Missouri Books


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Missouri Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Missouri
Flow On Sweet Missouri
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2005-01-24)
Author: Carol Troestler
List price: $21.95
New price: $20.00
Used price: $18.88

Average review score:

Great Historical Novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-05
The Author brought to life real people who lived through a very important period in our nation's history. The Civil War played a major role in the lives of her ancestors and the author was able to express with realism how they were affected. A most interesting aspect of this tale shows how a town is split down the middle with one side supporting the Union Army and the other side the Confederates. The living conditions and family life during this period of our history is woven with color and flavor. Genealogy can be boring especially when it is not our own, however Carol Troestler makes the reader part of her family allowing the reader to experience their pain, their sorrow and their happiness.
Carol Troestler can be proud of her ancestors who made a significant contribution to this country.


Abe F. March
Author, To Beirut and Back

Appeals to all ages.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-21
I followed this book as it was being written. My 10 seconds of fame come in the introduction. This story takes on the character of the writer, honest, compassionate, gentle, fun, passionate about writing and her family, past and present. It is an honor to be her friend. No foul language and therefore good for young people as well as those who appreciate clean language. I just ordered her second book, IOWA BORN AND BRED, from Amazon, and I think she is writing a third at this time.
Nancy Holum, Summerland Key, Florida

History with a Human Touch
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-07
There was nothing even remotely uplifting about the Civil War, yet Carol Troestler's poignant and thoroughly researched novel about a Missouri family that experienced it firsthand gives a new focus.

We read about the Boothman family, based on her own ancestry, whose spirit and values go above and beyond the divisions within their chosen country, state, and town to achieve unity in family and nation through romance, marriage, birth and death.

Ms. Troestler describes eloquently the tensions produced in each member of the family by the warring factions of North and South, as the men or boys leave home to join one or the other side--the Union or the Confederate--and position for battle in the border state of Missouri.

As schools and churches close for the duration, Elizabeth "home schools" the children with a "play" to teach a history lesson about the lives of Lewis and Clark's expedition down the Missouri River to find a route to the Pacific. As a former teacher who often used this method, this reader found it delightful.

In another joyful moment that made her heart pound, Elizabeth dances the jig--an Irish dance she knew from her youth in Ireland--that also brought back memories of a time when I was part of an Irish Dancing Group.

Not allowing anything to totally destroy their family, not even suffering and death, moving to different states or far distances, Elizabeth Boothman's strong character gives the history an authenticity as she employs spiritual values and qualities of life that redeem an otherwise dreary and depressing moment in the history of America's struggle to become a united nation.

The question we cannot help but ask ourselves is "was the country already in the throes of a peaceful resolution of the evils of slavery, or was this a necessary war with all the suffering and loss of life it produced?"

Bringing the question to a different level--one that is very much in the minds of Americans today who face similar divisions and a war many do not support in a country not their own--Ms. Troestler describes with compassion the sorrow and emotional confusion of those Missouri soldiers who faced an "enemy" and found it was "themselves."

This is a novel that would be an important piece of literature in high schools and colleges to teach history because it is written with knowledge of the issues involved, not just facts, and with a human touch. Five brilliant stars.

Joyce Ann Edmondson
The Listening Tree


Review for Flow On Sweet Missouri
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-08
I just completed reading what I think had to be a very difficult book to write. The author provides a detailed history of her family; history requiring hours of research. Even with the many "in depth" details covering 264 pages, I found myself reading each page with ease and understanding.
Beginning in 1858 when the family of ten crossed the ocean seeking a new life in America, this pioneer family spans nearly 150 years of loving life yet the sorrow of too much death; death from the war, devastating fires and early childhood diseases.
Elizabeth was the early matriarch of the family being a strong-willed woman with great courage who would stand up to the strife of war, the jayhawkers, the vigilantes and of course the bushwhackers - each on different sides of the conflict but invading the area of Missouri where this family had settled. Even the town where they lived was divided in philosophy.
"Minnie" was the first baby born on American soil during the early part of the Civil War. When her mother was forced from their home by bushwhackers, Minnie made her appearance to the family on the banks of a coal mine. As she grew, became a mother, grandmother and great grandmother, she was to become the future matriarch. During her long, difficult life she came to realize the true meaning of freedom - the freedom they sought in this, the new land.
Minnie's final request during her last days was that her granddaughter, Alice release her own daughter from the controlling ways the mothers in the family had always demanded. Her final gift to her great granddaughter (Carol Troestler) was that she have the freedoms to live, play and love - those same freedoms the women of her family were denied. And, oh yes, the freedom to write - write a wonderful book about the Farrar Boothman family titled Flow On Sweet Missouri. It is a great read - Carol took a difficult accumulation of facts and molded them into words that flow like the mighty Missouri River itself. If you enjoy history, you will especially enjoy reading this wonderfully written book. I did.

The Civil War Comes Alive!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-22
As I read Carol Troestler's Flow On Sweet Missouri, I was impressed with her dedication to the story of her family, the mind boggling amount of research that she had to do, and the gentleness of her spirit.

When I was in high school, the class I most dreaded was American History. At that time American History was remembering dates and names that did not seem to connect to my life. It is too bad that we did not have Carol Troestler's book, Flow On Sweet Missouri, for reading at that time. Through her families struggles, you see both sides of the Civil War. It makes it real. It is not just dates and battles, but people surviving and dying on both sides.

Carol has written a magnificent book that should be in schools. Her documentation is wonderful. The songs and hymns of the time are accurate. Her research is without fault.

Many people have written books about their own family history. The difference with Carol Troestler's book is that you know where they were, what they thought, how they lived, their trials and their joys and how they all fitted within the politics of the times. It is a beautiful book!

Missouri
High on a Hill (Missouri, Book 2)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Grand Central Publishing (2002-11-01)
Author: Dorothy Garlock
List price: $6.99
New price: $1.83
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Hillbillies, Bootleggers, Romance
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-08
Some of the characters in this story are the same as in Edge of Town. I liked it because it gave me some insight into country folk, bootlegging and the story line was interesting to me. It showed how sometimes decent people get involved in bad things. The bootlegger's daughter, whose father was trying to get out of the bootlegging business, finds some romance after helping fix up Jack who was beat up on his way home from baseball tryouts one day. I enjoyed reading this very much. It is a fast read and recommend it for light, entertaining reading.

Good One
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-09
High on a Hill is the story of Annabel Donovan, who would just like to stay in one neighborhood long enough to befriend neighbors, but because of her father's shady whiskey business, they have to stay on the move. Corbin Appleby, and ex-marshal is assaulted, and has to stay in the small Missouri town, or so he says until his injuries are healed. Corbin and Annabel end up meeting when she goes into town, they fall- in-love, but could Corbin be after her father, you have to read this book and find out. There are also other characters in the book who has their own little story lines going on. I thought the book was good, but lagged on at one point, I do plan to read more books by this author.

Its a keeper!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-09
Wow! It was really good. This was my first Dorothy Garlock story. I have since read 3-4 others and am in the middle of another. So yeah, her writing totally impressed me. You can see here that the story is about Bootlegging in Missouri in during Prohibition. But the whole package---what you're getting is not so much your typical romance, where the story focuses on one man and one woman, with subtle humorous secondary characters.
In Garlocks stories, so far that I've noted, she intertwines others stories so theres not just one romance/relationship blossoming. Its not all about the main characters! Woohoo!
The details she provides really impressed me. She'd add little descriptions, or talk about the cars, or how to cook on an old stove, or going and getting ice for the freezer---its amazing to have all the period detail, quality writing and a sweet little romance all wrapped up in one. And I like the fact that some of the resolution ends in DEATH----seems another taboo thing for a romance novel---makes it, to me, stand out as more realistic.
I loved it! I hope you do too.

Another excellent story by Dorothy Garlock!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-09
Dorothy Garlock does it again with this excellent historical romance, set in the 1920's. For those of us that read "The Edge of Town," you'll be delighted to read Corbin Appleby's story, along with Jack Jones!! If you have not read "The Edge of Town," you won't miss a beat, as this story takes place in another Missouri city called Henderson (not Fertile). The characters from The Edge of Town are mentioned, but only to please those Garlock fans that never miss a word of her writings. This story has it all, mystery, intrigue, danger, deception, love and romance, close friendly relationship, and more! There is enough information in the description that tells what this book is about, and if I stated anything more, I'd give the surprises away. Sit back and enjoy this one! It's great!

Prohibition, speakeasies and bootlegging
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-12
The prohibition brings big business to bootleggers, speakeasies and gangsters. For years Annabel Lee Donovan, daughter of a bootlegger, has endured frequent upheaval and promises that her father will soon leave the business behind. Their latest move brings them to Henderson, Missouri to a house on a hill. Annabel worries over her father's frequent absences, but tries to make their new home comfortable. Her father leaves behind two men to look to her safety and take turns guarding their stash, Boone and Spinner.

One day a seriously injured young man appears on her doorstep seeking help. Annabel welcomes Jack Jones, nursing him back to health and earns his loyalty. Jack does not know a family friend, Corbin Appleby, tracks him. A former police chief, Corbin insists that he is not a Fed, but his interest in her father's business and in the illegal activity in the area leaves both Annabel and Boone suspicious. In addition, Annabel has dangerous neighbors to contend with, especially when one decided that she belongs to him.

As a new comer to Dorothy Garlock's work, I found her choice of setting, the Prohibition, absolutely fascinating, and her writing delightful. Annabel proves to be a delectable combination of contradictions, raised fairly conservatively by a bootlegging father. Her need for permanent roots proves charming from her acquisition of farm animals to garden planting. As her attraction for Corbin slowly blossoms, suspicion of his motives leaves her questioning his trustworthiness. The Secondary plot proves even more delightful, especially as Boone and Tess almost upstage the romance between the main characters. A beautifully realized old fashioned romance with a emphasis on family ties, HIGH ON THE HILL comes highly recommended.

Missouri
Insiders' Guide to Kansas City, 2nd (Insiders' Guide Series)
Published in Paperback by Insiders' Guide (2005-01-01)
Author: Katie Van Luchene
List price: $18.95
New price: $0.45
Used price: $0.34

Average review score:

Useful travel book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
We live approx. 3 hours from KC and like to visit about once a year. This book is packed with useful information. It's a great buy even if you plan on visiting KC only once.

What to do in Kansas City ...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-20
I am a resident of the area and was impressed with the ideas given to have a vacation without leaving the city.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-23
THE INSIDER'S GUIDE TO KANSAS CITY is a wonderful book. It tells you where the best neighborhoods are on both the Missouri and Kansas sides; the best school districts; the best health care; and virtually everything you need to know about this area. Of course, it could talk about the shopping malls in more depth, like some other books in this series, and some radio station listings are inaccurate as to category and should be taken like the humor in AMERICAN WEDDING, SIMPLY IRRESISTIBLE, THE SISTERHOOD OF THE TRAVELLING PANTS, HARVARD MAN, DRIVE ME CRAZY, 13 GOING ON 30, PRETTY WOMAN, MY BEST FRIEND'S WEDDING, HOW I MET YOUR MOTHER, FRIENDS, DATE MOVIE, and/or the two GARFIELD movies featuring Jennifer Love Hewitt (for example, KRBZ belongs in the Rock/Rhythm/Soul category, not the Contemporary category, while KLZR is not even a Kansas City station but is based in Lawrence and belongs in the Contemporary category, not Rock/Rhythm/Soul, as does KFME, which is now KCJK, and moreover, KNRX is now KMJK- an adult urban contemporary station- and is located about 45 minutes away, in Lexington, MO), as should the listing of Countryside as a separate city (it merged with Mission in 2003), but overall, if you're interested in different metro areas, you'll crave this book.

My personal guide
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-14
When I read this book I felt like Katie was personally showing me KC. It was like she was holding my hand as we explored the neighborhoods and hot spots.

A KC Household Must
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-19
As a local, who takes the city for granted and continually revisits the old haunts, I am enormously grateful for this comprehensive insight into what MY city has to offer.
Katie has sparked the "adventurous" in me and now I am ready to hit the road. This is a book meant for every local's library not to mention all visitors to the city. Most of us are unaware of the myrid options that Kansas City offers. This guide gives us the opportunity to explore and enjoy everything that is available. We are also prepared when, when they come, to enlighten visitors as to everything that Kansas City is about.
Thank you Katie for making all of us who have the book "insiders." The book is a must.

Missouri
The Short Stories (Collected Works of Langston Hughes, Vol 15)
Published in Hardcover by University of Missouri Press (2002-06)
Author:
List price: $44.95
New price: $29.65
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Average review score:

Wonderful Collection of Hughes' Works
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-21
The book contains over 40 short stories and 4 early works by Langston Hughes. As a high school student, I have enjoyed each and every work of Hughes and am fond of his writings.

Yum
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-14
I'm not usually a big fan of short stories but I love these. They are insightful, attention grabbing and always interesting. I got this book as a gift when I was 15 still come back to it frequently years later.

WONDERFUL!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-26
THIS BOOK IS TRULY A MASTERPIECE!I HAVE ALWAYS LOVED LANGSTON HUGHES WHETHER IT WAS HIS POETRY OR HIS SHORT STORIES. HE WAS A VERY INTELLIGIENT MIND(WHAT A BRILLIANT MAN). R.I.P. MY DEAR LANGSTON!

The BEST insight in the human condition
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-08
If you want to read some really deep and powerful insights into the human condition, check out "Mary Winowsky" (written when LH was in HIGH SCHOOL!), "The Gun," Fine Accomodations," "One Friday Morning," "The Little Virgin," "The Young Glory of Him." These stories will make you weep and think about the everyday people you pass in the street and wonder about the stories they may have inside of them. This book should be in EVERY literature class!

This book tells more than just what it is to be Black, it says a lot about being human.

The Dean of Black American Literature & American Lit
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-24
Langston Hughes entire body of work is a testament to his love and pride of being a black American. Though he never excluded his common bond of brotherhood with other people of non-African decent, black Americans occupied first place in his affections and concerns. He never turned his back to them to win the approbation of a larger audience by catering to stereotypes. He had a profound dislike for blacks ashamed of being black,ashamed or who denied their African heritage, ashamed of their skin, and who catered to the worst prejudices of the larger audience in any medium for profit and fame or just to be liked and accepted--like a worrisome number today.

Like his poetry, Hughes short stories reflected much of his philosophy about being proudly black and the shared commonality of all people. Here in LANGSTON HUGHES: SHORT STORIES, edited by Akiba Sullivan Harper with and introduction by Arnold Rampersad, is the proof. Many of the stories presented here are those that have been out of print for some time ,or, are being printed for the first time since they were created. Much like the COLLECTED POEMS by Rampersad, an effort has been made to put the stories in chronological order by the date they were written or published. In all the stories represent a brief overview of specific short stories, not "all" Hughes short stories, and are different in tone and universal in some topics while still embracing black identity. My favorites are "Blessed Assurance" (protesting homophobia in the black community and black church in Hughes's own understandably gay closeted way) and those inspired by his early sea travels. The appendix of this book contains those stories written when Hughes was still in high school.

Like much of Hughes body of work, what he produced is still relevant today in one way or another as in the day he first put pen to paper or struck the keys of a typewriter to entertain and make a statement.

Missouri
The Uninvited: The True Story of the Union Screaming House
Published in Paperback by Llewellyn Publications (2008-09-01)
Author: Steven A. LaChance
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.14
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Average review score:

Best book I've ever read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-11
This is by far the best book I've ever read. I love ghost stories and I couldn't put this book down. I read it in 2 days and I usually take at leat a week to read a book. It was very easy to read. Everything was just straight to the point. Mr. LaChance was not someone that could easily believe in ghosts, at least not at first until it happened to him. My heart truly goes out to these 2 families that had to go through this horrific ordeal. I highly, HIGHLY recommend this book to anyone that likes to read about the paranormal. I know this story was featured on the Discovery channel's A Haunting show, this episode was called Fear House. I saw that episode, but the book was about 10 times better than the show. The show was only a brief summary of what happened and you don't really get the whole story.

want to get scared?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-05
I hope someone makes a movie out of this book It was really good, I enjoyed reading it,in fact I couldn't put it down. Written very honestly and from the heart. I don't know how this family lived through all that .I would advise future paranormal investigators to read this.

Captivating Horror!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-10
Captivating Horror! My only advice is to read this book with the lights on! I watched the documentary on the Discovery Channel's A Haunting; however, the television show didn't do the true story justice. This book gives a full account of the horror that this family endured. This is a true story as told by Steven. It will make you think twice about what you see from the corner of your eye. I highly recommend this book; you won't be disappointed.

Wow!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-08
I read this book in one sitting. I just couldn't put it down. If you like books about the supernatural, you will love this book.

Must read!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-01
The Uninvited is a gripping tale that you won't want to put down! I read this book in 2 sittings, but could have done it in 1 sitting. The first part of the story is your basic ghost story, but by the time the tale is finished, you will not believe what has happened to Mr. Lachance and his family, friends, associates, etc. I do hope that the house on Union Street is no longer for rent...and if so, someone needs to put a BEWARE sign in the front yard!

Missouri
Crossings: A White Man's Journey into Black America
Published in Paperback by University of Missouri Press (1999-09)
Author: Walt Harrington
List price: $29.95
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Average review score:

Read it and pass it along, I did and have thanked each time
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-10
Every so often you are impacted by a compelling act, word or deed. Crossings gave me much to think about. There are dozens of books I have read and they mostly have left my memory bank. Not this book, it made a lasting deposit. E-mail me about Birmingham Pledge: attempt to end racism.

very interesting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-29
I have always been very interested in the role of race in our society. There is no real answer to the questions of its importance, but Harrington does an exceptional job in giving his readers nonbiased, objective research. He travels the country interviewing many different African Americans in different socioeconomic backgrounds, regions, and lifestyles. It is incredibly interesting reading about their different beliefs on the subjects he brings up, and their openness to discuss these things also intrigues me. I loved this book and would recommend it to anyone wanting to learn more about race, whether it is your own, or one you want to know more about.

Class matters most.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-17
This important work should not have disappeared from bookstore shelves, and should be on every thnking person's reading list. By the way, it is also a pleasure to read as Harrington is a gifted storyteller, the mark of a firs-rate reporter. Walt Harrington talks frankly of those differences in style which often separate, perplex, and offend us. White and black social styles are different, but we can deal with that.What we seem unwilling to confront, in our social policies and our private assumptions, are the much larger and harder-edged gulfs between economic classes. Harrington's realization that poor blacks and whites have more in common with one another than with the wealthy, and his analysis of barriers to individual success put up by economically stressed communities, as opposed to racially segregated communities were brilliant. I find myself constantly rethinking my own work in education and in community building based on his work. This book is a must read for every college sociology class, political science professor, and business school graduate.Some publisher out there must recognize the worth of this book. Everyone who has read it is ready to give a copy to at least 5 friends! We can all hope Oprah discovers this work and puts it on her list so that it will gain the audience Harrington deserves.

Let those with ears hear what Harrington has to say.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-31
Walt Harrington has provided America with one of the best accounts of race and racism in this county. Through many interviews with black people around the country, Harrington provides a vivid picture of race in America. His most important point is that all black people do not share the same views on politics, economics, and racism. The only ciriticism that comes to mind is that his book is too optimistic. Harrington insinuates that one day racism can be overcome. This comes after countless off-the-collar, racist comments from various white people he meets (one from a young boy playing basketball). While we must continue to try, white racism seems an insurmountable obstacle.

A fascinating journey that touches the lives of heroes
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-02
I absolutely loved this book. What a journey? As an African Canadian I've had a long fascination with the history and lives of my brothers and sisters to the south. When I was very young I would pore over my father's old Ebony magazines from the 60s absorbing all the knowledge I could about people who I found incredibly complex, strong, loving, generous, heroic....The many stories of courage, achievement and triumph made me very proud. Walt Harrington's book has allowed me to continue my fascinating journey. Today I have many African-American friends who are often astonished with my knowledge of their history and culture. Harrington's book is one that every American should read. Mainly because it's not a book about African Americans, as much as it's a book about America. Every chapter is a journey into complexities of American culture and it's people. They say that the best stories are true - this book is living proof of that. The fact that Harrington is white, makes this journey all the more interesting. Him experiencing things for the first time that we as Black people have long been privvy to is often funny (in a sad way). There are many examples of the accepted ignorance that white privilege creates. However, we find Harrington asking himself questions that would be so easy to sugar coat with a great white liberal response, but he instead answers with the unexpected - brutal honesty (what you suspect he is thinking, but would never say). Some of Harrington's experiences and stories scrape the depths of despair (Chicago projects), while others show the will of a people (Oklohoma cowboys). Harrington is generous in his writing style, recreating Black people's lives and experiences with the greatest detail and vividness. Walt, thank you for your commitment to expanding your horizons and allowing others to be part of your journey - I enjoyed every minute of it. This book is one I look forward to revisiting.

Missouri
Elston and Me: The Story of the First Black Yankee (Sports and American Culture Series)
Published in Hardcover by University of Missouri Press (2001-11)
Authors: Arlene Howard and Ralph Wimbish
List price: $29.95
New price: $17.00
Used price: $9.41

Average review score:

A Fantastic and Inspiring Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-13
A Fantastic and Inspiring Book. Elston Howard was a great man who had guts and charisma. This is a must read for ALL baseball fans and even non baseball fans! Enjoy!

AN EXCELLENT READ
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-20
MRS HOWARD AND MR WIMBISH DO A SUPERB JOB IN TELLING THE LIFE AND CAREER OF FORMER YANKEE GREAT ELSTON HOWARD. ELSTON DESERVED A MUCH LONGER LIFE. THIS IS WRITTEN WITH MUCH HONESTY AND SENSITIVTY. . FROM THE JIM CROWE LAWS TO ARROGANCE AND PREJUDICE, ELSTON HOWARD FACED MANY BARRIERS ALONG THE WAY TO STARDOM. HE WAS QUITE A PLAYER AND DESERVED MUCH MORE RECOGNITION. THIS BOOK BEAUTIFULLY DESCRIBES THE TRADGEDY, TURMOIL, AND TRIUMPHS THAT CAME TO HIM AND HIS FAMILY. A MUST READ FOR ALL YANKEE FANS AND HISTORIANS OF BASBALL. A GREAT READ.

A book for all sports fans and then some
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-17
I enjoyed this book tremendously. It's not just a well written story, but it seems to give true insight to life inside the Yankees during one the franchise's most notable eras. Mickey, Yogi, Elston and company made history together. Arlene stood tall in her role as the first black Yankee wife and Elston prevailed with honor and sportsmanship during these difficult transitional years. Mrs. Howard and Mr. Wimbish's collaboration deserves kudos and more readers. Even long suffering Red Sox fans (just like me!) won't be disappointed.

Baseball History at its Best!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-16
The story of Elston Howard's climb through the baseball ranks during the height of the Jim Crowe laws is not to be missed by anyone who likes baseball or history. His widow Arlene sees his great rise and tragic end to a debilitating disease with the eyes of an old-fashioned story-teller: passionate and dispassionate, an actor on the stage and an observer from the audience. A must read for baseball fans, black history buffs, and those who want to know what it was like to live inside a separate America during one of its greatest and worst eras.

A True Piece of American History
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-11
For those of us who grew up in the 50's with the Yankees, Dodgers, and Giants all in New York, it is a great story evocative of those days told from with a fine eye and keen perspective. A must read for young and old alike - a story that should never be forgotten. Elston Howard's widow is direct and unsparing in this straight forward narrative of their life together with Baseball.

Missouri
Holding Out and Hanging on: Surviving Hurricane Katrina
Published in Hardcover by University of Missouri Press (2007-12-06)
Author: Thomas Neff
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Average review score:

A Reminder
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 35 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-25
Neff, Thomas. "Holding Out and Hanging On: Surviving Hurricane Katrina", University of Missouri Press, 2007.

A Reminder

Amos Lassen

I have had many different kinds of experiences in my life but one that certainly stands out is Hurricane Katrina and I think that is not only because of what I saw but how it so drastically changed my life. There are still pictures in my mind that I do not think I shall ever forget and I am not sure that I want to forget.
Thomas Neff in "Holding Out and Hanging On" allows me to remember and in his photographic essay, he shows us the real impact that Katrina had on the lives of those who went through it. Looking at his photographs is like having a conversation with the people in them. We see moments that go beyond what the camera saw. There is great sensitivity here and a great deal of insight. Many of us who experienced the storm will never forget what we saw but it seems to me that others who were not directly involved need to be reminded of one of the worst disasters in American history. We all must remember Katrina.
Neff not only gives us photographs but also interviews with those affected directly by Katrina and the book is a wonderful testament to those who have been able to rebuild their lives but we must remember that not everyone has been that lucky. A lot has been accomplished since the storm but there is still plenty to do.
Neff's photos and the text shows us what kind of man the author is--he is filled with compassion and courage and an example for all of us As it broke my heart, once again, to see these pictures, I can only imagine what was going on in Neff's mind as he took them. The book documents a disaster--one we should never have to face again.

REAL Katrina Work
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-12
Neff has produced a magnificent book here of portraits of Katrina victims. These are the REAL people and stories from Katrina!

Brilliant, insightful, yet beautiful vision into the reality of Katrina ...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-22
Thomas Neff is a remarkable photographer and this book sharing the real impact of Katrina on people's lives is powerful, timeless, truthful in an inside and honest way that no casual viewer could comprehend. Neff's vision is sophisticated but pure, trained but revealing in its simplicity, visually poetic with the abhorrent facts of life that have been so cruel to so many. If that weren't enough, there are the essential, heroic and stunningly conveying essays which accompany each image. The photographs share so much comprehensive visual information that one needn't ask for more, but by conveying a much broader and richer context for each image through writing and story telling, a nearly complete cultural mosaic is spun, surrounding the milestone and epic event so unique in US History. This book will stand through time as a classic conveyance of important information about an event that we all know about, but certainly haven't had, until this book provided us with it, an insider's view of the real nitty-gritty that is life, both cruel and beautiful. Way to go, Thomas Neff. Such a brilliant work which we should all feel grateful to comprehend.

Vision of an owl
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
Armed with a thorough history of the medium and a flawless technique that has played out over a distinguished career, Mr. Neff has produced a timeless and distinct look into a photographic story untold by the weekend warriors of popular media. The photographs in Holding Out and Hanging On are an extended conversation, empathetic moments that live far beyond the click of the shutter and into a tragedy that has long been forgotten by it's neighbors and countrymen. The photographs are the eye and the heart of a man who is compassionate, realistic, courageous beyond belief and a model for who we should strive to be. As the portraits separate themselves from the time of exposure, the complex clarity and humanity of Neff's photographs are further revealed as a critically important document of the people who lived though Hurricane Katrina as well as an informative and poetic addition to the canon of concerned photography.

Mr. Neff has been my friend and mentor for over ten years now and I could not be more proud to own this necessary book of socially and historically necessary photography that is flawless in it's execution and communion with the spirit and people of New Orleans.

Bradly Dever Treadaway
Faculty Member, The International Center of Photography
New York, NY

Capturing What Words Alone Cannot Fully Express
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-31
The drive down from Chicago to the French Quarter in the canteen left me feeling heavy hearted & speechless. The vast area that hurricane Katrina hit left behind a sea of wasteland like nothing I'd ever seen before. Some areas were completely wiped out where others were only battered, yet the people I met along the way while serving with the Salvation Army in the French Quarter were such a blessing. It was one afternoon in the French Quarter that I met Mr. Neff--I was on my way back from delivering supplies and checking on some of the neighbors. By this time the media was swarming the streets looking for new sensational stories for the headlines. I must say that I did meet a few that tried to report more uplifting personal stories of survival but the majority did not--they were insensitive and disrespectful to the residents. Mr. Neff had a sincere interest in the people he met & photographed, and you can see it in his subjects' eyes: their transparency and trust. Mr. Neff's body of work gives the reader a glimpse into his subjects' lives during this most difficult time. Thank you for recording what words cannot fully express.

Missouri
Naked Playwriting: The Art, The Craft, And The Life Laid Bare
Published in Paperback by Silman-James Press (2005-01-28)
Authors: William Missouri Downs and Robin U. Russin
List price: $21.95
New price: $13.73
Used price: $13.45

Average review score:

Naked Playwriting
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-05
There is an entire industry in publishing books about writing. Writers, especially aspiring writers, are very insecure about their work, and seek reassurance that they're on the right track from others. Most of the books produced to ameliorate writers' self-doubt are crap. But I can say with confidence that Downs and Russin's NAKED PLAYWRITING is not only the best playwriting book I have ever read, it is the best book I have ever read on any kind of writing, from the beginning of the process to the end.

It's easy to talk about how to tell a good story, but how many books actually break down ideas point by point to determine which ones actually have a future? This one. Many would-be writing mentors talk about sitting down and writing, but how many have actually given instructions on how to create a style sheet on Microsoft Word so that you can create a perfectly formatted manuscript on your first try? This one. Everybody knows that the creative process isn't complete until the work is seen by an audience, but how many books demonstrate how to comparison-shop theatre companies, give you balanced pointers on how and when to get an agent, and show how to evaluate a contract to tell if it serves your interests? This one.

The light conversational tone that obtains through most of this book makes the information contained between the covers very approachable. The authors are aware that many of their readers will be beginning writers, but they also incorporate more intermediate and advanced information, so young writers can follow through to the end on what they've already begun. This book is not some compendium of lukewarm exhortations to write now and write more; it's an actual plan to turn your writing into a vocation and a life.

Young writers buy a lot of books to get them started on the art and the craft. This is one of the few books those writers will actually keep on their desks through the years as they write.

Best Possible Resource
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
A little context -- I studied playwriting in college several years ago and had productions of a couple scripts. Recently I've had a play germinating inside me, and I decided to give it a try. I discovered this book on a casual browse through a bookstore.
This book is not only the best imaginable resource, it also serves to inspire and give you a chance to believe in yourself. Yes -- I was rusty and this book reminded me of the styles of plays available to draw on (I'm a bit into alienation and absurdism.), and it demonstrates clearly the difference between vague and uninteresting dialogue with that which contains dramatic tension.
He is also the most practical of teachers. He makes regular suggestions for writing a play that has the best appeal for being produced. (Don't write a play with 50 characters and six scene changes, including a snowstorm in Siberia!)
I would think this book is most useful if you too have decided to embark on the challenge of writing a play; otherwise I'm not sure what the appeal would be. It is not a great tome on dramatic theory. At every step of the way it is practical -- right there ready to help you express yourself and, one hopes, to write a successful play.

This is a great book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-01
The authors have a great sense of humor and tons of information. There are a lot of books out there on playwriting but this one really opened my eyes. Naked is a good way to write.

Naked Playwriting: The Art, The Craft, And The Life Laid Bare
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-19
This is an excellent book to get you on your way towards fulfilling your dream of writing plays.

A Well-Crafted Ship
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-01
Okay, maybe its attractive title did draw this reader's attention to the book, but Naked Playwriting proves to be, as one other reviewer stated, not just a great one amidst so many How-To...books. Naked Playwriting is the best book I've read on writing, as well.

I finished this and thought (yes, exhilarated) that every writer could benefit from this one. No matter what genre. No matter what style. Naked Playwriting is, incredibly, written by two voices, Downs and Russin, and yet it speaks so fluently, so masterfully, and so concisely--with this humor throughout--that I just trusted these writers were actually writers from the first line.

That it speaks so smoothly to the reader, guides the reader, without pompous self-glorifying stories of their own past careers, speaks of the closeness these two writers stayed on course with the subject--and it speaks of the dedication to playwriting that Naked Playwriting follows.

A well-crafted ship is, as the authors describe, the beauty of a stage play, carefully crafted, going somewhere, with purpose, and capable of taking others along on a tremendous ride--that is what the great ones do--and that's what Downs and Russin have offered us.

Read this, then reread, and continue to reference it--Naked Playwriting will become a manual to hold onto.

Missouri
Seven Laurels
Published in Hardcover by Southeast Missouri State University Press (2004-04)
Author: Linda Busby Parker
List price: $35.00
New price: $13.96
Used price: $1.97

Average review score:

A Wonderful new Southern voice
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-14
Thank you Linda Busby Parker for writing the life of Brewster McAtee, an Alabama African-American. I met Brewster as a boy in Low Ridge, Alabama in 1956. I watched this very determined and focused young man grow into a wonderful husband, father and furniture maker. I rejoiced in his many accomplishments and shared his pride in his talented son Laurel. I was awed how he overcome the obstacles of the segragated south with dignity. I traveled with him from hope, through tragedy, and back to hope again. I loved this story because it spoke to my heart and was filled with many positive values. I felt Brewster's family's tragedy did not belong to just them, but to the world.

A real page-turner of a novel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-17
Winner of the James Jones First Novel Award, Seven Laurels is the story of a black man, Brewster McAtee, and his daily effort to earn a living as a skilled carpenter in 1950's Alabama - an era that saw the beginning of the end of legal segregation in America, as well as a change in long-standing American assumptions and prejudices about race. A tense, story of having to deal with changes, tension, and murderous hositility that is far greater than the will of any one individual, Seven Laurels is a real page-turner of a novel that keeps the reader hooked to the end.

Magic and Tragedy in the South
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-03
This is a novel about all the travails and joys of life, the fragility of human nature, and a family's love that spans decades. Parker has succeeded in capturing life in the troubled South; she has also managed to render a realistic picture of all the levels of racial tensions still rife here. But SEVEN LAURELS is primarily a personal and riveting story about a man we readers come to love: Brewster McAtee. I felt I was there with Brewster, I KNOW this man. I could not put the novel down. Perhaps it was Parker's beautiful, decorous language, her masterfully wrought characters or maybe it was the hard subject matter. However she did it, one thing is for sure: Parker is an ALCHEMIST. Buy and read this book. You will not be disappointed!

Seven Laurels is an exceptionally beautiful song of life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-28
The newest novel from the Southeast University Press, Linda Busby Parker's Seven Laurels, is an exceptional story of life, trial, joy, devastation and hope. Parker creates memorable characters the reader can identify with and care about. Her beautiful use of language moves readers to feel the boundless joy of new life, and the crushing shock of life cruelly cut short.
Seven Laurels is an emotional and compelling tale that traverses the life of Brewster McAtee, a strong and gifted African-American living and surviving in Alabama through the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and into the 1980s. Flashbacks reveal Brewster's childhood and adolescence, and all the obstacles he overcomes to develop into a land-owning master carpenter raising a family in the South.
Readers follow Brewster as works to save enough money to buy land and build a home. We meet the girl of his dreams and watch as he tries to win her love and measure up to her father's expectations. We see him become a father, then a grandfather, all in a hostile time and place that seems to actively work against him on occasion.
The breadth and depth of human emotion and potential are displayed by various characters in the novel. The love and support of family contrast an irrational hated and separation by skin color. The kindness and compassion of an elderly Dutch immigrant are juxtaposed with the blind prejudice and hatred of a poor, ignorant white man who lives in a tiny shack near Brewster's land.
Race and prejudice are key themes in the novel. Brewster works every minute of his life to overcome the stereotypes surrounding black men. Scene after scene portrays the unjust practices perpetuated by white people. Decent education, voter registration, buying land, a home, even a car were privileges not readily extended to blacks. Major civil rights events-the bus boycott, Malcolm X's speeches and murder, Martin Luther King, Jr.'s speeches and murder, formation of the NAACP and many more-affect Brewster and his family in a variety of ways.
This novel is not just about race and prejudice, however. It's about family, growth and life. It's about church suppers, birthday cakes, piano lessons, wood carving. It's about perseverance through adversity, patience and understanding, pride in the accomplishments of people you care about.
That is not to say the novel is always rosy or that things work out all the time. They don't. As much as this is a story of triumph, it is also one of defeat. Deaths and accidents occur. Things don't always work out as they should. The point of this whole experience, however, is to realize what can be accomplished in spite of destruction and tragedy. The novel is complex and full, but the straightforward description and conversational tone make the beautiful language easy to read.
The novel has won the James Jones First Novel Award, and deservedly so. I encourage everyone to put it on their summer reading lists.

Civil Rights era blacks with blue collar jobs
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-08
In this remarkable novel, Linda Busby Parker takes us on a journey of a black man's life in rural Alabama during the Civil Rights era. Over and over we admire Brewster McAtee as he deals with an abusive father, poverty, and the degrading insults of living in the pivotal time of enforced equality by law and citizen agreement. We delight in Brewster's determination to own land, build a home, and raise a family with the cultured woman of his dreams. We mourn his losses and exult in his triumphs while fulfilling the American dream.


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