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EXCELLEN BOOK!Review Date: 2000-07-11
EXCELLEN BOOK!Review Date: 2000-07-11
EXCELLEN BOOK!Review Date: 2000-07-11
Reallity in paperbackReview Date: 2000-06-30
Great BookReview Date: 2000-06-29

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This is THE Virginia CookbookReview Date: 2008-08-18
The most reliable cookbook I own!Review Date: 2003-09-03
Virginia HospitalityReview Date: 2001-12-31
Favorite CookbookReview Date: 2000-11-27
Virginia HospitalityReview Date: 2005-02-09

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I don't want it to endReview Date: 1999-09-18
I have to agree,Review Date: 2007-08-24
Exhaustively researched, crisply written, judiciousReview Date: 2001-12-06
The best so farReview Date: 1999-12-18
Interesting, but not for the Woolf neophyteReview Date: 1998-12-22

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Don't Visit the Blue Ridge Parkway without it!Review Date: 2002-08-31
A great companionReview Date: 2002-09-17
Get out of the car and walk the Blue Ridge ParkwayReview Date: 2003-11-11
My only objection to the rating is that the author considers too many hikes as strenuous. For example, Adkins labels the Snooks Nose Trail, eight miles round trip and described as "not well-maintained and hard to locate" as strenuous. The two-and-a-half mile round trip hike up to Mt. Pisgah, on a clear, well-marked trail, is also rated as "strenuous". Hikers will have to decide what strenuous means to them. Ratings aside, the book is necessary to anyone looking for a variety of hikes in the area. The appendices are also a wealth of information. He lists every feature on the Parkway along with its mileage, all the inns and campgrounds as well as a roadside bloom calendar
Best hiking guide to the parkwayReview Date: 2004-07-26
All in all, we were happy to have found Walking the Blue Ridge and will be using it often.
Don't visit the Blue Ridge Parkway without it!Review Date: 2002-09-22

Happy Birthday FelicityReview Date: 2006-05-11
In the beginning of the story Felicity and Elizabeth,her friend, were making fun of Elizabeth's sister (Annabelle) while she was playing the guitar and singing. Next, Felicity heard soldiers talking about a plan and when she told her parents, they didn't believe her so she had to fix it herself.
The theme of this book is always obey because you may have a problem like Felicity. This book reminded me of myself because I play the guitar just like Felicity was learning to. Girls of all ages would enjoy this book.
A.F. in Annapolis
Happy Birthday,Felicity!Review Date: 2006-04-28
I't a spring time story by Valerie Thrip,and mostly about Felicity getting a guitar and a lamb for her birthday.
It was a good book,and reccomend it to any girl who loves American Girls series!
WOW!!Review Date: 2005-10-19
A great Felicity bookReview Date: 2004-01-18
Not not this one, but all the books in the series!Review Date: 2003-06-30
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The bestReview Date: 2008-01-26
Deepwater MountainReview Date: 2003-01-02
Deepwater MountainReview Date: 2002-08-14
This book grabbed me on the first page and never turned me loose, I don't think I have ever gone through so many emotions while reading a book as I did with this one. The Characters were so real I had to keep reminding myself that it was a story. I kept hearing echoes of my Father, my Mother, my Grandma, my Grandpa, my Uncles and my Kin.
There is a unique mystique about being a West Virginian that few who have not been born and raised here understand. It is so hard to describe or explain, because it is spiritual. Rebecca has captured it and woven it throughout her book. It starts where her story starts and ends, well it don't end, it is still here in these hills and in our hearts.
If you have not read this book you are robbing yourself of one of life's good experiences.
I sure hope there is more where this came from.
Shirley Dawn Kincaid Walker's review of Deepwater MountainReview Date: 2005-04-17
"Had Thomas Wolfe grown up in the Appalachian Mountains of WV, as I did, I think he'd agree with me. NC doesn't hold a candle to WV.
"A Kincaid in Kincaid, next door to Camhi's Page, I remember my parents, Todd and Minnie Kincaid, taking me to visit Great Grandpa Poley, Great Grandma Lizzie, and Creedy in their little house with the toasty warm coal fireplace. They lived "just up the road a piece" from me.
I can't recall ever reading a book faster than this one. Saying I was mesmerized is a fact. Willa May and Daniel became my family in Chapter one and I simply felt overwhelmed emotionally when I had to leave them. I do hope Camhi will continue with their family saga. I recall feeling the same when I read John Galsworthy's first novel about the Forsyte Family.
"Camhi has that wonderful knack of capturing the reader and making her feel a part of history. Her characters are realistic and she teaches WV history, obviously having done her homework. I can see "Deepwater Mountain" becoming a required reading in WV English and History classes.
"In fact, I see Willa May as John Denver's Mountain Mamma in "Country Roads," which many people say put WV on the map. Anyone wondering about WV, the most Northern of the Southern states, the most Southern of the Northern States, and the most Western of the Eastern states, and the most Eastern of the Western states, should grab the opportunity to find out about Wild, Wonderful West Virginia by reading "Deepwater Mountain."
Shirley Dawn Kincaid Walker(formerly of Kincaid, West Virginia)
6309 Alderwood Bay
Woodbury, Mn 55125
Review of Camhi's Deepwater MountainReview Date: 2005-04-20
I grew up in Kincaid, West Virginia, which is right next door to Page, Robson and Deepwater Mountain, the places that Rebecca Camhi brings to life again in her book, Deepwater Mountain. I traveled through these small towns for four years while commuting to college at West Virginia Tech. Becky has brought back the memories of traveling that wicked road, dangerous to this very day.
This book brings back vivid memories of my great-grandfather Napoleon Kincaid and my Uncle Harry Cale. I can still see Napoleon, "Poley," as we called him, delivering his moonshine on Page Road just a few miles south of Deepwater Mountain. (By the way, Becky, we were always told that "Poley" never got caught by the Feds, but that he had a lot of close calls.)
I can still hear my father and grandpa Tibb talk about Poley, Lizzie and Creedy. When I make my annual visit to clean the gravesites at the Kincaid Cemetery here in Kincaid, and see the gravestones of Poley, Lizzie and Creedy, it brings back all those memories that Becky described in this wonderful novel. It is hard to explain how we West Virginians feel about our state: when we meet another West Virginian, no matter where we've traveled, it's as if both of us have come back to the hills. It's in our hearts!! Becky has truly captured this spirit throughout her entire book.
Those in my generation who were born and reared in Kincaid, WV, can relate to Becky's book because we actually lived the life of her characters from 1940 to present. And when we look back through Becky's eyes, we can see ourselves at the very beginning. Becky has truly captured the motto of West Virginia "Montani Semper Liberi" (Mountaineers are always free!)
Once you pick up this book, you won't put it down until you have finished reading the entire book. Becky Camhi is a truly remarkable author. Each chapter is a surprise, and you just can't wait for the next one.
I look forward to Becky's next book, but will be hard for her to top this one.
Douglas L. Kincaid, Sr. of Kincaid, West Virginia

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Economic Development in Days Gone ByReview Date: 2008-10-04
Dunn's thesis is that the Tidewater slave-holding aristocracy, hewing to the agrarian, small-government ideals of Thomas Jefferson, held back the state's progress. While northern states embarked upon internal improvements, encouraged manufacturing and educated its citizens, Virginia's aristocracy restricted the franchise, dominated the political system, and thwarted the entrepreneurial vitality that threatened to overturn the state's agrarian society.
There is much to recommend Dunn's book, especially for Virginians who, like me, have only the foggiest notion of the state's history between the American Revolution and the Civil War. While the slave-holding aristocracy undoubtedly did hamper Virginia's evolution to an industrial economy, it strikes me, based upon information that Dunn herself provides, that there was more to the story.
What most intrigued me was Dunn's chapter, "Roads, Canals and Railroads: Moving in Place," which chronicled Virginia's "transportation policy" of the early 19th century. Although Virginia lacked the economic vitality of the northern states, it was not entirely devoid of entrepreneurial energy. The Old Dominion took part in the canal-building mania that gripped the nation around the turn of the century. Business interests launched canals along the James River and the Potomac River with the goal of breaching the barrier of the Blue Ridge the Alleghenies to link up with the fast-developing Ohio River Valley.
Neither enterprise succeeded in its goals. (Dunn doesn't explain why, although I suspect it was a matter of geography - the distances involved and the challenges entailed with crossing mountain chains required far too much capital.) But the canals did form a potent constituency that lobbied effectively against the competitive threat of the railroad. Writes Dunn:
"The investors in the James and Potomac canals, along with Tidewater planters, were among the first in the 1820s to oppose the development of railroads in Virginia, especially lines leading into the interior of the state that might have competed with the canals. Even into the 1850s, their influence held sway in the General Assembly, where legislators killed proposals for the expansion of railroads in some parts of Virginia...
"The canal interests ultimately hampered the economic growth of the entire state. A vital line, only 15 miles long, from the Midlothian coal district to Richmond was delayed again and again."
(Ah, the power of special interests - plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose.)
But the economic case for building railroads was so compelling that the canals could not halt construction forever. In 1816, the General Assembly created a state-controlled "Board of Public Works" to mobilize capital and invest in internal improvements. The board would invest in private companies if entrepreneurs supplied three-fifths of the capital; the board would supply the rest. (The first public-private partnerships!)
Dunn argues that the Board was a half-hearted effort, lacking sufficient capital to carry out its task. But it could be equally argued that the institution was flawed from its inception by allowing political considerations to supplant economic ones.
The problem, noted Dunn, is that the Board of Public Works had no overarching vision for conceiving, planning or coordinating projects, much less to build a unified transportation system. Instead of cooperating, cities competed with one another to gain commercial advantage. Furthermore, the Board spread its resources so thinly - among 11 navigation companies, seven railroads and 38 turnpikes - that it accomplished little. Writes Dunn: "The projects were unprofitable, the quality of work poor."
It's not clear to me how this represents a failure of the Jeffersonian vision of limited government. Rather, it looks like a classic case of a failed government program, in which Virginia's scarce investment capital was misallocated by a government board driven by political considerations rather than economic ones.
By the 1850s, Virginia had built 2,000 miles of railroads. Nineteen different companies operated rail lines. But the lines were often unconnected and had incompatible gauges; Richmond was served by six different rail lines, but there was no central depot for the transfer of cargo or passengers. While Virginia was busy launching under-funded enterprises in response to special-interest lobbying, it failed in a crucial legitimate role that government could have played: creating a blueprint that would have allowed private companies to integrate into a unified system.
By the 1850s, Virginia could boast almost 5,000 manufacturing establishments, writes Dunn. That may have been an impressive number by the standards of the slave-holding states, but it lagged industry and commerce in the North. Dunn argues that "if the state government had energetically supported a network of internal improvements, Virginia might have developed large, vital cities that could have attracted skilled labor, capital and consumers." Virginia possessed coal and iron deposits - it potentially could have been a leader in the industrial revolution.
Dunn has captured elements of the full picture, but I sense that her analysis is incomplete. While Virginia's entrepreneurial vitality lagged that of the north, it exceeded that of other slave-holding states. Where did that industrializing impulse come from? Who were Virginia's ante-bellum entrepreneurs and where did they get their capital? What role did the tariff (the subject of a different chapter) play in transferring wealth to Northern states and inhibiting capital formation in Virginia? To what extent did the Board of Public Works misallocate the limited supply of capital that was available?
"Dominion of Memories" may not have all the answers, but Virginia public policy junkies will find Dunn's account of the great economic development issues of Virginia's early 19th century to be fascinating nonetheless.
(From the Bacon's Rebellion blog at http://baconsrebellion.blogspot.com).
How the Virginians of yore resisted progress and paid for itReview Date: 2008-05-03
The slavery's role in the decline of the South is an old story. However, the author manages to narrate insightfully how Virginia (once the wealthiest and most populous state that produced so many colonial leaders and early presidents) slipped steadily downhill in the first decades of the 19th century. All that (and much more that I do not mention in this summary) is developed in 224 pages (notes excluded).
So I could not put it down, and read it in less than a week's time (content: 4 to 5 starts; pleasure: 4 to 5). I highly recommend it.
Other books on the USA I would also recommend are the following:
A) Dealing with constitutional and political ideas:
1) "America's Constitution: A Biography" by Akhil Reed Amar;
2) Constitutional History of the American Revolution [ABRIDGED]" by John Philip Reid; and
3) "Lincoln's Constitution" by Daniel A. Farber.
B) Other books chosen with an approach historically impressionistic:
4) "The Death Penalty", by Stuart Banner;
5) "The Churching Of America, 1776-2005: Winners And Losers In Our Religious Economy" by Roger Finke and Rodney Stark;
6) "American Colonies. The settling of North America", by Alan Taylor;and
7) "Battle cry of freedom. The Civil War Era" by James M. McPherson.
dominion of nightmaresReview Date: 2008-02-22
Well doneReview Date: 2008-01-03
An excellent revision of the misty memory of the Old SouthReview Date: 2007-11-26
The book is also illuminating to anyone interested in Jefferson. For me, living in Jefferson's hometown, there's a bit of local history in it, too.
Ms. Dunn may infuriate some Virginians, because she paints a not so flattering portrait of Virginia's leadership, at a time when the heroes of the Revolution were passing the torch to the next generation. But to me the cultural and political points of view that were dominant at that time, and which are explored in this book, still have a visible effect here.
I found it to be a great book to read after finishing His Excellency: George Washington, by Joseph Ellis. That book raises some similar issues in regard to the cultural and economic evolution of Virginia, which hampered the state's economic development -- specifically as that evolution depended upon the commitment to a slave-based economy.

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Good for teachers, too!Review Date: 2005-11-30
Great for the classroom tooReview Date: 2004-02-02
Fun ways to help your children love mathReview Date: 2001-07-21
You can probably guess that the normal elementary school math curriculum did not thrill him. Fortunately, early on, his kindergarten teacher lent me her copy of this book, and suggested that it might help him get started on understanding some higher math concepts, while still being age appropriate. The words "higher math" were not exactly music to the ears of a math phobe like me. But within a couple of weeks, after trying out a few games, I was hooked, and bought my own copy.
During the time he was in elementary school, I think we did at least 3/4 of the activities in the book, not because I thought he should, but because he wanted to. And, to my enormous surprise, so did I. The games and activities in this book are so intriguing that even I began to develop a sense of what it must feel like to really love math. (And, amazingly enough, I even got a little better at basic arithmetic.) Several of the games were so much fun, they became obsessions. We played them day after day.
My younger child, who recently finished kindergarten, doesn't remotely share her brother's love of numbers, but this year I dug out my old copy of the book to see if it might get her more interested. Sure enough, it worked. The games of logic and the games designed to develop rapid mental arithmetic skills that so fascinated her brother don't really interest her. In fact, most of the book is still way beyond her skill level. But I've found quite a few games that are appropriate for a child still struggling to add and subtract single digit numbers. (She says they're more fun than the math games they play at school). And there are several activities (Tangrams, and Color Designs, for instance) that take advantage of her love of art to help her understand math better. At the end of kindergarten, my daughter told me that her favorite school subject was math. I have no doubt that her exposure to Family Math games had a lot to do with that. And I have no doubt that we'll be using this book more and more over the next few years.
Making Math Fun!!Review Date: 2002-10-10
The book is organized into different math topics (like Logical Reasoning, Numbers and Operations, Probability and Statistics) and each activity clearly states the age level that it is for and its purpose.
FAMILY MATH ends with instructions for setting up a Family Math class to teach parents and teachers how to use the material.
Family Math ReviewReview Date: 2007-01-18

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If you "enjoy" this book..........Review Date: 2008-08-11
The tale is told from the viewpoint of Etta Ipp, who became Edna Ipson here in Richmond, VA. "Izzy's Fire" was a pet name her husband's family had for her. Some of the scenes, and stories, will make you sick. {DON'T let little kids read it}. Some will make you cry. There is great evil in the world; if you doubt that, read this book. There is also great good...never doubt that, either, for you shall meet it here.
The Ipsons lost almost all of their family to the Nazis, but they survived, and even prospered. Izzy died in 1997. Edna was still alive at the publication of the book in 2005. Jay, their young son, is now in his mid 70s, and helps run the Virginia Holocaust Museum, in Richmond. He is living history. I shall do something I never do, and recommend you not buy this from your favorite bookstore...if you purchase it from the Holocaust Museum, Jay will sign and personalize your copy; that virtually makes it a sacred relic. I assure you I treasure mine.
The triumphant true story of a holocaust survivor and members of her familyReview Date: 2005-07-04
out of the frying pan into the fireReview Date: 2005-08-10
Beasley draws from personal interviews, research & numerous memoirs, including those from Israel "Izzy" Ipson, who helped his family escape from Kovno Ghetto, one of the most notorious killing fields for Jews in Lithuania. The Ipps, as they were known then, relocated to Richmond following their liberation and later changed their name to Ipson. Their story has been re-created at the Virginia Holocaust Museum in Richmond, Virginia.
IZZY'S FIRE is Eta's answer to those who say the Holocaust never happened, & is a tribute to personal bravery & the unquenchable resources of compassion, quick-wittedness & sheer determination to live, with a lot of luck thrown in.
Complete with maps & photos, IZZY'S FIRE is a story for all time.
Required reading for all high school students. Review Date: 2005-05-05
Excellent, excellent, excelent!Review Date: 2005-03-08

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The True Story Of JamestownReview Date: 2008-02-12
However, the Jamestown story has its own set of myths, the most obvious being the supposed saving of John Smith's life by Pocahontas. Horn does an effective job of demonstrating this to be a likely falsehood. Instead Smith is shown to be an arrogant leader who was despised by most of the colonists and ended up returning to England a failure. He was replaced by Sir Thomas Dale, who turned out to be a somewhat more effective leader. But it really wasn't until the discovery of tobacco as a viable cash crop that Jamestown became anything approaching a commercial success. Prior to this the colonists lived on the verge of starvation, dependent on the Indians for corn in order to survive.
But Horn also shows the high level of tension and violence that existed between the English and the Indians from the beginning. The Powahatan chief, Wahunsonacock, viewed the English with great suspicion that later grew into contempt and a desire to prevent any further incursions of English into Powahatan territory. This resulted in the Indian uprising of 1622, where hundreds of English were killed in a single day. But the English settlers continued to arrive in ever greater numbers and the colony was made permanent.
But this permanence was hardly inevitable. Spain was keeping a close eye on Jamestown as well. They sent several ships up from Florida to investigate. These were all turned back. But still the Spanish could have likely destroyed the Jamestown colony if they had made it a more significant priority. But they chose not to. The two primary reasons being that they had recently concluded a peace treaty in the Netherlands and didn't want to risk further hostilites as well as the fact that they thought it probable that Jamestown would fail on its own without any Spanish interference, an entirely reasonable scenario at the time.
Overall, Horn manages to tell the true story of Jamestown, sharing his vast knowledge in a way that brings this period of history to life and captivates the reader. I also enjoyed reading the numerous quotes he included from John Smith and other primary sources. Perhaps some more attention could have been paid to the arrival of slaves from Africa as well as the distinct class differences between the colony leaders and the workers, many of whom arrived as indentured servants. But still this is an excellent book and comes highly recommended.
Intriguing look at the Virginia Company @ JamestownReview Date: 2007-06-17
James Horn has attempted to correct this imbalance by writing this clear, lucid, and colorful history of the settlers at Jamestown - the only thing missing from his title is that this story is almost one of the colonial efforts of the Virginia Company more than just the story of Jamestown. However, the book does focus on the exploits, trials, and tribulations of the early settlers in Jamestown and surrounding plantations.
The book largely focuses on the early years of the settlement, including the exploits of Captain John Smith and the interactions with the native Americans, but runs all the way through the bankruptcy of the Virginia company and the transition from a private enterprise to a royal colony. Horn speculates as to the value of the Jamestown settlement at the conclusion of the book - although his speculation is well reasoned, it would take multiple additional volumes to bring to fruition his thoughts.
ExcellentReview Date: 2007-01-03
From the initial foothold onto American soil in 1607 by John Smith, Captain Christopher Newport, Bartholomew Gosnold, John Ratcliffe and a total of 144 adventurers, we develop an understanding as to the trials and tribulations of colonizing and conquest in a foreign land spanning two decades of time. Hunger, disease, Indian hostilities and moral fiber are at its tautest for establishing settlements in such a vast unexplored region.
Horn's respectable character analyses of Powhatan Chief Wahunsonacock and his brother Opechancanough, along with the great many other personalities involved on both sides, gives this rendition a profound and discerning look into how America began.
An authoritative and lively read.
Excellent insight into early American historyReview Date: 2006-11-16
He seems to be ambivalent about John Smith: while he doesn't seem to like Smith much, he describes him as one of the few seeking to get the settlement self-sustaining rather than putting up with idleness and depending on the Indians for food. In this portrayal Smith is very arrogant and makes some serious mistakes, but no more than others, and he does try to establish productive relations with the Indians, which subsequent leaders failed to do.
I particularly liked the author's liberal use of quotations from source material. They made the narrative more lively and more personal. I hope Dr. Horn keeps writing.
An Outstanding Account of the Establishment of a British Colony in North AmericaReview Date: 2006-11-05
In search of wealth, glory, and the conversion of the natives to Christianity, the Virginia colony survived by a thread for its first decade. It survived a succession of crises until John Rolfe proved that tobacco could earn a profit, and thereby placed the colony on a path toward self-sustainment. The very success of the colony demonstrated that the British were a serious threat to the Powhatan way of life and in 1622 they rebelled in a bloody war that lasted several years before the native peoples were defeated. Although the Virginia colony survived this war, but just barely, it decimated the joint stock company that oversaw it, and in 1625 Virginia became a royal colony under the suzerainty of the King of England.
This is a very skillfully written account of the first twenty years of the Virginia colony, demonstrating very clearly how the British established a foothold in North America. It is a worthwhile and at times exciting reading experience. Enjoy!
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