North America Books
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Used price: $0.01

Fantastic and uniqueReview Date: 2000-06-14
An Investment for the Traveling Family!Review Date: 2000-05-31
Useful age-related guide for kidsReview Date: 1997-12-01
I can't tell you how long I've looked for a book like this!Review Date: 1999-05-11
Collectible price: $79.99

Musically and Editorially SuperbReview Date: 2008-09-30
16 page introduction by Lomax. Chapter introductions by Lomax or his team. Multiverse lyrics and alternate lyrics. Color front pastedown map showing the locations of different Song Style Families. Color back pastedown map of the Names and Places of the Songs.
Every song appears to be annotated by Lomax, or by his team, with an introduction explaining the background of the song and quotes from Americans such as Faulkner, Woody Guthrie, or Reuben Delano.
The simpler songs are notated with melody and guitar chords. The more complex ones have a piano accompaniment.
There are over 25 pp of Appendices: Book List, Guitar and Banjo Guide, Discography, Index of Song Titles, Index of First Lines.
IndespensibleReview Date: 2008-01-26
If you love real folk music, this is a good book to have.Review Date: 2006-07-05
I bought this book again and went through it. So many songs well known by lovers and students of the blues and old time music of banjo playing and fiddling of Black and Canadian Maritime folk music that I had not remembered or had not known were there as well as the obvious songs.
Having said that, this book reflects the particular weaknesses of Alan Lomax and his work. This is a book of public domain traditional music collected by Lomax and his father and others, but copyrighted in the name of Alan Lomax. The book hues pretty close to Lomax's general romantic "Americanism" and belief in some inherent superiority of "folk" music over "commercial music" whereas recent scholarship suggests the interaction between the two is more important than the difference.
However, this is the basic collection of American folk songs. The advances we have made in the availability of recordings of all kinds of traditional music, in the specialization and extension of scholarship of specific genre, specific cultures and sub cultures, and other aspects of the music mean probably no one today would attempt to publish one big book of general traditional folk songs. However, that has come in large part by musicians, scholars, and enthusiasts who came out of the generation who learned their folk songs through this book and other work Lomax and his colleagues did.
If you love real folk music, this is a good book to have.
A great repository of over 250 folk songs with melody linesReview Date: 1999-05-30
A wonderful resource for the beginning singer of traditional songs.
Great book of folksongs and stories about them.Review Date: 1999-01-05
Used price: $30.64

Great bookReview Date: 2008-07-26
A great book on some hard to find speciesReview Date: 1999-12-02
Good Resource BookReview Date: 2000-11-02
The Best of Lynx/Bobcat InformationReview Date: 2006-02-26

Used price: $14.02

A Great ReadReview Date: 2008-10-20
(And it is) But I picked it up to read a few passages and kept going. Next thing I knew, I had finished reading half the book in one sitting.
It's a great read even if you don't plan on travelling the Northern Plains. I learned a lot about forts in the Omaha area. A few I had never heard of even though it's my hometown.
Stew Magnuson
(Author of The Death of Raymond Yellow Thunder.)
Take it with you when you goReview Date: 2008-09-29
Good overview - whets the appetiteReview Date: 2008-09-02
A Researcher's DreamReview Date: 2008-08-24
Mr. Dana Jackson, Fairlawn, Va.

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Remarkable book on the Land. the People and Its Mysteries Review Date: 2007-07-22
Excellent intro to the land and people of the SW USReview Date: 2006-03-28
Brown is an excellent writer and captures the uniqueness of the desert Southwest well without going into rapturous (and phony) doggerel. He is a "loner," however, relying on historical records or scientific textbooks for most of his information, and rarely brings along another geologist or historian to hash out information. (This being the case, it's surprising that there is no bibliography included.) Even his own personal observations, other than a few camping/hiking scenes thrown in here and there, are kept to a minimum. Some might object to this impersonal approach, but it didn't bother me at all. The book is interesting and informative - an excellent overview of the desert Southwest.
Four CornersReview Date: 2002-05-31
Michael Shea, MD
An eloquent, detailed overview of the Colorado PlateauReview Date: 1999-11-01

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Poetic and Emotive pieces on black gay life/vision/passions/joysReview Date: 2008-11-19
My Brother Likes This BookReview Date: 2005-01-25
My brother happens to be gay and I got him this book for christmas. He LOOOOOOOVES it. He says it's one of the best books he's read in years.
Just my two cents.
A Collection to be CherishedReview Date: 2005-03-20
How wonderful it is to revisit Exxex Hemphill, regarded the premiere black gay poet in America at the time of his death from AIDS related complications in 1995. His bitter/beautiful five-part poem about love and lust in the ghetto, "Tomb of Sorrow" (1989), represents him here: "Gunshots ring out above our heads,/ a few of us are seeking romance,/ others a piece of ass,/ some--a stroke of dick./ The rest of us are killing./ The rest of us get killed."
From James Baldwin's excerpted swan song "Just Above My Head" (1979) to Randy Boyd's infuriating interracial fiction excerpt "Walt Loves The Bearcat" (2004), we are treated to, shocked by, and enthralled with the literary profound and profane.
Marlon Riggs' 1991 essay "Black Macho Revisited: Reflections of a SNAP! Queen" is a powerfully on-target indictment of black America's distorted view of Black Macho and it's relegation of black male homosexuals to Negro faggotry and minstrelsy, while editor Harris closes this volume with trademark pop lit (What I Did for Love") that dangles enough to hold promise of a new series wide open.
Marvin K. White's "FOR COLORED BOYS WHO HAVE CONSIDERED S-CURLS WHEN THE HOT COMB WAS ENUF" (1990) still retains its sass and sting. Don Belton's 1994 interview "Where We Live: A Conversation with Essex Hemphill and Isaac Julien," conducted on the heels of Marlon Riggs' AIDS related death, is a conversation around Riggs' film "Black Is...Black Ain't" which exploresd the nexes of black identity and masculinity and features appearances by Hemphill, bell hooks, Michelle Wallace, Cornel West, and Angela Davis.
Novelist/journalist James Earl Hardy, founder of the Afrocentric gay hip-hop romance genre, is representred by an excerpt from his classic "B-Boy Blues" follow-up, the satisfying but lesser "2nd Time Around" (1996), Vega by his gentle 1989 poem "Brothers Loving Brothers," while Carl Alan Johnson's 1993 "Post-Nulcear Slut" still reads as fab-nasty as ever.
This collection is too rich to ignore, too diverse to fully assess in this small space. Suffice it to say that this is a keeper to be visited often.
Finally, I must echo the sentiments of a previous reviewer. Reading these wonderful pieces, knowing that so many of the authors have been taken away from us by AIDS--Hemphill, Riggs, Joseph Beam, Steven Corbin, Melvin Dixon, Gary Fisher, David Frechette, Craig G. Harris, and Assoto Saint--is a sad reminder that we have been given limited access to these brilliant minds. So let us cherish this book for its rarity as much as for its insights, illuminations, and artistry.
E. Lynn Harris should be commended for this tremendous undertaking and achievement.
Our Time Has ComeReview Date: 2005-01-06
Freedom In This Village: Twenty-Five Years of Black Gay Men's Writing edited and and with an introudction by E. Lynn Harris.
I happened (smile) to be coming from The Abbey during my time home in Los Angeles last week when I passed A Different Light Bookstore. I went in and displayed prominently was this book and of course, I had to have it, and so I bought it, and anticipated reading it once I completed "The Last Dream Before Dawn."
I started reading this book last night on the 2 train (New York City) and while I was reading "About The Contributors" a combination of anger and sadness came over me and one that at this time I cannot capture but it was more to the fact that we need books that celebrate us...Black Gay Men
I was saddened by the number of men who died of AIDS related illnesses and was like what are we doing, what am I doing, to honor these men who made it possible for me to be one that to some degree has a bit more "freedom in the village" than they did.
As I was looking through the "Table of Contents" I saw some familiar names and new names that I look forward to reading.
We need or rather I feel we need books like this on the regular as there are so many voices as one is not merely enough and also cannot tell all our stories.
I implore you, each of you, to rise and have your voices heard and if you are a lover of Black Gay Male Literature then by all means purchase this book if not for you then for someone else.
With that said, I have some reading to do (smile)...

Used price: $142.00

UNA EXCELENTE RECOPILACIÓNReview Date: 2008-06-01
A Much Needed Updating of SmithReview Date: 2004-01-22
I don't fault this book for lack of color because that might have easily made it even more expensive. If you want to see color photos of algae, and indeed very good ones, try "Freshwater Algae: Their Microscopic World Explored" by Hilda Canter-Lund and her husband J. W. Lund.
Despite the cost, I recommend this book as essential for anyone trying to understand the North American freshwater algal flora.
ReviewReview Date: 2003-01-04
algae referenceReview Date: 2007-01-11
The book is organized in a conventional manner with major groups treated in separate chapters. It is easy to use and well-illustrated. It will find a home with scientists, students, and interested lay persons alike.

Used price: $17.86

Had him as a teacherReview Date: 2007-01-12
A five rating, but with a footnote.Review Date: 2000-12-13
Not just for Puerto Ricans.....Review Date: 2000-10-28
Mr. Flores makes you stop and think, then think again about issues you may have had preconceived notions about. I really enjoyed being challenged intellectually as I read this book.
I recently attended a lecture/performance (at the CUNY Graduate Center in New York City) of "From Bomba to Hip-Hop" conducted by Mr. Flores, music historian Rene Lopez and Mike Wallace (who won a Pulitzer Prize for his book, "Gotham.") True to form, it was a very unique, educational and entertaining experience.
A book that needs to be a major part of contemporary AmericaReview Date: 2000-09-24

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $21.99

Caribbean Ports of CallReview Date: 2008-06-22
These are great!Review Date: 2008-01-22
this book is very honestReview Date: 2007-07-12
Great Starting PlaceReview Date: 2007-06-07

An excellent and up-to-date work on a fascinating storyReview Date: 1998-04-01
Kirsten Seaver has produced the best and most readable work on the subject in 50 years, incorporating the large amount of very recent study being done in the field with acute insight and a clear narrative.
(Although it means there is not much point in me writing my book on the subject :( )
A great "whodunit" regarding the lost Greenland colonies.Review Date: 1998-09-05
Well Researched and Well WrittenReview Date: 2006-07-04
The author portrays a history of over five centuries and has made discoveries that other researchers have missed. The author's conclusions are solid, however rather than sticking to solely historical facts, she speculates slightly on political issues. Nevertheless, the bulk of the book is thoroughly researched and well presented. An interesting read and a great way to learn some history as it is a book that is difficult to put down once you start.
The Norse in Greenland Review Date: 2006-05-29
The great mystery is, of course, why did the Norse colonies in Greenland disappear and when? A worsening climate, Innuit attacks, inbreeding, and isolation have all been cited as reasons. I won't reveal the author's conclusion except to say that she theorizes the Norse survived longer in Greenland -- perhaps after 1500 -- than most scholars believe. The most interesting and original part of the book for me was her examination of the important role of traders and cod fisherman from the English port of Bristol in the exploration of the North Atlantic in the 15th century. She makes a good case that these sailors might have reached the New World a few years before Columbus -- but like good fishermen everywhere kept their favorite fishing holes secret.
All in all, this is a well-researched scholarly history with just enough learned speculation to keep a history and exploration buff reading on. It's the kind of book that -- if you're really, really a fanatic -- you could read a second time and benefit from many small points you missed on the first reading.
Smallchief
Related Subjects: Mexico United States Canada
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