Arizona State Books


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Arizona State Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Arizona State
Secret Sedona: Sacred Moments in the Landscape (Special Scenic Collection)
Published in Paperback by Arizona Highways Books (2005-10)
Author: Larry Lindahl
List price: $12.95
New price: $9.17
Used price: $9.33

Average review score:

Secret Sedona
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-24
This is an amazing work, which draws you into the mystiques of our past and makes us seem so inconsequential in the greater scheme of lives gone by.

Sedona Splendor
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
I have lived in Northern Arizona for most of my life and visit Sedona often. This book, with its wonderful images and text, make the reader feel like they are in Sedona. As a photographer I find the images outstanding and the messages in the text inviting.

A Rare Treat of Reverence and Delight
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-23
Elegant and unique - the best of it's kind! This book is one that I enjoy over and over again, enriched each time by the authors' reverent vision and writings about this sacred and profoundly beautiful landscape.

The new edition's 22 Hikes are described and well organized (i.e. Easy Hikes, Hikes along Water, Hikes to Arches, Hikes into Canyons, Vista Hikes and Loop Hikes) and are wonderful for all levels of ability. I keep this book out for guests and visitors to see and have given it as a gift to out-of-town guests. Lindahl's photography and writings blend the beauty of Sedona in both mystical and poetic ways. I was especially impressed with the combination of rich native historical information and journal narratives that create a sense of being in the timelessness of the place. This book gives me a new appreciation of the natural world through the author's keen attention to detail and the way his profound descriptions and relationship to the land keeps me right there with him on his deep and meditative journeys.

Arizona Highways Magazine

Fantastically Gorgeous Gift for Sedona Lovers!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
I love this book. My parents are long time Sedona residents, and every time I visit them I purchase a few of Lindahl's "Secret Sedona's" to take home as gifts from vacation. The photography is phenomenal, as well as the written word, which decribes Sedona in the romantic fashion it is in reality.
An easy read, with pictures worth a thousand words and beautifully laid out, I recommend this book to anyone, whether you live in Sedona, visited Sedona, or have even never been there! (It will make to want to do all of the above.) 5 Stars!!!!!

Precision and Beauty in Secret Sedona
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-25
Secret Sedona illumines, with precision and beauty, Sedona's swirled red rock country and its ethereal waters.

Larry Lindahl's photos have such depth that it's worth taking them into the sunshine, to see into the purple shadows.

The layers of his text include Lindahl's journal, cultural and natural history, plus a thorough index.

But the book isn't a travel guide. Lindahl's text invites the reader to settle in for a slow read, with supple images, riding the edge of the known and unknown in Sedona.

Here is a lasting cache of awe to enjoy, alongside, or far away from, time in Sedona.

-Jane Yett

Arizona State
Sedona Hikes
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Hexagon Press (1998-08-25)
Authors: Richard K. Mangum and Sherry G. Mangum
List price: $14.95
Used price: $3.42

Average review score:

Sedona Hikes
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
This book seems to cover many great hiking areas in Sedona. It is quite explicit re: directions and information about the hiking trails. Great book for a person new to the area or even people who have been around awhile. Very informative!

Great Guide, but also buy a map
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
I used this book for planning a 2 day visit to Sedona. I was extremely happy with the format. It has 2 pages per hike, with a high quality photo of what to expect for views, driving/hiking distance/time, as well as selections of their favorites. We didn't visit long enough to do a lot of the hikes, but we truly felt that we were able to select 3 hikes that were perfectly suited to our tastes and with nice variety. Overall, I don't think you could go wrong in Sedona, but I felt like this guide was well worth the price and only wish I could find similar guides for other locations. The Magnum's have done a great job, deserving of 5 stars.

The only shortcoming you may find is that their maps are very general and mostly help you find the trailhead (which was flawless). But, I prefer to have a quality map as well and I purchased the Emmitt Barks Cartography - Sedona Trails Map (not sure if it was on Amazon), and was very happy with it. Personally, I don't think you can create a detailed map inside the book for each hike, so I don't consider this a flaw to the book - just a bit of advice if you are planning a trip.

Good hiking book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-18
This book was very helpful in deciding which hikes to do. We were not dissappointed by any of the hikes. It was good that we knew about the pink jeaps ahead of time.

GET THIS BOOK
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-30
I have read five books about the Sedona hikes, all written approximately across the same time period, and this is why Iknow what I am talking about.I have also been to Sedona twice and know about it in a general sence. Short and sweet...this is the best all around Sedona hiking book filled with lots of bits about popular and unheard of hikes. This book is good because it is created by a Husband and Wife writer and photographer team who have lived in the area for years. The book includes maps of how to get to the trail heads and where the trails go from there. Also, descriptions of weather related to time of year and level of exertion required to do the hikes. The hikes that include VORTEXES are clearly marked. The photography is great. The five other books are best described by one or several of the following phrases: sickening and homespun; the writer as spiritual guru who is grandiose; might as well not bother; information repeated elsewhere ad nauseum. GET THIS BOOK

Good description, Terrible overview
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-27
This book is good you want to look up a specific trail by name. I am more interested in researching trails in a specific area and found the layout of this book VERY frustrating. This book NEEDS a trail map overview where one can see where a specific trail is in relationship to the other trails. If you purchase this book make sure to purchase a Sedona Trail Map as well.

Arizona State
Canyons of the Southwest: A Tour of the Great Canyon Country from Colorado to Northern Mexico
Published in Paperback by University of Arizona Press (2000-10-01)
Author: John Annerino
List price: $18.00
New price: $0.91
Used price: $0.86

Average review score:

Best read.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-08
Best Read. John Annerino's CANYONS OF THE SOUTHWEST. -Tucson Weekl

Towering red rock and rushing waters.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-08
CANYONS OF THE SOUTHWEST by John Annerino features the author's photographs of towering red rock and rushing waters. -Travel-Holiday Magazine

Stunning.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-08
CANYONS OF THE SOUTHWEST by John Annerino. A stunning overview of the "inverted mountains." -Summit Magazine

Unbelievably beautiful pictures and stories.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-08
For people who love the West, especially those who seldom leave the concrete road, this book provides unbelievably beautiful pictures and stories about gorgeous places in the wilderness. -Rocky Mountain News

Compelling photographs.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-08
Foremost are the photographs. I would call Annerino's canyon portraits the best of a really good lot, even over big-time large-format photographers. While the large-format works are stunning artistic studies of light and color shot with impossibly huge f-stops, Annerino's canyon photographs give expression to the phrase "wearing one's heart on the sleeve." His photos have an active passion that others lack. Anyone who knows him will say he is among the "hardmen' to tackle the Southwestern mountains and canyons, but that he is definitely the most sincere in his passion for place. Perhaps, because of this he lacks a calculated commercial view of the places he photographs. His images also record his own passion, creating compelling and unique photographs. More than any other contemporary outdoor photographer, Annerino's photos mirror his love of the land's people. In the text, Annerino portrays canyonlands people as part of what makes the places special. He has a deep affection for past and present native peoples, but unlike some Anglo North Americans, Annerino isn't a lost 20th century soul. Rather, he seems to have a straightfoward and genuine admiration for native people, and has learned a great deal about them. His research on each canyon's history is impressive. Annerino writes with an immensity commensurate with his subject. His style is old-fashioned, evoking an older, more grandiose era of writing of explorers like Powell and Pattie. While many modern writers seem bent on infusing themselves into as much of the story as possible, Annerino's style is not so full of himself as full of the intensity of his canyon experiences...Annerino is at his best when he writes about Mexico, especially the Big Bend passage where he talks about the injustices served the Mexican across the river at the hands of our national park there. An optimist who sees great things in the canyons, Annerino neither ignores nor dwells on the obvious problems facing the West like pollution and development. And fortunately, CANYONS OF THE SOUTHWEST is not a treasure map guidebook to these areas. -Desert Skies

Arizona State
Going Back to Bisbee
Published in Hardcover by University of Arizona Press (1992-05-01)
Author: Richard Shelton
List price: $39.95
Used price: $6.47
Collectible price: $39.95

Average review score:

Creative Non-Fiction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
GOING BACK TO BISBEE is essentially a memoir augmented by plenty of history, both natural and human. It won an award in 1992 for "creative nonfiction" and I can understand why. The conceit of the book, which is taken up by the title, is a drive by the author Richard Shelton from his current hometown of Tucson to Bisbee, Arizona, where he had spent two years of his life, newly married and a fledgling teacher, fresh out of the military, about thirty years earlier. He intersperses his account of his half-day-long, 100-mile drive with recollections of his personal life in Southern Arizona, stories of the history of the area (for example, the Apaches, the U.S. Army, and a century of mining), and sidebars on the flora, fauna, and geography of the region. The book ends with Shelton back in Bisbee, having dinner with an old friend and grande dame of the former mining town re-invented as a center for the arts.

For my taste, the "going back to Bisbee" conceit is a little too artificial and forced, and the anthropomorphism to which Shelton is prone becomes mildly annoying, especially when repeatedly used with reference to the van, "Blue Boy," in which he makes his trip. But on the whole, the book is very engaging. It certainly is a much more entertaining way of learning about Colorado river toads, Perry's agave, coyotes, mesquite, and many similar subjects than the typical natural history guide. At the same time one learns much about the destruction of the landscape by the Anglo invasion and their cattle-ranching and mining without undue preaching, and one is treated to a number of interesting personal anecdotes, some of which are genuinely funny.

Hence, GOING BACK TO BISBEE can be recommended on a number of levels, but it would be especially appreciated, I think, by those interested in the Sonoran desert and the mountains of Southern Arizona.

Bisbee as both a state of mind and a place.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-14
"And I'm going back to Bisbee, not really knowing why. Perhaps it is because two years of my life were left there, put behind me, and now I have reached an age at which I cannot afford to forget even two years out of those allotted to me. Perhaps I am looking for the spirit of a mountain I never knew, a mountain which became a crater on whose edge I lived for two years, happily, while the landscape and earth around me was being destroyed. Or perhaps it is just nostalgia. I was happy there, while the destruction went on for twenty-four hours a day, and now I want to go back" (pp. 21-22).

Richard Shelton is an Arizona writer and poet. His 1992 memoir Going Back to Bisbee won the Western States Book Award for Creative Nonfiction in 1992 and was selected for the 2007 One Book Arizona program. It is his love song to Bisbee, a desert city with a European feel located 82 miles southeast of Tucson in the mile-high mountains of southern Arizona. With his poet's eye for detail, Shelton immerses his reader in the landscape, flora, and fauna of the Sonoran desert as he makes his nostalgic journey (in the temperamental van he proudly calls "Blue Boy") from Tucson to Bisbee, where he taught English in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Along the way, he not only revisits the natural history of southeastern Arizona, but he reveals the beauty of the Sonoran desert, even capturing in words the scent of the desert when it smells like rain. Ultimately, Shelton's highly-recommended memoir reveals that Bisbee is as much a state of mind as a place. I should know. I have Bisbee dust in my blood. I was born and raised there. And like Shelton, I was happy there. I say read the book, and then experience Bisbee for yourself.

G. Merritt

VERY good book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-21
This is a terrific book. I live in Arizona and learned so much from reading it. It is never boring and is full of information and fun stuff.
I even learned a few new words for things that happen in Arizona.
I would highly recommend this book.

Wonderful book for anyone interested in the SW
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
Others have already heaped praise on Mr. Shelton and this book, so I can't improve on that. But you must also try his 2007 book "Crossing the Yard". It is every bit as good, if not better,Crossing the Yard: Thirty Years as a Prison Volunteer than "Going back to Bisbee"

Must read for anyone who loves the Arizona desert!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-17
What fun we had tracing Richard Shelton's steps (and drive) through the Arizona desert. He's personal stories throughout this book are great. The information on the flora and fauna are very detailed. The history on this desert area itself is fascinating.

Arizona State
Arizona Atlas & Gazetteer
Published in Map by DeLorme Publishing (2004-01-01)
Author:
List price: $19.95
New price: $9.43
Used price: $12.51

Average review score:

Hit the Arizona Highways!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-06
Arizona is a spectacular state. There is so much to explore, from the Grand Canyon to old mining town of Bisbee. North to south, east to west, this atlas will get you where you want to go. Even in you have a GPS, it helps to have a broader visual back-up. Get yourself an atlas and hit the road. Happy Trails!

Accurate and complete map
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
We are snowbirds and we kept getting "misplaced" with the regular maps. This one is complete and accurate. Thanks

Delorme Atlas & Gazetter
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-25
These Delorme Atlas & Gazetters are wondeful. They show you many features not available through GPS, maps or other atlases. It is a great feature to have the BLM lands marked as well as the back roads. Good resources are also included in each states atlas. A good addition to anyone's travel tools.

Topo with clear elevation lines
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-28
I purchased the maps so I could see the elevation contours. I have a Tennessee maps and it gives the elevation changes by 100 foot. The map gives some elevation but not the contours.

Atlas and Gazetteer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-08
Great Product! Nearly as good as having a seperate map for every county in the whole state.
I like it best because I can read the text much easier than a state map, especially in low light. My bifocals are OK for reading but not the fine details of most maps.

Arizona State
Rubbish!: The Archaeology of Garbage
Published in Paperback by University of Arizona Press (2001-03-01)
Authors: William Rathje and Cullen Murphy
List price: $17.00
New price: $7.16
Used price: $4.47
Collectible price: $17.95

Average review score:

No Rubbish!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-15
Rathje's and Murphy's RUBBISH! is insightful and engaging. Their anecdotes about the ironies of environmental movements rallying behind particular causes (like McDonald's styrofoam clam shells), and their analyses of popular misconceptions about waste provide, great food for thought for policy makers and for environmentally-minded individuals concerned about the problems with waste and its disposal. Along the way, the authors demonstrate the utility of archaeological knowledge for dealing with current social challenges. This book is a really great read!

A Classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-26
Great book. Rathje is a engaging figure that delivers a good story - the story of our garbage.

Highly recommended.

Garbage Holds Its Treasures
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
I never thought reading about garbage would be interesting - well, okay, actually I did, otherwise I would have never read this book. I mean that I didn't suspect the book would be so darn interesting. Garbage really sheds a strong light on the culture that generates it. Just think, your garbage tells us a lot about who you are. Future archaeologists are going to love digging through our old garbage in a few thousand years. Oh, what a story it will tell.

What Our Rubbish Says About Us
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-19
This is an overview of the University of Arizona's continuing trash sorting project started in 1972 to document the lifestyle habits of the American public through observing what we eat, what we use in household goods, etc., and then throw out. Socio, political and economic behaviors become evident while recording the fascinating finds in daily trash digging, probing, and quantifying.

This project also included studies at the now closed Fresh Kills landfill on Staten Island in New York City where holes were bored all the way to the bottom of the fill and where the studies then took on a more ominous dimension of environmental impact discoveries such as: that the breakdown of trash, even over years, is a myth. The research showed that there is little biodegradation occurring due to compaction and lack of bacterial decomposition, so the researchers found completely intact and recognizable items from food to readable newsprint- even at the bottom of the heap where it was at least 50 years old- same type discoveries of intact trash heaps discovered in ancient Rome, Greece, etc.

Most distressing of the discoveries in the landfill was the discovery of the huge quantity of "leachate"- a toxic liquid stew, that is leaking at the rate of a million gallons a day into New York Harbor.

The book concludes with recommendations on alternatives to landfill as a means to dispose of trash plus recycling and lifestyle changes.

For another enlightening read on all things trash, there is Elizabeth Royte's "Garbage Land"- a personal story of discovery of what her family's trash footprint is and where everything including recyclables ends up- a real eye-opener and an entertaining read!

There is a link between owning a cat and reading "The National Enquirer"!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-27
"Rubbish" is a highly academic book about "The Garbage Project" at the University of Arizona's Anthropology Department. The main idea behind "The Garbage Project" is to gain information about society by analyzing garbage patterns in various locations.

Despite being a book about garbage, the contents of the book are quite diverse. The book is divided into 4 parts. The first section, An Introduction to the Garbage Project, gives the background of "The Garbage Project", why it started, what they do, and what they hope to accomplish. This section also discusses how anthropologists use garbage to learn about ancient civilizations. The second section, The Landfill Excavations, discuss the basic theories of landfills, how the team takes samples from landfills, and discusses why biodegradation does not work in landfills. The third section, Interlude: Diapers and Demographics, I found to be highly entertaining. This section has a fascinating chapter on estimating the population of a neighborhood (as well as sex and age) based on the garbage collected from this neighborhood (a study done to initially help the Census Bureau). This section is also filled with useless information such as "There is a link between owning a cat and reading "The National Enquirer"". There is also a detailed discussion about disposable diapers in landfills. The final section, Garbage and the Future, was the most educational by far. This part discusses the serious shortcomings of citywide recycling programs and side effects people never hear about. There are also discussions on alternate garbage disposal methods, such as high tech incinerators used to generate electricity, as well as several other attempts at using technology to turn garbage into a useful product. The section and the book end with a chapter on reducing and addressing garbage disposal.

I think this book will not be for everyone. The book reads like a Master's Thesis at times, rather long and seems to ramble. However, some parts of the book are exceptional (such as the chapter on recycling or "Closing the Loop") and are really an eye opener.

I'd recommend this book to anyone interested in Environmental Sciences. Also, if you can manage to wade through pages of various scientific theories and facts, I'd highly recommend picking this book up! While a little slow reading at times, it is quite informative and I think a real eye opener.

Arizona State
Color Country: Touring the Colorado Plateau
Published in Paperback by Gibbs Smith Publishers (2002-05-01)
Author: Susan M. Neider
List price: $19.95
New price: $7.99
Used price: $1.94

Average review score:

This book gets it right
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-25
Susan Neider's Guide to the Colorado Plateau gets it exactly right. Read this book - or even just look at it - and you are itching to get on the road! The stunning pictures tell you where you'd love to go and the logical and readable maps and the clever photo icons show you just how to do it. After you make your travel reservations, go back and really read the book. The pictures will reward much careful looking and the literate, informative text is filled with useful and unusual details on the history and geology of the region. This book informs without clutter or preachy wordiness. And when you are finished with your trip, you'll have an unbeatable souvenir - though it is likely to be worn out! No matter, you will likely, like me, log on and buy another! The price is right, too, it won't break the bank. This book is an excellent value. Great job, Ms. Neider, thanks!

Unique and extremely well done - William Hunter
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-19
The best book of its kind and it delivers a remarkable balance of informative text, readable maps, and wonderful photos. This is much more than your normal guide book - it is a portfolio of why I love this place. There is a great deal of information that I haven't found anywhere else - or at least not from the same reference. I now have a copy to carry with me, and a copy to keep displayed in the house.

A beautiful and informative book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-07
I took Susan Neider's wonderful Color Country on our family's recent trip out west. We had never been there before, and traveling with Ms. Neider's book was like having our own personal tour guide. She tells you where all the "not to be missed" spots are in each park, and even the best time to see them. Then she provides great maps that make it foolproof to get there. We were never lost even once. We particularly appreciated the scenic route she recommends for approaching Monument Valley, and the detour to Goosenecks State Park, a wonderful spot our other guidebooks didn't even mention. And there was just the right amount of information about the geology of each area to keep us informed, and so well explained that we were still interested. She gives each site a Child Rating for its interest to children, and we found these to be spot-on. For example, she rates Mesa Verde a "5" (the highest child rating), and we all loved it. And now that we're home, Color Country has become our favorite souvenir. The photos are just plain amazing. This book is worth the price just for the portfolio of photographs alone.

Solid Information and Beautiful Photography
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-04
[...] Color Country provides travelers to the Colorado Plateau of Utah with essential information to get the lay of the land, a concise explanation of the geology of each park, a list of highlights, and gorgeous, honest photographs of the places covered. Dirt and gravel roads are not the focus of this touring guide; those who want more detail about backcountry travel would be advised to read an expert such as Michael Kelsey. However, even remote places like Kolob and Needles are, in fact, mentioned in the copy I bought. For the traveler looking for a superb overview, this book cuts to the quick and captures the essence of each park with finely-conceived text and images. Rating this book with one star is like buying a Brooks Brothers suit and then complaining because it didn't hold up when you went rock climbing in it.

Good Guide almighty
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-27
The photography is art and I am looking forward to our trip. I feel as if I've already been there.

Arizona State
All My Rivers Are Gone: A Journey of Discovery Through Glen Canyon
Published in Hardcover by Johnson Books (1998-12)
Authors: Katie Lee and Terry Tempest Williams
List price: $30.00
Used price: $14.99

Average review score:

A Love Affair With A Canyon
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-27
A 1950's folk singer and wild woman's memoir of her love affair with the Colorado River and Glen Canyon before the Glen Canyon Dam flooded her canyon. She tells of floating the river and exploring intimate side canyons on small personal trips.

Fantastic Read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-20
This is one of the best and most special books I have read. Katie Lee really gives you the experience of Glen Canyon--it's beauty, wildness, and uniqueness. I fell in love with the place through her words, and felt her loss deeply when the damn dam was built. This act (the building of the dam) was truly a dark time in our history. I thank Katie Lee for sharing her thoughts and feelings and cheer her for her openness in those closed times.

From the heart...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-04
Katie Lee has written a beautiful & powerful love story & funeral song to a place some considered the most beautiful on earth, now drowned under Lake Powell. The book is largely exerpts from Katie's river journals from 40+yrs ago & has an immediacy that left me feeling like I was in Glen Canyon with her. She mentions that she shared early drafts of a fiction version with Ed Abbey, who told her to just write her own story. That she couldn't make up anything better than her own experiences. Ed Abbey was right. I devoured the book in one emotional sitting, then spent the rest of the day wandering aimlessly with dreams & visions of lost desert canyons in my mind.

Looking to the Past
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-09
Katie Lee has given us a wonderful glimpse at a lost treasure. Her discriptions of the river and side canyons tell of her love of this lost world. My 2nd greatgrandfather went through Glen Canyon in 1872 with the second Powell Expedition and Katie has given me some feeling as to What he saw and the places he visited. I never understood what a treasure Glen Canyon was to Us till I read her book. Thank You Katie Lee

Shoulda Found a Ghostwriter
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-22
Katie Lee has led a remarkable life. But while she may be a fine story teller for a live audience, she is a poor writer. I found it a slow book to flog myself through- despite an enormous interest in the subject. Too bad she couldn't have put her ego aside and sat down with a professional writer. I can think of several women writers of the west that would have been a boon to the project. I look forward to the Katie Lee biography from one of them.

Arizona State
Bring Me Your Saddest Arizona (Iowa Short Fiction Award)
Published in Paperback by University Of Iowa Press (2003-10-01)
Author: Ryan Harty
List price: $20.00
New price: $14.94
Used price: $7.18

Average review score:

Real people living amidst shifting landscapes
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-01
This book contains stories with contemporary characters so life-like you might feel like emailing one or two with your thoughts. The backdrop of Arizona is a setting that is at once organic and otherworldly, like a lunar landscape. The dialogue is surprising and clear-toned. These are vivid and haunting stories.

An Amazing Collection of Stories
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-29
This is one of the best story collections I've read in years. Every story is strong, all the characters are incredibly real, and there's an overall sense of sadness that knocks you on(...). Not that the stories are depressing, per se. In fact, they can be hilarious at times, and there's almost always a feeling of hope at the end. I came across "Why the Sky Turns Red When the Sun Goes Down" in BEST AMERICAN SHORT STORIES 2003,and while I love that story (it's about a family with a robot boy), there are others here that I like even better. "Crossroads" and "September are my favorites. An amazing book. I look forward to whatever Harty writes next.

Consistent, Moving Collection
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-30
Ryan Harty has wowed me with this prize-winning collection.
Each of the eight stories deals with sadness in indelible forms. One of my favorites in the collection centers around a husband and wife and their robot son who seems to be coming apart. The ways in which each family member handles the boy's breakdown mirror survival techniques of people dealing with illness: The wife distances herself; the husband tries to fix the situation; and the son tries to hide his problems.

In another story, a brother cleans the apartment of his dead, mentally ill sister and ends up sweeping all of her cats out onto the street.

The last story, September, is a gorgeous account of one young man's first love: the mother of one of his friends.

I highly recommend this SSC!

A gorgeous book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-17
While I was reading this book, I couldn't wait to get home from work so I could fall back into the stories. Now I'm walking around with the characters in my head, like old friends. It's a beautiful book, the kind you want to recommend to everyone you know. Ryan Harty is a wonderful writer.

Suburban Southwest Wasteland
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-26
People often romanticize the SouthWest, imagining coyotes and endless desert and cowboys; however modernity has cut off a lot of the romance. Wal*marts, strip malls, endless bars, parking lots, concrete offices, endless cold air chilling the outdoors dot this landscape. Harty knows this and invigorates his character, develops his plots and gives people a history, an emotional depth deeper than any desert valley. I am not sure whether his one more science short story in this collection is a hit or miss-a rather Bradbury-esque story, it is off from the rest of the book. His teenage/young adule male characters are intense, brooding, lost, and not always likeable-but you won't forget them. Their is a palable sadness, a desolateness nature in his writing, it is very moody, but there is a kind of hope borne of small suburban trials and tribulations that keeps you reading.

Arizona State
50 Favorite Hikes: Flagstaff & Sedona
Published in Paperback by Cosmic Ray (1999-04-01)
Author: Cosmic Ray
List price: $8.95
Used price: $7.47

Average review score:

Beth's review - Cosmic Ray's book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
This is my third copy of the Cosmic Ray book; the other copies have been "borrowed" and not returned. The maps are amusing, and it fits into a jacket pocket pretty easy...Good book if you like a cartoon type picture.

Cosmic Ray Rocks
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-30
I have both hiking books--Best of Phoenix and Best of Flagstaff/Sedona. In fact, I am on my second copy of both as I have lent my first Phoenix copy to a friend (it disappeared) and wore out the first copy of my the Flagstaff/Sedona book. The maps are easy to follow and the topographical maps are awesome. Whenever I go hiking, I have two little girls (ages 1 and 4) in tow, so it is necessary to know the terrain inside and out before ever leaving home... Cosmic Ray is so detailed and so accurate that I never worry about being misinformed. Buy a copy for yourself and buy one for a friend... That way yours won't go missing!

Favorite Hikes: Flagstaff & Sedona by Cosmic Ray
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-04
Just got back from Arizona- and we used this book extensively as it was easy to read, the maps accurate, and the book is quite entertaining. My 6 year old son stated that the Lava River Cave trail "changed his life" (in a good way). The trail trips turned out to be the highlight of our trip!! The authors advise is excellent and the designation of level of difficulty is on target.

The best No. Arizona Hiking Book....BAR NONE!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-26
This is it...look no further...

Trail maps and information as well as local business area beta....covers all the well-known hikes and even some of the lesser known...

A must hiking guide for Northern Arizona.

Both Sedona and Flagstaff are covered....the book is stout and put together very well; this sturdiness provides needed protection in your pack!!

thanks!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-14
As a transplanted Montanan, I don't trust much advice on hiking in Arizona. I thank you for the Favorite Hikes book. I used to hike in the Glacier and Bozeman area but have been out of the action for a few years since moving to Flagstaff and having a baby. I have found this guide to be accurate and reliable when planning hikes with my son and/or dog. Thanks again. Buying this book is the best 10 bucks I ever spent.


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