North America Books
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Used price: $3.48

Sacred and Mysterious ConnectionsReview Date: 2000-11-07
ExcellentReview Date: 2000-10-30
Kinship with all beingsReview Date: 2000-11-06
Ceremonial RichnessReview Date: 2000-11-06
A beautiful book to be treasured and shared.Review Date: 2001-03-03
Nancy Lorraine, Reviewer

Used price: $6.22
Collectible price: $14.95

Best on the SubjectReview Date: 2007-01-10
Required reading for Anthropologists, and Archeologists.Review Date: 1999-08-29
best available on subjectReview Date: 1998-03-28
excellentReview Date: 2003-09-20
EXCELLENT SOURCE FOR THE BEGINNERReview Date: 1999-05-19

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A book I can personally relate tooReview Date: 2001-10-30
Bullet-Proof Buddhists: The Real DealReview Date: 2002-12-22
A Pleasure To ReadReview Date: 2001-09-20
YesReview Date: 1999-09-19
Frank Chin combs the landscape of Chinese American cultureReview Date: 1998-11-26

Great ResourceReview Date: 2008-07-18
Great book, but not a field guideReview Date: 2008-05-03
By far the best one-volume guide to N.American ButterfliesReview Date: 1998-07-03
First Class - little more to say reallyReview Date: 1998-10-31
Superb overall quality and an absolute must for anyone with the slightest serious interest.
Encyclopedic Natural History. Field Guide?Review Date: 2000-01-08
There are better books for use as a field guide. This book is too big (8x10) to carry in a pocket or binoculars case. I would be afraid of damaging this large, relatively expensive book. The sheer number of photographs makes a quick tentative identification harder.
This is a book that any butterfly enthusiast should add to his library. However, he should start his library with one of the smaller guides, such as Butterflies Through Binoculars: The East, the Golden Guide, or one of the regional guides.

Collectible price: $119.00

America's missing National Park -- a lament and a dreamReview Date: 2006-03-21
At one time, in the early 1930s, the National Park Service was looking at a national park at least 150,000 acres, and as much as 1 million acres, for Texas' Panhandle caprock. That's right, 1 million acres -- 1,600 square miles or so.
What happened? Don't blame the Depression; the NPS bought land in Texas at the tail end of the Depression to create Big Bend.
Lack of political will and a dime-store solution on the cheap are what happened.
After helping the state of Texas create Palo Duro Canyon State Park -- around 15,000 acres, not 150,000, let alone 1 million -- the NPS simply didn't carry that through. So all we have today is Palo Duro and another dime-sized state park, Caprock Canyons (Copper Breaks is not a canyon, per se, and it's not in the Caprock).
Flores, who once had a rough-it/hippie house in Yellow House Canyon, on one of the Caprock forks of the Brazos River, knows this land intimately and personally -- including the vast majority of the Caprock still in private hands.
Read this intimate account of what many of you may be missing who haven't visited either of the two state parks in Texas' Panhandle, and for those of you who have been to Palo Duro but not explored the rest of the Caprock, see what could have been -- and what Flores dreams still could be.
Deep canyons and deep thoughts-more than a geology bookReview Date: 1999-03-07
very interestedReview Date: 2000-08-14
seemingly endless plains, farmed into a quilted patchwork of green squares and circles, abruptly dissolved into a brownish red fractal universe.
at 34.946 north 103.438 west is one of the most striking features. you can check it out online at the terraserver or on any map program. of course they could never do justice to what it really looks like. i've been obsessing over this area for a few days now, although i hope it'll pass before i crank out bucks for yet another book i don't really need.
Deep canyons and deep thoughts-more than a geology bookReview Date: 1999-03-07
Hidden treasuresReview Date: 2000-01-02

Collectible price: $37.95

Cherokee SisterReview Date: 2003-03-26
Cherokee SisterReview Date: 2003-03-26
Cherokee SisterReview Date: 2003-03-26
Cherokee SisterReview Date: 2000-12-09
Cherokee SisterReview Date: 2000-10-16

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I got mine in 1969...Review Date: 2008-01-05
Masterful document. Review Date: 2007-10-22
I still have my 1974 purchase. Well worn and borrowed often.
Great View of Chicago's History & Growth Review Date: 2007-01-04
You can read this book straight through, use it as reference, or just learn about our city from the many photos. Either way, you'll sense the pride that leads many residents to identify themselves first as being from Chicago, and only later as being from Illinois, the Midwest or the USA.
One of the only College texts I actually enjoyed!Review Date: 2003-03-07
Comprehensive and BeautifulReview Date: 2000-07-12

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Buy this BookReview Date: 2007-12-15
A must for every elementary libraryReview Date: 2006-01-20
Careful attention to what life is really likeReview Date: 2003-06-10
One of the best multicultural educational book I've seen!!Review Date: 2005-03-02
Excellent photos break stereotypes, teach about diversityReview Date: 2005-12-04
In the Forward by folksinger Buffy St. Marie (whose music first raised my awareness of Native issues back in the 1970s), she correctly points out that every child belongs to at least one culture, but that children are not ONLY their cultures. "Even kids from the most traditional Native backgrounds have much in common with other children," she writes. "They have families, they grow and change every day, they love and work and play."
There are over 500 Native tribes in the United States, each of which has its own language and customs. This book covers 25 tribes representative of the various geographical areas, from Maine to Hawaii, with a map showing their locations. There's also a section on urban communities. (Which city has the largest Native population? New York!)
The authors describe their photo essay as "a book of few words and many pictures." The bright, colorful photos are indeed fabulous, and the "few words" are well-chosen. Each tribe gets a two-page spread, with child-friendly facts about history and daily activities that range from sports (Lacrosse is originally a Native game) to harvesting clams, making maple syrup, riding horses or carving totem poles. Sidebars give the total population of each group, its geogrphical location(s), and names of some famous people. Throught the bookj, the focus is always on things that children do, with lessons about about diversity, respect, tolerance, ecology, and other issues gently woven in and not at all preachy. I myself learned a lot myself from reading this book, and the photo on page 11 finally cleared up the mystery about an odd old tool I found on my hobby farm -- it's a "comb" for harvesting cranberries!
There is also a teacher's activity and resource guide (sold separately) that goes with this book. The Guide has biographies of contemporary members of various Native groups, with suggested investigative activities focusing on that person's accomplishments and/or expertise. For example, the page on Lori Aviso Alvord, the first Navajo woman surgeon, has a discussion of traditional forms of holistic healing, and suggestions for investigating different healing approaches used in the world today. Taken together, the activities in the Guide cover the whole gamut of contributions that Native Americans have made in all areas of society and life.
The authors are currently working on another diversity book about children's ceremonies around the world. (In fact, that's how I learned about this book. Author Yvonne Dennis queried me for details about a traditional hair-cutting ceremony for Hasidic boys. I was very impressed that she actively sought to include Jewish children, because so many diversity projects do not see Jews as a culture.) The goal of their new book will be to help children relate to each other through learning about the ways that children are special in each culture. I look forward to reading it when it comes out.

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Children of the longhouse is a great bookReview Date: 1999-11-11
"Children of the Longhouse"- An Excellent Teaching ToolReview Date: 2004-09-30
Children of the Longhouse is a great historical fic book.Review Date: 1999-11-12
This book is very action packed.Review Date: 1998-12-04
An awesome bookReview Date: 2000-07-11

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Best book I've read yet!Review Date: 2003-01-16
My Uncle, one of my Heroes.Review Date: 2001-09-28
When Oz's brother, Danwood, (my father), died, Oz became my father and mentor. Over the years, I would talk to him and feel his story come alive.
Before I took my turn as a warrior protecting my people, as a young Marine, I went to see Oz in California to talk about my turn in combat. His words to me gave me strength during my time in hell. Bakite ishin, "hit me if you dare," was his gift to me that protected me along with my heritage and my father's spirit.
Oz's spirit live on within these pages. His gift of life for his children, wife, and his relatives is one of struggle, within his own roots, happiness, and glory. To many in the Native American community, his life is one of the Ogitchidaa, (warrior): one who defends, protects, serves his family, community and their way of life. Now in this time of mourning over the World Trade Center disaster, his story can provide a special insight into a way of strength and overcoming the hardships of life.
My uncle's gift to me lies within those simple words,Bakite Ishin. They continue to give me the strength and insight to survive in today's world. I sit here now putting a Native American publishing house together with my wife. We suffer and endure for the people of our lives and heritage. Our first book, "Freddie Came Home & Other Coyote Tales," reflects the courage of my uncle's spirit and life. Our struggle with life, whether it be in business, traditions, family or community is supported by my Uncle Oliver's legacy. He truly gives hope to the world and to the people.
Bakite Ishin. Hit me if you dare. Words of the old ones in our proud heritage. Words for people to stand up to, to be proud of, and to stay strong. Che-Miigwech, Uncle, Che-Miigwech
I couldn't put it down!Review Date: 2001-09-21
Story Nearly OverlookedReview Date: 2001-08-19
He also did strange things-going without food, making marathon runs (long before they became popular), and peeling paper matches to get two lights out of one. He didn't waste words or anything else.
Rasmussen had given a press conference after his ordeal in 1945. The media kissed it off as a joke with headlines like, "Aviator Wandered Around Japan." So he stopped talking.
I left the Navy in 1955 after a four-year hitch but I never forgot the mystery of Rasmussen's sojourn in Japan. In 1997 I was retired and decided to find him and ask him about it. I found his widow, Esther, living in California. She told me that in the late 1960s a friend asked her husband if she could tape his story. He agreed with the idea that she would write a book so he could "leave something for his children." But the book never materialized. Chief Rasmussen died in 1980 and his friend died not long after, without starting the project. The tapes were delivered to Esther Rasmussen who kept them in her garage for seventeen years, but didn't listen to them. Esther loaned me the tapes. The book they produced makes an exciting read, with plenty of tips on how to survive in the wild.
As Chuck Yeager put it: Rasmussen went down in Japan and I went down in Nazi-occupied France-a couple of bad places for Americans to visit during World War II. But both of us knew how to trap and hunt and live off Mother Nature. That helped. We were country boys-combat fliers, but still country boys. When our planes went down and we found ourselves in the wild, we knew what to do.
Not a unbiased report.Review Date: 2001-08-16
Related Subjects: Mexico United States Canada
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