinsurgents in fighting in an urban environment. Ideas that would assist the US and her allies today in the insurgencies she is involved in.
In summary, this is more than a book to buy and have on your shelf. This is one to read - and to reference back to.
An In-Depth, Sophisticated Analysis of Urban Insurrections in Their Historical SettingReview Date: 2007-11-11
Joes quotes Fuller, Tukhachevsky, Lord D'Abernon, and Carr as to the decisive nature of Poland's victory over the Bolsheviks in 1920 (pp. 11-12).
Joes unmasks the nature and extent of the Soviet-Nazi pact: "Stalin punctiliously sent great trainloads of food and materiel to Hitler so the latter could evade the consequences of the British blockade...Apologists for Stalin often maintain that Stalin saved Russia, and indeed all of Europe, by his pact with Hitler because it gave Russia time to prepare for war. True, he did get an extra year and a half of peace, but during this time he was helping feed the Nazi war machine...The `second front' for which Stalin incessantly clamored in 1942-1944 had already been there in 1939...What saved the USSR was not Stalin's cunning but Hitler's errors..." (p. 33)
As for the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (1943), Joes focuses on the very limited ability of Poles to render significant aid (p. 24). The Polish Underground was not yet deployed, and it possessed a meager stock of arms at the time.
Joes provides considerable detail about the Warsaw Uprising (1944) and the 63-day agony and defeat, all thanks to Soviet perfidy. There has been a tendency for writers to be wishy-washy about Stalin's conduct. Joes will have none of it. He quotes Air Marshall Sir John Slessor, RAF commander, who called it `the blackest-hearted, coldest-blooded treachery on the part of the Russians.'" (p. 35)
In conclusion, "The Germans were responsible for the deaths of a quarter of a million civilians in Warsaw, by mass execution and deliberate starvation, but no one was arraigned for these crimes (nor for Katyn) at Nuremberg." (p. 37). "For decades after Germany's surrender, punishment continued to be meted out to Nazi war criminals. Nobody has been punished for the countless thousands of deaths resulting from Stalin's deportations of Polish civilians in 1939-1941. No one has been punished for the murders of thousands of Polish officers at Katyn." (p. 21). Well said!

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Best Short Book on the American Civil War AvailableReview Date: 2007-10-26
His book is not "primarily an analytical study" but rather "a synthesis of the major writings on the war" (Preface xi). One quibble I had was his reliance on Clausewitz over Jomini, the latter being a greater influence on the war's strategy and tactics. I appreciated the academic format of the book, published by The University Press of Kentucky, which had, for me, required hallmarks including a preface, table of contents, maps and photographs, a bibliographic essay and an index. The absence of footnotes or endnotes was understandable due to the length of the book and its overview perspective, but I would have preferred being able to review his sources to enhance my understanding or for further research.
Roland's view is that the final impasse which the North and South came to in 1860 grew out of "political, economic, cultural, and social differences... [reaching] back to the very origin of the nation and beyond" (1). He does state, however, that slavery was the chief contributing factor to all these sources of tension which finally brought on war. He presents well the two, and sometimes more, sides of various arguments but concentrates on the political ones. He discusses not only the main stream ideas of the opponents but also the extremes of both sides such as the four attitudes the Senate had on the spread of slavery in the Mexican cession. Roland discusses the various machinations the politicians then went through to eventually produce the Compromise of 1850, the penultimate compromise.
My final example of his fairness is his discussion of President Buchanan's actions in 1860 giving reasons that his equivocating was not necessarily a bad thing if he was, in fact, trying to limit the damage secession of the lower South could cause. I do detect Roland's belief that war was inevitable although he never expressly said that. It may be that a logical and coherent presentation of all the actions leading to the war made it seem inevitable--a penalty of hindsight. I could find no evidence of sectional biases in his book.
Good introduction to ACWReview Date: 2005-03-30
A Good and Short Overview of the War.Review Date: 2000-04-12

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An engaging read, the commonplace made almost sacredReview Date: 1999-11-05
A good read and an intriguing look at the history of apples.Review Date: 1999-04-29
Essential To Keep Doctor AwayReview Date: 2004-07-05
Food writer Elliot Essman's other reviews and food articles are available at www.stylegourmet.com

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beautiful language, strong storyReview Date: 2004-04-20
transfixed in horror and wonderReview Date: 2004-04-03
I usually don't do this --Review Date: 2004-05-31

Interesting history, but still lacks somethingReview Date: 2004-04-19
After a comparison and contrast of different styles of colonialism (he asserts that Zionism can best be understood as a form of colonialism), he reviews Zionist land policies. For Shafir, agriculture and the land is the root of Israeli-Palestinian conflict. While this is certainly a hugely important issue, he neglects the urban roots of conflict in favor of his agricultural theories. Ironically, this only furthers the myth of Israelis returning to the land, whereas most future Israelis lived in cities. Without examining the urban aspects of the conflict, he only tells part of the story. Also, his work is Ashkenazi-centric (European Jewish). True, the leaders of Zionism were mostly Central/Eastern European during this period, but he virtually marginalizes the story of other Zionists.
Nevertheless, Shafir's contribution to the academic literature as it offers a glimpse into the agricultural roots that contributed to the modern conflict.
Excellent treatmentReview Date: 1998-07-03
Outstanding economic explanation of the conflictReview Date: 1998-03-09

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The Waltons of the Bourbon industryReview Date: 2000-10-15
Wonderful story, lovely familyReview Date: 2001-12-13
A beautiful book for bourbon lovers and historians alikeReview Date: 2000-03-25
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