North America Books
Related Subjects: Canada United States
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Used price: $13.70

Wonderful book!Review Date: 2007-12-18
a well-rounded presentation of North American star loreReview Date: 2005-02-17
In addition to the star lore, Dorcas has also included a decent amount of background information on the individual tribes to help the reader better understand the context of the star stories. In the back of the book you'll find an extensive set of notes and bibliographic references for those interested in further reading on this subject.
Don Childrey, author of "STAR TRAILS - Navajo"
Well-written book with information hard to find elsewhereReview Date: 2000-05-14
More hopeful than the Greeks: Native American star mythsReview Date: 2005-07-07
Miller starts with the conventional Greek constellations that still map our sky for professional astronomers, providing myth summaries and seasonal sky maps. Her stick figures of these constellations are a delight and I copy their details onto the daily sky charts from the internet.
Both the Greeks and our First Peoples filled their skies with peoples and animals. Only a few identities, such as bear and dog, straddle both hemispheres. Greek heroes and heroines may be banished forever to the sky by the action of the gods as punishment, or placed by a friendly god to protect them from the angered one. Animals and humans are often antagonists. I can't think of a creation myth. The dead didn't go there.
Our First Peoples connection with the sky seems ongoing and personal- get lost and you may wander into it. Die and you may walk up the Milky Way, past guides and obstacles. Suffer and you may find an opening to the sky or a rescuer who will take you into it; you may be homesick, come and go, but finally choose the sky. If you navigate by the stars, why not? It may be a refuge. The myths feel contemporary, the characters often ordinary, and creation feels recent. The animals may be small and hungry, brave or lazy.
Miller provides the myth texts as she finds them, supplementing with discussion and drawings- maps of their known or probable stars and historic diagrams such as rock art that may be relevant. The bibliography is broad. This book will be a good anchor for collecting other North American books coming into print or reprint. `

Used price: $29.67

great bookReview Date: 2007-12-01
Wonderful storytellingReview Date: 2007-05-10
An excellent read - my kids BEGGED to do History!Review Date: 2007-01-04
I would say the only thing I did not care for in this book was the way they portray the Indians. Other than Squanto, Samoset and Massasoit, all of the other Indians are viewed as 'savages' (and not very intelligent ones, at that.) In the last few chapters, they are even used as 'comic relief.' She also has them speaking the word 'Ugh' a lot...such as "Ugh! White squaw bring me cider!"
I thought that was a little unrealistic, and insulting as well.
The information on the Pilgrims is wonderful, and she really brought their journey alive.
If you can overlook the Indian parts, I would highly recommend this book.
Great Read-aloud!Review Date: 2006-06-16

Used price: $19.99

Stormrider North AmericaReview Date: 2007-05-25
1st and only comprehensive guide to surfing North AmericaReview Date: 2002-09-06
A must have for surfers.
THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE AND INFORMATIVE GUIDE TO SURFING NORTH AMERICA Review Date: 2007-03-08
best NA surfing book everReview Date: 2003-08-12

best bookReview Date: 2003-12-12
from Anne Fine
this is the best book in the worldReview Date: 2003-12-05
for jim i have cut my hair short (i'm a girl) to see what it is like to lose something
from sassy
Street ChildReview Date: 2002-04-14
A tale of sadness and friendshipsReview Date: 2000-03-18
This book is about the life of Jim Jarvis, a street boy in Victorian London. After his father died his life was hard and following the death of his mother and loosing his sisters, his life got worse until he met 'Barney', now known as Dr Barnardo, who looked after him.
This story is based on the true story of the start of Dr Barnardo's homes.
The book is exciting but sad in many places so I have only given it four stars, but I would recommend everyone to read it to realise how bad life was not very long ago in England and to realise that there are still children living like that in places around the world today.
Mum adds . . . I enjoyed this book too. It is well written for children. It is not too sentimental, neither does it hide the facts of the rough life of the poor, without being too frightening. It is gripping and keeps you caring all the way. An excellent read.

Used price: $25.24

excellent,informative,well researched book !Review Date: 2008-01-29
If you are into primitive archery this section alone is interesting read( it is NOT an intructionional book, but is informative enough to give you good insight to how native bows were made)..
The book covers a lot of different topics and has very in depth knowledge of each area..
Comprehensive review of Native California Life WaysReview Date: 2004-11-03
Unique, invaluable contribution to Native American studies.Review Date: 2000-04-06
Thorough look at California Indian lifeReview Date: 2001-08-14
Used price: $4.88

A Remarkable CollectionReview Date: 2008-11-04
With the exception of a few such notable writers as Willa Cather, Mary Austin, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the women represented here have not been read since their original publication. The search that turned them up was a "treasure hunt," Miller says, as she followed trails of footnotes and buried references to bring us reports from the wild places of the frontier, written by women who traveled the difficult roads sometimes alone, sometimes in company, but always in partnership with their pens. They wrote letters home, or wrote essays for publication, or wrote after the fact, but they wrote. And wrote, and--luckily for us--kept on writing.
Four of the writers in the anthology are Native Americans. More than half wrote before the years of the Civil War. One, Elizabeth Custer, wrote to immortalize her husband; another, Frances Gage, immortalized Sojourner Truth. The intrepid Isabella Bird wrote with her heart in her mouth about her climb up Long's Peak (what in the world was she wearing?). Caroline Kirkland wrote with her tongue in her cheek about the enormous lot of gear that was packed into the wagon that carried her and her family into the wilderness, "which we then, in our greenness, considered indispensable. We have since learned better."
All of these women writers had an appreciative eye for domestic detail. We read about adobe houses in Los Angeles (Helen Jackson) and the tents and earthen lodges of the Western tribes (Alice Fletcher), about food and gardens and husbands and children and births and illness and deaths, about women's hopes and dreams and disillusionments. Men don't record these homely details in their stories--they can't. Women do, at least, these women have, and it's a good thing, too, for how else can we know about the lives of real people as they heroically settled down to carving homes and schools and towns out of a wild land? I must personally confess to a happy moment of recognition when I turned a page and found a long poem by Rose Hartwick Thorpe, "Curfew Shall Not Ring Tonight," which I memorized as a girl for my own personal pleasure, because I loved the poem's story and its strong, ringing lines.
Miller has also given us brief but valuable biographical essays about each writer, placing her in the context of her time and giving us a sense of the shape of her literary work. These, together with sources, a full bibliography, and the rich treasures of the writings themselves, make for an extraordinarily powerful and unique volume. Many, many thanks to Susan Cummins Miller for an remarkable anthology that belongs in every collection of women's and Western literature.
by Susan Wittig Albert
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women
Wonderful!Review Date: 2000-07-21
A Must Read For All Women & HistoriansReview Date: 2002-07-14
Oprah should read THIS oneReview Date: 2000-04-14

Tarot Says Good BookReview Date: 2005-03-29
with lots of mystery'sReview Date: 2001-10-19
Melanie's book ReviewReview Date: 2000-04-06
Tarot Says BewareReview Date: 2000-04-14

Used price: $12.94

I was ENTHRALLED!Review Date: 2005-09-16
I found this book at the dusty museum at Buffalo Gap, Texas,
and was enthralled!
Somebody has written the DIFINITIVE history of my early stompin'
grounds,
(the area whose back roads I traversed in my early 20's,
shooting .22 rimfire bullets into every road sign I encountered,
(statute of limitations HAS expired)
and as I read it,
I detected nary a false note.
Ty Cushion is a righteous dude,
(for a Baptist).
Truth is stranger (and more interesting) than fictionReview Date: 2006-06-21
Had this prof. for a class..He's cool and his book is greatReview Date: 1999-11-07
Pioneering Look At The Life And Death Of A Frontier TownReview Date: 2001-09-02

Used price: $11.57

Thaddeus Stevens: Complex Man for Comples TimesReview Date: 1999-11-30
By far, Stevens comes alive in the preface of Trefousse'account. The reader is pulled gently into the life of this individal because of the hardships he experienced as a child and because of his determination to see justice prevailed.
As I progressed into the book, I marvelled at both the strengths and weaknesses of this complex man called Thaddeus Stevens. Personally, I think he was a man before his times. It is unfortunate that he considered himself a failure. We have had many presidents in recent years who could not or would not acknowledge that they had achieved anything of "real tangible worth". Stevens comes to the end of life feeling that he had achieved very little of lasting value. It is truly worth lamenting! If Stevens could come back to this century, I think he would be astonished to see what legacy he left the United States and particular minorities who have benefitted much from his efforts to support emancipation and a true Reconstruction for those who had suffered because of slavery.
I was first introduced to Thaddeus Stevens in Lerone Bennett's BEFORE THE MAYFLOWER. I found Stevens to be the underdog, but an all powerful hero for the rights of equality. I think the second best thing to having enjoyed Trefousse' outling the work of Stevens would be to see the book made into historical fiction. Somewhere out there in "fantasy land" is an actor who could bring more to "life" this complex man called Thaddeus Stevens
Thaddeus Stevens: Nineteenth-Century EgalitarianReview Date: 2000-01-18
Excellent biography!Review Date: 2004-11-03
The book also goes into Stevens' strengths, weaknesses and his troubles. I thought it was a honest effort on the part of the author to showed the reader the complete man and the account of Stevens' life proves to be balance and fair.
One of the more interesting aspects of this book lies within the struggled between Stevens and Andrew Johnson. The fight between "reconstruction of the south" to the "restoration of the south". This struggle had far reaching consequences in our nation's politics as well as racial relationship. Although product of his time and era, Stevens proves to be far ahead of himself in terms of race relations. It was interesting to learned that his concerns lies not only with the blacks but also toward Indians and Orientals. The book reflects accurately in the end that Stevens was a true egalitarian in the truest form.
About Time! A Solid Biography of Thaddeus StevensReview Date: 1999-11-23
Stevens, the tactical leader of the "radical Republicans" through the Civil War and Reconstruction era stands probably second to only James Madison in Constitutional history.
Considering his historical role a thorough biography has been long overdue. Trefousse has gone a long way toward supplying a fresh biography of the man. In its pages he has applied the extensive depth of modern scholarship now available on the reconstruction era.
Only Fawne Brodie has attempted a biography in recent times and that book, Thaddeus Stevens: Scourge of the South has slid thankfully out of print.
The Trefousse biography will likely be the standard source on the life of "the old Commoner" for some decades to come.

Used price: $1.48
Collectible price: $16.95

A Lesson in Protecting Our Planet's CreaturesReview Date: 2003-08-03
One of my Favorite Kids BooksReview Date: 2006-03-24
THE MOTHER LOAD FROM THE MOTHER HERDReview Date: 2003-10-31
In They Came from the Bronx, Neil Waldman recounts the fascinating tale of how this quintessential American animal was brought back from extinction.
Waldman speaks of the Bronx Zoo's "Mother Herd," and his curiosity as a child with the name. How could a captive herd of bison in the largest American metropolis, so far from the wide-open spaces of the Great Plains, claim such a title?
Waldman's story weaves an eloquent account beginning in Oklahoma, stepping back to New York City in the early Nineteen hundreds, offers historical facts about the bison's prairie reign and then it's back to Oklahoma where a Comanche grandmother and her grandson await a most improbable reunion.
They Came from the Bronx is technically a children's book but will appeal to children of all ages, from one to ninety-three, if you will. Beautifully illustrated and written, the book speaks volumes about the tragedy of man's irresponsible exploitation of wildlife but also offers a ray of hope that once mistakes are made and recognized, if we are careful and responsible, they can and should be rectified.
Douglas McAllister
A Must read for 4th,5th,and,6th gradersReview Date: 2001-08-15
Related Subjects: Canada United States
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This book covers some Greek Mythology and whereabouts of the common constellations so that the reader has a basis to start with, and can find the star patterns mentioned in the book.
The book is then broken into sections of North America by going over the tribes that lived in each place. It covers not only that tribes star lore, but goes into detail about how each tribe lived, such as food/shelter/migrating habits, so that the reader can easier understand how certain elements follow into the star lore.
With over 300 pages of detailed information this is a wonderful book and I am happy to own it!