Ohio Books
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The Majesty of the Papal CollectionReview Date: 2001-06-20
The Majesty of the Papal CollectionReview Date: 2001-06-20

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Through the Eyes of an ImmigrantReview Date: 2002-12-30
Her travels throughout Brazil are interesting and well told. The best are her experiences in the fragile Amazon in Alta Floresta; Riding the riverboat on the River Sao Francisco; and the beauty of the relatively unknown Plantanal. She vividly describes the wonders she encounters in these sparsely populated, wild west areas of Brazil. While explaining these new areas, she also expresses her uneasiness and concern with how development is occurring in many of these areas relating them to the older areas of Parana that she saw develop when she first arrived in Brazil.
Several of her stories in the book are particularly humorous. Two of the better ones are how she has to show a group of Brazilian tourists that an American motel is not paid for by the hour and her experience of riding the Brazilian equivalent to the Orient Express.
Her forty year experience of adapting to a new country, raising a family of five children (all of whom study abroad but return to Brazil), and seeing the changes that occur over forty years is extremely interesting. It brought to mind what my ancestors might have faced when they came to the U. S. several generations ago to begin a new life as farmers in a very strange land.
I started the book over a weekend and couldn't put it down. It is highly recommended.
Geld's book better than PW reviewReview Date: 2002-12-31
The reviewer obviously wanted Geld to delve into the ecological problems of developing in the Amazon River basin and discards completely Gelds questioning of the long term issues related to development in the Amazon River basin. Geld very interestingly compared development in Parana, which she witnessed when she first arrived in Brazil, with what she saw occurring in the Amazon.
The political realities of agrarian reform are also lost on the reviewer. Several times in the book Geld explained how politicians in their attempt to improve conditions for small farmers, often complicate and hinder proper development of land. Geld's description of the small farmer who couldn't get title to his land, because the government was concerned that title would allow him to sell his land, but resulted in him not being able to borrow money to properly improve the land was but one example of her understanding and admirable description of these complex issues. Geld's quote of her father, "Poor people make poor soil," is very appropriate.
Your comment, "...parallels between the rich Ohio agrarian society of her youth and the subtropical poverty of a Brazilian farm economy", is laughable. I have visited Louis Bromfield's Malabar Farms twice in the past ten years and can tell you that the surrounding farms are anything but rich. Due to the diligence and innovative farming practices of her father, he slowly turned a run-down Depression era farm into a marvelous, model, working farm. Brazil's agricultural economy is far from poverty, as the country is rapidly overtaking the U. S. in farm production and productivity. This unnamed reviewers comments reflect either ignorance or some other hidden political agenda...
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Old and still mostly new gem of an acoustics referenceReview Date: 2007-03-23
To cover the missing ground of treatment of the wave equation in terms of distributions and a nice and easy treatment of the method of descend I'd recommend Stein and Shakarchi's recent, very accessible and overall just excellent "Fourier Analysis", Princeton University Press, 2003.
Anybody that looks for a quality reference for acoustics, this is a real catch and if one wants to buy just one reference, this may well be the best one to get despite its age. Given its clarity it certainly is suitable for self-study.
Complete referencebookReview Date: 2000-07-17
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Ways Steam Towboat DirectoryReview Date: 2007-01-18
This book not contains names of vessels, but photographs and tid-bits of first hand knowledge.
This book has already become a prized addition to my collection.
Most comprehensive research toolReview Date: 2003-06-22

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The Weary BoysReview Date: 2003-03-30
A terrific book for anyone interested in . . .Review Date: 2002-12-09

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Western Civilization: A Brief HistoryReview Date: 2000-06-15
good bookReview Date: 2000-08-06

Charming fabrication with real southwest flavorReview Date: 2002-05-09
One of the best books I have ever read.Review Date: 1999-10-13
When she tries to relate this experience to her boyfriend, her daughter, and the scientific community at Los Alamos, they have a hard time grasping what she's trying to express. As time goes by, however, she becomes a mythic figure to many people.
This book is written with a lot of detail about places and atmospheres, but doesn't get bogged down in it. The development of the atom bomb is a central metaphor relating directly to the main characters' lives. I could not put the book down.

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A unique and informative contribution to Lighthouse historyReview Date: 2001-01-17
Women Who Kept the LightsReview Date: 2000-04-07

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To be stronger at the broken places Review Date: 2006-08-24
For Wilson the heart of this book is in the theme that those who go through some extraordinary suffering may be granted with it extraordinary powers of creation. He illustrates the theme in reading the works of Dickens, Kipling, Joyce, Wharton, and Hemingway.
Wilson was a critic of enormous erudition who could sweep through and bring together learning from diverse worlds. He was a pioneer in his own seeing of the value of the great turn- of- the century literary creators . A master man- of - letters this book of essays remains one of his best works.
Parentless and helpless childReview Date: 2004-08-05
The wound of Kipling also occurred in his childhood when his parents left him in the care of a heartless aunt while they returned to India. The trauma is recounted by Kipling in BAA, BAA BLACK SHEEP. Kipling's sister termed the place the 'house of desolation'. Kipling's work was shot through with hate. Kipling's failure of nerve may be explained by the fact that he lacked faith in the artist's vocation. Some stories show Kipling's morbid permanent sense of injury. Inescapable illness dominates the later Kipling.
The theme of Casanova's Memoirs is the many things life may hold. Edith Wharton's later work dulled the reputation of her earlier work. Kipling, Dickens, Wharton were all maladjusted. Edith Wharton writes of the conflict between the individual and the social group. Mrs. Wharton was always aware of the pit of misery, the wastefulness of the plutocracy. Wilson believes that Mrs. Wharton's genius was triggered by an exceptional emotional strain.
Hemingway possessed an exceptional mimetic gift. He mastered a precise and clear style. The actual title of the collection of essays is derived from Wilson's essay on Sophocles's play, PHILOCTETES. There is the conception that superior strength is inseparable from disability.
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A Great Tiger's TaleReview Date: 2008-01-19
The real treasures of this book are the numerous cartes de visite from Ralsa Rice's own album, discovered by one of the editors in an Ohio flea market in the 1980s. Of the 67 photos in the book, 18 are from Rice's collection, augmented with another set collected by Captain Edward P. Bates, one of the last commanders of the 125th. These photos allow the reader to put a face with the names of many of the men mentioned in the narrative, an give an added poignancy to the often impersonal statistics of killed, wounded, and missing.
Rice writes with a keen wit, and a soldier's eye for the humorous and ridiculous in the alternatingly frustrating, boring, and terrifying life of the Civil War infantry soldier. He also offers welcome glimpses of the often-overlooked second and third tier commanders in the Western theater.
This is a fine first-person account, and highly recommended.
A Reenactors Perspective on Yankee TigersReview Date: 2000-07-13
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