Kentucky Books
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Good StartReview Date: 2007-04-11
Keeper of the DovesReview Date: 2006-10-11
keeper of the dovesReview Date: 2003-01-15
The best book you will ever readReview Date: 2003-10-10
This book is about Amie and a man named Mr Tominski. He had doves in a nearby chapel. He trained his doves. This story is placed in 1899 in Kentuky. One day Amie meets Mr Tominski in the grave yard. Amie has a camera. Mr Tominski talks in German. He was pointing at himself. Amie said do you want me to take a picture of you? Mr Tominski shook his head. Amie took 2 pictures of Mr Tominski. This book is about differences. I recommend this book to anybody!!!

Teriffic guide to this areaReview Date: 2007-07-25
One "must see" for the area is camping for a night on top of "Turtle-Back Arch". This arch is near the Rock Bridge area and is accessible from the Swift Creek Trail by following the author's detiled instructions. Some fairly challenging scampering up rock faces is needed to get up on top of the arch but the effort is well worth it. There are a few areas to camp up on top of the arch. They offer spectacular views of the surrounding area and offer the only arch-top campsite area I am aware of in the red river gorge area. If you continue up the arch you can get back to solid ground to forage for wood and to explore. This has to be my all-time favorite campsite.
Invaluable to back country hikersReview Date: 1999-05-13
This book is a treasure map to the riches of Gorge!Review Date: 1999-02-27
The only critique I have is that the author seems to jump around somewhat in providing trail directions. A straight forward reading of some sections leaves one lost as to which trail the author is speaking of. It would appear that the author is so familiar with area, having hiked the trails many times himself, that he assumes much of the reader. Beyond this I would HIGHLY recommend the book to anyone serious about hiking the gorge and obtaining the most satisfaction from his/her efforts. I would only comment that I disagree with the author's assumptions concerning causes for the geologic formations. I believe the entire Gorge area attests to the factuality of the Biblical Flood! The swirling texture of many of the rock formations coupled with the existence of rock caves and land bridges points strongly to the aftermath of flood conditions. Thanks for listening!
The only DETAILED trail guide I've found of the Gorge!Review Date: 1999-07-16

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Modern Medea, modern mistakesReview Date: 2005-01-20
He constantly refers to a "teenage or young" Archibald, this Archibald was 25 years old ! And this Archibald was the oldest child of John Pollard Gaines.
He gets the dates wrong to so many things you have to wonder what else is wrong ?
This book may have been more accurate if the author had consulted with descendants of the Gaines, Bedinger or Marshall families, which he did not.
Mr. Weisenburger's bio at the University of Kentucky states "Steven is a fanatical researcher of primary sources." With so many errors, I do not see that...
A true story of slavery and infanticideReview Date: 2004-05-16
In "Modern Medea," author Steven Weisenburger uses court documents, newspaper stories and other sources from the time to examine this almost-forgotten trail that challenged the 1850 Fugitive Slave Law. We follow along with the entire trial, seeing all the tricks that both defense and prosecution lawyers used to either bring a quick end to proceedings or to protract them in order to keep the Garners on free soil. The trail also gives us an interesting look into politics, the pro-slavery mindset, abolitionism view, and the media perception and bias of the time.
What I found most interesting about this book is that the trial to determine whether or not the Garner's were still the property of Archibald Gaines took precedent over the charge of infanticide. The outcome would have a profound effect not only on state's rights but would spark a tiny flame leading up to the American Civil War. And even after the trial was concluded, the media, poets such as Elizabeth Barret Browning, and other authors used the events to add fuel to the ever-growing debate on slavery.
But, it still remains a little-known trial, falling into the dust of history in part due to public "whitening" of the events and to the events of the Dred Scott decision almost a year later. Yet author Toni Morrison helped to revive interest in this trial by modeling one of the characters in her novel "Beloved" after the ghost of Margaret's slain daughter, Mary.
The book sometimes reads more like a college text and asks many questions that are never answered. But the amount of information surrounding the trial and concerning the battle of state's rights versus federal law make this a great book to read.
The story behind (or beside) Morrison's BelovedReview Date: 1998-12-12
Garner's case, though little recalled today, was far better known in its day than many readers of Morrison's novel may realize. The best-known lawyers and abolitionists of the day argued Garner's case, and newspapers across the country reported the story. The most fascinating aspect of the story is the account of the competing legal and rhetorical strategies used to try to free Garner -- or, if she could not be freed, to give her the greatest possible symbolic value for the cause.
Garner's act -- killing one of her children rather than allowing het to be returned to slavery -- placed her between two contrary legal systems. Within the slavery system, and the Federally- administered Fugitive Slave Act, Garner was a piece of property to be returned. Yet within Ohio law, as a person accused of murder, she was subject to persecution for her crime as a human being. Her lawyer, paradoxically, had to persuade a judge to issue a writ for her arrest for murder, in order to prevent her from being returned to Kentucky as a slave -- it was in fact her one hope.
Weisenburger details how, in the end, this defense too failed, partly due to the complicity of certain Ohio officials with the Kentucky counterparts, and partly due to the inaction of then-governor of Ohio Salmon Chase. The actual tale of Margaret Garner, strangely enough, is even more tragic than that of Morrison's Sethe. Margaret was shipped off to cotton-belt slavery with relatives of her Kentucky owner, losing a second child to a streamboat accident en route, and evenrually died a horrible death from typhoid fever.
I'd recommend this book to anyone engaged by Morrison's novel, or by the recent film -- not as 'the fact behind the fiction,' but instead as a vital counterpoint, an *other* story of Margaret Garner, a woman who stood at the razor's edge of on of American history's most brutal junctures.
Interesting story, well writtenReview Date: 1999-10-31
Minor criticisms: Too much is devoted to courtroom battles at the expense of describing daily slave life. As the author is a professor at a late 20th Century American university, he feels it necessary from time to time to wave his little red PC book in the air and shout slogans: Slavery was evil! Racism is not nice! Well, duh. None of this adds to the book and all of it detracts from the book.
Still, this is a good read. Buy it; you won't be disappointed. (By the way, I have never read Toni Morrison's "Beloved"; one doesn't need to in order to enjoy this book.)
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GarbageReview Date: 2004-12-17
God and Politics in OberschopfheimReview Date: 2001-03-16
The book is based on the Oberschopfheim archives which "contained copies of correspondence sent and received and detailed information about such matters as agriculture, local government, the manifold endeavors and concerns of the church, the distribution of welfare, community discord, and the activities of the politice. The pastor, village officials, and ordinary citizens alike were generously cooperative." (p. 3) It is one of the most level-headed books about the whole period.
Here, for example, you have an account of the town's voting patterns in one of the elections. "The ingrained political responses of Oberschopfheimers likewise offered little to comfort the Nazis. In many German villages, both Catholic and Protestant, clerical influence on the voting habits of church members was so effective that it was sometimes positively embarrassing, producing results that approached in predictability those in post-1945 Communist states. In most elections in the 1920s only about half of the eligible voters in Oberschopfheim had bothered to go to the polls. Of those more than 80 percent routinely obeyed the pastor and voted for the Center (Catholic) party, thereby earning for themselves the sobriquet, "black nest of reaction." (pp. 95-96).
Here is another. "Contemporary Anglo-Saxon, especially American, writer frequently distort the history of people who live under any authoritarian regime because they assume that democracy is the natural, normal form of government anywhere, that the mass of `normal' people everywhere admire and desire it, and that any deviation from it is some sort of civil disease of `problem' requiring diagnosis. If one begins merely by noting the historical record-that some form of absolutism has been the usual mode of government at most times and places and that democratic experiments have generally been short-lived historically-then fascism does not appears to be a social sickness but only another variant of authoritarianism. At once, all sorts of human conduct in Nazi Germany and elsewhere becomes demystified. By focusing relentlessly on the most bizarre features of Nazi ideology and the most base cruelties of Nazi practice it is easy to forget that for the ordinary nonpolitical person day-to-day life in some authoritarian society does not differ markedly from that in a democracy. One must be wary of exchanging political opinions with others, to be sure, and a prudent individual should not attract attention to himself. One should also be careful to obey the law, since authoritarian regimes are usually less lenient to transgressors than are democracies. But these are not especially onerous restrictions to most conventional, nonideological persons. Even under the most strident despotism more of the time of judges and courts is spent dealing with taxes, licenses, applications, civil lawsuits, thievery, public drunkenness, brawling, and marital discord than with the persecution or enslavement of political dissidents." (pp. 133-134) Highly recommended.
A wonderful description of the village of my ancestors.Review Date: 2001-11-24
This book is simply a delight for me to read. Opening a window to the past: finding how my ancestors lived; their beautiful surroundings; with very interesting information how Oberschopfheim came into being; with it's developments through out the centuries.
I am also interested very much in WWII history. It is a very interesting to see how the Nazi's influenced such a small village. This question has always been in my mind, and now I have an insight into the WWII atmosphere, created by the Nazi's.
Since I have been searhing for information on Oberschopfheim, the discovery of this book has been an answer to a prayer for me. Once, I was about to give up with my search, but now I feel like a have a real understanding of the passage of time in the village. I am so grateful for such a wonderful book!!!
Either way, if your approach is getting information of this particular village, or for an insight into the impact of the Nazi's, this is a wonderfully written book.
My thanks go out to Mr Rinderle, and Mr. Norling!
An informative history of the village where I am bornReview Date: 1998-08-13

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Ripping YarnReview Date: 2008-09-08
Swift ReviewReview Date: 2008-09-02
Wonderful Slice of History and MysteryReview Date: 2008-08-20
The strange case of Jonathan SwiftReview Date: 2008-07-04
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A Very Enjoyable ReadReview Date: 2006-08-16
This was a forgetable memoir.Review Date: 1999-01-03
Deceptive tactics.Review Date: 2002-02-18
A great personal description of wartime in subsReview Date: 2001-10-18
I bought this book after reading it in the submarine's library. My CO has the book. Some junior officers bought the book. We like it. CAPT Ned Beach wrote a nice blurb on it. Some subs have it in their professional reading libraries.
You may like it too.

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What a great book!Review Date: 2006-09-11
Truly America's Greatest GenerationReview Date: 2001-08-16
For those that are aviation buffs, the book goes into detail about the logistics involved and the archaic and rudementary navigational aides of time and the virtual absense of air traffic control. It is truly a miracle that several hundred bombers could take off and get into formation and proceed to the target by primarily using pyrotechnics.
A must read!
Beware!Review Date: 2000-12-30
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Borrowed Children- or Depression in the HillsReview Date: 1998-11-28
this is a very good book for you to read.Review Date: 2004-11-19
Borrowed ChildrenReview Date: 2002-12-24
two older brothers,Ben and David,are 14 and 16.One day they have a new baby brother,Willie.Mandy's mother is tired from Willie's birth and really weak.So Mandy had to keep the house running with David and Ben.And she gets to escape all this work by going to her grandparents' house for two weeks in Memphis as a christmas present from her presents.

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Excellent cruising guideReview Date: 2007-08-27
very usefulReview Date: 2006-03-23
Don't waste your timeReview Date: 2007-08-21

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One literate soldier from KentuckyReview Date: 2005-01-10
Jackman's journal was ever present and, as you might expect, there is a focus on food, with talk of getting "bear" (local livestock)", or going off for watermelon and bacon in the morning. Sickness was common for Jackman, and he writes of the pain of new shoes. Jackman's style is often light even in the midst of war, for example, "I fell to my lot to be mounted behind a very large man on a very small horse". He read when books were available, including Cicero (in Latin) and Dickens "Great Expectations". Relevant to today, the soldiers in the confederate army also complained of having their time involuntarily extended. The editor did not over edit the account and the introduction in each chapter was helpful. Including a map would have helped me follow the story.
Great Book for anyone intersted in the Western TheaterReview Date: 2000-12-10
Excellent account of life in the 'Orphan Brigade'Review Date: 2000-09-03
Jackman saw it all, and as renowned and prolific Civil War author and editor William Davis points out, his account is the longest and most unvarnished of the diaries that have come out of the war about the "Orphan Brigade." "Diary of a Confederate Soldier" is one of the better memoirs to come out of the war, literate, readable, humorous (especially the great snowball battle in March of 1864), and educating.
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