California Books
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Used price: $1.80

great bookReview Date: 2002-01-24
This did the job.Review Date: 1999-12-19
perfect guideReview Date: 2003-02-01
It was complete, concise, and easy to follow.
I definately could not of made the change without the help of this book.
I do not recommend trying to change your name without this - it walks you through from A to Z, not missing a beat.
Excellent book.
Straight forward and to the point!Review Date: 2003-06-13
Pro's and con's are examined about Court Ordered Name Changes and Common Usage methodologies. Well thought out and written in a very readable and comprehensive style...this book answers almost any question you may have regarding the implications of changing you name.
Highly recommended....by far, the best book I have seen on the market around this issue.
You can do it yourself!Review Date: 2001-05-22

Used price: $0.68

Archaeological BestReview Date: 2005-07-19
From Oil City to Surf City, here it is!Review Date: 2004-11-01
Instant NativeReview Date: 2001-09-29
A sidewalk is worth a thousand words.Review Date: 2001-08-23
Extremely interestingReview Date: 2001-08-09

Insects of the Los Angeles Basin by Charles L. HogueReview Date: 2005-10-05
Face Your Fear!Review Date: 2001-05-22
Insects in L.A.Review Date: 2000-08-21
Great Indentification GuideReview Date: 2000-06-02
So much more than a reference book!Review Date: 2004-07-26
Most reference books -- you know, the North American Guide to Seashells or whatever -- are dense and hard to use, with keys and indices and all the pictures collected onto the fewest number of pages possible, to save printing costs. But this book has pictures or drawings of every insect listed, right next to its listing. And while it doesn't cover every insect of the LA basin -- no book could -- I've yet to find one that isn't in this book.
But what really sets this book apart is the writing. Charles Hogue was the entomology curator at the LA Natural History Museum until his death in 1992. Surely, he had hundreds or thousands of people bring in pictures or specimens, asking, What is this? And he's written a book for that type of people, those who would never study entomology, but would notice and wonder at some unusual bug.
As you wend your way through the chapters, Hogue anticipates what you might find interesting, what you might ask, and he's right there with some details or answers. He'll mention how Belkin's Chigger played a role in a murder investigation in Ventura County, or recount how Black Witch moth (with a wingspan of 6 to 7 inches) was common around the Coliseum during the 84 Olympics, even though you won't find its caterpillars in the basin.
It's fun reading about dragonflies and whatnot. It's fun learning that the daddy longlegs in your cupboard isn't a daddy longlegs at all, it's a cobweb spider. It's not so much fun reading about earwigs. But telling your friends that earwigs can fly, and that the tubular lawn furniture on their patio might be housing large populations of them? That's great fun.
After reading this book, I knew I had to get on Amazon and give it a five star review. How nice that so many other people beat me to it!

Used price: $14.85

The best guides!!!Review Date: 2008-07-15
Before traveling to San Francisco I decided to get it as it is very easy to use and has everything you need!
I traveled by myself and I did get lost once but it was my own fault. With the attached compass is very easy to find your way, specially when the guide even has bus routes! By following the guide I was able to enjoy most major attractions in only 3 days!
It also comes with a pen and a light in case you find yourself in need of those. Great little (it's tiny!) book that I'll definitely look for everytime I travel.
Comes in handy!Review Date: 2005-10-15
My only complaint would be that this guide doesn't do the city of San Francisco justice. There are just too many jewels to list!
Compact Functional AdventurePark in your HandReview Date: 2006-06-15
Of course, who buys a guidebook for the free pen? You want pictures. They're here. You want maps - the book is published by The Map Group and the maps are as good as you'd expect. Probably the neatest thing is the origami folding job that fits a 8 inch by 12 inch map behind the cover of a book that fits in your back pocket. It's really wild to see it pop out at you when you tug on the corner.
I own a whole shelf of guidebooks and this one really stands out for the small size, paper and photo quality and the cool gadgets and maps. The content is good, plenty of ideas to browse looking for one that grabs you. Of course it is limited by the small size of the book so if you're looking for city history or a comprehensive list of attactions, you'll need to supplement with a larger companion guide. But take this one with you as you walk. You'll be happy you did.
The Most Intelligent DesignReview Date: 2005-08-12
Everything we neededReview Date: 2005-03-01


Napa LoversReview Date: 2008-07-09
photographer BRAD PERKS is a stunning showcase of why so many people
Love Napa.I highly recommend you share this book with your family and
friends that appriciate the most beautiful places on earth.
An absolutely AWESOME BOOK!Review Date: 2008-07-08
For any and all Wine LoversReview Date: 2008-07-08
Wow!Review Date: 2008-07-08
A must have for any Bay Area residentReview Date: 2008-07-08
It also makes a great gift. I gave one to my father-in-law for his 70th birthday last month. Being a wine connoisseur, he loved the book and quickly started paging through and appreciating the pictures.
If you live in the Bay Area, buy one for yourself and a couple more to have around as a handy gift item. And no, I'm not getting commissions on these books :)

Used price: $9.48

AmazingReview Date: 2006-10-03
SOLID GOLD!!!Review Date: 2004-12-29
BrillianReview Date: 2005-03-15
MARTIN VENEZKY ROCKS MEReview Date: 2004-12-11
-fish
Provides his commercial design work plus new graphics created just for this book: some 700 images in allReview Date: 2006-02-03

Used price: $5.02
Collectible price: $35.00

Steinbeck is Amazing...All of itReview Date: 2007-12-31
Steinbeck's ArtReview Date: 1998-03-22
The Grapes of WrathReview Date: 1998-03-20
Knowing this, it seems that one has to be of a particular mindset in order to enjoy the novels collected in "The Grapes of Wrath and Other Writings 1938-1941". The novels of this compilation attack many of the ideals upon which this country was founded -- and they do so by looking closely at those who have never really benefited from those ideals. This attack is carried out most effectively in the most prominent of the packaged novels: Steinbeck's classic "The Grapes of Wrath."
At an abstract level, this particular novel is an impassioned plea for change ... one that left many readers at the time of its publication both angry and frightened, and resulted in the book being placed on many academic "Banned" lists, and caused Steinbeck himself to be branded by some as anti-American.
That said, it is my opinion that "The Grapes of Wrath" is one of the best novels ever written, because it tells the story of those most affected by the Great Depression - those who never had much in the first place. In particular, it focuses on the Joad family as they are forced to relocate to California, to try to find enough work to put food on the table. Along with thousands of other displaced sharecroppers they are lured by colorful handbills advertising great jobs for all. California becomes Mecca to the families, many of whom have literally been forced out of their homes. Desperate, the families sell all of their belongings, buy cheap cars, and begin the arduous journey. Many do not make it, and those who do find to their dismay that all is not as promised.
This is an extremely powerful novel. The reader comes to know the members of the Joad family and their friends as people, not just as characters in a story. We are able to identify with them as they suffer hardship after hardship. Written in an accessible style, and spellbinding throughout, this novel is certainly a deserving classic, and it dominates this excellent new collection of Steinbeck's fiction.
it was greatReview Date: 1998-07-30
A classic that is worth re-readingReview Date: 1998-03-21

Julia Morgan, ArchitectReview Date: 2000-03-29
Wonderful Review Of A Forgotten MasterReview Date: 2000-06-14
Superb volume on MorganReview Date: 2007-08-25
A little side note here, I've done five different tours of the Hearst Castle over the years, so have had an opportunity personally to view one of her most important works. During one of the tours, the guide said that a few years ago they had a 6.4 magnitude earthquake there, but except for a few tiles that came off here and there, the castle sustained no damage. That's because despite the delicate looking surface ornamentation, underneath the building is steel reinforced concrete, with even thicker walls than necessary. As a result, the entire Hearst Castle sustained almost no damage during the quake, and no structural damage, and the only really dramatic thing that happened was the guide said that the quake shook things violently enough so that a lot of water sloshed out of the big Neptune pool. :-)
One of the guides said some interesting things about Hearst's wealth. By the standards of the time, he was certainly very wealthy, earning $50,000 a day back in the early 30s. But compared to the most wealthy people of the day, such as Rockefeller, who made one million dollars a day, this was relatively modest. Hearst was the 42nd wealthiest man in the U.S. at the time, his father, George Hearst, being 32nd, if I remember right. He spent 9 million dollars on the Castle, approximately one half a year's earnings, so percentage-wise, it was not that much money for him. But compared to the super-wealthy of the day, such as the Morgans, Rockefellers, Vanderbilts, etc, apparently it wasn't much. :-)
Back in the financial panic of 1905, J.P. Morgan, one of the wealthiest men of his time, lent the U.S. government 20 million dollars of his own money, back when that was a lot more, so it could temporarily keep operating. When Morgan died, Rockefeller commented, "He accomplished a lot for a man who wasn't that wealthy."
Anyway, just a few perhaps irrelevant comments on some of the history of the wealthiest individuals of the time. :-)
The true Julia Morgan becomes knownReview Date: 2000-10-16
Best general interest book about MorganReview Date: 2002-01-08
Used price: $9.42

Poetry for the PeopleReview Date: 2008-03-18
And even if you're not inclined to teach, there is a great deal of information in this book that will help you learn how to write. Jordan inserts her guidelines for revision, self-critique, self-publicity, and other skills a working poet will need. Whether you want to work with others or alone, this book will open your eyes to the ways poets improve their art.
There is even a healthy selection of poetry that poets and teachers of poetry should take a look at. Categorized according to racial, social, sexual, and other lines, it will allow you to build a library that represents a cross-section of verse as it is written in America today. The list is a little out of date, having been written in 1995, but if you have access to a good library, or even time to look around Amazon.com, you should be able to bring the selection up to date for your own writing.
The book isn't without problems. In the reading selection, the "White Male" section seems to stop with the death of Robert Frost, as though no white men have written poetry, or none worth mentioning, for the last 45 years. Some of the poetry from the class is very confessional, sometimes at the expense of quality, so there are poems which seem less like poetry amd more like airing dirty laundry in public. And the social outlook of the book is very urban-centered, as though if you don't live in a world surrounded by urban sprawl and drenched in media, you can't write or perform poetry.
But on balance, even a rural white male poet with nothing to confess will have a great deal to gain from this book. From how to edit yourself to how to organize with other poets to how to publish and publicize, there is a great deal you'll be able to take away and apply to your own poetry and your own community. A must-have for all poets who aspire to work in a serious and committed manner, and for poetry teachers who want to do more than just copy-edit their students' work.
Puts "the people" back into poetryReview Date: 1999-08-06
A Fitting Memorial to a Truly Great WomanReview Date: 2005-04-27
It went on the stack of 'next time you're looking for something interesting to read' and had to wait for me to finish a few books of poetry, as well as Ted Kooser's Poetry Home Repair Manual. I felt some sort of irrational loyalty to the new Poet Laureate. But Kooser is good; very good. He made me think through everything that I write -- carefully, critically -- and my spirit was quickly wilting. I needed an antidote; or, more precisely, a complement, a little yin to counterbalance the substantial yang of Kooser's superb book. June Jordan was the very thing.
Reading it is a joy. Thinking through how to teach people to write poetry that speaks to the truth of their world, their experience, and how to bring it to the public -- all the grub with the glory, so to speak -- with June Jordan and her students was pure pleasure. And I couldn't argue with the results -- which are generously sprinkled throughout the book, with an extra dollop at the end. Poetry, the craft and how to sell it.
I have to mention that one thing that initially attracted me to Poetry for the People was the memory that Jordan had recently died (in 2002, I believe). I'm in the habit of reading a book by an author when they die as a sort of memorial, an extended meditation on their contribution and general mutability, if you will. We lost a great one when we lost June Jordan; but she was responsible enough to leave a substantial legacy, so the net loss is negligible. It's ours because she wanted it to be.
A good readReview Date: 2001-10-10
A tribute to the power of poetry and to democratic teachingReview Date: 1999-11-03

Used price: $6.95

Manchu WonderlandReview Date: 2003-12-04
When Evelyn Rawski wrote about the Forbidden City- literally and figuratively, it is forbidden to outsiders- a real wonderland populated with characters that might eerily remind one of Alice's adventures in wonderland.
ManchuReview Date: 2000-10-19
China should changed the name back to "Manchu" Qing Dynatsy is great!!!
An excellent synopsis on the Qing DynastyReview Date: 2001-09-28
I was introduced to this book after reading Jonathan Spence's "Treason by the book". Mr Spence, perhaps the foremost sinologist writing in a Western vein, has himself praised this book for its fount of new information on the Qing period.
I couldn't agree more and can also add that it is highly readable.
Great Book For those Interested in the Manchu MonarchyReview Date: 2000-10-07
E.Rawski's concentrated research on the Manchu royal family shows that the Manchus, particularly the elite did not lose their cultural heritage but in fact strove to maintain it.
The book explains how the Manchu royal family differed from the Chinese dynasties in their various aspects of social life. As the book is divided in chapters, it's easy to follow and read.
In my humble opinion, this book is for those who wish to study the Manchu monarchy in more detail.
Solid well written social historyReview Date: 2003-11-19
This book is well written, except for a few minor stylistically uncomfortable passages, and really proves her point. Unfortunately, it does drag on a bit at times. Rawski gives an extremely detailed account of life in the upper echelons of Qing society focusing on the imperial household. There is a large body of work here and it will take several readings to truly imbibe all this book has to offer.
If you are looking to deepen your knowledge of the field I recommend "Manchus & Han: Ethnic Relations and Political Power in Late Qing and Early Republican China, 1861-1928 " by Edward Rhoads. It is a bit shorter and focuses on the ethnic and political divides between the ruling elite and the Han Chinese.
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