North America Books
Related Subjects: Canada United States
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Used price: $2.66

The best cutting book!Review Date: 2009-01-02
EntertainingReview Date: 2008-09-21
Fun play with kumon workbook seriesReview Date: 2008-07-09
This workbook has a simple and fun material which is exactly for kids around 2. I felt it's a bit pricy for what it has, but I am generally satisfied with this book since it's hard to find this kind of books for this age.
Excellent preschool activity book!Review Date: 2008-06-27
good productReview Date: 2008-10-10

Used price: $2.95

Interesting Perspective on a Historical MysteryReview Date: 2006-07-25
The book is an excellent tale! I recommend it highly!
All of these books are great for all ages very goodReview Date: 2001-12-12
A great book that starts a great seriesReview Date: 1999-08-14
REVERSE POCAHONTAS TALE?Review Date: 1999-07-11
But this is no boring history book; rather it is more a coming-of-age tale with some gentle romance. Jess confides her dreams and fears, her doubts and plans, as her family emigrates to the Chesapeake Bay--to found a city called Ralegh. We suffer with her on the ghastly ocean voyage; we observe life in that island colony which has since disappeared into the misty myth of time. Jess shares the gradual dawning of her womanhood--both physical and emotional--as she writes in her diary. This young protagonist is torn between George, her first crush, and the allure of the forbidden "savage"--the son of one of the camp's two native guides.
Being blond was something special even back then, as this daring girl matures from selfish child to compassionate young woman, pursuing her private quest for love, while remaining steadfast in her family loyalty. Excellent for middle school, partiuclarly girls; it will stimulate discussion about the fate of the Roanoak colonists. Well-researched, the LYON Saga will entertain and hold the interest young readers. History made Human!
Great story!Review Date: 1999-09-12

Excellent BookReview Date: 2008-05-12
Great gift book, and a surprising work too too!Review Date: 2008-01-10
L.E.
Great Book!Review Date: 2007-12-21
definitive guide to weatherReview Date: 2007-10-21
This is a fantastic book for anyone interested in weather and particularly clouds. While made with North America in mind, anyone could enjoy this book especially the brilliant photography included with it.
Required Reading For All PilotsReview Date: 2005-10-04
This book is an excellent supplement to any pilot's training manual in providing visual aids for learning about spotting weather phenomnena.
Also, in general, it is very enjoyable to page through the book, as the quality of photography is very good.

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Breathtaking action photogrpahyReview Date: 2008-11-25
Organized by geographic habitat, from "Pacific Coast Urban and Suburban Habitats" to "Arctic Tundra," Bannick covers all 41 species of owl and woodpecker. The text, while not scintillating, is clear and informative, providing a detailed life view of each bird and its relation to its environment, including other birds.
The cavities of pileated woodpeckers, for instance, are vital for the nesting of red-breasted nuthatches whose beaks aren't up to excavating their own. And the wells of yellow-bellied sapsucker feed ruby-throated hummingbirds.
The photographs are truly breathtaking. Bannick captures the birds in every aspect of their lives. Anyone with a love of wilderness and/or beauty will enjoy this book.
I'll be suggesting "The Owl and the Woodpecker" to readers of my own books and newslettersReview Date: 2008-10-30
After leafing through the many unusual photographs, try the text. Tidbits Bannick learned on his travels to photograph these birds and snippets of natural history about the birds accent his explanation of the roles these iconic species play in our ecosystems, including our urban and suburban places. Thoughtfully, the author provides information for both the novice and the more expert observer.
For those who are not fortunate enough to have observed these creatures over hours or days, Bannick offers what you might have experienced had you been at the right place, at the right time, for a long time. An unexpected highlight of this offering is the CD of Martyn Stewart's recordings. Delightfully clear recordings of the calls each species of owl and both calls and drumming of each woodpecker are included.
Treat yourself this winter. And treat your friends. I'll be suggesting "The Owl and the Woodpecker" to readers of my own books and newsletters.
A unique and personal glimpse at amazing birdsReview Date: 2008-11-03
After perusing the photos, I was finally able to turn my attention to the text. The introduction gives a glimpse into what has obviously been a life-long passion for the author. The following chapters provide unique facets of behavior and habitat on members of both families that is both specific and yet flows in a very readable format.
I can only imagine the hours of exhaustive research and patient waiting that must have gone in to capturing each subject in its natural environment. Paul Bannick gives each of his readers a very rare and personal glimpse at the natural behavior of these magnificent birds. No matter what your level of expertise, this book will not disappoint and comes with the highest of recommendations.
A terrific photographic and scientific birding bookReview Date: 2008-11-04
I expected a photo book--you know--lots of great images and some text. I did not expect an expert, detailed and eminently readable treatise on these magnificent, gorgeously illustrated birds and their habitats.....and a CD! So, not only does the reader get to see terrific images, but also learns a great deal through reading, listening and looking. In particular Bannick's love of natural habitats and his sense of urgency about preservation comes through. The writing is beautiful, succinct and cogent
I've done quite of bit of nature photography and I can fully appreciate the untold thousands of hours that went into this book--the effort clearly shows.
Highly recommended for birders of all stripes, nature lovers and those interested in the natural world. In particular, I think that young people would be drawn to the combination of great images and educational material.
A Must Have For the Naturalist/bird lover, those who care about our world Review Date: 2008-11-07
The CD recording is wonderful, and engaging. Each bird is introduced in a soft spoken manner, and does not disrupt the flow of studying the voices of each bird. The background sounds, makes it seem you can actually close your eyes and go to that forest, tundra, or grassland, and see not only the focal bird, but the other birds in the near distance. Martyn Stewart did an exceptional job.
I cannot wait for more work from these two. I just hope they have another project in mind.
I highly recommend this book!The Owl and the Woodpecker: Encounters With North America's Most Iconic Birds

Used price: $8.94
Collectible price: $25.99

David Halberstam strikes again!Review Date: 2007-09-05
Amazing Book--Must Reading for All Review Date: 2006-06-26
Please rate this review. Thanks.
The Power That WasReview Date: 2007-05-07
Read if you DAREReview Date: 2006-08-23
But that which will stick with me forever is the way Halberstam delivers the frailty and fate of America to a mere mortal, the President of the United States. Eisenhower fiddles, Kennedy charms, Johnson screams and Nixon frightens. It took Halberstam seven years to research and write this book and after you read it you will wonder how he did it so fast, a monumental effort.
Fortunately the truth is often downright funny. Nixon's twenty eight year old publicity man making a side comment that Nixon looks like he drops down out of his closet every morning in the same rumbled suit and badly in need of a shave.
Halberstam conveys how power was for the taking and that those who had it developed it primarily in accordance with their own agendas, personal or family politics and use it and us in the process.
No matter that this is now just history ending with Watergate. Halberstam's real message is that the circumstances he describes will remain the same in any generation.
The Powers That Be may change the way you think of power and how it affects you.
Revealing Look behind the ScenesReview Date: 2007-03-26
This book arrived in 1979, before the advent of Internet and most cable news. Still its lessons remain appropriate, even if media often fails to live up to the hopes of the founding fathers and the First Amendment. Halberstam is a talented observer who capably follows George Selby, Theodore H. White, and many others with a critical eye towards the media. I gave the book just four stars because the prose is a bit thick, but this remains an important read.

A must-read book to get to know this tiny country -and its powerful American "ally's"- behind-the-scenes relationshipsReview Date: 2007-07-02
If you are into learning the backside of what we could all dub "official history", then this book's for you. You will no longer look at Kissinger, Nixon or Westmoreland with the same candid, obedient and servile eyes after reading it. Packed with previously unheard-of accounts, reports, testimonies, following a clean, highly intelligent argumentation methodology, Sideshow acts as a real bulldozer on the reader, repeatedly confronting him/her with loads of devastating illustrations of unsound decisions, hidden political actions, secret wars of influences etc. It is certainly one of the punchiest, journalism-based historical account I have ever read, whatever the subject.
It shed a completely new and intense light onto the poor -though touching- little country I was living in then, and forever changed the way I looked at politics, diplomacy and intelligence.
History to be reviewed over and over againReview Date: 2005-05-30
EssentialReview Date: 2006-09-16
In any case, SIDESHOW has managed to stand as one of the better books on Cambodia, and America's involvement in Cambodia (Elizabeth Becker's WHEN THE WAR WAS OVER is a must-read as well). One could debate Shawcross' perspectives, but his research is meticulous and has withstood many attacks, and his depiction of the machiavellian darkness that can creep into foreign policy is chilling and ruthless, and - for better of worse - makes for hypnotic reading, all the more frightening as it's drawn straight from history, research, the Freedom of Information act.
Now more than ever, this is essential reading.
-David Alston
Congress was so much better then than nowReview Date: 2006-01-16
"The justification for bombing Cambodia had been to protect Americans in Vietnam. Since October 1970 the Congress had included in every military appropriation bill a proviso expressly forbidding bombing in Cambodia except for that purpose. By the end of March 1973 there were no American troops left in Indochina. Still the bombing of Cambodia increased. The administration now based its case on Article 20 of the Paris Agreement. Rogers now claimed that American withdrawal from Vietnam did not affect the situation in Cambodia, and that Article 20 legalized the bombing `until such time as a ceasefire could be brought into effect.' " (p. 277).
One of the strange things about the invasion of Cambodia was that Nixon made an announcement on April 30, 1970 which attempted to keep all previous secret activities secret:
Ignoring Menu, Nixon began with the lie that the United States had "scrupulously respected" Cambodia's neutrality for the last five years and had not "moved against" the sanctuaries. This falsehood was repeated by Kissinger in his background briefings to the press. That same evening he told reporters that the Communists had been using Cambodia for five years but, "As long as Sihanouk was in power in Cambodia we had to weigh the benefits in long-range historical terms of Cambodian neutrality as against any temporary military advantages and we made no efforts during the first fifteen months of this administration to move against the sanctuary." The next day he said of Sihanouk's rule, "We had no incentive to change it. We made no effort to change it. We were surprised by the development. One reason why we showed such great restraint against the base areas was in order not to change this situation." (p. 146).
In his announcement of the invasion, Nixon stated that his action was taken "not for the purpose of expanding the war into Cambodia, but for the purpose of ending the war in Vietnam"; he would give aid to Cambodia, but only to enable it "to defend its neutrality and not for the purpose of making it an active belligerent on one side or the other." (p. 146).
Currently Iran has a militia of five million, and if Iran were to officially enter a war in Iraq as a result of bombings by Israel, as urged by Vice President Cheney, to remove Iran's nuclear capabilities, even if a bomb based on plans provided by the CIA wouldn't work, Iran has other ways it could strike back. Being subatomic is very much like Cambodia was in 1970, but we shall soon see what issues are about to be submitted to the UN security council, and if it helps or hurts. A blockade created by Iran so American supplies might have more trouble reaching Kuwait and Iraq; oil exports from the region could end; American dollars could fall; the interest on bonds could rise so high that the U.S. government couldn't balance a budget; and some of the world's banks might then be alarmed.
SIDESHOW by William Shawcross is the only book I have in which I can look up Lon Nil in the index. Lon Nil might well be Cambodia's forgotten man. His brother, Lon Nol, declared himself Chief of State as well as Prime Minister and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces when he dissolved the Assembly in October 1971 and assumed emergency rule. (p. 229). In December 1971, an American psychiatrist in the U.S. Army found "his close associates indicate his mental faculties have deteriorated markedly as a result of his February 1971 stroke" (p. 208). On April 1, 1975, at the urging of his brother Lon Non, Lon Nol took half a million dollars and moved to Hawaii. (pp. 357-358). But for me, the best picture of events in Cambodia is the final page of Chapter 8, The Coup, in March 1970, when Lon Nol overthrew Sihanouk, using the hostility of the urban elite and military officers to Sihanouk to justify a power grab by a former Minister of Defense who "had been the principal scourge of the Vietnamese Communists while privately profiting from the thriving covert business that they brought through Sihanoukville." (p. 113). Sihanouk responded by forming a government recognized by Peking on May 5, 1970, shortly after the American invasion announced by Nixon. Sihanouk had flown from Moscow to China on March 18, 1970, but Lon Nil was still in Cambodia:
Rioting broke out in several provinces; opposition was strongest in the market town of Kompong Cham, Cambodia's second city, fifty miles northeast of Phnom Penh. After Sihanouk's radio broadcast, the town filled with peasants, fishermen and rice farmers from the neighborhood. The townspeople refused the government's orders to remove the Prince's portrait, and they burned down the house of the new governor whom Lon Nol had appointed. Demonstrators gathered in buses and trucks to march on Phnom Penh. They were halted by an army roadblock, and after that . . . About ninety people were killed or wounded. (pp. 126-127).
The most vivid display of anger against Lon Nol occurred, again in Kompong Cham, when peasants seized his brother Lon Nil, killed him and tore his liver from his stomach. The trophy was taken into a Chinese restaurant, where the owner was ordered to cook and slice it. Morsels were handed to everyone in the streets around. (p. 127).
The Madman Theory of WarReview Date: 2005-02-17
During the earlier years of the war, Cambodia was a relatively tranquil nation that was trying to remain neutral. But the country was being used as a hideout by North Vietnamese soldiers, leading to bombing by the Americans. Here Shawcross shows how Nixon and Kissinger made use of political trickery and overhyped threats to keep the bombing going to an extent that was far more destructive than necessary. As a bonus, this book also documents the wire-tapping paranoia and unconstitutional shenanigans in the Nixon White House. Shawcross is especially tough on Kissinger, finding that he disregarded the integrity and safety of Cambodia (which he had only ever visited for four hours), in favor of short-term political advantages and unyielding ideology. The relentless bombing destabilized Cambodian society, leading indirectly to the hideous genocide and societal destruction enacted by the Khmer Rouge a few years later. It is difficult to argue with Shawcross' heavily researched conclusions, and the hellish wholesale collapse of Cambodia (of a type never before seen in modern history) becomes all the more poignant as a result.
Be sure to get an edition of this book from 1986 or after, in which Shawcross adds materials from the political firefight that the book ignited. Kissinger was obviously upset and went to great lengths, through articles written by his lackey Peter Rodman, to try and disprove Shawcross' assertions. If your copy of this book contains these articles, you'll be quite bemused by Rodman's evasive, dissembling, and downright condescending rebuttal attempts, which are easily shot down by Shawcross. This war of words in itself proves that Kissinger had, and always will have, a lot to answer for. [~doomsdayer520~]

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beautifulReview Date: 2008-02-22
a must have for any pottery collector and artistReview Date: 2007-09-26
visual journey into the pastReview Date: 2007-07-20
A Great Place to StartReview Date: 2003-02-27
Excellent overview of every pueblo's potteryReview Date: 2005-08-10
This is very well written in an easy going, non-snobish style, instantly increasing your depth of knowledge in southwestern pottery. The photographs are excellent and plentiful, giving many diverse examples from each pueblo/region/era.
Highly recommended for those new to collecting. I gave a copy to my parents in New Mexico, and even though they had been doing a bit of collecting for years, they have a much better understanding of the history of some of the pottery sitting on their shelves. They love this book.

Used price: $2.71

leading the wayReview Date: 2008-08-22
I like the look of the Book and love the teachings!Review Date: 2001-04-09
I know my inner spirit now.Review Date: 2001-04-10
No One Will Hold Your Hand, Your On Your Own...Review Date: 2001-04-09
The book and th e author changed my life!Review Date: 2001-04-10

I must readReview Date: 2009-01-06
I bought this book as a gift for him... He has read it before & would definitely give it 5 full stars !!!!
A different kind of humorReview Date: 2008-12-12
The thing that struck me most in this re-reading is the great pervading sense of humor that runs through the book despite the difficult and often dangerous life as a white man living among Indians in Montana in the late eighteen hundreds. When this book arrived, I was reading 'Broadway Nights'; a humorous book about a gay pianist (not pronounced pee-anist). Both books made me laugh out loud despite being at polar extremes as far as life style is concerned.
There are unforgettable moments in this book; the fat squaw and the drunk warrior; the bear in the tent. Some made me laugh hysterically, and a few made me shiver with awe and horror.
Sadly, this printing does not include the photos printed in the original book. They brought everything into sharp, and, at times painful, clarity. Poignant reminders of the past and beautiful Indian girls, now long gone. Just read it.
One of the 10 best "documentaries" I have ever read!Review Date: 2008-09-22
awesomeReview Date: 2008-04-27
Tough Trip Through ParadiseReview Date: 2008-02-23

LOUISE D RICHReview Date: 2008-09-16
ALL of her books are super! This one tops them off!!
MACHIAS, MAINE!!
Superb!Review Date: 2003-01-05
Good enough to make me moveReview Date: 2004-12-30
Life in the Maine woods - a classicReview Date: 2005-11-02
For one thing, her house had no plumbing. Water had to be hauled to the house in buckets. Supplies and the mail came by boat. Life was no picnic for her and her family. But, of course, there were trade offs. The beauty of the place, for one. The living as one with nature. The need to be resourceful, and the feeling of pride and accomplishment that goes with it. Trade offs worth the hardships, Rich makes perfectly clear.
Rich captures the flavor of her idyllic spot in the Maine woods a few miles east of Upton along the Rapid River (the swiftest river east of the Mississippi, even though it is only about four miles long). She describes what life is like there, how the busy summers are a prelude to the slow, long winters. She talks about her neighbors, the loggers, the animals they encounter, how one endures and enjoys life in the woods. She describes the effects of the hurricane of 1938 and the havoc is caused even there, so far inland. Her prose style is clear and direct, and she truly makes the reader jealous of her situation rather than sympathetic. It's an excellent book, one that I've read a number of times, always with an I-wish-I-was-there enthusiasm. Highly recommended.
Maine in the 1930s Review Date: 2005-07-06
The book is set up in chapters that answer questions: "Isn't housekeeping difficult?" or "Aren't you ever frightened." One of the better stories in the chapter, "Aren't the Children a Problem" tells about her husband delivering the author's baby in the dead of winter -- and greasing it with olive oil which he kept to dress his trout flies. The new parents discuss what they are supposed to do with the hot water always called for when a baby is being born -- and they decide to make coffee.
For the modern reader, the highlights of the book are probably tales of the trials of living without conveniences. The Rich houses -- they had a winter and summer house -- had no plumbing. Heating and cooking were with wood. What you needed for groceries was delivered by boat once a month; the Sears catalog supplied the rest. For anyone who has ever thought wistfully of fleeing civilization, this is a humorous primer of both the rewards and hardships of such a life. It deserves a permanent place on the short shelf of Americana classics.
Smallchief
Related Subjects: Canada United States
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My daughter is almost 3 and loves to cut anything! This book allows her to cut beautifully colored pages that are small enough for her to hold. The pages also increase in difficultly so that she is not constantly cutting in the same manner.