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North America Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

North America
Kirsten on the Trail (The American Girls Collection)
Published in Hardcover by American Girl (1999-05)
Author: Janet Beeler Shaw
List price: $3.95
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Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

A fabulous book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-14
Kirsten on the Trail continues the story of a nine-year-old Swedish girl who's family has come to live on the frontier in 1854. Kirsten has a secret Indian friend, Singing Bird. But while they are visiting, her little brother Peter sees them. Peter promises not to tell anyone, but blurts it out to Kirsten's mother. Kirsten is forbidden to play with Singing Bird. But Peter runs off and gets lost. When Singing Bird saves Peter by helping Kirsten find him, Kirsten's mother agrees that Singing Bird is a good friend.

Another wonderful story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-21
This is another in the American Girls Short Stories series about Kirsten Larson, a nine-year-old girl from Sweden, whose family has moved to frontier Minnesota of 1854. In this book, Kirsten's American Indian friend, Singing Bird, returns. Almost immediately disaster strikes, when Kirsten's secret friendship is discovered, and her mother orders Kirsten to never see Singing Bird again. However, when Kirsten's brother Peter gets lost in the woods, Kirsten turns to a friend who can help when others can't. It proves a chance for the whole family to learn a lesson.

As an added bonus, this book contains a chapter on the Sioux Indians, and instructions on making a charm bag. I never ceased to be amazed at the quality of the American Girls books. With wonderful illustration, the book tells a great story that teaches a valuable lesson. I strongly recommend this book to anyone with a young daughter. My daughter and I both love these books!

[For those parents interested in reading historical fiction about Swedish immigrants, please consider reading The Emigrants series by Vilhelm Moberg.]

Nice Early Reader
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-14
Kirsten on the Trail is a good story for early readers and children who can hold their attention to a twenty minute story.

This is the tale of frontier life and the interaction of a pioneer girl and her indian friend of the same age. Theirs is a secrete relationship -- history has told their parents to be wary of each other and they are forbidden to play together.

The disappearance of Kirsten's younger brother and his rescue by Kirsten's indian friend allows the parents of the pioneer girl to accept the the innate goodness of a child from a different culture. This book introduces pioneer life, the clash of indian and pioneer cultures and the acceptance of difference to young readers. Its a story my kids like.

Good book for young girls just learning to read on their own
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-26
If you or your child has already read the American Girls book "Kirsten Learns a Lesson", you know that Kirsten has befriended an Indian girl named Singing Bird. In that story, Kirsten was ordered not to play with Singing bird any longer. Singing Bird leaves. In this new short story, which forst appeared in American Girl magazine, Singing Bird is back. Kirsten wants to see her, but cannot break her rules. Can she and Singing Bird meet again and keep their friendship a secret or will everything fall apart? Kirsten learns another lesson in this great book for little girls.

North America
Kiss the Sunset Pig: An American Road-trip with Exotic Detours
Published in Paperback by Summersdale Publishers (2006-03-01)
Author: Laurie Gough
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Average review score:

Loved it so much !
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-01
that I am looking for her next book :)....what a great (yet) readable book !

A Journey: Heart and Mind, Body and Soul
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
When I opened 'Kiss the Sunset Pig' I was expecting a travel book, which it is ... and a great one at that. What I wasn't expecting was how much it would touch my soul. I sat, riveted, as I took a journey not only around the world, but across thoughts, hopes, dreams. Anyone who's ever questioned whether, with the whole world to choose from, they're living their lives in the best place or whether they've filled their lives to the very best of their ability, will find a resonating spirit in this book.
As Laurie Gough makes her way from Canada and across America she hopes not only to settle happily in California, but to find the coastal cave that she lived in for six nights, years ago. But the search is not so much for the cave itself, as for the more free-spirited (she believes) girl that lived there. As she drives, she recalls previous travels in the Greek islands, the Yukon, Jamaica, Sumatra, and Seoul, to name a few. These tales can't fail to inspire. Her bravery alone, traveling solo through often uncomfortable, and sometimes dangerous, situations is humbling to say the least. But it's this bravery she feels has been lost and she hopes to rekindle by finding her cave.
Several times the author seemed to wander into places I thought only existed in my daydreams. Some were so uncanny they made me gasp. Since childhood I have wanted a glass-walled bedroom perched on the top of a house, entirely surrounded by trees. I clapped my hands in delighted envy when the author set up home in just such a room ... and in a Californian Redwood forest at that. These instances were some of the most poignant for me - the fact that daydreams can so easily be reality if you go out and make them so ... that really hit home.
The travel stories are touching, humourous, enchanting, and filled with travel's usual mix of discomfort, frustration, alarm, and achingly beautiful encounters. All are told with the author's clear natural gift for portraying the lightness and the depth in every situation.
So if the idea of sleeping in a coastal cave, inside a Californian Redwood, on a Mediterranean beach, or on the banks of the remote Yukon river lights something intangible inside, I wholeheartedly recommend you read 'Kiss the Sunset Pig' and let inspiration rain over you.

An Inspiring and Thought-Provoking Journey
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-09
If you enjoyed Kite Strings of the Southern Cross, or even if you were not lucky enough to read it, Laurie Gough's second book offers the same magical combination of beautiful, descriptive travel writing and soul-searching that never comes across as self-involved or forced. Starting in Canada, Gough takes the reader along on her road trip to rediscover a special cave she once stayed in along the California coast - and how she has evolved since that memorable sojourn. Interspersed throughout the narrative are chapters on some of Gough's other international adventures to such exotic locales as Sumatra and Seoul, South Korea (a place that comes across as utterly unappealing).

Much of the beauty in Gough's writing comes not just from her memorable descriptions of the people, places, and things she encounters and learns from (especially those harrowing Indonesian bus and ferry rides and Marcia, her struggling car), but also from her brutal honesty about some of the low points she struggled through along the way. By the end of the book, the reader truly roots for Gough to find her cave so the journey can go full-circle.

Despite an unexpected outcome, Gough manages to discover the meaning and convey the depth of her experience in a way that never seems heavy-handed or cliched. This is a beautiful and inspiring piece of travel writing that offers many riches for fellow travelers, those who enjoy strong writing, and anyone who has ever considered his or her place and purpose in the universe.

An Intrepid Traveller
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
Laurie Gough is an intrepid traveller with a youthful exuberance for adventure. I realize, though, that no matter what one's age, some people are born with wanderlust and have a need to travel the world. The interesting thing is, travellers always return home. That's what Gough does. She's been to thirty countries, hitchhiking thousands of miles by herself though fourteen of them. But she always returns to her hometown of Guelph, Ontario in Canada.

At the beginning of Kiss the Sunset Pig, Gough sets off for California from Guelph in a "blue, beat-up mini Ford Bronco" she calls Marcia. To help with driving and expenses, she picks up a travelling companion named Debbie, whom she has met through an ad and, before the trip begins, has only spoken to on the phone. Debbie gets dropped off in St. Louis, Missouri, at the home of a boyfriend she has never met face to face.

"Sometimes I think I'm still looking for an axis," Gough writes early on in her journey. After reading her book, I think the axis may be the wanderlust. It's who she is. For a person with wanderlust, there is no perfect place to live. A place may seem ideal, for a time, but really it's just a base at which to prepare oneself for the next adventure.

Reading about her encounters with strange and wonderful people is frightening at times (for the reader and for her), but I realize travelling with a companion or in a group, as I usually do, one is not open to the same exciting possibilities. Travelling solo, Gough finds herself talking to strangers more readily as she's more open and more herself. "That's the thing about travelling: it's like peeling away a layer of yourself, exposing yourself to the world so it can expose itself to you".

The structure of the book is an interesting one that works extremely well. (She did the same in her first book, Kite Strings of the Southern Cross, which I highly recommend.) Rather than write a book of travel stories in chronological order, Gough reflects on previous journeys as she drives across the United States in a car that needs lots of garage visits along the way.

One of those reflections is the Greek island of Naxos. There Gough created a temporary home under a small bamboo wind shelter on the beach. Her backpack went missing for a time and to ease her panic, she looked at the "dependable milky rock" of the moon. Gough realized things like that didn't matter "in the great scheme of the universe" (she had her passport and money), and I realize too, as a traveller, one needs to practice non-attachment. Gough describes Greece beautifully as a "land where myth and reality swirl around each other in a luminous haze." Yet she needed to move on, "to see the rest of the world."

One summer, Gough hitchhiked to the Yukon, 3,000 miles from Guelph. She says hitchhiking is "always a surprise study of human beings." Her travelling companion Kevin told her of his own world adventures. His advice was "You have no idea what's in store for you, but if you let yourself go along with the flow of the unknown and accept whatever happens, things seem to work out".

The "exotic detours" of which Gough writes don't all have happy endings. Her teaching job in Kashechewan in Canada's sub-Arctic ended after only three months with Gough defeated and exhausted by the chaos of a third-grade class. A trip to Jamaica with her sister ended quickly, as Gough likes to stay with locals while her sister prefers fancy hotels.

Gough is full of questions about where she belongs. Those questions don't at all detract from the book; they help us relate. After all, travel is about looking for oneself, and as travel-book readers, we get to reflect on similar questions.

On her trip to California, Gough plays Joni Mitchell's "California" that includes the phrase "kiss the sunset pig." She carries a tattered notebook called "Cave Journal" and would like to find that cave on the Pacific again, where she spent some time thirteen years previously. Along with her questions and her longing, Gough has a healthy sense of humour about her encounters along the way. She describes a town on the Great Plains called Grainfield as the "size of a bath mat."

At an earlier age, Gough described herself as "still on my way to everywhere." She has learned that travel can mean "hours, even days of despair, rain, heatwaves, snow, mosquitoes, late trains, no trains, followed by a single moment of dazzling elation. It was those single moments one tended to recall." Gough makes some realizations at the end of her California trip that I don't want to reveal here. But I would say, even though she is older and perhaps wiser, I still see her as on her way to everywhere.

Gough has married since the stories written about in her book and has a baby son. They divide their time between a farmhouse outside of Guelph, Ontario, and a Quebec village. Seventeen of her stories have been anthologised in various literary travel books, including Salon.com's Wanderlust: Real-Life Tales of Adventure and Romance and Sand in My Bra: Funny Women Write from the Road. She has written for the Los Angeles Times, the Globe and Mail, the National Post, Outpost, Canadian Geographic and numerous literary journals.

by Mary Ann Moore
for Story Circle Book Reviews
www.storycirclebookreviewsorg
reviewing books by, for, and about women

North America
Lake Effect: A Deckhand's Journey on the Great Lakes Freighters
Published in Paperback by Gale Force Press (2008-08-01)
Author: Richard Noel Hill
List price: $17.95
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Average review score:

An intelligent and candid memoir
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-18
Knowing what it is like to work on the Great Lakes aboard those enormous freighter ships is an area in which there is limited information for the non-specialist general reader -- until now. In "Lake Effect: A Deckhand's Journey on the Great Lakes Freighters", author Richard Hill takes his readers on an informed and informative journey into the daily life and work of a freighter ship deckhand. In this intelligent and candid memoir, readers will learn of the social and political turbulence of the early 1970's. "Lake Effect" also provides an insightful look into the world of the sailor, what makes them tick, and why they follow the sometimes hazardous work on a Great Lake freighter as a their career -- for better and worse. Smart, humorous, delightfully detailed this personal account is a great addition to any collection or supplemental reading list concerning the Great Lakes, commercial sailing, and the life of a contemporary deck hand.

Tonya Thul-Theis
Reviewer

A Great Read by a New Author
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-07
For a first time author, I was impressed with Hill's writing style.

He uses self exposure and honesty in revealing his impressions of life on the lakes, the work, the shore leaves, people he met and befriended as a young sailor during the early '70s.

The book provides the uneducated landlubber an enlightening and entertaining glimpse of a sailor's life on the Great Lakes - just enough technical jargon to make sense of the sailor's life while focusing on the broader perspective and the people.

I thoroughly enjoyed and highly recommend this book to anyone.

A GREAT READ!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-05
I just finished reading Richard Hill's book, "Lake Effect: A Deckhand's Journey on the Great Lakes Freighters." As I approached the final pages of this truly enjoyable book, I found myself slowing my reading pace, even rereading paragraphs that I'd just finished, merely because I was reluctant to admit to myself that I'd reached the end. I've never stepped foot on an in-service Great Lakes freighter, but I do remember being lulled to sleep during my childhood by the deep, low, soothing tones of the whistles of ore boats that made their way up and down the St. Mary's River. I guess that it was my unanswered curiosity about life and work on these boats that prompted me to buy myself a copy of "Lake Effect."

What a great read this book is...on so many levels! This book is one of those books that, when you've finish reading it, you close up, set down and say to yourself, "Well, that was a downright pleasure to read!" Even for a landlubber like me. Hill has a wonderful way with words...in creating scenes that capture your senses, in colorfully describing his zany coworkers and others, in relaying stories in ways that the reader can really hang on to...all the while making you laugh right out loud when you least expect it! I might add that Hill doesn't sugar coat (what I would imagine to be) the true-to-life language of the ore boat workers. Meaning, the author doesn't pretend that "Dirty Dan" typically would exclaim, "Well shuckie darn, whaddaya know about that." when something would go wrong...nor that hot-tempered "Gary" would gently respond, "Gosh...you know, I'd really prefer that you didn't manhandle me like that, sir. After all, I have feelings too." when given an angry shove by the bosun. It's a true story told in true-to-life style. I recall my parents sometimes saying, "He was cussin' like a sailor." I suspect that there's a reason that this expression exists.

I really believe that, whether you've worked on "the boats" for years or you know absolutely nothing about lake freighters, you'll thoroughly enjoy reading Richard Hill's "Lake Effect." It's funny, it's enlightening, it's educational, it's entertaining...it's even philosophical. Get your hands on a copy and give it a read. I'm sure that you won't be disappointed.

Engaging, Interesting, and Entertaining
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-16
I enjoyed this book greatly and for the most basic of reasons: "Lake Effect" is a highly entertaining read. It satisfies on all the important levels: an engaging narrator, well-told stories, vividly drawn characters, and enough technical detail about the working life on a Great Lakes freighter to satisfy even the most demanding freighter geek. On top of that, it comes with a great many photographs of lake freighters relevant to the book.

Richard Hill's "Lake Effect: A Deckhand's Journey on the Great Lakes Freighters" is a fine book in a great tradition. His memoir of working on Great Lakes freighters in the 1970s and 1980s belongs to the long tradition of maritime memoir and also to the less extensive but proud tradition of personal narrative by Great Lakes seamen. It belongs alongside Fred Dutton's "Life on the Great Lakes: A Wheelsman's Story" and Patrick Livingston's "Six Steamboats: Sailing Through the Sixties," each a classic in its own way--each providing engaging stories and the technical details of day-to-day life on a working boat when the old iron ore carriers ruled the Great Lakes. Hill's book, like Dutton's and Livingston's, recalls that time of plenty. Toward the end it sounds the same elegiac tones for the end of an era, when the old coal-powered steamboats on the Great Lakes began to be replaced by the modern, diesel-powered 1000-footers.

In "Lake Effect," Hill brings that past front and center in his vividly recalled account of working as a deckhand on four steamboats in the 1970s, and as a marine cadet on the 1000-foot diesel-powered Columbia Star in the 1980s. From "Making Headway" to "Homeward Bound," he describes his life on the boats with a keen eye for the details of the everyday. Anyone who has glimpsed one of those long iron ore boats far out on the lake and wondered what it must be like for the crew can step aboard in "Lake Effect" and find out. Here are the technical aspects of a working boat--from steering in the rivers and out on the open water, to opening cargo hatches, to loading and unloading. It's all here. But the most purely entertaining parts of "Lake Effect" are the characters in the book--Crazy Dog, Dirty Dan, Big Red, many others--all presented as wonderfully human and quirky. Yes quirky. Put 30 men together on a 600-foot boat for a nine-month shipping season and any long dormant and strange idiosyncracies will make themselves known. Fortunately Hill's good eye and ear were there to capture them. Some of those idiosyncrasies are not pretty--the language can be raw--but all of them in Hill's telling are wonderfully entertaining.

Hill begins his sequence of 19 chapters in the present day with the sighting of his former boat the Columbia Star then drops back 30 years to his initiation as a deckhand on the Leon Fraser. He then works up to the present, and as he does so, he makes sense of his early fascination with freighters and the gradual erosion of his plan to make a life as a ship's officer. The story of his journey from boat romantic to clear-eyed realist is one that anyone of a certain age can read with complete understanding. In the end Hill walks away from the boats as a life career. But as "Lake Effect" shows, he didn't really leave the boats behind at all, and readers of this book can be grateful for that.

North America
The Lakota Ritual of the Sweat Lodge: History and Contemporary Practice (Studies in the Anthropology of North Ame)
Published in Paperback by Bison Books (1999-08-01)
Author: Raymond A. Bucko
List price: $17.95
New price: $10.60
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Average review score:

Good work!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-05
Not only the most throughout chronicle of the sweat lodge ritual, but also one of the best books on contemporary Lakhota religion. Good work!

Great insight into this multifaceted ceremony!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-28
This book was a wonderful source of information for me to learn more about a ceremony that I'd been through countless times. The Sweatlodge is a powerful ritual on many different levels & this book sheds some light on that, especially for those of us not brought up in the Lakota culture.

Good introduction
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-17
This book was very well done. Many people who are looking for information on what to expect from sweatlodges in general will benefit from this book. The author gives a good amount of information about the history and the many different styles of the inipi ceremony. I personally have been in many different inipi (sweatlodge) ceremonies and found that there are different styles but there are a lot of common things as well. This book is well written and well worth the read. The author sticks to just the plains indians style of lodges and does not go to compare with the many different styles of sweatlodges around the country and around the world. I liked that he kept his information consistant and from the people who wanted to share it first hand. There were quite a few people who shared information that might take a lifetime of looking to find.

great book
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-26
I read through this book in one day. I couldn't put the book down except to make a coffee. Excellent reading.

North America
The Languages of Native North America (Cambridge Language Surveys)
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1999-11-28)
Author: Marianne Mithun
List price: $110.00
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Average review score:

Far and away the best book on Amerindian languages
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-28
As someone who creates languages for fun, I've read a lot of linguistics books, searching for ideas and inspiration. Recently, I became interested in polysynthesis, but could find no detailed information on it. Then I found this book. The first three hundred pages are full of unique linguistic features. Polysynthesis is covered in great detail, as is almost every rare grammatical structure. The sheer scope of this book is tremendous. Mithun claims to include every attested North American language, and I believe her. Also, the extensive references (almost 150 pages) make it easy to locate information on specific languages (like full grammars, phonologies, et cetera). Highly recommended to anyone interested in linguistics, and a must-read for any conlanger.

The astonishing diversity of human speech
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-03
People who are interested in unusual languages, like myself, probably have some familiarity with Marc Okrand's Klingon, created to be the speech of an alien race. This artificial language throws in some less than common sounds, and creates a somewhat unusual syntax, and attempts to sell the result as the speech of an alien race.

A few minutes with this book will suggest to the reader who takes an interest in these things that Klingon is a profound failure. Here we have a record of people here on Earth who have created alternative linguistic structures that are even more unfamiliar to English speakers. This book will open your mind to the astonishing variety of ways human verbal communication can be categorised and organised. We have languages with no clear distinction between nouns and verbs, and languages that can give tense and conditionality to adjectives. We have languages that use different pronouns for a 'we' that includes the person being addressed, and a 'we' that excludes that person.

For a reader with interests in these matters, this will be a fascinating, if somewhat dry, read. Your joy at being introduced to this fascinating variety will be tempered, though, by the ever-present elegiac note in these pages. Literally hundreds of these tongues are still spoken only by a handful of aging people; hundreds more have gone silent.

Great reference
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-12
Marianne Mithun is *the* expert on Native American languages. This book is an excellent resource for grad students, undergrads, professors, and anyone else interested in the languages of the Americas. Mithun describes in detail language phenomena and language families, and includes an extensive bibliography in case you can't find what you're looking for in this book.

A Great Linguistic Reference
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-17
This book is chock full of linguistic information about the many diverse Amerindian languages and has an excellent bibliography. My only regret is that it includes almost nothing on Amerindian sociolinguistics. It would probably be difficult and dry reading for people not already interested in linguistics; most of the book is fairly technical.

North America
The Last Generation: Young Virginians in Peace, War, and Reunion (Civil War America)
Published in Hardcover by The University of North Carolina Press (2005-05-30)
Author: Peter S. Carmichael
List price: $39.95
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Average review score:

A Fresh Perspective on Virginians Before, During, and After Civil War
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
I owned this book for three years, and after only recently picking it up to read it, I realized what I was missing out on during that time. This is a fresh and descriptive analysis of the young Virginia generation before, during, and after the war. As one who has read dozens of books on the Civil War, it was this one more than any other that best explains how and why Virginians formed their fundamental opinions of their native state, the Southern region, and Northern industrialism during the antebellum period. Through their viewpoint that Virginia's reputation and standing in the Union was diminished during the period prior to the war, it becomes clear that the war gave these young Virginians an opportunity to improve the status of their commonwealth while cementing their place among men in their state. Though one often gets the perception through Carmichael's writing that these were overzealous, egotistical young men, their conduct in the war brings to fruition their importance in the New South.

Carmichael's writing is interesting and well-detailed with a wide variety of excellent material from both primary and secondary sources. His inclusion of statistics on the members of the last generation provides ample insight into the professions, religious affiliation, and other important data on the members of the last generation. Even more than "For Cause and Comrades" by James McPherson, this book will expose why a reluctant Virginia joined the Confederacy and explains clearly how the young Virginia generation almost pushed the South to ultimate victory.

A revealing and stunning read
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-01
Like most readers of history, the significant figures of the Civil War have taken on almost mythic proportions. Some times they seem almost to be gods stepped down from Mt. Olympus. In The Last Generation, Peter Carmichael manages to shed new light onto the lives, interests, and beliefs of many of the young Virginians that were so caught up in the cause of the day and in the process makes them human once more.

I found The Last Generation to be full of information that is new...at least to me. I've done my share of reading about the major characters involved in the Civil War, on both sides. Yet Carmichael seems to provide the reader with new insights on almost every page.

I also found the tables in the appendix to be full of useful and eye opening facts. Trust me, they're worth the time it takes to study them. Finally, I spent more time than usual studying the notes provided by Carmichael, a compliment of the first order.

For the casual or serious Civil War buff, The Last Generation will be a memorable read.

A New Look at the Civil War
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-22
In his book, "The Last Generation," Peter Carmichael explores the psyche, values, goals and visions of the young caucasian men of Virginia who came into adulthood just as our nation descended into the Civil War. Born to privilege in the 1830s and early 1840s, these men were in colleges and schools across Virginia and the nation when the crisis of secession reached its apex in 1860 and 1861. Once the war started, they served as junior officers in the Army of Northern Virginia, leading their peers into combat and fighting alongside them.

The book is a generational study and an examination of Confederate nationalism in the young Virginians. Carmichael first takes us through the 1850s, a time when young Virginians worried about the future of their state and their place in it. They watched as the North increasingly distanced itself from Virginia through industrialization and internal improvements. They feared that Virginia, the home state of four of the first five U.S. presidents, was becoming moribund under the leadership of its elders, "old fogies" who lived on past glories of events such as the American Revolution and who encouraged unthinking opposition to change even at the expense of educational and economic reform.

At the same time, the young Virginians had to find a way to reconcile slavery, the system upon which they depended for their wealth and social standing, with the free labor system of the North. Some of the strongest points in Carmichael's book delineate how these men did just this. Their belief that slavery was sanctioned by the Bible as necessary because God had created races to be inherently unequal, coupled with their belief that Southerners were God's chosen people, sustained many young soldiers throughout the war. Even as it became clear in 1864 and 1865 that the war would be lost, Carmichael cites examples that show these men could not distinguish between their religious beliefs and political nationalism. To the end, many young Virginians believed that God would not allow the North to be victorious. Young Virginians sincerely believed that theirs was a unique Christian society trying to survive in a godless world. The book is careful to point out that young Virginians gave considerable thought to secession and do not fit the traditional stereotype of secondary scholars who say young Southerners were drawn to the flame of secession like boys playing with fire.

The book looks at the leadership style of young Virginians once the war started. Examples are cited of how they maintained order and discipline in the ranks, what they thought of battle and death, and how they maintained their morale through defeats. Some colorful anecdotes are also included in "The Last Generation": Jeb Stuart's thoughts on women while he was a cadet in West Point, NY; the president of Washington College and his comical attempt to control the secession frenzy sweeping his campus; the notion of body building by young Virginians in college as a way to "muscularize" and "masculinize" their Christianity.

In the final chapter of the book, Carmichael examines the fate of various members of the Last Generation who managed to survive the war. He explains how they adjusted to Reconstruction. The romanticized, "Moonlight and Magnolias" view of some ex-Confederates is contrasted with those who wished Virginia to take a new role of leadership and have the economy of the state resemble more closely that of the North.

This book contributes greatly to the discussion of why some Southerners fought the war- a question which will probably always be debated. Through diligent research and thorough explanation, Carmichael presents a new picture of a generation of Southerners of the Civil War era. His book takes into account many factors that made "The Last Generation" distinct from their Northern counterparts and from the older Virginians who preceded them. It is an important book on dispelling stereotypes of the young Confederates and in understanding the complexity of the South as a whole.

Eminently readable and quite fascinating
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-03
In this fascinating book, author and historian Professor Peter S. Carmichael takes a generational look a particular group of American men who fought in the Civil War, selecting 121 men who had been born in Virginia between 1830 and 1842. These men were mostly highly educated, from the slave holding class, and formed the junior officer core of the Virginia military units. These men were part of the last generation to grow up in Virginia with slavery, and the story of their journey of life is one little studied, until now.

As a fan of the works of Messrs Strauss and Howe ("Generations" and "The Fourth Turning"), I was intrigued to see another book that looked at American history with an eye to generations. The book is eminently readable, and is quite fascinating. The author does an excellent job of telling the story of the "last generation," bringing them and their experiences alive. I was interested to watch the "last generation" move through the 1850s fostering a inter-generational conflict, assume capable and pragmatic managerial control of the armies their elders led, and then move into leadership positions after the War.

In relation to the Strauss and Howe generational theory, this book focuses on a part of the Gilded Generation. Overall, I thought that the book complemented it very well, showing that side of the generation that lost the war.

So, let me just say that this is a fascinating look at a generation that lived during a fascinating time in American history, one that will captivate anyone who is interested in generations, the American Civil War, or just plain history. I loved this book and highly recommend it to you.

North America
Lessons from Afghanistan
Published in Paperback by D F Pubns (2002-02-10)
Author: David Fleishhacker
List price: $13.95
New price: $1.49
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Average review score:

Instructive, Entertaining and Thoughtful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-05
David Fleishhacker uses his personal experience in the Peace Corps in Afghanistan as a framework to teach us about that country's history, topography, and culture. His sense of humor and his affection for the people of Afghanistan make this a fun book to read, but Fleishhacker also has a strong message--urging everyone to gain more knowledge and understanding of other cultures and places in the world. A wonderful book!

Everyone Should Read This
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-29
Three cheers for David Fleishhacker, a wonderful writer! And, three cheers for the Peace Corps! Far more than a collection of reminiscences, this little book contains the sort of philosophy, based on history and experience, that should be the underpinning of our foreign policy everywhere. I devoured it at one sitting and only wished he had written more. Clear, funny, honest and tender, this book should be required reading for our entire State Department, the Military Establishment, the "Lords of Poverty" (international aid/relief organizations)and literally every American involved in overseas activity. For that matter, it should be required reading in every high school and board room in the country. Great stuff.

A Street Level View of Afghanistan
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-16
David Fleishhacker's "Lessons from Afghanistan" is based on the author's experiences in the country as a Peace Corps volunteer in the 1960's. This brief account is, however, more than just a memoir of a vistor who was in Afghanistan forty years ago. Fleishhacker deftly connects his experiences with current events. Unlike many of the "instant experts" whose views on Afghanistan appear daily in the media, this book gives one a feel for what the country is really like. This slim book is a good way to get a sense of the country as experienced by someone who was there and who had an opportunity to observe the way average people live their lives.

A most timely account
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-05
This is a most entertaining and enjoyable book to read about a part of the world which is virtually unknown to most Americans. It is well written and contains many anecdotes and amusing incidents relating to the author's personal experience in the Peace Corps in Kabul and Mazar-I-Sharif in the 60's. Beyond that, however, it provides comment which should be food for thought for anyone who wishes to follow or who seeks to implement American foreign policy in the future. The comments on basic issues faced in Afghanistan are timeless and universal in nature and provide much food for thought.

North America
The Life Stories of Undistinguished Americans as Told by Themselves
Published in Kindle Edition by Taylor & Francis (2007-03-20)
Author: Hamilton Holt
List price: $33.95
New price: $23.95

Average review score:

More!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-12
I hope this is one of many books just like this one! Heart-warming stories, you'll wish you'd known the person first-hand. I'm actually buying copies of this book for various friends that think the only history they need to know is on the History Channel!

Well-written.

The threads that bind us as Americans
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-22
Each story is engaging and interesting. The stories are about urban and rural life. The most wonderful aspect of these acccounts are how much in common we have as human beings and immigrants. The same struggles and hardships are experienced regardless of ethnicity, an eye opening read.

especially charming, direct, informative
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-16
This book should be more widely available. I find it full of the kind of detail about peoples' lives (in this case, immigrants to the United States) that are cogent, relevant, and delivered with considerable charm and lack of artifice. Everyone to whom I have given a copy of this book has raved about it.

You can't say enough nice about this book.....
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-03
I'm not one of the sort of people who falls often for heart warming. I'm too bitter, too jaded... too educated to be able to gush openly about kindly regard for many things. This book, though, deserves that kind of praise.

As you could gather from the blurbs from magazines, this is a hundred year old book that seeks to illustrate the lives of typical, everyday (not to say uninteresting) Americans. The book is short; it's stories are realistic. Thus, it gives great insight into our collective 'ancestry': a voice to the long-dead.

I'm inclined to think that every time I mentally want to destroy America, in this book, again, could be found renewed hope and exploration. In this book one can find the stories of Lithuanians who set out to cross the ocean, of free black women finding for the first time life in a segregated south, of Greek pushcart workers who end up with $50,000 in the bank. More or less, these are the voices that give our community continuity.... and, well, I'm starting to ramble and make little sense....

Just read the book....

North America
The Light and the Glory for Children : Discovering God's Plan for America from Christopher Columbus to George Washington
Published in Paperback by Revell (1992-12-01)
Authors: Peter, Marshall, David, Manuel, and Anna Wilson, Fishel
List price: $14.99
New price: $6.75
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Average review score:

Must Read!
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-10
This book is a must read for children to get a proper perspective of history. Public school textbooks will not reflect our Christian roots. Parents should read the regular version. My 9 year old granddaughter says this is her favorite book.

a must for all
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-30
Great and educational book. My son loved it and he does not care to read. This is a must for all out there.

A good book for Christian home-schoolers.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-10
This is a good book for Christian homeschooling moms. I bought it for my daughter, who is homeschooling her children.

Children will gain insight about America's Christian roots.
Helpful Votes: 60 out of 64 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-17
Like the adult book of the same title, The Light and the Glory for Children examines evidence for America's Christian roots. The authors reveal a past that is not at all smooth. The challenges of settling this land and building a new nation are shown in their harsh reality. Equally, the faith that strengthened the people for these challenges is presented as inspiration for tomorrow's citizens and leaders. Review questions in the back of the book helped my children explore their own values and beliefs about their country. There could be no better way to raise responsible citizens than to have them investigate our Christian heritage through this book.

North America
LIGHT OF THE FEATHER
Published in Paperback by Anchor (1993-09-01)
Author: Mick Fedullo
List price: $14.00
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Average review score:

I didn't want the book to end!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-08
I found this at my local library and I will end up buying it. This was a wonderful book--"Mr. Mick" presented a detailed and warm history of his experiences teaching on reservations throughout the country. I learned a lot about our local tribes in Arizona as well as in other places. When I was finished with this book, I was a little sad because I wanted to learn how his teaching journey continued. A family member is planning to become a high school teacher, and I am going to get this book for her as an inspiration on how to be a good teacher.

I highly recommend this book for those who want to learn about NDN cultures and those who are thinking about going into the teaching field (he provides examples of good and bad teachers...I hope the bad teachers have left the profession!)

Good information regarding life on reservations
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-14
Mick Fedullo should be commended for his long-standing efforts in teaching creative writing to Native American students. From his own account in Light of the Feather, he has been successful in connecting with Indian students and providing a vehicle with which they can express themselves and communicate their feelings and ideas regarding their lives, culture, past, and present.

As someone who has taught and lived on a reservation for four years, I'm in awe of how he was able to work his way into the many reservation communities as he did and be accepted as such. This is no easy accomplishment.

He does point out a sad reality regarding teachers on reservation schools, that there are some who really don't belong there because of an inability or unwillingness to get to know and respect the Indians. Yes, prejudice still exists on reservations, even in 2005. Add to this teacher incompetence, and it is no wonder that Indian schools perform where they do in relation to the rest of the nation.

What Fedullo doesn't do in this book is offer suggestions or point the finger (or nose and chin) in other directions that need to be addressed. Schools do need to improve, but so do families in the Indian communities. And all of these changes need to occur swiftly and sincerely, or else many more Indian children are going to continue to be disenfranchised by the system in place and life in general. I firmly beleive that Native Americans are the most precious group of people in the United States, and that positive measures need to occur for their people and their future to remain intact.

I do look forward to Fedullo's next installment. Light of the Feather was published in 1992 and so much has changed since then. I'm aware that he is still living and working in Montana and am curious to see how he perceives the culture of Native Americans has changed, especially since the invasion of the internet and all the other modern trappings of accessibility into reservation life.

Clear pictures of Native American life
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-20
For anyone wanting to have an insider's view of Native American life read Mick Fedullo's "Light of the Feather". The author tries to clearly explain life within the communities and tries to debunk myths. This book is an excellent overview of why self-determination should continue in the world today. It also provides readers with insights that they otherwise would not have the opportunity to see.

Fedullo puts aside stereotypes & and discovers his students.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-29
Mick Fedullo's Light of the Feather displays his child-like wonderment of the Indian world as he goes from reservation to reservation teaching students writing and language skills. The openness and acceptance of tribal cultures he expresses help Indian students trust him as he strives to discover more about them. Fedullo values the tribal customs of each group and becomes a better teacher by becoming closely involved with every student. As he travels throughout the southwest and up to Montana, Fedullo learns more about Indian people and helps to bridge the gap between white and non-white people. I highly recommend this book for teachers, students, Indians and non-Indians.


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