North America Books
Related Subjects: United States Canada
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Used price: $11.60

A fine piece of scholarship on homophobia in government and the early gay rights struggle Review Date: 2008-10-18
The Lavender Scare: The Cold War Persecution of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal GovernmentReview Date: 2008-07-06
an essential addition to the history of the McCarthy periodReview Date: 2007-08-10
MarvelousReview Date: 2004-02-16
The book is written with marvelous grace and sensitivity. Johnson's brilliant skill at research and powers of analysis are in evidence on every page. Much to his credit, Johnson has used those skills to give voice to those from whom otherwise we might never have heard. The impressive narrative structure of The Lavender Scare makes it read like a fine novel. And the callous devastation, the lives lost and ruined by the tactics of a government in search of a moral center after WWII, makes one wish it were a work of fiction. But it is far from that.
The Lavender Scare, rather, is a work of consummate historical research and writing. The enduring contribution of the book is that it shows how the "McCarthy Era" had much less to do with "the Communist threat" and much more to do with homosexuality and "moral panic" than we could have possibly imagined. We will never again be able to think of the Cold War period in quite the same way. Johnson has complexified and clarified perhaps the most vital time in Post WWII American history. The book is certain take its place alongside George Chauncey's magisterial Gay New York.
I'm now a history lover!Review Date: 2004-10-12
This book is a must read!

Used price: $2.75

Fun for my 3.5 year oldReview Date: 2008-01-02
My 2 year loves this book!!!!!Review Date: 2007-12-16
Great book for almost 3'sReview Date: 2007-10-12
Highly Recommended by me --a teacherReview Date: 2007-01-09
Love it, love it, love it!!Review Date: 2007-11-16
Of course you have to cut out pieces for the pasting portions. That's where the coloring book is coming in handy. She can do one of those while she's waiting for me to cut out the pieces for her next project. The pasting starts off similarly to the stickers, but advances to gluing features on a face, decorating a birthday cake, and 2-4 piece puzzles. Her first face was rather picassoesque, but the next day her panda was pandalike with no prompting at all.
This is my 4th child and I've "home pre-schooled" them all. I wish I'd had these available sooner. I love the incremental approach to more challenging activities. We've recently ordered the "More Let's Sticker and Paste" and "More Let's Color" and we're going to try "Let's Cut Paper" as well.

Used price: $19.50

excellent condition and excellent deliveryReview Date: 2008-03-19
Ground breaking book on understanding issues related to Native AmericansReview Date: 2006-10-09
Finally a book from "the other side"Review Date: 2001-07-27
An important book for ALL counselors and therapistsReview Date: 2003-12-11
Insight into Systemic-Abuse TraumaReview Date: 2006-02-01


A must-have for your NYC vacation!Review Date: 2005-08-03
However, the one thing the map lacks (and why I'm giving it 4 stars instead of 5) is that the subway stops are shown on a separate, smaller map, and it was quite challenging trying to overlap where we were on one map and where a stop was located on the other map--we certainly got our exercise circling a few extra blocks here and there! Also, by the end of the week, the map was showing some signs of wear and tear: one of the perforated folds ripped, and sometimes I'd struggle to get the map to fold back up to its flat size. Regardless, I would definitely recommend this map to anyone headed for New York. And, if you plan on traveling by subway, ask for one of the free (and very large and in-depth) subway maps from any subway station.
A Lifesaver!Review Date: 2005-02-03
This company makes the same types of maps for other major US and European cities so I'm investing in a few before my next trip abroad.
amazing map seriesReview Date: 2004-11-28
I live in NY now. I am about to buy another 6 of these as our visitors keep going home with them because they forget they have them in their pockets! Simply the best maps of NY - I have tried about 5 other types.
These are great, small and detailed
A NecessityReview Date: 2003-10-30
Greatest Map SeriesReview Date: 2003-09-26

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $15.00

An Ojibway LegendReview Date: 2006-11-26
In addition to the wonderful story, the book contains evocative and moving artwork. It also contains something that is missing from too many books - a glossary of words that are unfamiliar to the average reader. This was a GREAT help.
Loved it!Review Date: 2005-09-20
The Circle ContinuesReview Date: 2001-12-28
Excellent ReadReview Date: 2001-11-02
The Circle ContinuesReview Date: 2001-12-28

Used price: $1.05

Love and respect for the native peoples of CanadaReview Date: 2000-11-10
Throughout, her love and respect for the Indian peoples shine through her writing as she brings legends and traditions to the printed page. Her quirky personality as well as the world around becomes very real, as does her own inner journey.
She is a reporter and describes what she sees. Perhaps that is why not every character she comes into contact with is fully developed. But there are some Indian elders whose stories she captured in just a few short pages.
And her descriptions of the danger and excitement of being dependent on tiny bush planes made me feel her anxieties.
I thank Ms. Jiles for bringing her experiences to the pages of this book and introducing me to these northern native peoples.
I was up until three in the morningReview Date: 2000-11-07
Important for EveryoneReview Date: 2003-04-08
A Story You Won't Want To Put DownReview Date: 2000-09-25
Casting a SpellReview Date: 2002-06-15

Who's missing now in the Blossom family?Review Date: 1999-03-11
a family goes separate ways and ends up together.Review Date: 1999-03-05
The Not-Just-Anybody FamilyReview Date: 2005-01-12
Together Forever But Sometimes Apart!Review Date: 1999-02-05
Fourth Grade Teacher Gives Five StarsReview Date: 2000-06-11

Great book Great serviceReview Date: 2008-06-04
Excellent for Kids and AdultsReview Date: 2007-12-31
It is written in storyform about the daily lives of the Robertson family, pioneers living on a backwoods farm in the 1840's. Throughout this 237 page book we learn, in a fun and interesting way, how this family dealt with the everyday living that a typical family of the time might have lived: their chores, crafts, eating habits, their spare time. Tools used, how to milk a cow, making maple sugar, harvest time, visiting a general store, building a house...so much interesting historical living written in a very simplistic manner.
Interspersed throughout are sidelines of information pertaining to the subject being written. For instance, there is a chapter about a peddler's visit to the family and the families reaction to this traveling salesman. But, at the end of the chapter, there are a few pages thrown in speaking of individual peddler's trades and how they do their crafts.
Most of the chapters are set up in this way, which adds greatly to understanding more fully the chapters.
I would love to see more books in this form for other era's in American history, as this style or history writing can entertain and teach all - kids as well as adults - who have an interest.
Highly recommended.
this is a fanntastic bookReview Date: 2002-11-23
The Pioneer Sampler is a fun and fascinating book. It tells about a pioneer family. Can Nekeek and Willy catch fish by hand? You'll find out. This is a fun book.
I'd give this book a five *...
Great , engaging book about pioneer life!Review Date: 2003-03-11
This book will add to your library, and is a nice complement to Laura Ingalls Wilders books. Homeschooling familys will enjoy it, I know we did.
Experience pioneer life!!!Review Date: 2001-07-02
The book is beautifully illustrated...all the way through...by Heather Collins. The pictures are so well done that, even as an adult, I would like to step into the scene!
There are instructions for simple, fun activities such as growing a potato plant, dyeing fabric using an onion, or making a cardboard jumping jack; pioneer games that will even entertain today's children for hours such as shadow shapes or knucklebones; and recipes that are easy for children.
Reading this book to a child is a great 'stress releaver'...it's like a little escape from the treadmill of life!!!

Used price: $4.39

Rabbit and the BearsReview Date: 2006-02-23
Rabbit and the Bears is perfect for the classroom!Review Date: 2005-04-19
From Roundup Magazine Book News, Oct. 2004Review Date: 2005-01-24
The Grandmother StoriesReview Date: 2004-04-19
Cherokee legends and art for today's children of any ageReview Date: 2004-04-16

Used price: $0.88
Collectible price: $20.02

A Man That Makes You Think.Review Date: 2007-09-28
Great BookReview Date: 2001-08-08
Michael Eric Dyson is a true black leaderReview Date: 2005-05-20
A wonderful and insightful bookReview Date: 2002-07-16
Made me think a subject not ordinarily on my radar screenReview Date: 2004-02-27
Michael Eric Dyson . . . it is a collection of essays that deal with
the problem of racial division in America, as well as with divisions
within the black community.
Dyson, a former welfare father and now an ordained Baptist
minister and professor of Communications Studies at the University
of North Carolina, starts by talking about O.J. Simpson . . . I recall
initially thinking, "not this subject again," yet was pleasantly
surprised by how he got me to realize that there was more--a lot
more--to the subject than the media presented . . . another essay
dealt with the sate of black women and the inequities they have had
to face due to not only their race but also their gender . . . lastly,
I found it fascinating how Dyson agreed with both the integrationist
ideas of Colin Powell and the separationist beliefs of Louis Farrakhan--and
then denounced them both as being only road to racial salvation.
Dyson made me think about subject matter that ordinarily isn't on my
radar screen . . . for that, I'm grateful.
Related Subjects: United States Canada
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An important point the author makes is how previous historians have usually downplayed or, more often than not, completely ignored, the prominence of the homosexual issue during the McCarthy era. Part of the reason for this, the author suggests, is that historians have used Senator McCarthy's public pronouncements to provide them with a measure of the public focus on gay people. In his initial speeches in early 1950, McCarthy linked homosexual behavior with adherence to communist doctrines, but then, for no clear reason, ignored the homosexual issue for the rest of his career. Dr. Johnson shows what he says other historians have ignored, that other politicians picked up the issue and were successful in using in it. The Lavender Scare picked up steam in early 1950 when under-secretary of state John Peurifoy stated before a Senate committee that 91 employees from the State Department had been fired for homosexual activity. Pretty soon, newspaper reports indicated that while a quarter of the letters to McCarthy's office were about communists, the other three quarters expressed fear and anger about homosexuals employed by the federal government. President Truman's advisors told him that the public worried more about homosexuals in government than communists. In particular, the state department was seen in the public mind as a haven for homosexuals. In his syndicated column, the reactionary Westbrook Pegler continually stressed a connection between homosexuality and the State Department. The right wing continually tried to link liberal Democrats to homosexuality, portraying the Roosevelt and Truman administrations as being populated by effete, unmanly intellectuals and bureaucrats who raised the taxes of hardworking Americans and sold out to the Soviet Union at Yalta. There was much speculation that homosexuals had been placed in the State Department by Sumner Welles, who had been the number two official in Roosevelt's State Department. Welles had been forced to quietly resign after he drunkenly propositioned several male porters while travelling by rail with Roosevelt's entourage in 1943. Homosexuality would be used against Charles Bohlen, who had been one of the US architects of the Yalta accords, in guilt by association way in 1953, during his confirmation hearings to be ambassador to the Soviet Union. Bohlen was not gay but had a friendship with a gay State Department official named Charles Bohlen. Bohlen got the ambassadorship but his friend lost his job.
The official justification for firing homosexuals was 1) a foreign power, mainly the Soviets, could lure homosexuals in sensitive government posts into compromising positions and blackmail them into being spies 2) homosexuals demoralized fellow government employees with their "abnormal" behavior. The spying/blackmail issue was that which was most prominently played up. The Soviets were trying to lure female government employees into lesbianism so they could blackmail them into being spies, Senator Kenneth Wherry claimed. Dr. Johnson shows that during the Hoey Committee hearings, Senators looked for statements from medical experts that would substantiate their belief that homosexuals had weaker moral fibers, a greater vulnerability to becoming spies than heterosexual folks. The medical officials responded that no evidence existed for these claims but the committee ignored them. The Committee seized on the claim of the director of the CIA that, in the early 20th century, the chief of Austrian intelligence had been caught in a homosexual act by Czarist Russian agents and, in return for not making evidence of the homosexuality public, forced him to become a Russian spy. Johnson argues that, in reality, while this intelligence chief may have been gay, there was no evidence that he became a spy because the Russians threatened to use his gayness against him. Homosexuality was again cited as a cause for the defection to the Soviet Union of two NSA analysts in 1960. The lead NSA analyst seemed to have been gay but no evidence exists that the Russians used his homosexuality to blackmail him.
Homosexuality ranked as a very prominent "security risk" in the eyes of government officials. In 1953, State Department official Carlisle Hummelsine told congress that of the 654 dismissals or forced resignations of employees on "loyalty" or security grounds in the Department since 1947, 402 were because of homosexual behavior. Especially after Eisenhower became president in 1953, security specialists swarmed over all government agencies, using gossip from informers or background checks, to bully alleged homosexual government employees into resigning. The standard of the federal government was that even one homosexual experience in an adult's life, no matter how far in the distant past, automatically disqualified one for government employment. The number of people fired or whose application for employment in the federal government was rejected on the grounds of homosexuality, ran into the thousands. Many were subsequently blacklisted from gainful employment. A handful of people have been documented to subsequently have committed suicide, though this number is probably much higher.
The Lavender Scare is held by Dr. Johnson, I think quite plausibly, to have started the Gay Rights movement. It was not the Stonewall Riots of 1969 as is commonly believed. Frank Kameny, who had been fired as an astronomer with the navy (at the dawn of the space race) in 1957 for being gay, helped build on tentative gay organizational efforts in the 1950's. Kameny's organization The Mattachine Society of Washington gained national attention with a series of pickets before federal government offices, including the White House, in 1965. Kameny helped start legal challenges against the federal government's discrimination against gay people.