Pennsylvania Books
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Pennsylvania Books sorted by
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Indians in Pennsylvania (Anthropological series)
Published in Unknown Binding by Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (1993)
List price:
Average review score: 

An insightful look at the REAL history of Native Americans.
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1996-06-11
Review Date: 1996-06-11
Paul A. W. Wallace offers us an unbiased account of the history of
the Native American people of Pennsylvania. Each chapter made
me want to learn more about the individual tribe that was
represented in its pages and inspired me to continue reading.
Mr. Wallace does not ever compare the European settlers with
the Indians and say that one was more savage than the other.
He merely points out that the Native American people were
more intelligent than what the history books would have us
believe. Paul Wallace introduces us to an innocent culture
and guides us through the necessary metamorphosis of a land
besieged by "conquerors."
If you're interested in the plight of Native Americans, or
in the history of Pennsylvania, this book should become the
keystone of your library!
Thorough and accessible historical and cultural overview
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-21
Review Date: 2005-06-21
I was really pleased with this book, all the more so since it was published in 1970, when attitudes towards Native Americans weren't as they are today in 2005.
The book is not too long, but thorough and well-documented. It's about right for someone who's really busy and just wants a good and thorough overview.
The book explains well the various tribes (including the Delaware, Iriquois, Eries, Susquehannocks, Shawnee, Conoy, Conestoga, Mohawk, Oneida, Tuscarora, and Wyandots), although it's focus is particularly on the Delaware and Iriquois, who were descendant and ascendant at the time. Wallace does a particularly good job explaining the impact of white settlers on the native tribes, particularly in terms of the impact on native economics, which drove local tribes to immediately abandon traditional weapons for guns, which they could only get from the settlers. In order to get guns, the only item the settlers wanted were furs, which were in demand in Europe, particularly beaver. Immediately the local animal populations were devastated, and in order to get more, the Native tribes had to go further and further west. All the tribes realized that their fates were precarious, as they dealt with the English in the East and the French to the North, and the Indian tribes weren't innocent, they worked politics and alliances as well as the English... although perhaps not as well as the French. The Iriquois in particular had a clear vision of what they had to do to survive, and jockeyed to become the middle-men between the other Indian tribes and the settlers.
There's much more than this, including primary source accounts from the 17th and 18th Century, well-balanced descriptions of culture, technology, religion, and ceremonies, maps and illustrations, and the final migration of the Indians out of Pennsylvania, based on a series of land purchases and the "extinguishment of Indian title." And of course much history about the wars and conflicts between tribes and the settlers.
History has been revised (as it has been before and will be before), and this book may have an older point of view that may not be what is conventional wisdom today regarding relations between the settlers and natives. But in some ways this point of view is new to me, and is worth considering. Rather than being entirely stolen, land in pennsylvania was purchased in fairly above-board manners that surprised me. When taken in context of how land had been won and lost between the tribes for centuries before, and how there was a vast uninhabited area in Western Pennsylvania due to the disappearnce of the Monongahelia tribe (due to plague or conquest is unknown), it puts things in a new perspective. That doesn't lessen by any means other tragic events (such as the forced relocation through the Trail of Tears, etc.) and what conventional wisdom says are hundreds of other broken treaties, but it is a different perspective.
I'd recommend this book for people with an interest in local history, and students in high school and perhaps junior high school.
The book is not too long, but thorough and well-documented. It's about right for someone who's really busy and just wants a good and thorough overview.
The book explains well the various tribes (including the Delaware, Iriquois, Eries, Susquehannocks, Shawnee, Conoy, Conestoga, Mohawk, Oneida, Tuscarora, and Wyandots), although it's focus is particularly on the Delaware and Iriquois, who were descendant and ascendant at the time. Wallace does a particularly good job explaining the impact of white settlers on the native tribes, particularly in terms of the impact on native economics, which drove local tribes to immediately abandon traditional weapons for guns, which they could only get from the settlers. In order to get guns, the only item the settlers wanted were furs, which were in demand in Europe, particularly beaver. Immediately the local animal populations were devastated, and in order to get more, the Native tribes had to go further and further west. All the tribes realized that their fates were precarious, as they dealt with the English in the East and the French to the North, and the Indian tribes weren't innocent, they worked politics and alliances as well as the English... although perhaps not as well as the French. The Iriquois in particular had a clear vision of what they had to do to survive, and jockeyed to become the middle-men between the other Indian tribes and the settlers.
There's much more than this, including primary source accounts from the 17th and 18th Century, well-balanced descriptions of culture, technology, religion, and ceremonies, maps and illustrations, and the final migration of the Indians out of Pennsylvania, based on a series of land purchases and the "extinguishment of Indian title." And of course much history about the wars and conflicts between tribes and the settlers.
History has been revised (as it has been before and will be before), and this book may have an older point of view that may not be what is conventional wisdom today regarding relations between the settlers and natives. But in some ways this point of view is new to me, and is worth considering. Rather than being entirely stolen, land in pennsylvania was purchased in fairly above-board manners that surprised me. When taken in context of how land had been won and lost between the tribes for centuries before, and how there was a vast uninhabited area in Western Pennsylvania due to the disappearnce of the Monongahelia tribe (due to plague or conquest is unknown), it puts things in a new perspective. That doesn't lessen by any means other tragic events (such as the forced relocation through the Trail of Tears, etc.) and what conventional wisdom says are hundreds of other broken treaties, but it is a different perspective.
I'd recommend this book for people with an interest in local history, and students in high school and perhaps junior high school.

Appalachian Winter
Published in Paperback by University of Pittsburgh Press (2005-01-20)
List price: $19.95
New price: $13.66
Used price: $18.47
Used price: $18.47
Average review score: 

A Winter For All Seasons
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-07
Review Date: 2005-06-07
Even though I read this book in early June, I almost couldn't wait for the next winter in my area of Central Pennsylvania. Marcia Bonta also lives in this region, in a large forested enclave on top of a ridge, and this book functions as a diary of her wildlife viewing around her property during an entire winter. There are entries for each date from December 1 through March 20, and while you might think such a diary would be monotonous, that is far from the case because of the wide variety of wildlife and weather Bonta observed every day. She saw plenty of the most common woodland creatures frolicking throughout the supposedly "dead" season, with some surprise sightings of bears, beavers, and foxes. The biggest surprise for the reader is the astonishing variety of birds that inhabited the Bonta ranch during the winter, from mighty raptors to surprisingly hardy songbirds. Throughout the daily diary entries, Bonta adds informative biology lessons on the behavior of the birds and animals she spotted. Meanwhile there are occasional forays into other scientific areas, such as the botany of lichens and the history of the snowshoe, topped off by occasional passages of wise and experienced Thoreau-like naturalist philosophy. This very enjoyable book shows you that winter only seems like a dead season if you stay cooped up inside every day. Instead, venture outside and see for yourself how alive the hills and forests of Appalachia really are. [~doomsdayer520~]
Informative, inspiring reading
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-18
Review Date: 2005-05-18
I first encountered the works of Marcia Bonta when assigned her books to review for a university publication. She fast became a personal favorite. I am especially fond of the quartet of seasonal nature journals, APPALACHIAN SPRING, APPALACIAN FALL, APPALACHIAN SUMMER and now APPALACHIAN WINTER. Bonta has a sharp eye, a wealth of knowledge and a graceful hand at writing that will hook anyone anywhere even though she is documenting life atop a mountain in central Pennsylvania.
The volume on Spring was her first in the quartet, and stuck closely to the flora and fauna on the mountain. The next in the series was Fall, in which her daily treks and observations brought her and her family up against an unscrupulous lumberman whose devastation of the land bordering theirs offered lessons in public policy and environmental awareness. The Summer journal included glimpses of new human life in the form of a grandchild while search parties looking for a lost child wove through the Bonta's beloved woods. The Winter volume thrums with close-up looks at birds, mammals, insects and climatic events but Bonta's awareness of ageing and the aggregation of human devastation of the environment also creep in. She weaves a tapestry of wonder, fact, observation, opinion and thought. Her way of life is extraordinary and she is generous to share her world. Though I was saddened at the prospect of no more entries to anticipate in the seasonal journals now that Winter concludes the quartet, I am heartened that Bonta expresses the conviction to continue to uphold her role as steward of the natural world and to serve as its interpreter as long as possible.
The volume on Spring was her first in the quartet, and stuck closely to the flora and fauna on the mountain. The next in the series was Fall, in which her daily treks and observations brought her and her family up against an unscrupulous lumberman whose devastation of the land bordering theirs offered lessons in public policy and environmental awareness. The Summer journal included glimpses of new human life in the form of a grandchild while search parties looking for a lost child wove through the Bonta's beloved woods. The Winter volume thrums with close-up looks at birds, mammals, insects and climatic events but Bonta's awareness of ageing and the aggregation of human devastation of the environment also creep in. She weaves a tapestry of wonder, fact, observation, opinion and thought. Her way of life is extraordinary and she is generous to share her world. Though I was saddened at the prospect of no more entries to anticipate in the seasonal journals now that Winter concludes the quartet, I am heartened that Bonta expresses the conviction to continue to uphold her role as steward of the natural world and to serve as its interpreter as long as possible.

The Apple Orchards: An Historical-Fictional Account of 300 Years of Powell Orchards Planted in Pennsylvania and Ohio
Published in Hardcover by Fountain Publishing (2007-12-15)
List price: $20.00
New price: $20.00
Average review score: 

Faith, Family, Fruit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-22
Review Date: 2008-08-22
Vera Glenn has given a valuable introduction to an American Family and a sustaining faith. Authentic descriptions of the growth of a family through 300 years of seeking a Godly life, farming, educating and seeking education will resonate with many who have similar stories to tell. For others, it is a glimpse into the values, accomplishments, joys and sorrows of a large number of your fellow countrymen.
the apple orchard
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-26
Review Date: 2008-04-26
I loved this book.It was history with a personal feel to it.
Plus I live in the area and it was fun reading about places that you have seen.Also to read about the apple trees and how the seeds got around from other states and countries.
Plus I live in the area and it was fun reading about places that you have seen.Also to read about the apple trees and how the seeds got around from other states and countries.

Are There Horses in Heaven?: And Other Thoughts : Sermons Preached in the Shadyside Presbyterian Church Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Published in Hardcover by Lighthouse Point Press (1996-06)
List price: $20.00
New price: $13.13
Used price: $3.75
Used price: $3.75
Average review score: 

Christian Inspiration at its Finest
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-07
Review Date: 2002-03-07
Roberts' words come truly from his heart. I had the pleasure of hearing him speak when he was the interim pastor at our church in Birmingham, AL. Even as a teenager, I was able to absorb what he said and apply it to my own life, both then and now. I have always been a daydreamer, but I was never able to turn my daydreams into real life Christianity. This quote by Roberts I read everyday and it continues to make my life a little more livable and I little more in touch with God. "So, one thing that I believe is that there are dreams that are energizing and that God has some dream plan which is implanted in every heart. I don't know what God's dream is for you but I believe that God has one and that it is important for you to keep seeking that dream. Make sure that it is somewhat impossible and don't ever confuse a dream for some easily attainable goal. Make sure that it's a big enough dream and that it is your very own dream - not one others choose for you. Your dream doesn't have to be one of the limited, proper dreams that meets approval of others. What matters is that it is your dream and that it keeps urging you on, invigorating you, bringing the best out of you, making you your best self." Though I am still uncertain what my dream is I know that it is there inside me now and that it always had been. Even when I was confused about my life, it was always there, just temporarily misplaced. Now that it has been rediscovered I wake up every morning with something truly to live for - my own dream and my own life. Once I have this true sense of happiness I know that I can continue my life confident that God knows what he is doing with it and it is beautiful. And I thank Dr. Roberts for that gift.
A Fantastic Vision of True Christianity
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-19
Review Date: 2000-09-19
I was priveleged to hear Morgan Roberts preach as an Interim minister at Independent Presbyterian Church. I've never been an avid church goer, but after hearing Morgan's sermon the first time I was "hooked", so to speak, and went almost every Sunday until he finished his time with our congregation. Morgan's philosophies and view points are special in that they appeal both to Intelligence and Christian values without blurring any lines or making any radical interpretations. To summarize what I mean, here is an excerpt from the first chapter of the book: "Do you really want everyone in your heaven? Do you want the multitude of every tribe and tongue and nation which is pictured in Revelation? Must everyone in heaven look like you and yours? Do you want the foreigners, the undesirables, the homeless, the addicts, and the gays to come home to our heavenly Father? Do you hope and pray and work for their homecoming? Do you love them unconditionally as Christ loves them unconditionally? And if you don't, how can you hope to be forgiven if you do not forgive others their debts? Heaven is for the forgiven and the forgiving".

Benefits for the Workplace of the Future (Pension Research Council Publications)
Published in Hardcover by University of Pennsylvania Press (2003-02-23)
List price: $75.00
New price: $71.11
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Used price: $49.95
Average review score: 

Benefits for the Workplace of the Future
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-21
Review Date: 2004-10-21
From Noteworthy Books in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics, Princeton University (July 2004):
"The essays in this volume examine how benefits and compensation packages will respond to the need for economic restructuring, demographic shifts and changes in the role of government versus private sector. The chapters in the first section deal with developments in the future workplace and outline the implications for benefit coverage and design. The authors in the second section look at challenges to benefits and compensation design such as recession and economic volatility, the interaction of business conditions with the slower labor growth predicted for the future, and the benefit effects of the evolving labor-management relationship. The case and sector studies in the last three chapters provide insights into specific company and sectoral practices."
"The essays in this volume examine how benefits and compensation packages will respond to the need for economic restructuring, demographic shifts and changes in the role of government versus private sector. The chapters in the first section deal with developments in the future workplace and outline the implications for benefit coverage and design. The authors in the second section look at challenges to benefits and compensation design such as recession and economic volatility, the interaction of business conditions with the slower labor growth predicted for the future, and the benefit effects of the evolving labor-management relationship. The case and sector studies in the last three chapters provide insights into specific company and sectoral practices."
Benefits
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-02
Review Date: 2004-06-02
The future workforce promises to be quite different from that of the past. As global markets grow more closely integrated, companies are having to reinvent the workplace, which requires more skilled, more reliable, and more flexible employees. This book explores how anticipated workforce and workplace changes will alter the form and design of employee benefits.

Best Hikes With Children in Pennsylvania (Best Hikes With Children Series)
Published in Paperback by Mountaineers Books (1996-05)
List price: $14.95
New price: $13.33
Used price: $5.28
Used price: $5.28
Average review score: 

I love the author...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-21
Review Date: 1999-05-21
,,,but we are no longer married. If you buy this book it will help both of us.
Yes thats really my email address below and I AM Marty Trepanowski
I love the author...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-21
Review Date: 1999-05-21
,,,but we are no longer married. If you buy this book it will help both of us.
Yes thats really my email address below and I AM Marty Trepanowski

The Best Pittsburgh Sports Arguments (The Best Sports Arguments)
Published in Paperback by Sourcebooks, Inc. (2007-10-01)
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.13
Used price: $6.30
Used price: $6.30
Average review score: 

Great conversation starter!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-23
Review Date: 2008-01-23
This is a great book for someone who doesn't always take the time to read a long book. At any one short sitting, the reader will find fun, interesting commentaries to spark great sports debates!
Interesting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-19
Review Date: 2008-01-19
Great book with interesting facts. Any Pittsburgh fan will love to read the many fascinating sports trivia.

Better in the Poconos: The Story of Pennsylvania's Vacation Land (Keystone Books)
Published in Hardcover by Pennsylvania State University Press (2002-03)
List price: $41.95
New price: $27.62
Used price: $29.45
Used price: $29.45
Average review score: 

Connects Pocono history to larger trends
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-09
Review Date: 2002-10-09
Lawrence Squeri has written a book that is educational and enjoyable on many levels. As a former resident of the Pocono area, I found the local history fascinating, especially considering the paucity of other worthy books on this subject. It also works on a larger scale since Squeri ties in the history of recreation in this area with the changes in the country at large at the same time. In this way, Better In the Poconos serves as a case study for the nation as a whole instead of just a small-niche local interest book.
An original slice of regional American history
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-05
Review Date: 2002-06-05
Better In The Poconos: The Story Of Pennsylvania's Vacationland by Lawrence Squeri (Professor of History, East Stroudsburg University) is an original slice of regional American history, offering the reader an inside look behind the glamour of the tourist industry. Focusing specifically on the tourism trade in the Poconos area of Pennsylvania, from the opening of the first hotel in 1829, to the many industries who ruthlessly compete for tourist dollars today, Better In The Poconos is an amazing story of clashing economics, evolving trades, and more, highlighted with black-and-white photographs from a variety of eras in history. Better In The Poconos is very highly recommended for academic and community library American Popular Culture and American History supplemental reading lists and reference collections.

Betty Groff's Pennsylvania Dutch Cookbook
Published in Hardcover by BBS Publishing Corporation (1996-11)
List price: $9.99
New price: $44.29
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Used price: $3.96
Average review score: 

How Did She Know My Family's Secret Recipes?
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-30
Review Date: 2003-06-30
I picked up this cookbook hoping to discover some recipes to make for my mother that would remind her of the cooking that she grew up with. I was not disappointed! There were several old favorites and many recipes that I could swear were family secrets. The Dandelion Salad with Bacon Dressing and Potato Filling recipes were very similar to what we make for special occasions, and the Apple Fritters, Hot Potato Salad, Coconut Cake, and the Ham, Green Beans, and Potatoes dishes reminded us of several other recipes we had not made in a long time. Listed by food type in an easy-to-follow format, the only thing missing in this book was a beautiful picture of each of the recipes. If you enjoy cooking, are from Penn Dutch country, or just want to sample some regional cooking, this book is a great choice for you! Enjoy!
Love this book!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-28
Review Date: 2002-11-28
This is one of my most used cookbooks. I was raised eating a lot of Pa Dutch food but the aunt who cooked it passed away before I could pick her brain for all of her secrets. Ms. Groff's recipes are always exactly how I remember my aunt's dishes tasting.
Between Theater and Anthropology
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Pennsylvania Pr (1985-03)
List price: $35.00
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Average review score: 

Victor Turner wrote the Forward.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-21
Review Date: 1999-05-21
Victor Turner wrote the forward to this book.
He is not its designer
Encompassing and probing
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-23
Review Date: 2002-12-23
A book of its time (60s-early 80s), but I'm glad I finally came to it. Generally it contrasts the theories and practices of western innovators (Stanislavski et. al., Brecht, Grotowski, Brooks) against the rituals and traditions of eastern institutions (Kathakali, Noh, Kabuki, ritual events of Bali, India, especially Ramlila). Fascinating diagrams accompany the discussion of performance theory. Loved the essays on performance in "Restoration of Behavior," and "Transported and Transformed." And for both the actor and director, the argument that performance exists somewhere between the "not-me and not-not-me" is compelling.
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