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

Texas
Alamo Story: From Early History to Current Conflicts
Published in Paperback by Republic of Texas (2000-02-25)
Author: J. R. Edmondson
List price: $24.95
New price: $11.50
Used price: $0.48
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

A Vivid, Honest Re-telling of the Alamo Saga
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-18
Was the battle of the Alamo a stragetic blunder? Did Davy Crockett wear a coonskin cap? How did the Alamo's "Holy Trinity" really die? How many duels did famed knife-fighter James Bowie take part in?

These are only some of the questions answered in what must surely be the ultimate history of the Alamo--as a mission, a fortress and a shrine. Edmondson's writing is colorful and fact-crammed, carrying the reader forward with the breathless pace of a novel. Above all, he portrays history through the actions of the men who made it--James Bowie's quest for adventure and wealth; David Crockett's failures as a Congressman; William Travis' burning ambition for ever-lasting fame.

Edmondson has brilliantly captured the often harsh realities of life on the Texas frontier. Among these: the ineffective and lethal "treatment" for venereal disease--mercury; the support of many "freedom-loving" Texans for slavery; and the conflicts faced by Tejanos trying to remain loyal to their native Mexico while opposing the dictatorship of Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.

The climax of the narrative arrives in his full-length and dramatic account of the siege and fall of the mission. Edmondson presents all possible sides to every controversey, and allows the reader to reach his own conclusions. For example, on the death of James Bowie: Edmondson notes that Bowie was deathly ill at the time of the final assault, and thus highly unlikely to have piled corpses around his sickbed. Yet he also states that Bowie had proven a hard man to kill in the past--and thus makes the convincing case that if Bowie had had the strength to hold weapons, he would have used them.

Edmondson has taken a subject well-trodden by historians and novelists and re-created it for a new generation. In doing so, he has rendered scenes of stirring drama while emphasizing the shared humanity of the combatants on both sides.

the alamo story
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-28
This book was recommended to me by Alamo historian and artist, Michael Schreck. It is a good read. J.R. Edmundson obviously knows his subject. The narrative flows smoothly and avoids the tedium so often occuring in historical works. Not only is it a spirited and accurate telling of an oft-told story, but he is not afraid to challenge the views of the revisionist historicans that are now in fashion. I highly recommend this book to both the layman and scholar.

History the way it should be told.
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-08
This book reads like a novel, but contains the facts of the historical event. Too bad Edmondson isn't writing for the school book market. History would be a favorite subject for kids.

Most people know about the battle at the Alamo, but don't know why this mission-turned-fort became the focal point of the confrontation between the Mexicans and Texians (yep, that's spelled right, read the book). Edmondson starts from the beginning to bring the reader up to the moment of siege and sacrific. The book begins as a fascinating read about Spain's early attempts to colonize the territory that would be come Texas. It moves into a fun read about favorite and familiar characters like Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie, and William Travis. Then the book takes the reader into the final 13 days that sealed the fate of those in the Alamo and set the course for Texas' separation from Mexico. Mark out a whole evening to read the last 212 pages, you won't be able to put it down. I sincerely hope Edmondson will be writing more history about Texas and the southwest. I for one, am waiting for his next book.

An Excellent Narrative History
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-10
J.R. Edmondson's "The Alamo Story" eclipses Walter Lord's groundbreaking "A Time to Stand" as the finest narrative history of the Alamo available.
Written in an engaging, highly accessible style, Edmondson's book is a first rate introduction to Alamo history, but provides enough detail to capture the interest of even the most knowledgable Alamo scholar.
Highly recommended.

Well Worth It
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-03
Jack Edmondson has done an exceptional job retelling the Alamo story. Students of James Bowie will be in for a real treat, since Jack devotes quite a bit to "that knife fighting adventurer" (as he was called in several movies). Edmondson never engages in "hero worship" which all-to-often clouds serious historical study.Nor does he indulge in "bashing" like Jeff Long did in "Duel of Eagles". Edmondson touches on the Crockett death controversey, but if you write about the Alamo, it's inevitable. If you are a serious researcher, Jack's book belongs on your shelf!

Texas
Antbirds and Ovenbirds: Their Lives and Homes (Corrie Herring Hooks Series)
Published in Hardcover by University of Texas Press (1996)
Author: Alexander F. Skutch
List price: $40.00
Used price: $17.50

Average review score:

The Unique Insight of Alexander Skutch
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-10
Anybody who has enjoyed other writings by Alexander Skutch on the subject of neotropical birds will also appreciate this book. After all, where else can you find interesting and informative writing about these two large and important families of neotropical birds? Not only is there a wealth of data concerning behavior, habitat, etc - but it is all presented in Skutch's very personal style, and intermingled with intimate anecdotes that really put you right there in the forest with that Bicolored Antbird, etc. Read this book before birding in lowland rainforest in Central or South America, and you will be rewarded with a much greater understanding of what you are witnessing. If you haven't yet, also read "A Birdwatcher's Adventures in Central America", and "A Naturalist in Costa Rica", as well as "Birds Asleep" - all by Alexander Skutch.

The Unique Insight of Alexander Skutch
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-10
Anybody who has enjoyed other writings by Alexander Skutch on the subject of neotropical birds will also appreciate this book. After all, where else can you find interesting and informative writing about these two large and important families of neotropical birds? Not only is there a wealth of data concerning behavior, habitat, etc - but it is all presented in Skutch's very personal style, and intermingled with intimate anecdotes that really put you right there in the forest with that Bicolored Antbird, etc. Read this book before birding in lowland rainforest in Central or South America, and you will be rewarded with a much greater understanding of what you are witnessing. If you haven't yet, also read "A Birdwatcher's Adventures in Central America", and "A Naturalist in Costa Rica", as well as "Birds Asleep" - all by Alexander Skutch.

The Unique Insight of Alexander Skutch
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-10
Anybody who has enjoyed other writings by Alexander Skutch on the subject of neotropical birds will also appreciate this book. After all, where else can you find interesting and informative writing about these two large and important families of neotropical birds? Not only is there a wealth of data concerning behavior, habitat, etc - but it is all presented in Skutch's very personal style, and intermingled with intimate anecdotes that really put you right there in the forest with that Bicolored Antbird, etc. Read this book before birding in lowland rainforest in Central or South America, and you will be rewarded with a much greater understanding of what you are witnessing. If you haven't yet, also read "A Birdwatcher's Adventures in Central America", and "A Naturalist in Costa Rica", as well as "Birds Asleep" - all by Alexander Skutch.

The Unique Insight of Alexander Skutch
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-10
Anybody who has enjoyed other writings by Alexander Skutch on the subject of neotropical birds will also appreciate this book. After all, where else can you find interesting and informative writing about these two large and important families of neotropical birds? Not only is there a wealth of data concerning behavior, habitat, etc - but it is all presented in Skutch's very personal style, and intermingled with intimate anecdotes that really put you right there in the forest with that Bicolored Antbird, etc. Read this book before birding in lowland rainforest in Central or South America, and you will be rewarded with a much greater understanding of what you are witnessing. If you haven't yet, also read "A Birdwatcher's Adventures in Central America", and "A Naturalist in Costa Rica", as well as "Birds Asleep" - all by Alexander Skutch.

The Unique Insight of Alexander Skutch
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-10
Anybody who has enjoyed other writings by Alexander Skutch on the subject of neotropical birds will also appreciate this book. After all, where else can you find interesting and informative writing about these two large and important families of neotropical birds? Not only is there a wealth of data concerning behavior, habitat, etc - but it is all presented in Skutch's very personal style, and intermingled with intimate anecdotes that really put you right there in the forest with that Bicolored Antbird, etc. Read this book before birding in lowland rainforest in Central or South America, and you will be rewarded with a much greater understanding of what you are witnessing. If you haven't yet, also read "A Birdwatcher's Adventures in Central America", and "A Naturalist in Costa Rica", as well as "Birds Asleep" - all by Alexander Skutch.

Texas
Armadillo Rodeo
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Juvenile (1995-09-12)
Author: Jan Brett
List price: $16.99
New price: $8.74
Used price: $1.18
Collectible price: $16.99

Average review score:

Walking across Texas
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-16
This is really a cute book and I know my niece will really enjoy it. I recommend buying and reading it to all children. It is truly fun.

The book I have the most fun reading aloud to my 7-year old!
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1998-05-01
My sister, a nearby neighbor of Jan Brett's, discovered this book and sent it to my then 5-year old son for his birthday. Bo's nearsighted adventures entertain; and his being lost and not knowing he's lost delights my son. Most children will envy Bo's adventure to the rodeo and understand his curioisity. Having developed quite the Texas "accent and attitude" while reading this book, it's at the top of our list of all-time favorites. Thank you Jan Brett!

Armadillo Rodeo by Jan Brett
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-12
This book is really cute! The 7 year old boy I purchased it for wants to read it over and over again! The illustrations are really colorful and well done. This is the type of book that is great fun for a boy or girl - ages 4 to 8, I should think. The author, Jan Brett, is very clever. I will look for more of this authors books in the future for children on my gift list.
Loriann Ringgold
Elko, NV

A delightful adventure
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-29
For children and for those who just love that critter I love so...you will enjoy this book very much. With a delightful story and wonderful illustrations, it is sure to please.

Armadillo Befriends Boot
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-17
A slightly different tale from Jan Brett. Gone is the European feel of so many of her books. It is replaced by a healthy jargon-filled dose of American Western. Gone are the hedgehogs; welcome the armadillos.

Bo is one of four armadillo brothers. He tends to be curious and wander so his mother tries to keep a close watch on him. Like all armadillos, Bo's eyesight is not very good. So one day while he is following a lizard, he sees a red cowboy boot and thinks it is a red armadillo.

The boot in question is being worn by a young girl who is trying to scuff them up so she won't look like a tenderfoot at the rodeo. But Bo does not see the girl, or the other boot for that matter. Instead, he thinks he has found a playful new friend.

Chasing after the boot, Bo has many experiences while his mother and brothers search for him (as seen in the side panels). Bo's adventure takes him across the rodeo arena, to a bar-b-que, into an encounter with a jalapeno, to a barn dance, a hayloft, and ultimately to the truth about his new friend.

In the end we learn that while Bo has learned the truth of his day's adventures, he knows just what to do when he feels a little mischievous.

I usually give Jan Brett's books five stars but gave this one only four. I did that only because of the heavy use of Western jargon that needs to be explained to young ears in order for the story to make sense. But it is still a very fun book with beautiful illustrations.

Texas
Bone Dry : A Blanco County, Texas, Novel (Game Warden John Marlin, 2)
Published in Hardcover by (2003-09-10)
Author: Ben Rehder
List price: $23.95
New price: $8.20
Used price: $6.59

Average review score:

vintage Rehder
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-01
If you are from or are familiar with this area of the Texas Hill Country, all the details ring true. If you are a long time fan of Ben Rehder's then you will love this one. The man can't write a bad book!

Fans of Rehder Should Check Out Box as Well!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-18
This is a great light fun read. If you loved this book also check out the author C.J. Box and his Joe Pickett adventures which also follow a game warden based near a hunting culture small town filled with eccentric red necks, corrupt officials and other fun characters, his books are set in Wyoming. Both even have similar author photos complete with dogs and bucket hats or whatever they're called inside the back covers. Open Season (Joe Pickett Novels) is the first novel in that great series, check it out!

Bone Dry the sequel to Reheder's first novel Buck Fever picks up at the start of the next year's deer season from when that novel ended. It is important to note that you do not need to have read Buck Fever to enjoy or get the most out of this novel. Other than a reoccurring main character, game warden John Marlin, as well as other eccentric county residents who appear in each novel such as local rednecks Billy Don and Red. This series of fun adventures set in Blanco County Texas can be read in any order.

New characters who add to the storyline of Bone Dry include Inga, a smart supermodel quality blond Volvo driving conservationist. Inga isn't afraid to fill a hunter's ute with bullets. A nerdy even more extreme environmentalist Thomas Peabody is her travelling companion and determined to win Inga's favour by proving he is dedicated to the cause with even more and more dangerous stunts in the name of the environment.

Witness relocation mafia man Sal and his dim-witted son Vinnie who now run a tree clearing business also add to the fun. Fans of the Hollywood's horse in the head scene will be pleased with a scene created by Vinnie in this book which is the catalyst for a number of events putting this once powerful underworld figure in danger of being discovered. Smedley a morbidly obese US marshall who is a good but lazy and not to bright man assigned to keep tabs on Sal, Sal's housekeeper and poor immigrant Maria who Sal fears has the powers of a witch complicate the situation for this mafia family but add great enjoyment for the reader.

A lazy incompetent former big city cop will learn the hard way that city tactics don't work out in rural Texas nor does trying to force a confession as he investigates the shooting of a local hunter. An of course game warden John Marlin is the glue that holds this fun story together.

Read this series, it's good!

didn't hesitate
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-12
i didn't hesitate to pick up ben rehder's second book when i saw it and was not disappointed.....this book was even more fun than the first one.....peace mary

Hilarious Slap-Stick Sequel to Buck Fever
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-05
If you enjoyed the outrageous humor in Buck Fever about cross-species sexuality and good old boys poaching deer, you will be thrilled with Bone Dry. The talented Mr. Rehder has added more targets for his humor, made them funnier and further developed the excellent goofballs, Red O'Brien and Billy Don Craddock.

In Bone Dry, you will find Italian mobsters mixing it up with the local Texas drunks, a supermodel who uses her looks and her scent to save endangered species, lots of brush-busting and scams galore. In the middle of all the resulting mayhem, John Marlin, the Lone Ranger of game wardens, finds himself running the investigation into a hunter's suspicious death.

The book combines a satire of the Godfather, a Carl Hiaasen-type story about Texas, an excellent police procedural, lots of environmental lessons and a love story with enough irony to keep your eyes blinking with surprise for days. It's a remarkable, guffaw-inducing achievement.

Save this book for the next time you really need a good laugh.

I recommend that you also go on to read the latest book in the series, Flat Crazy, which is even better than Bone Dry.

If Carl Hiaasen was Texan...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-15
I listened to the audio edition of this book and my comments pertain to that edition.

I read the first book in Rehder's Blanco County series last year and enjoyed it. When I got the chance to listen to the second on audio, I jumped at it. If possible, I liked the second even more than the first.

If you love the zany Floridian adventures of authors like Tim Dorsey and Carl Hiaasen, you will probably want to take a side trip to Blanco County. As those authors do, Rehder throws a bunch of semi-competent crooked folks (in this case including a Mafia family in hiding), a few well meaning folks (this time around it's a couple of tree-huggin' types trying to save a rare bird from all the brush clearing going on) and in the middle of it, a bemused decent good guy trying to sort out all the events. The center of the Blanco County novels is game warden John Marlin, who does his best to stay sane and sort out the string of bizarre events.

He has his hands full in this second book, as some bodies turn up, others go missing, and that's in between the eco-terrorism, county jail hostage stand-off, Marlin's personal life going to hell, and oh, yeah, opening week of hunting season. Rehder does a fine job of juggling multiple plot lines and a huge cast of supporting characters while keeping all the threads moving toward a neatly wrapped up conclusion. I could often see where the plot was going a few chapters ahead of time but I thoroughly enjoyed the ride nevertheless.

The unabridged audiobook is competently read (I'm sorry I don't have the name of the narrator). While nothing was particularly gained or lost by listening to the book rather than reading it, I didn't have to put the book down to do chores like washing dishes--as long as you aren't listening in places where people will give you strange looks if you occasionally laugh out loud while listening.

I recommend this book and the whole Blanco County series to anyone who likes a light, funny mystery, particularly fans of the Carl Hiaasen style.

Texas
Deep Rivers
Published in Paperback by Univ of Texas Pr (1981-08)
Author: Jose Maria Arguedas
List price: $13.95
New price: $9.98
Used price: $0.05

Average review score:

Best of them all!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-19
I couldn't find this book anywhere!! Books-a-Million said that they could order it and it would have taken 3-7 weeks. I finally found it on Amazon and it was reasonable and here within 5 days. I have also ordered with Amazon before and they have the best service. I love how you can track your item down to the day it arrives.

Excellent translation of Los Rios Profundos
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
If you are looking for an excellent translation of Jose Maria Arguedas, "Los Rios Profundos" this is it. The book retains the integrity of the origianl Spanish, and the spirit of the quechuan explanations which are left in quechuan. With a brief introduction by the translator as well as a glossary of terms at the end this English translation has made Arguedas masterful novel available to the English speaking world.

Hauntingly poetic
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-16
This is a gem of a book. While there are many things to like about it, I am most enamoured of the richness of detail in its naturalistic description. Arguedas, with his Indian upbringing, has a perceptiveness toward nature not often found in modern, Western society. The translation conveys this beautifully, though I've heard that the original Spanish is even more vivid in its descriptions. The characterization is multi-layered: there's even someone highly reminiscent of the Grand Inquisitor in Dostoyevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov"...

Conflicting cultures flow deep beneath modern-day Peru
Helpful Votes: 26 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-22
Non-western thoughts, beliefs and fears still permeate 20th.century Peru, a cultural heritage of the Inca empire. Arguedas, although white, learned Quechua as an infant, forced by circumstances to spend long periods with Peruvians of indian extraction, an experience which he would forever remember with deep tenderness and affection, and which would transmit surviving elements of Inca thought as well. The problem Arguedas faced as a writer was how to express a non-western state of mind in Spanish, a western language. In "Deep Rivers", he sometimes shifts the structures of sentences, or uses diminutives, to mimic Quechua. Stones can talk, and rivers sing. Big black flies are attracted to persons who are about to die. For Inca thought, the reflections from a pool of blood relate to the reflections from rapids in a stormy river. In "Deep Rivers" Arguedas shares with us the deep undercurrents and contradictions which flow beneath the surface of modern-day Peru. Conflicting cultures related through cruelty and despotism. Deep rivers flow in every culture. Not the superficial, visible elements of a culture, but those intimate fears, obsessions, and dreams which lie at the core of its members.

Less a novel than a series of reflections
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-06
This subject line is not to diminish the power of this work. Only to convey that, unlike many other "coming-of-age" stories of a youth, Arguedas' semi-autobiographical tale presents a boy already formed even before the events of the bulk of the narrative. A pantheism rushes over his pages, and the Catholicism in whose school he is domiciled for most of the story remains more of a veneer over a pagan and defiant Quechua world refusing to succumb under the oppressive colonial and clerical regimes. The set-pieces of the book, the uprising of the peasant women for salt and waiting in the town as the plague approaches, gain force when (as Vargas Llosa notes in his afterword) placed within a calmer flow of words, at times scraped by harsh reality.

The descriptions of the natural world remain moving; however, many of the supporting characters at the youth's boarding school and the girl he courts (from afar it seems more than close up) stay rather diffused and vague. Nearly no details emerge, for example, of the actual schooling he receives, but plenty of cringeworthy accounts of how Rector Linares attempts to manipulate the Gospels to placate insurrectionists. A message, I gather, that subsequent generations in Latin America learned from. The prescience of this work, given the later events in PerĂº, makes Arguedas all the more compelling a contribution, that even in English (thanks to the abundant Quechua blended in), makes for a bracingly vivid read, with hints of what would become "magic realism" mixed with muted political critique and personal quests for identity for a boy caught between cultures.

Texas
Earthly Fathers
Published in Hardcover by Zondervan Publishing Company (2001-03-01)
Author: Scott Sawyer
List price: $16.99
New price: $0.45
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $16.99

Average review score:

Ward Clever, No Competition for These Earthly Fathers
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-04
We all have a story--usually a bittersweet blend of angst and elation. When loss comes, whether through death or separation from someone we love, our hearts must wade through the complexity of emotion remaining.

There are many ways we can tell our stories...flanked with humor and shrowded by denial...cloaked with bitterness and oppressed by hatred...or creatively open and inspired by redemption.

This is the brilliant balance Scott Sawyer achieved in his own story. In choosing to share this story, he could have opted for denial or for bitterness. Instead, he chose a delicate blend of humor, creativity and redemption. He allows us a unique glimpse into his contemplation, his desire and his pursuit to comprehend what bearing loss has had on his life.

The focus encompasses much more than loss, however, and delightfully depicts sibling rivalry, a boy's adoration for his mother and his family, wonder at not one but two fathers, the pursuit of passion and dreams, as well as life-altering spiritual discoveries. And revelations about a Heavenly Father.

I was rapt with the flowing rhythmn of humor, contemplation, angst, passion, peace and JOY (you'll see the significance of this adjective when you read the book).

Scott was brave to bear his heart, was artful in how he did so, and gracious not to air unnecessary dirty laundry.

This is a story that will make you laugh out loud and bring tears to your eyes. And it will cause you to contemplate your own soul...journeys left midway...pain left untended...discovery still to be made.

A journey through a lifetime of experience and memories
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-27
This is a warm, and honest portrayal of a man living through time by capturing and re-evaluating his past. When the famous psychologist Alfred Adler was exploring how our identity is formed he made the following interesting and counter-intuitive claim: Our present effects our past to a greater degree than our past effects our present. This book, a journey through a lifetime of memories experienced again and bonds established for the first time, demonstrates that Alder's claim is often true. The perspective we have today influences how we view the events and feelings of the past. The author, Scott Sawyer, uses his present perspective to unearth a beautiful retrospective of his family and his fathers.

This book contains a wonderful journey, and those reading it will be blessed by the opportunity to experience it with him. I was moved and touched, and the depictions and images involved me as a member of this family for a fleeting few moments. I cried, I laughed, and I was humbled by the love that radiates off the pages.

The style of the book is more poetic than narrative. I would normally have given 4 stars on this review, because I am usually more drawn to a narrative style, in this case however, the events, images and emotions of this family and his life captured me so completely that I quickly adapted to the many transitions and sound bites of thought.

Please read this book. I found that once I settled into the story, my efforts were rewarded, and the images and emotions came to life. I had the pleasure of attending a reading of the book by the author at a local bookstore and can tell you first-hand that the emotion that went into this project is real. The scene was similar to the experience of reading the book. We all laughed out loud at the comic depictions of his childhood, and cried at the emotion of meeting and losing his father again. Highly recommended to everyone.

A Tender and Compassionate Tribute to Fathers Everywhere
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-18
This is a haunting and touching memoir unlike any others I've read. It brought tears to my eyes but reminded me of the love our Heavenly Father has for us even as we struggle to make a life here on earth. Beautifully written and inspiring!

Scott Sawyer will become a familiar name in literary circles
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-03
This is the true story of one young man's search for identity as he grew up in a small Texas town in the shadow of an older brother, both having lost their real father as very young children. Their stepfather was the only father figure Scott knew, yet he was acutely aware that they were not the same flesh and blood. It is also the story of his family coping with the death of Scott's older brother from cancer when he was only sixteen. His ongoing relationship with two fathers-the one he never knew and the only one he did know-ultimately helped him find his identity in the heavenly Father as well.

A Keeper
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-22
After reading the story of Scott Sawyer and his journey with his family of origin I am struck with the honesty, the fairness, the love that would move a man to write such a book. Obviously the events in his life have molded a grateful,tender, forgiving heart and a man who has passion for his walk with his heavenly Father. I suspect most mothers would give anything to have such a man marry their own daughters. He is truly a brilliant writer and more importantly for me, a real 'Keeper'. He is my son-in-law.

Texas
Final Decree (Corie Mckenna Mystery, 1)
Published in Paperback by Top Publications (2003-05)
Author: Kay Finch
List price: $14.95
New price: $11.97
Used price: $0.04

Average review score:

Exciting read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-31
Great mystery from beginning to end. Can't wait to read more about Corie McKenna

Great book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-18
Smooth reading, realistic characters (at least in Texas their realistic!)and enough twists, turns and surprises to keep you going. Story ends great - because it not only raps up all your questions it also leaves you ready for more. Watch out Sue Grafton !

Great Suspense
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-05
Author has a delightful style that has you engrossed from beginning to end. Can't wait to read more about Corie McKenna !!!!

Exciting read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-31
Great mystery from beginning to end. Can't wait to read more about Corie McKenna

Totally Intriguing
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-20
I was totally surprised at the ending. Final Decree has a very complex plot, woven very well. The characters are very real and I'm sure Corie and I will become good friends. I highly recommend this book.

Texas
Flounder Fundamentals (Saltwater Strategies)
Published in Paperback by Bibliotechnology Systems & Publishing Company (2000-08)
Author: Texas Fish & Game Publishing
List price: $19.95
Used price: $58.01

Average review score:

Excellent reading!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-03
I enjoyed the book "Flounder Fundamentals" very much. My son and I learned a new facts concerning flounder fishing that we did not know.

The book was written in a easy to read style! Good luck to the author and hope he writes a few more fishing books.

Most enjoyable!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-14
Ive been young and now I'm old. This was the best book I have ever read. I hope Mr. Moore can write for many years to come. There is no doubt in my mind, thousands of people young and old that enjoy flounder fishing will learn from this book. Buy this book if you love fishing.

I learned a lot!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-01
I ordered the book after reading about it on a message board somewhere on the web. I really loved the artifiical lure chapter because the author goes into great detail about lure selection for different times of the year. I'm not a big reader, but found this easy to digest and the information was easy to retain. I reccommend it.

A ton of information!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-14
Chester knows his flounder! If you want to catch more of this elusive and selective fish you need to buy this book. It is very well written and you will learn the little things that make a huge difference catching more flatfish.

Enjoyable and informative reading!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-01
Excellent reading! The book is informative, entertaining and easily readable. I enjoyed the author's style. He gives you a feeling that he not only knows a lot about flounder fishing, but that he really enjoys what he does!

Texas
The Gay Place
Published in Paperback by University of Texas Press (1994)
Author: Billy Lee Brammer
List price: $24.95
New price: $12.99
Used price: $9.68

Average review score:

The Best Novel on Politics Ever!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-26
The Gay Place is a winner in so many ways: an absorbing, deep novel, a historical novel about a key time in our history, an accurate an perceptive regional novel (about my home town, Austin!) and, the best novel on American, or maybe any, politics ever written. Billy Lee Brammer was a speech writer for Lyndon Johnson who was fascinated by the world where a sentence could start with high minded political goals and end in crude bullying. A world where bribery, humiliation and blackmail were tools of the trade, often for worthy purposes. A must-read American classic that grows in reputation as time passes.

The Best Ever
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-16
Despite its age and it's fictional nature, The Gay Place is still the definitive book on Texas politics and Austin, and one of the top ten books on Texas overall. The charachiture of Lyndon Johnson is priceless.

politics from a gimlet eye
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-17
This is a wonderful trilogy of novels on state politics. Though they seem disjointed, they are unified around the shadowy figure of the governor, who lurks in the background manipulating people and events down to the minutest detail. Thus, the immediate action taking place is a kind of epiphenomenon, all players that are living chess pieces in the governor's grand game, which is never fully explained: that is the real art of this novel, that it leaves far more unsaid than explicitely stated. The reader has to connect the dots.

In the first novel, the governor has chosen a young legislator for an unaccustomed role in the spotlight: his life, like those of his cohorts, is a mess of alcohol and libertinism, but he is also struggling with his conscience to do the right thing. There are so many layers to what was really happening that it is impossible to explain, because the reader can only suspect what the governor is doing. The governor mixes the most intimate personal machinations, it appeared to me, with a legislative purpose and to depose (even destroy) a potential rival. It reminds me, of course, of LBJ, a politician without equal. One of the really interesting aspects is that the author describes many people just like GW Bush: priviledged, brash, debauched, and inadvertantly wondering what they should be doing. If you read this, you will understand GW Bush and his milieu much better - that is a sign of the timelessness of Bramer's achievement, truly a masterpiece.

The second novel is similar: the governor's enemies are defeated, while he stages and manipulates events to suit whatever his purposes are. It is at times brutal and sad, yet funny and even uplifting, particularly in the scenes of introspection, when the characters have flashes of insight and empathy. The plot, which is only a vehicle to expose cryptic motvations, is the governor attempting to get an appointed young senator to run for a true popular mandate - he is a complex and flawed character, whom the governor sponsors out of respect but also to keep him in his pocket. It is splendidly ambiguous, as is all politics. The third involves similar personal struggles and an ineviablle passing of power, again, very realistic and down to earth. Marriages are destroyed, while politics plays in, and the characters wallow in existential angst while working very hard and yet hardly understanding why. It is a unique combination of themes, a genuine work of literature.

One thing that really fascinated me was how similar this is to a Gore Vidal novel, a kind of comedy of the priviledged who inadvertently do politics while living their complicated lives. The political action is entirely off stage, but solved in their everyday actions and affairs and drunken parties. I have no doubt that Vidal carefullly studied the literary method that Bramer pioneered here, which resulted in his truly fine series of novels on American politics. Finally, tt really is where Bush came from, a reflection on the depth of Bramer's art, almost prescient in its intelligence and lack of facile scrutiny.

Warmly recommended as great art and a unique view into politics.

Fantastic Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-14
Not just LBJ, this book is about politics and the ways of power. Very well written, insightful and lyric, it might be the best kept secret in political fiction. On a side note--man did people drink a lot then. Its amazing.

Anyone who loves writing and politics will enjoy this book.

The Real LBJ
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-27
In the 500 plus pages of this remarkable trilogy, Billy Lee Brammer does more to explicate and evaluate American politics, especially Texas politics and even more especially, populist politics as practiced by Lyndon B.Johnson, than all the ponderous Caro-type analyses that weigh us down blur the color and cloy the flavor. More than a portrait of LBJ, the book is an artful depiction of the lure of politics and its terrible cost on those who pursue it. All this is conveyed with humor, sympathy and a clear-eyed vision of the American scene of the 60's.

Texas
Jeannie, a Texas Frontier Girl Book Two
Published in Hardcover by Topeka Bindery (2002-09)
Author: Evelyn Horan
List price: $24.55

Average review score:

KidZLit Loves Jeannie!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-04
The exiciting adventures of little Jennie continues in Book 2 with Jeannie growing into a frontier teen. The fun continues with Jeannie and her friend Helga learning to do women's work. Jeannie still longs for her own horse ranch and there is a good chance that her dream may come true, but you'll have to read the book to find out how.

Horan is a fromer teacher and counselor who has spun a good story, including some "faction" from her family history about frontier life. She has managed to create characters that jump off the page and demand that you remember them. You simply cannot get Jeannie out of your head. Now that's writing!

--jcpinkerton

Another great book, by a great author!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-29
In Book Two of 'Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl,' only good things can be said about it! A very simple story involving a very complicated girl; Jeannie!

Turning fourteen, Jeannie is getting to be a mature, young lady. Many things are in store for her this year. Her best friend, Helga, also turned fourteen and has a a young male caller, Billy Joe. Jeannie can't be troubled by boys and kissing, she's only interested in having a farm ranch and raising horses.

All winter and summer, the girls learn to cook, sew, crochet and take care of Helga's new baby brother. These new skills will help them in the future. Living in the 1880's is hard work. You learn to grow up fast.

Jeannie's wish might be coming true soon enough. She has always dreamed of having her own farm ranch. Her mother just inherited some money from a relative so Jeannie has a sizable amount in her savings. Will she be old enough next year to have a ranch? Who will she want to work on her farm with her? She might have someone in mind!

Look for Book Three, coming soon!

Great and Adv enturous!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-02
I just finished Book Two. It was great and very adventurous. I am in the third grade at a Christian school Mrs. Horan visited. I also read Book One. I want to get Book Three when it is published. I want to say God bless you to Mrs. Horan.
Love,
Victoria

"Another adventure from days gone by"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-05
Evelyn Horan is not only a talented writer but she is a delightful and charming woman to boot. A true talent in her chosen genre of books and me (a grown man) loving every word she writes! I have ordered copies of her books for my own nieces and nephews. Her stories are well-written and educational. Her school teaching experience apparent with each book she writes. I look forward to the remaining books in her charming series!

John Savoy

The Second "Texas Frontier Girl" Adventure
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-15
"With Morning Star trotting along behind, the girls guided their horses to the wooded, north pasture. In a small clearing near a stream, they dismounted and walked toward a white picket fence enclosure surrounded by yellow sunflowers and a cluster of brightly colored Indian paintbrushes. A few baby blue eyes lingered among the shady cedars and live oaks." pg. 15

Evelyn Horan is a native Texan who has spent many years as a teacher-counselor. Over 200 of her children's articles have appeared in over 80 periodicals and publications. Her grandparents told her many stories about their adventures, traditions and customs in an earlier time. Evelyn wanted to write about these memories so children would know what life was like in the 1880s.

This is the second book in a four book series set in the Texas frontier. Books 1-4 were written for children and grown-ups who love to read about the Texas Frontier.

In Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Book Two, we find Jeannie and her friend are now 13 and 14. (In Book three they are 15 and by book four they are 20 years of age. The content remains appropriate for younger readers.)

The second book is a continuing tale of friendship and adventure. Jeannie has two new playful puppies to look after and the start of the book presents a cute situation where "Princess" and "Junior" play near a braided rug by the stone hearth as Pa, Ma and Jeannie enjoy the puppies antics.

The reader is immediately drawn into the story as we read about Jeannie's brother and her parents. Jeannie wishes she could be more like her mother because she is such a great cook and is a real frontier woman who knows how to make a delicious aromatic vegetable soup. She can't wait for Helga to visit and together they remember Jeannie's experience when she met a mountain lion.

Henry, Billy Joe, Helga and Jeannie go fishing and catch a catfish and Ma shows Jeannie how to fry the filets in a black iron skillet. Ma also makes a blackberry cobbler. You can just imagine a table filled with food as the aroma of freshly baked cobbler mingles with the crisp evening air.

There are stories about visiting Mr. Wasserman's store, piano lessons, drinking punch at a party and a Christmas Eve Nativity play. This was a time when people made strings of popcorn for their Christmas trees. One of my first memories of Christmas was making a string of colored popcorn for a tree, so this book brought back some memories of my own more recent childhood. Evelyn also writes about childhood memories from the 1800s, like "Alice in Wonderland" by Lewis Carroll, published in 1865.

In this book you will find out:
1. How the girls help a family in need.
2. How Eagle Feather changes Jeannie's ideas about the Comanche Indians

There is a West Texas Map from the 1800s and this shows where Jeannie and Helga live. The locations of the Church, school, creek and Trading post are all on the map.

Evelyn Horan is today's " Laura Ingalls Wilder" and she has created unique books that not only capture the excitement of living on a frontier, she also focuses on daily life and has a flair for writing about cooking! Her descriptive writing is something I look forward to and I can't wait for the third book!

In Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Book Three, Helga trains Morning Star and Jeannie's dreams of her horse ranch start coming true.

~The Rebecca Review


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