Oregon Books
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Vancouver region (further afield section)Review Date: 2008-09-25
Very useful--strong on illustration, less on lodging informationReview Date: 2008-07-27
There are a couple of important categories of information that are less comprehensive and useful. We found that the Internet was a much better source for hotels and restaurants. The guide does list some possibilities in each category, but it doesn't approach being a full list. Our favorite hotels on the trip--the Ace in Portland and Hotel Max in Seattle--didn't make the cut for the guide, but are two of the best rated hotels of their kind (moderately priced) on the Net.
All guides have some limitations as does Eyewitness. Still, this is a beautifully illustrated and useful publication, worthy of consideration by anyone traveling to the NW on vacation.
A Wuunderful Guide!Review Date: 2007-04-03
Great Book, Even Though There Were Some OmissionsReview Date: 2007-03-21
Visually strong but lacking in descriptive details Review Date: 2007-04-07
The book has lots of pictures and good maps, helping you get around and then recognize your goal or destination once you get there. But descriptions and explanations of specific places range from a few sentences to (at most) a few paragraphs for the major sites.
For example, for Seattle the section on Pike Place has great visual information to help you find your way around the market, but just a few sentences each on the Pike Place fish throwers and the original Starbucks. And while the Space Needle gets a few pictures and two columns of text, and the relatively new Experience Music Project is also given a nice two page spread, other fascinating experiences like the Seattle Underground Tour in Pioneer Square are not even mentioned. I'm sure Lonely Planet had that one.
Bottom line: this Eyewitness guide to the Northwest can't be beat for its photos and useful maps, but as with any Eyewitness guide it helps to have an additional supplement--a friend who can show you around the area, or another guidebook--to make up for what the Eyewitness lacks in details. Buy this guide primarily for the pictures and maps, and then keep it as a souvenir when your trip is over.

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The Price of SilenceReview Date: 2007-11-29
Todd's job was two-fold. She did the editing, layout and any computer troubleshooting that was necessary, as well as helped Ruth, her boss, with a special centennial edition of the newspaper. The special edition would choreograph the history of Brindle. During her research, Ruth had uncovered the truth behind a fire in 1888 that killed four people and wanted to publish it.
While working for the paper, Todd learned of a series of teenaged girls that had disappeared over the years and recently, a fourteen-year-old named Jodie Schuster had disappeared. When she started writing articles about the disappearances, no one wanted to hear it. The residents of Brindle didn't believe that there was a predator living among them.
When Ruth provided a similar, but much older pattern of disappearances, the two women start investigating. With the help of a ghostly presence, they uncover the truth. A community icon was kidnapping girls that reminded him of the love he couldn't have. He cared for them for a time, but they invariably died. He would bury the girl and then start looking for a replacement.
The Price of Silence has a little bit of everything, dysfunctional families, complacency, ghosts, kidnapping and murder, courage, truth and love. It is an excellent psychological mystery and well worth reading.
Excellent character development. even if the plot developed a little slowly...Review Date: 2007-08-24
What tells the geese it's time to fly?Review Date: 2007-02-02
If you are looking for a rip-roaring thriller with twists and turns, this is not it.
The setting is beautifully described, as are the characters in this book. It is nicely drawn, and explores the parts of the mind that work when we aren't paying attention.
It's an old fashioned novel; a good book for contemplating.
Certainly not for everyone, but a good read none the less.
Engaging, but not her bestReview Date: 2006-06-17
The plot is one Wilhelm has used a couple of times before: an attractive and intelligent young person who is at loose ends as to what to do with herself, and not quite sure of her life's direction, winds up through chance circumstances in a small town where something is deeply wrong, and no one wants to talk about it.
That's part of the problem I had with this book, though; while in past books such as "Skeletons," the secret has had to do with the past and is hidden by an older generation, in this book, the problem is ongoing and yet people are still ignoring it. Teenage girls keep disappearing - and no one pursues them or suspects them of anything other than running away. While that might have been the case half a century ago, in these days of entire organizations built around missing children, and pictures of missing children on every milk carton, and TV shows about searching for missing people, it just didn't seem likely to me that in a single village, 5 or more teenage girls would disappear and no one would be raising a stink, not even their parents, until our protagonist appears. And that in a relatively small town, no one prior to her would have noticed the similarities between the girls, nor figured out what other things were going on right when the disappearances started.
It also seems unlikely to me that the kidnapper could be doing the kinds of things they are doing, and not have other abnormalities show up in their behavior or personalities, that no one else would ever think that there was anything odd or unusual in the way this person behaves or things they say. (I'm not giving away who it was; that's why I'm avoiding saying she or he.) I think that people who are this sick show signs of the sickness in more than one way and generally aren't able to completely compartmentalize their lives. It's one thing if the person is a loner and doesn't associate with their neighbors at all, so that no one ever talks to them much; it's different if the person has a regular job and talks to many people every day and goes to social events: some other sign that something is WRONG with this person would show up. So I found the characterization of this person a little unrealistic, and the behavior of the neighbors a bit unbelievable.
Nonetheless, it's a well-written story and lots of action for our heroine and her husband. And I know that many people like this kind of suspense and think that there ARE completely hidden monsters among us, and those people won't have the reservations I had about the realisticness of the villain.
AWARD WINNING NARRATOR SPINS A CHILLING TALEReview Date: 2006-09-01
Oregon, home of and a favored setting for author Wilhelm, is the background for this dark tale of murder, hypocrisy, and lies. Brindle is a small town that appears on the surface to be a haven of peace and quiet. It is quite the opposite as Todd Fielding soon discovers.
Todd has come to Brindle to work for the local newspaper while her husband, Barney, pursues his doctoral degree in a nearby university town. Newspaper owner Ruth Ann Colonna is planning a special edition of the paper featuring Brindle then and now. So, Todd busies herself becoming acquainted with her new community.
The superficial serenity of Brindle isn't interrupted by the sudden disappearance of a young girl. This sets Todd to wondering - she does more than wonder when she discovers that five other girls have mysteriously vanished during the past two decades. What is even stranger and rather frightening is that no one seems to care about the whereabouts of the girls.
Newcomers to any place who start probing are seldom welcome, and Todd fuels a fire that threatens to get away when she decides to write about the girls' disappearance. Ruth Ann seems to be her only ally, and Barney is often miles away.
Voice performer and Audie Award winner Anna Fields successfully captures the outrage, fear, and determination of Todd as she seeks to uncover the truth. A more than satisfying listening experience!
- Gail Cooke

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Strangely annoyedReview Date: 2008-09-22
The History, Snapshot, and similar sections are great, but if you have a brain of your own - use it. Forget their restaurant and hotel recommendations, as I'm not even sure they visit the places. Sometimes they have history or comments on places that is worthwhile to read, though. All tourbooks may have these drawbacks, to be fair.
Finally, I think I'm going to stop buying Lonely Planet's, though. First, they always act like driving is so scary everywhere, when it's actually quite easy to anyone with a brain. They also forget to give worthwhile tips on getting a car, etc. I imagine that this is their way of "saving the Earth". To a person who does care about the Earth, but doesn't believe that being a dirty hippie is going to save anything, this - and all their other BS trying to coerce their opinions onto you as fact - gets really freakin' old. Yes, yes, I know, LP is founded by some hippie freak from AUS or something - whooptie doo. That doesn't mean I have to pay some jerk who's going to push his politics on me, whether I agree with them or not.
Excellent Guidebook for an Expansive TripReview Date: 2005-07-28
Beautiful North Oregon CoastReview Date: 2004-03-28
The rooms are beautiful, it is almost on the quiet, dreamy, seven mile beach, nearly in the forest of the Nehalem Bay State Park, and the breakfast is Huge and DELICIOUS.
We are locals - love this book.Review Date: 2005-12-30
This is not a city resturant guide, however. Someone else gave this book 3 stars because it only told them about the highlights of what makes the Pacific Northwest special, and didn't name the 5-star resturants. I am a 4th-generation Seattle-ite and fancy resturants are not my scene. Go anywhere, eat wild salmon and a latte, then go do some more walks or boat trips or something like that!
Good guide for sightseeing, but NOT for hotels, restaurantsReview Date: 2004-10-11
Use it as a guide, but not as a reference. I'm sure there are other sources of more accurate information for travelers.
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It promises to be well received by deer hunters.Review Date: 1999-05-16
It's fun to read and contains a lot of solid "how to" info.Review Date: 1999-05-16
Very Interesting!Review Date: 1999-05-16
Very enjoyable!Review Date: 1999-05-16
It's laced with tips and tidbits.Review Date: 1999-05-16

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Western PassageReview Date: 2007-01-03
This book is strickly a novel. It is to be read just for pleasure. It is a great book if you want to follow a woman who traveled by herself in a wagon train, which was NOT allowed.
The author sold it as the frist wagon train to leave MO, that was done in 1841 not 1843 as this man wants you to believe. He talked about not having a trail to follow yet on the other side of a river crossing, the wagon train would have to back track to pick up the trail again?
And I love this one, in the back of the book, the writer has a member of the wagon train beginning the city of Sacramento, wasn't that Sutter?
And at times the book was redundant. At times I was thinking okay, let's go already.
As I said, this book is strickly fictional with not much historical value. So read it as a pleasure book not if you are looking for correct information about trail passage.
Great book, but "Oregon Country" is just an updated version of the book "Western Passage"Review Date: 2007-02-21
I am still giving this 5 stars, because the book is a terrific story, but please please be aware that it is the exact same story as Western Passage. I just wasted $33 for something I already have.
I'm still waiting for TJ Hanson to write more about Abigail's life in Oregon, after she made the adventurous trip.
Western Passage, one woman's journey on the Oregon TrailReview Date: 2007-08-08
The trail follows the western plains, over the Rockies, through Idaho into Oregon's Blue Mountains and finally through the Columbia River Gorge on the way to the end of the trail at Oregon City. Although I mentioned some might not find this a racy page turner, I was thoroughly fascinated and had a hard time putting the book down. The historical detail, even of the day to day part of living on the trail was fascinating -- the buffalo stampede was just heart stopping.
All in all a very good tale of a courageous woman with "sand" as Jacob called her, able to live up to and exceed the challenges of the Oregon Trail to reach her destination and achieve her dreams of a new life in Oregon City. I especially enjoyed the last of the tale, as Abby sees the Columbia River for the first time and her reaction to the beauty of that river. I am fortunate to live in the Pacific Northwest and have traveled many times along that glorious river, and the author brought all of it magically to life -- the rapids (which are long gone due to dams), the basalt cliffs, the waterfalls, Beacon Rock are all there for the reader to experience along with Abby.
This was a first rate book and I highly recommend for any lover of historical fiction or for one interested in the Oregon Trail.
If You LIke Laura Ingalls Wilder books...Review Date: 2006-05-11
My brother sent me a copy of Western Passage by T.J. Hanson. I'm still trying to figure out if the fact that it is a large print edition was intentional or not since it was for my birthday.
If you liked reading Laura Ingalls Wilder and her descriptions, then this is also a book you will enjoy. In this book, you follow the heroine, Abby, every step of the way from Independence to Oregon City. And I mean every step of the way, from learning what kind of supplies would be bought, to taking a wagon across a stream, this book follows along with the first wagon train along the Oregon Trail. You are really right there. Even though this is fiction, it reads like a really good journal.
I've been searching for a book exactly like this for yearsReview Date: 2005-12-02
But I've only been able to find historical fiction about the trial written for kids and young adults. This always bothered me, because while those books written for kids may be great, they're not of an adult perspective on the great migration west. So I was thrilled when I found this book.
This is the story of Abbey, who I think is a fictional person. She endured tragedy while homesteading in Ohio and heads to Indepdence on her own to fulfill her dead husbands dream of going to Oregon. While I think the idea of a woman alone on the trail, even with hired help like Abbey has, is not historical accurate, this book is great. The descriptions are trail life is very alive and emotional, and I could really feel the emotions of the travelers as the first saw the great northwest. It is called great for a reason.
This book is very good and obviously well researched. I recommend it for anyone who loves historical fiction. I do wish I knew though if there ever was a woman who traveled without a husband or male family all the way to Oregon City, or if Abbey is a made up person entirely. I was always taught that any woman on the trail had to get immediately re married if her husband died, or if her father died and she was of marriageable age. The journey was too just much for people on their own, and woman, by the social conventions of the day, where not permitted to band together with other woman and go with friends as men were.
So I may never know if Abbey's situation was possible or not. The author obviously knows his stuff, so I'll defer to his expertness. The only thing I didn't like about this book is it really shows that the hope that Oregon City represented to travelers has just been hopelessly wasted by the economic depressing the city (well, town really) is currently in. Its not the authors fault in any way, but Oregon City is a pretty depressing place now.
Five stars for this wonderful book, that I've spent years searching for.
I also recommend along with this "Across the Wide and Lonesome Prairie: The Oregon Trail Diary of Hattie Campbell, 1847 (Dear America)" by Kristiana Gregory, which, even though it's a young adult book, is a great historical look at the Oregon Trail.

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Great MapReview Date: 2008-07-21
On the reverse side, it also has a wider regional map, which is helpful to put your travels into context, especially if you use the map alongside tour books that often point out destinations outside the downtown region.
Easiest to manage Map of portland areaReview Date: 2007-10-16
Streetwise PortlandReview Date: 2007-05-29
A good map of PortlandReview Date: 2007-05-14
Easy to work withReview Date: 2006-08-10

Hidden HistoryReview Date: 2008-01-22
As someone who has family from the slave catchment areas in East Africa, it was interesting to read the accounts and reports of the events my grandfather would describe in his tales.
A thoroughly good read... and a much needed education for all those who thought the european trans-atlantic slave trade was the worst there ever was.
WELL RESEARCHED AND SCHOLARLYReview Date: 2003-06-23
This should be required reading in all schools.Review Date: 2005-12-20
well researched and scholarlyReview Date: 2003-06-29
An Important First BroadsideReview Date: 2004-08-11
This is honestly in part due to translation, which Gordon can't be blamed for. There were parts of the book where one could tell that there was an obvious translation error from the French, where the word or phrase wasn't used quite the correct way it is supposed to be used in English. However, numerous times Gordon also contradicts his own thoughts, making for confusing reading. As he himself admits, much of the research itself is contradictory, but he could have done a better job of weeding through the research, and his editor a better job of clearing up contradictions before publication.
I still recommend this, because it is such important information, and there is so little out there. This book should be seen as important first broadside in understanding an important part of our history. There was so much information here that I had never before known. I had no idea the slave trade continued across Sahara until 1920's, and slavery still allowed in the Middle East until 1970's. Gordon gives amazing details on the horrible atrocities committed under this institution, like emasculation of children. His scholarship is quite good- he rightly faults past researchers who were so against slavery that they made the problem bigger than it was. So, for instance, Gordon shows how the emasculation death rate of 99% is exaggerated by far, it being closer to only a 90% death rate.
It is interesting that most of the slavery under Islamic rule was household help and concubines, leading to very few field workers in the history of Arab Islamic slavery, the opposite of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. This also made women more expensive than all men, except for eunuchs. Gordon rightfully shows that though Islamic slavery lasted far longer than the Atlantic slave trade, some 1000 years, it was generally kinder, with slaves usually treated more as family members- although certainly not always. It is after all an evil institution. And though whites were often enslaved as well, there was definite racism with blacks being considered inferior slaves, doing harder work, and in the end, the only slaves.
And I had no idea that there were benefits to colonialism. For, since slavery is approved in Qur'an and by Mohammed (pbuh), it was a long-established practice that no Islamic country was willing to remove on it's own. There was no indigenous anti-slavery movement that grew up as did in the West, such as the Anti-Slavery Society or among the Quakers. It was only through the pressure of the European countries, through colonialism and then subsequently economic pressure, that finally convinced every Islamic country in the world (with the exception of Mauritania) to finally officially give up slavery.

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Slow, unengaging, unsatisfyingReview Date: 2007-08-25
Finally, as a fan of Charles de Lint and a reader of Gene Wolfe, I think it is unfair to compare Evening's Empire to the generally high level of their work. Herter has not gotten there yet. Not recommended as a fantasy novel or as straight fiction.
Color of soundReview Date: 2003-12-09
If it was any other book, it would have mattered more.
This book is unique in that it evokes not only pictures, but sounds. The hero, Russel Kent, is a composer, a synesthete who perceives all sound as color. He is comissioned to write an opera based on Jules Verne's "2000 leagues under the sea"; he composes sketches of music haunted by dreams of death and memory. Kent's opera is born in front of our eyes out of the dark secrets of the sea and the fear that lives in small towns on the coast; it is born out of storms and tremors of the earth. It speaks of drowning, and of people who walk under the water, of strange cities abandoned yet active under the pressure of water and ground. It is the music dreams are made of, and nightmares. I know very little about musical theory; yet this book was for me a unique experience of music in greens, blues and greys.
I found most of the fantasy elements in this book redundant, added as if an afterthought to the plot. The written musical pieces never come together as a complete oeuvre, and neither does the book. The opera project is put on hold. Only some of the score is written.
In real life, I guess, we rarely hear about such abandoned projects, even if they are works of genius. Herter lets us listen to Kent's unfinished masterpiece. It may sound strange, but I hope that in Herter's imaginary world, the project is someday completed. I wish I could see this opera performed; I guess I'll console myself with Reimann's Lear.
strong fantasy suspense thrillerReview Date: 2003-04-17
Feeling a bit guilty, Russell has an affair with Megan Sumner, the owner of the bed and breakfast he is staying at. He also begins to meet many of the residents, but feels uneasy as he senses everyone shares a dark secret except him. Russell finds a thirst to learn the undisclosed as he starts questioning anything and everything for everyday occurrences here in Empire seem slightly off center or eccentric.
This is a strong fantasy suspense thriller that builds the tension to extremely high levels as readers accompany the hero with a need to know the truth. The story line is loaded with action and filled with an assortment of characters that manage to make the everyday appear eerie. However, the climax feels abrupt as a series of inexplicable disclosures with few or no real clues occur in a very short stretch as if a page limit barrier was hit. Still, David Herter displays his talent to keep the thrill at its acme and the need to know even higher in this powerful fantasy suspense tale.
Harriet Klausner
Not a best-sellerReview Date: 2006-08-01
a) make the protagonist a modern classical composer struggling to write an opera based on 20,000 Leagues under the Sea.
b) make the villains the owners and operators of a cheese factory.
c) wait for over a hundred pages before introducing the first hint of supernatural phenomena.
d) leave the fate of many of the secondary characters unresolved.
This novel is encumbered by all of these obstacles. It starts very slowly, and concentrates on character more than your typical fantasy novel. Personally, I enjoyed it immensely. As for the ending, the ending of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea leaves the fate of several characters hanging, just like the ending to Evening's Empire. There is an important difference, in that in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea there is no possible way for our heroes to find out what happened next, whereas in Evening's Empire the presumption is that the characters will discover what happened in a few months. Somehow, this makes the ending much more unsatisfying. Unfortunately, Herter seemed to miss this distinction.
Fantastic.Review Date: 2002-08-13
The town of Evening had a secret. Something everyone kept quiet about and secretly worked on, unknown by the rest of the world. Quietly, the population of Evening hid a fantastic secret in a cavern beneath the town and only referred to as "downstairs". After many decades of work, and several deaths, the secret was about to be revealed!
This story seemed to flow as smoothly as mellow music. A small bit of curiosities to begin with, followed by a constant undercurrent of tension. The story kept me guessing as to what the big secret was. Even as my imagination ran wild, I never came close to the truth. David Herter has masterfully created a novel that will keep its readers on the edge of their seats! Recommended!

Tess Gerritsen is astonishingReview Date: 2007-09-08
Okay bookReview Date: 2003-01-24
Not up to parReview Date: 2003-10-17
Earlier Attempt By A Great Author!! Really Worth Reading!Review Date: 2003-01-16
This is the story about Nina Cormier who is a ER nurse from a very affluent but dysfunctional family. The story opens with Nina being left at the alter. To add insult to injury while she is sitting in a car waiting to go home the church blows up. And still in the same day someone tries to drive her off the road. Why is this all happening to her?
Bomb detective Sam Navarro is called to the scene of the latest bombing and ends up questioning the bride to be. Sam has his own problems from the past and really has no plans to ever share his life with someone else. Now he finds himself drawn to the witness and there is still the huge mystery as to how Nina fits into the puzzle of the recent bombing, and other murder attempts.
The chemistry between these two people was great and Ms. Gerritsen shows her potential as a suspense novelist. You don't want to miss this one.
The SinnerReview Date: 2004-01-06

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Great Book -- Saved Our TripReview Date: 1999-06-06
Never get stuckReview Date: 1999-05-25
Excellent summary of Oregon and Washington campsitesReview Date: 1998-09-14
Needs a rating systemReview Date: 1999-05-07
Our book is marked, highlighted, and falling apart from use.Review Date: 2000-07-12
This book is fantastic. We have marked it with highlighters, "Post-It" flags, and even different colored stars. "Sea Perch" campground near Cape Perpetua in Oregon, is marked with a gold star. It is literally on the ocean, clean, friendly, and has beautiful scenery.
Since we travel year-round, I like the information on campground openings and Motorhome size limits, facilities, etc. The quadrant maps, detailed driving directions, and "Trip Notes" are invaluable.
I am a skeptic when it comes to ratings in books; to me, quality of an area is determined by personal preference. The descriptions in the "Trip Notes" provide an excellent overview to make personal selections.
We have shared this book and recommended it to MANY people.
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