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

Texas
Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl: Book Four
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2004-07-12)
Author: Evelyn Horan
List price: $14.95
New price: $16.95
Used price: $15.00

Average review score:

"I wish I could give this series more than 5 stars"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-20
Gifted writer, Evelyn Horan, has given us a wonderful set of books with her BESTSELLING "Jeannie, a Texas Frontier Girl," series.

I have read all four-books and enjoyed each one of them very much. My daughter, Michelle and I shared the stories together and had a lot of fun taking turns reading the chapters in each book.

After we read the books we gave them to Michelle's school library and the books became some of the most popular books in the history of the school. Yes, the stories are that good!

Kids of all ages relate well to the excitment and the adventures Jeannie and her friends share together.

The characters are real (even though these books are a work of fiction), and the dialogue is lively and fun, and the plots are exciting and believable.

You owe it to yourself and your kids to join them in a family read night. You have no idea how much fun you'll have with them. So, what are you waiting for? Turn off the tube and open a book for a change. Start with Jeannie, a Texas Frontier Girl: Book One, and work your way through. You'll be glad you did.

If you liked 'Little House On The Parie," then you are going to LOVE the Jeannie series.

(Highly Recommended Children's Series!)

Hate to see this series end! We'll miss Jeannie and Helga.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-10
Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Book Four, will leave readers smiling. It's gratifing to see Book Four of the series end exactly the way the reader hopes it will----in a happy, positive
conclusion. Jeannie and her best friend, Helga, have faced all of life's trials and tribulations, and through perseverance, along with a warm, loving friendship, and their faith in God, they have prevailed. Jeannie's horse ranch has succeeded, as has her personal life. Her future looks bright and promising, giving readers encouragement that, in their own lives, they too can overcome hardship and loss. This is a wonderfully written story that young and old alike will find endearing and entertaining.
Thank you, Evelyn Horan, for the memories your Jeannie series evokes of an earlier era on the Texas frontier."

Jeanne Glidewell, author, Soul Survivor, and Lexie Starr Cozy Series

Perfect Ending
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-23
With the finesse of the talented writer that she is, Evelyn Horan has presented us with the final book in her famous JEANNIE, A TEXAS FRONTIER GIRL four book series. Horan's series introduces us to a preteen Jeannie, her best friend Helga and to their families and friends. Interspersed with the fiction, the author offers us glimpses of Texas as it was in the 1880's. Book four of this, for-young-and-old alike, series carries us forward to Jeannie and Helga maturing into young women. Using their memories of the past, Evelyn Horan, advances her narrative while reviewing bits and pieces of previous books. Book four is a delightful, well-written culmination of Horan's marvelous "Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl" series. Horan's avid fans will not be disappointed with this, best-of-the-series final book. I applaud Evelyn Horan for her marvelous achievement in penning a series that captures the interest of preteens; young adults as well as us older folks, a series that seems destined to enchant readers for generations to come. Good job, dear Lady.
Beverly J Scott, author of Righteous Revenge, Ruth Fever and Jena's Choice
http://www.beverlyjscott.com

BYE, BYE JEANNIE...YOU'LL BE MISSED !!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-06
We must now say goodbye to Jeannie and her friends, but so many great things are happening in "Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Book Four," that we are left with a good feeling, knowing that all will be well for them as they continue on into adulthood. There is much growing up, along with happiness and sadness as they deal with daily experiences. In "Jeannie, A Texas Frontier, Book Four," the characters begin to cope with life's realities, to continue on undaunted, with happy attitudes of expectancy and joy as they look toward the future. A wonderful reading experience for both young people and adults! "Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl," books one-four are a must for every young person's library! It will be given to our school library.

V~

Delightful End to a Wonderful Series
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-04
At the young age of 17, Jeannie moves to her horse ranch and begins to live her dream, with the help of Slim, her ranch foreman. Changes take place in Jeannie's life over the next three years with her friends and family. She faces a personal loss and must decide what to do about the oil found on her property. She receives two marriage proposals, which is surprising to Jeannie, who has been concentrating on running her horse ranch and nothing else.

Will Jeannie decide to marry, and if so, who? Will she pump oil on her land? You'll have to read the book to find out!

The last in the Jeannie series, this book will bring tears and laughter but leave the reader with that warm, comforting feeling of having visited with an old friend. An outstanding series for adult and child alike, filled with characters who have become family, with plenty of warmth and love, and rounded out with enough historical information to edify while entertain. Highly recommended.

Texas
John Wesley Hardin : Suppressed Memories
Published in Paperback by Osiris Publishing Company (1999-05-26)
Author: Steppen Wirth
List price: $12.95

Average review score:

RIGHT ON TARGET
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-03
A fascinating and unusual account of one of Texas' most alluring outlaws. I was struck by its sheer intelligence. It transports you back to that dark period of Reconstruction Texas. Wirth deftly blends history and fiction so seamlessly that it's hard to tell what's real. It's wicked and witty. And, Wirth pulls it off so well that the reader really believes what he is reading. I feel that I've learned more about Wes Hardin in these pages than I did in his autobiography or any of the various biographies. Wirth's writing takes you inside the mind of Wes Hardin in a way that most don't. Check it out to learn about this largely overlooked western killer.

Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-31
As a direct descendant of John Wesley Hardin (he was my grandmother's so-many-greats uncle) I read every book on him I can. This is my favorite of all, because I believe it is one of the view that gives a realistic, balanced view of the man he was.

Unique and compelling
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-15
My father was born in Fannin County, Texas in 1910, the birthplace of John Wesley Hardin. I grew up listening to stories of Hardin's exploits and was pleasantly surprised to run across Steppen Wirth's book, John Wesley Hardin: Suppressed Memories. Many of my father's stories of Hardin came to life and old memories resurfaced.

The various biographies about Wes Hardin are little more than a retelling of his autobiography. Some authors go on to vilify, and some glorify Hardin but none really gives any insight into Hardin's personality. There isn't any reason for anyone to write
another biography on Wes Hardin unless new information is uncovered and that is doubtful. That's why a book like Steppen Wirth's is refreshing. He is not limited to rehashing Hardin's autobiography. Like one Reviewer put it: "The line between what is real and what the author has crafted from imagination is difficult to see." In Steppen's book Hardin steps from the pages, you can feel him breathe. You can almost touch him. The softer side of Wes Hardin, his deep love for his wife and close bond with family and friends moved me. Just when I started to feel empathy for Hardin the author reminded me of Hardin's willingness to kill. I admit there are parts of this book I think are too graphic for my taste. I wonder about the necessity of such violent detail. I have never understood why men have to kill each other but I've never understood war either. Most women don't. I realize Hardin's world was a different world, a world where you had to stay alive during that horrible period after the Civil War. I know anti-Union sentiments were still strong in my father's youth.

This title is a welcome addition to the Hardin list of books. Steppen's prose is vivid and strong. I became so engrossed I read the whole thing in one sitting. I will read this book again and look forward to more books by Steppen Wirth.

Si Dunn. Dallas Morning News, Dallas Texas
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-19
In his own time, gunfighter John Wesley Hardin was one of the most feared men in Texas and the Southwest. Author Steppen Wirth has created an unusual yet enteraining book about Hardin by combining fiction with facts, eyewitness accounts, and old photographs from the 1870s, 1880s, and 1890s. The line between what is real and what the author has crafted from imagination is difficult to see. And that is a key factor in the charm of this work, now in its second printing. Mr. Wirth, a Texas native, lives and writes in Montana.

An insight into the complex personality of Wes Hardin
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-09
This book tells the story of the meteoric rise of master gunfighter John Wesley Hardin, a legend by the age of eighteen, who dazzled outlaws and lawmen alike with his extreme daring and phenomenal skill with firearms. The author, Steppen Wirth manages cleverly to interweave crystalline paragraphs, reminiscences, letters, journals, and newspaper accounts to recreate this intensely human story. Eminently fascinating...a colorful, and inventive book, but not one for the queasy.

As a Hardin fan I read this book with great curiosity. In fact I read it four times and each time I found something else to like about it. Steppen Wirth effectively conveys the many sides of John Wesley Hardin's complex personality. It is truly a work of art. I highly recommend it.

Texas
Lone Star Menagerie: Adventures with Texas Wildlife
Published in Paperback by Republic of Texas (2000-03-25)
Author: Jim Harris
List price: $18.95
New price: $4.98
Used price: $2.33

Average review score:

excellent reading!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-12
I bought this book simply for research material on desert wildlife, but it turned out to be one of the best books I've ever read. Highly recommended to anyone and everyone!

praise from down under
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-12
I highly recommend this book to anybody who likes animals AND to anybody who gets a kick from good old fashioned entertaining writing.

Gerald Durrel's Successor
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-07
As a child I enjoyed the works of the late Gerald Durrel, because he was a skilled zoologist and bonafide nature lover PLUS he was a funny and entertaining writer. I long thought that no one could ever take Durrel's place, but Jim Harris may be the one to do it. In "Lone Star Menagerie" he shares his knowledge of the wildlife of the West but is not afraid to do it in a humorous manner, even if it happens to be at his own expense. This is one of the best books I've run across in a very long time.

High Adventure and Brilliant Humour
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-06
There are authors who can write gripping adventure tales and there are authors who can make you laugh out loud; rarely are the two combined. If you enjoy the works of Tim Cahill, you will enjoy the works of Jim Harris. There are accounts of attempting to capture a vulture bare-handed, being chased down a canyon by a herd of peccaries, seeking out sheep-killing coyotes to protect the innocent individuals of the species from the wrath of stockmen.... And all dealt up with a large portion of entertaining wit. Highly recommended for all readers, and particularly animal lovers.

Lone Star Menagerie
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-20
Lone Star Menagerie introduced me to the state of Texas and some amazing wildlife found within its boundries, but the true charm of the book was found in the way Mr. Harris could spin the tales of his adventures. I walked away from Lone Star Menagerie with a greater respect and knowledge of Texas and its wildlife, and the bonus being, each time I recall the buzzard tale (or some of his other adventures) they still make me laugh! BRAVO!

Texas
A Mouth Sweeter Than Salt: An African Memoir
Published in Paperback by University of Michigan Press (2005-11-29)
Author: Toyin Omoyeni Falola
List price: $19.95
New price: $19.95
Used price: $7.24

Average review score:

Santeria's New Testament
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-08
Finally the book to popularize Yoruba culture has arrived! A MUST for any serious santero or babalawo, this is the New Testament of Santeria to Migene Gonzalez-Wippler's Old. Told by a master storyteller, this book explains traditional Yoruba society better than any dry text could. One learns through the eyes of the author as a child what polygamy is really like, about obscure herbs/ebbos, and how the language is really spoken. Buy it now.

Historian's Fascinating Account of African Childhood
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-20
Toyin Falola's "A Mouth Sweeter than Salt" is a memoir of the first 13 years of his life in Nigeria. Readers will find a fascinating account of his upbringing in an extended family which was Christian, but polygamous, influenced by English colonialism, but more by Yoruba tribal traditions. Fascinated by trains, he recklessly boarded one as an adventurous youth and found himself stranded in a far-away Muslim city, where he supported himself as a "stick-man" guiding a beggar who faked blindness. Returned to his family by benevolent postal workers, he subsequently aided his grandfather in trying - unsuccessfully - to combat the abuse of a poor farmer by corrupt and exploitive tribal leaders. All in all, this book affords insights into African childhood which will absorb the interest of anyone previously familiar only with American or European experience.

An African Memoir
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-10
I just finished reading the masterpiece, A Mouth Sweeter Than Salt:An African Memoir, Toyin Falola, University of Michigan Press, 2004. This book is truly brilliant. It made me laugh, scream, and cringe. It is a superb combination of critical African oral discourse, brilliant analysis of modern African history, and lucid exploration of the making of the Nigerian state. I hope you will obtain your own copy and recommend it to others.

Olufemi Vaughan
Professor of African Studies & of History
Associate Dean, Graduate School
SUNY, Stony Brook
Stony Brook, NY 11794-4433

What A Great Piece!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-08
Falola's memoir, A Mouth Sweeter Than Salt, is a "must read" for anyone seeking to gain deeper and serious insights into the mind of the true African child. The author gives the reader a breath taking, bird eye view of the cultural panorama of the Yoruba society, and the implications of growing up in its most complicated and sophisticated city of Ibadan. The uniqueness of this book lies in its ability to transcend academic and cultural boundaries. It is as good a history book as it is a novel; social scientists will find it valuable and educators will find it to be of great relavance. It is a story of life and of living. It is indeed a celebration of youth and its rites of passage. Humor, wit, and readability add color and lucidity to all pages of this book. Wild, weird, wide, and even scary at times, this is a memoir that will stand the test of time.

Listening to the elders
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-18
Growing up in Nigeria in the years around independence provides good material for a personal memoir. These must have been extraordinary times, full of hope and expectation for the emerging new country. For a growing teenager though, the issues were closer to home. Falola, well known scholar of African history, has used his personal experiences to create a rich innovative kind of memoir that combines his growing up during that time with events in his community and the country as a whole. The resulting book gives the reader vivid insight into a complex society with its intricate traditions, in particular those of the Yoruba culture. Falola writes an easy accessible style, often addressing the reader directly. He demonstrates his narrative skill and an ability to impart local events with gracefulness and humour. He demonstrates how the use of proverbs, idioms and traditional imagery has remained part of everyday discourse by interweaving sayings into his narrative. "A proverb is regarded as the 'horse' that carries words to a different level, investing them with meanings...".

Falola's account suggests that he was already at the age of 10 a curious youngster and an astute observer of people, relationships and events. His early fascination with trains led him to experiences beyond his age level that were to influence his standing in his family and community. After an unplanned train ride and its aftermath, that created upheaval in the family, he was transplanted to another branch of his family in a more rural sector of Ibadan, the city-state in Nigeria's south-western region. Not having taken notice of the hierarchical structure of his polygamous family, he realized only then which of his "mothers" is his birth mother. There he also learned to connect with the rich traditions of the local people who have maintained much closer links to their past than those in the urban centre. For example, children are given an additional name by the family, a praise name (oriki). This name should establish a link to a real or imaginary hero of the past. Such names should enhance the young person's deep character and his ambition to emulate the past bearer. Like a young detective he tracks an old woman, different from any he had seen in the neighbourhood. When he is finally confronted by her, the outcomes are an important lesson for his life and future. These early influences shape his thinking into his adult life.

While the chapters stand as independent stories or essays, they flow together easily as a portrait of a person in his time and place. He merges the memories of his childhood with his comprehension of circumstances as an adult. Understanding of his roots and the culture instilled in him led him to study the cultural traditions of the Yoruba people and the history of the land. His reflections on how the two religions, Islam and Christianity managed to co-exist with the rich African traditions are as pertinent today as they were during the sixties. So is his criticism of the trend among the younger generation to denigrate their own culture in the face of western influences. [Friederike Knabe]

Texas
Out of the Madness: From the Projects to a Life of Hope
Published in Audio Cassette by Hachette Audio (1994-07-01)
Author: Jerrold Ladd
List price: $17.00
New price: $1.98
Used price: $2.94

Average review score:

Eye-opener, well written and well spoken (audio cassette)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-18
This story is hard to imagine anyone living through. Mr. Ladd's accomplishments are outstanding. This brings a reality to the reader that most people have no idea exists except those living it. This autobiography also shows the power of determination, attitude and self-reliance.

This should be inspiring and educational to young people especially but also to adults who can see the world from a young black man's perspective. Ladd allows us to walk in his shoes for a while; it is a privilege and a lesson.

The narrator for the audiocassette does an excellent job reading the book.

This story reminded me of "Finding Fish" by Antwoine Fisher, another great, inspiring story.

West Dallas's Teacher's review...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-20
As a 24 yearold 1st yr. teacher in West Dallas I have been looking for answers. I work at the Middle School across from the projects referred to in this book. I am not too far from "Fishtrap", and the gangs (boyz) have changed from Ladd's time but only by the faces of their members. Some of the most infamous being my most delightful students. My kids are not like all of the others in America. They are different...special even and Jerrold Ladd told me why. As I read this book with every page I turned I anticipated that the "story" would get better. I prayed that his mother would change. I longed for the chapter when some long lost Great-Uncle from Georgia would come and take him from the reality of his torrid life. But it never happened. And I became frustarted because my students do not have anyone to rescue them from their realities, not for the long haul at least. Jerrold Ladd's book explained to me the generational frustaration that West Dallas incorporates. The resentment and struggle of blocks and blocks of people is the only thing this community truly owns. Ladd wrote the testament and explanation of a community's fear. His hopes and fears were evident on every page of this book. I only wish that my studenrs could take time from their troubles of hunger, fear, anger, and poverty to big up this reflection of possible positive self. Thank you for this invaluable tool of living and learning.

The 1st yr. West Dallas Teacher's review...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-19
As a 24 yearold 1st year Teacher in West Dallas I have looked for reasons as to why my students (my kids) as I call them are the way they are. I teach eighth grade History at Thomas Edison Middle Learning Center which is located across the street from the projects referred to by Mr. Ladd. I can testify that all of my 109 students are the soul of Jerrold Ladd.

I have gone home frustrated many nights, crying myself to sleep distraught over what my kids must face at home from day to day after a long day at school. Mr. Ladd brought home the realities of my student lives. He pushed their questionable futures to the forefront of my classroom and by this Christmas I was sad to see them go. I was sad because I questioned how many of them would bathe without the motivation of not being ridiculed by mean classmates. I was sad because I wondered to what length one of my kids would go to pay his mother's rent, the same mother who stood in front of me and her precious son parent-confrence night and stated how he was a waste of 13 years.

As I turned the pages of this book I waited with each page for Mr. Ladd's situation to get better. Similarly, as I come to work everyday I look for my kids situation to get better. In the final ten to twelve pages of this testament to the community of West Dallas I finally saw inspiration and hope, however I shudder to think how long it will take the children of West Dallas to see the same thing.

Jerrold Ladd thank you for this guide into the minds of my babies. It is a invaluable tool.

Out of Curiousity...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-23
I am a freshman student at my high school, and was assigned to a book report... I then choose this book, yet not out of wantingness, but just to get something and be done with it. When I started this book, I was so amazed at the details, and way Jerrold lived, with such horrific times in his live from his living style, to growing up, and all the obstacles, and problems that occured in his life. It was so sad, yet you cant put it down.

WINNING IN AMERICA - AGAINST ALL ODDS
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-02
Excellent writing from a motivated and dedicated young man. Jerrold Ladd experienced disrupted education, a lack of early age positive male influence while proving first hand, that you can over come all obstacles and succeed in America.

It is a gut wrenching look into living in America's projects shortly after desegregation. It reminded me of the fact that life in America is not and has never been the same for everyone. For many, it is a living torture. Once you have read Out Of The Madness, you feel like you personally know the author. The author, Jerrold Ladd, tells an in-depth story about his life, his family (Mother, sister and brother) and some of his friends and associates. He provides an incredible amount of detail for a relatively short book (under 200 pages and large print). He allowed me to walk in his foot steps, feeling his disappointments, success's and failures. Each chapter presented intense quality of life and life treating situations that would test and potentially break the fiber of any man or woman. Jerrold exposes himself, his friends and associates in a bold and remarkable manner that allows you to actually feel his emotions. This book is a dead serious look at life within a segment of America, yesterday and today. The book reminds you that to many people (children and adults), needlessly, experience this and worst everyday. I recommend the book as a must read for everyone. My reason: This book provides an insight into a situation that many generations of Americans helped create. It gives motivation to those in similar situations and those that have not lived integrated into murder, drugs and abuse. Most of all, it proves, in America you can change your life.

Texas
People's Lives: A Photographic Celebration of the Human Spirit
Published in Hardcover by University of Texas Press (2001-05)
Author: Bill Wright
List price: $29.95
New price: $46.30
Used price: $2.76

Average review score:

A great collection of humanity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-25
Bill Wrights' PEOPLE'S LIVES is a straightforward approach that uses photography to show that our skins may be different colors, and our cultures may be diverse, but we are all tied together as members of the same humanity. Bill Wright is a photographer that shows us the world without making us voyeurs. His photographs invite us to have a clear understanding of our part in the family of man.

Faces from Around the World
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-11
Bill Wright is an exceptional talent. His photographs celebrate the strength, courage, joy and hope of humanity. Mr. Wright's travels have taken him just about everywhere from Nepal to New York City. His images reveal an intimate view of the extra ordinary folks he encounters along the way.

Honest pictures!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-18
A beautifully simple and simply beautiful book. Wonderfully seen photographs that really do capture and celebrate the human spirit. So many other photography books seem to be published solely to be jarring, hip, and fashionable. People's Lives stands out from this crowd as genuine, authentic, and mostly, just plain real. Well worth the price of admission to this more gentle view of our world.

People's Lives - A Testament To The Human Spirit
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-12
Bill Wright's latest book is his best to date. Once you open the book, start looking at the beautiful images and read the text, you will become so engrossed you will not be able to put it down until you have read every page and studied every picture. With so many things happening in the world that are so negative, this book is extremely uplifting. Wright's book is a testament that the human spirit is alive and well and thriving everywhere...........you just have to look for it.

Finding the dignity of people where ever they are.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-16
Bill Wright's wonderful photographs and commentary have a unique abilty to draw the reader/viewer into an emotional attachment to his subjects. I've yet to see one that didn't make me think, "I'd like to know this person."

Texas
Portraits from the Desert: Bill Wright's Big Bend
Published in Hardcover by University of Texas Press (1998)
Author: Bill Wright
List price: $40.00
New price: $89.94
Used price: $19.98

Average review score:

Perfect portrait of the Big Bend
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-28

I have visited the Big Bend more than two dozen times over more than that many years and have never found a book that captured the land and the people as well as this one by Bill Wright. I remember years ago searching for something like this. I could only find a photo book of the canyons back then but this is a book with much greater depth and it did not stop at just the geological. Wright does a top notch job of introducing the wild characters who inhabit the spaces between mountain and desert; the ones who live on the sand road that goes back behind the mesa. You won't regreat adding this book to your home library.

A Superb Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-05
I live in the greater Big Bend area; and, was surprised to discover my newest neighbors were Bill and Alice Wright. Bill's reputation is that of a great photographer; but, it will become immediately apparent to you when you read this book, that Bill is a great story teller. You will not soon lay this book down, nor forget the colorful stories revealed in his experiences of the Big Bend area.

A book rarity, superb photographs joined to a stylish text.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-07
This fine book will give the reader a good look and feel for the Big Bend of Texas.

Awesome place, beautiful book.........
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-31
Although I am a native Texan, I have never visited Big Bend. Through the author's experiences with the people he met along the way, Big Bend has become more than the awesome pictures. I'm planning a trip. Bill Wright is a wonderful writer as well as photographer - I hope there are more books to come. Sounds as if he has travelled the world.

West Texas as it really is
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-05
Photographer and writer Bill Wright comes from the West Texas town of Abilene: roughly eight hours drive at a steady seventy from his beloved Big Bend National Park. In Texas that, along with the fact that he's been visiting the park since childhood, pretty much makes him a local.

Texas has a considerable modern history, quite apart from it's more ancient nomadic inhabitants, and Wright maintains a consciousness of this in his travels through these southern borderlands of the USA. Passport controls do indeed exist at the border bridges into Mexico, along with stern warnings that it is illegal for Texans to carry guns into the neighbouring country, but the border patrols continue for nearly sixty miles across the desert into the USA with major checkpoints ocurring at the towns of Marfa and Marathon. The area South of these checkpoints, where Wright's portraits were made, are known as The Badlands and have been for the past 150 years.

Put simply Wright has an abundance of curiosity, the essential requirement of the documentary photographer; and a considerable degree of patience in the fact that he only really began making this book after a lifetime of visits. Be he visiting with the photographer Etta Koch, writing about "Crazy" Angie, who apparently isn't and operates the theatre at Terlingua Ghost Town, or photographing the rancher Buck Newsome, the white hat line on whose forehead clearly explaining how his life has been spent, Wright, while mentioning the people he was with and the details of the trip, never puts himself over the people or places he introduces to his readers. The border in West Texas might be described as permeable, with several unguarded but regularly used fords exisiting along the river. One such ford exists at a place called Lajitas, today a resort town bought lock stock and barrel by a billionaire and now boasting "the world's only international golf course", but Bill Wright digs deeper under the surface harking back to the time when the ford was an important crossing on the trail from Mexico city to the Spanish province of Nueva Viscaya. He remarks upon the "politically constructed" nature of the border between the States and their Southern neighbour, and the fact that locals continue to move freely across the Rio Grande even to this day. In an aside his thoughts wander to the realisation that where in the past Texas Rangers patrolled these areas, to keep international cattle rustling to a minimum, today the trade is reversed and the border patrols and enforcement agencies are more concerned with preventing the importation of illegal drugs. But for the local populace life continues much the same and Spanish remains the predominant language.

In many ways the story as a whole is about Wright and his experiences, but more about the manner in which the place molded him over the years than any form of personal recollection. For Texas is very much about the land. He has been absolutely true to his subjects and in this book he presents that very rare sort of travelogue that will be enjoyed by visitors, people who only ever visit far flung lands from the comfort of their own living rooms, and especially the residents of the Big Bend itself; who will understand.

Texas
Saga of the Jomsvikings
Published in Paperback by University of Texas Press (1988)
Author:
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.70
Used price: $8.00

Average review score:

Saga of der Hammer des kuchens review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-27
This is my first saga so I didn't really know what to expect from it but I found it to be enjoyable. I did have a little problem with remembering who was related to who because they go through so many generations of people with strange names and some of the people have the same name but I got used to it after a while.

The first part of the book quickly goes through a few generations of vikings until it gets to the forming of the Jomsvikings who are the best of the best viking warriors who fear nothing. During a feast many of them make an oath to go to Norway and help take the crown so thats what they go do then a major sea battle takes place. After the battle some of the Jomsviking get captured then they are killed one at a time after telling their captures that they don't fear death but welcome it, which is the best part of the book.

I was able to read through this book without much difficulty in a very short time and I would recommend it to anyone who like viking sagas about fearless warriors.

The Ideal Viking Saga
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-23
A common theme in the Nordic sagas, was the formation of a close-knit band of Vikings, sworn to a particular task or mission. The Jomsvikings were very likely the most legendary group such as this. They were a collection of elite mercenaries from all over the Scandinavian lands, mostly from Norway. Their mission, to restore a king to the throne of Norway. Those who would join the organization had to pass an initiation phase, where their skills and endurance as warriors were tested. They had a charter of rules and standing orders, and operated out of a fortified island base on Jomsborg. In short, they were very much an early medieval special-operations unit. Sadly, they were defeated in the final battle at the end of the saga, but not without causing grievous damage to the opposing force. Most telling, is the valiant conduct of the Jomsvikings taken prisoner at this battle, and their reversal of a truly dismal fate! This scene alone is Viking valor at its highest! Even in defeat, they acquire glory, with a good ending for all.

Brutal and entertaining!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-15
Saga mostly concentrating on an elite band of Viking warriors known as the JomsVikings. Packed with blood and gore from beginning to end, even human sacrifices to gain favor from the Gods in battle!

A tale of high adventure...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-14
...And I'm not kidding.

The Saga of the Jomsvikings is just about the best of the sagas (with the exception of, perhaps, the Laxdale Saga). The action is almost non-stop (once you get through the ponderous, but still interesting, introduction) and gives you a good idea about what the 12th-14th century poets/historians thought 9th-10th century exploits.

The most compelling chapter is chapter 23 where, as stated in the introduction, the author shows us the face of "...Men who know how to die." There is no hyperbole in this statement, and has, I'm sure, been the impetus for more than one writer/screenwriter (insert sly sidewise look toward Michael Crighton here).

A tale of great courage.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-05
This was only my second saga so I can't really compare it to many others. Having said that, this is a great saga to start out with. As expressed in previous reviews, "The Testing of the Jom'svikings" (chapter 23) is a great example of courage; men are able to face death completely void of all apparent fear, without so much as flinching at the blow of the sword. The excitement level is kept up very well throughout the story, especially for a tale which jumps around from different generations and countries as much as this. I never felt bored or that the book was slow moving. In other words, there was no constant strain for action. While it may be hard for the novice of the saga to get used to the long range of generations throughout the story, once you become used to it it becomes natural and easlily comprehensible.
Although many have expressed in previous reviews that the introduction was boring, I found it not too different from many other critical introductions I have read before. The introduction does what it needs to do, gives the reader an insight and an overview of the material that is to be read.

Texas
Shadowed Ground: America's Landscapes of Violence and Tragedy
Published in Paperback by University of Texas Press (1997)
Author: Kenneth E. Foote
List price: $19.95
New price: $25.00
Used price: $6.59

Average review score:

An Astonishing Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-06
This is an astonishing book, one that defies easy categorization or even any categorization at all. It is by turns
thought-provoking, horrifying, and inspiring, and the buyer will never regret the money spent on it. This book will stay with the reader for a long time to come.

I haven't read the book yet, but the cover image is amazing!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-30
I haven't read the book yet, but the cover image is amazing!

An Incredible Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-17
I read this book a couple of years and found it amazing!
It's heartbreaking, bloodchilling, and inspiring, all in one
book. These are stories that often remain untold and hidden in our culture, yet they are a distinct and vital part of
our national experience. I read the first edition, by the way,
and I now plan to buy the second, updated edition, which I
anticipate will deal with the World Trade Center attacks, the
Pentagon attack, and the Shencksville, PA, air crash. If you
buy one book this year, buy this one!

Phenomenal look at marking pain
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-22
Excellent overview of why we choose to designate tragic events in some cases, and hush-up others shamefully. Poignant, original...no other book so comprehensively covers the geography of painful memorials. An interesting sequel could be written regarding domestic terrorism, not just in America, but regarding other countries' place-memorials of such events.

Shadowed Ground : America's Places of Tragedy and Violence
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-30
If you arrange your library by category you may have trouble with this book. History? True Crime? Cultural Geography? Anthropology? Sociology? American Studies?

The book covers the sites of disaster, assassination, murder and accident all across America, including nearly every site and shrine in Texas. We review it not just for it's interesting content, but its coverage of a most unusual type of geography. It's a thought-provoking book at how, why and in what manner we deal with the sites of violence (and tragedy).

The individual stories of the incidents are told completely, but without distracting from the book's theme.

It's a unique book and should remain so for some time. Foote's thoroughness guarantees that.

Texas
Shortgrass Song
Published in Hardcover by Forge (1994-12)
Author: Mike Blakely
List price: $23.95
Used price: $0.85
Collectible price: $23.95

Average review score:

Caleb Holcomb
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-03
Caleb's adventures take him through the Civil War, buffalo hunts, Indian Wars, and barroom shoot outs. During these times he meets a Comanche slave woman who kidnaps him, and a renegade Arapaho who likes scalping people, and finally meets Marisol a Mexican beauty who gives him his children and wins his love. Some times the story slows down quite a bit and other times you won't want to put it down.

Great writing
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-19
I'm going to add my five stars to the list, because Mike Blakely deserves it. This book delves into the life of young Caleb Holcomb, and we get to watch him grow up. It, like Kirby Jonas books I'm always touting, is not your standard western, but it is a good homespun tale all the same. Caleb is heroic without being super human, and you will fall in love with his affable, musical character who is always finding almost too much trouble for him to handle. Read Mike Blakely and anything by Kirby Jonas, and you won't need to turn anywhere else. If these two authors ever got together they would have a lot in common and a lot to talk about. You can bet they would be friends!

This book is EXCELLENT !!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-24
This book is EXCELLENT !!! Anyone who has any intrest in the old west should read this book !!!! It is absolutely amazing !!!!! The writer has such style and grace !!! He is an amazing writer and I think he is great!

Not just a western, but a story of America.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-13
It is hard to imagine a more comprehensive, satisfying read in the western genre. Blakely's characters are real people. We care about them, and feel as if we know them. I always look forward to Mike Blakely's efforts. Even if your not a regular reader of westerns, give this book a chance. But be prepared to be spoiled. "Formula" westerns will pale by comparison.

Note: I have begun reading the sequel, "Too Long at the Dance" and find it well-crafted as well.

Born a sickly child Caleb Holcomb fights his way to manhood.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-15
The youngest son of two american pioneers, Caleb Holcomb tries desperately to show his manhood. The plot is well developed as Caleb picks and chooses the adventures in his life. Blakely uses accurate historical insight as well as first hand knowledge of the cowboy way to show his readers what growing up in the 1800's was like. A true american storyteller Blakely has turned out another timeless classic with "Shortgrass Song"


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