Kentucky Books
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Great BookReview Date: 2007-09-11
Great fictional/historical tale of the life of Daniel BooneReview Date: 2001-08-03
I was impressed with this book. Definitely a recommended read.

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good bookReview Date: 2007-01-03
Great Overview of Nonstandard Folktale TheoriesReview Date: 2000-04-28

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It's nice to find a new "Favorite Author"Review Date: 2008-06-26
It's also interesting to read a 2nd book by an author and see visible growth in their style and writing skills. I found her previous work Bewitch a little uneven and slow. By comparison the humor is sharper in "Cabin Fever," and the hero is a little more alpha. (Especially when he physically throws the heroine's sneaky ex-husband out the front door of a house).
I loved the secondary characters, too. Yuri, the Russian stepfather to James Adler Sullivan, was such a terrific character that I would have liked to see a "prequel" (even as a short story) about how he romanced James's mother, Barbara "Bibi" Adler-Sullivan. Ms. Archer, if you read this, maybe you can post it on your website or include it as a bonus in the back of your next book!
Funny & SweetReview Date: 2008-05-05
I liked the fact that the two of them seem to dance around each other for a while before they finally end up together. The invasion of the press (James is famous), his family, her family, and her ex-husband all complicate things. But a lot of scenes are very funny, and it's fun watching the two of them finally work things out and come together.

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Wonderful book for the open-minded investigatorReview Date: 2007-02-26
Nickell is rational, honest and uninterested in the sensational exploitation of celebrated crime photography. He also understands and delivers a fundamental truth: Every good photo analyst knows what he or she measures rather than what they see. In investigating the Kennedy assassination in particular, most so-called experts seem to have forgotten this sage truth.
Finally, it's a pleasure to have someone call my book "sensible." Hell hath no fury like conspiracy addicts scorned, and "sensible" is quite a change from some of the other names I've been called over the last decade and a half. Thanks, Joe.
Excellent summarization of gleening clues from photographsReview Date: 1998-01-27
I have been restoring and copying my family's 19th-century photographs. Starting out from a basic exposure to 19th-century photographs on paper, glass plates, and metal plates, I learned much about the history of 19th-century photography from this book which is otherwise lost knowledge to the common person in this (almost-)21st-century world. I am actively using the bibliography for further investigations into focused topics.
If there were ever another edition, I would suggest more, more, more of the same, pulling in more history, more explanation of various discarded photographic technologies (e.g., carbrotypes, Lambertypes and the restrictive licensing of their patents), more context, more techniques of tracking down negatives from photography studios of old, etc. I find that there are 2 separate audiences for this book: 1) historical photograph detectives for geneological/etc work after the death of subjects in the photographs and 2) modern trick photography for establishing truthfulness, such as for a legal case. I think that both audiences hunger for greater treatment. I would request splitting this book into 2 volumes, where each volume is double or triple its current size, focusing in depth on the specific needs of those 2 disparate audiences.
The views contained in this feedback are the personal opinions of Dan'l Miller and are in no way connected with his employer or any other organization.

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Civil War-KentuckyReview Date: 2008-05-28
Writing as a Small BusinessQualifying Laps: A Brewster County NovelSins of the Fathers: A Brewster County NovelTravelersThe Bluegrass Dream: A Wilderness Adventure of Early SettlersNatchez Above The River: A Family's Survival In The Civil War
Brother Against BrotherReview Date: 2000-06-23
Hard to miss with this wealth of interesting history.

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Contested BorderlandReview Date: 2007-08-12
I would recommend this book for anyone interested in the Civil War and how it affected the people of eastern Kentucky and western Virginia.
They felt the war on the mountain tops tooReview Date: 2006-11-27
The ridges of the Appalachians separated people. They defined borders between states, between free and slave, and for a while between a country trying to save itself and another wanting to begin on its own. Those mountains and the narrow valleys between them offered plenty of shade and shadows in which people of all sorts could seek refuge. Where they ended in northwestern Pennsylvania the lumber camps became havens for well-armed bands of Union deserters. Farther south, along the Kentucky-Virginia frontier, mixed bands of deserters from both sides hid in the forests and preyed upon the locals. "Volunteers" stepped forward under the shield of being soldiers to steal from whomever they didn't like.
As Brian McKnight points out in this regional study of the war near the Cumberland Gap, although lightly populated, this area had points of military significance, the gap itself being but one. It was here that James A. Garfield first proved his worth in the field, managing his men so well that he quickly gained promotion to brigadier and appointment as Don Carlos Buell's chief-of-staff. McKnight, who teaches at the University of Virginia's College at Wise, located right in the center of the area covered by his book, does a great job of showing all the facets of the war as they happened there. He shows you the military side, but also the partisan and civilian sides, which was significant in this mountain country where grudges were quickly formed and rarely forgotten, and an assassin in the dark could just as easily dole out justice as could a judge or jury. This was, after all, where the Hatfields and McCoys would carry on their own private war not many years afterward.
In his thoughtful introduction, the author provides a good historiography of other regional studies of the partisan war fought in other places in the Appalachians, as well as in Missouri where it was, perhaps, at its worst. And he correctly points out that the war around the Cumberland Gap has never been adequately covered before. It has now, thanks to his efforts now available in this excellent book.

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Uncommon, delicious, easy to makeReview Date: 2005-12-25
Lots of great recipes.Review Date: 2002-04-29
It's a great and delicious reminder of the terrific stay at Snowvillage Inn!

Solid Series ReboundReview Date: 1999-08-25
A timeless classic crime thrillerReview Date: 1998-06-01
Charlie soon realizes that the slasher is not only good with the knife, he understands the inner psyche of his victims and their families. A desperate Charlie concludes that only a medical person could do the professional incisions of the attacks and only a medical person could so understand where to place the maiming so as to destroy the victim both physically and mentally. Charlie knows he must stop this serial slasher before the body count requires astronomical numbers to keep track.
If not consistently the best, the Charlie Resnick British police procedurals are one of the top five series on the market today. CUTTING EDGE is a reprint of a classy novel first released in 1991. The who-done-it and the police elements are well written and fun to read on their own account. However, what makes this novel and the eight tales worth reading is John Harvey's insight into the personal lives of his characters to the point that the reader feels good about being a peeping Harriet.
Harriet Klausner

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A Detailed Portrait of the Woodsman in the WildernessReview Date: 2004-02-15
He was born in Pennsylvania in 1734, to devout Quakers. His rudimentary schooling shows up in many excerpts from his writings here; for instance, it seems to be true that on an East Tennessee tree he carved the inscription "D. Boon cilled a Bar on tree in the year 1760." Boone did indeed become an accomplished woodsman and hunter, and was always less fit for the life of frontier farming. He had a pattern of reaching out to new lands; he had a wanderlust, to be sure, and encroaching civilization always meant that he had to move to new frontiers to hunt game, but he was always eager to apply the simple solution of moving away when having people live around him was just too complicated. He would be on the move all his life. He fought for the British (along with Washington) in the French and Indian War, and then against the British in the western version of the American Revolution, which consisted mostly of fighting Indians. He had prodigious skill in the outdoors, and there are many stories here of heroism and craftiness. Although he could always win battles against Indians, he could not win against lawyers, and was often in court because of disputed boundaries he had surveyed. He was guileless and always assumed that treating someone honestly would get him honest treatment in return, an assumption that he never seemed to learn was unwarranted.
Boone was amazed that he became famous. There was a bogus autobiography printed in 1784, that was translated into German and French, and made Boone internationally known. He was painted by the young John James Audubon. James Fennimore Cooper based much of Natty Bumppo on him, and in a note to one of the Leatherstocking Tales said that Boone headed out from Kentucky to Missouri in later life "because he found a population of ten to the square mile inconveniently crowded." Tales of Boone's dry wit became staples. He did indeed, when asked if he had ever gotten lost in the wilderness, reply, "No, I can't say as ever I was lost, but I was bewildered once for three days." He blazed trails, most notably through the Cumberland Gap, and then was dismayed that they became widened for wagon travel and further encroachment by civilization. Ending up in Missouri, he spent his last years hunting buffalo and trapping beaver. He died at 85, as the nation was pushing further west and the wilds were more speedily declining. Lofaro's informative biography puts the brilliant pioneer and naïve citizen at the center of a complicated and longstanding war between settlers and Indians.
Daniel BooneReview Date: 2003-11-27

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Daniel Boone- Frontier Scout.....Justin 10 in San AntonioReview Date: 2006-12-03
I learned Daniel Boone joined the militia when he was 20 years old. He had eleven children and they all lived in a one room cabin. He hunted for food and skinned the animals for clothes and blankets. He lived in many different states.
I learned that Daniel Boone was captured by Shawnee Indians in the beginning of 1778. The Shawnee Chief adopted him as his own son, because the chief's son was killed in battle. He was able to talk the Shawnee Indians into not killing him and his men if they would hunt for the indians. He escaped from the indians in the summer of 1778.
I learned about frontier life and why Daniel Boone is famous. I would tell a friend to read the book if they need to do a report because it is interesting and you can learn about things you didn't know before.
Authentic Reliable Informative - Facts.. Not Rumor or LegendReview Date: 2004-08-21
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