Nevada Books
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Comprehensive is the Word !!!Review Date: 2002-11-12
The USA Comprehensive Public Camping GuideReview Date: 2003-07-20
As a CD ROM, I naturally assumed that this would be an interactive version of a book. Not a chance, it's just text, and the pages scroll down the screen with two pages per screen, except that it's not even formatted to fit a normal screen, so you have to scroll down to finish a page, and then scroll back up to start the opposing page. The information contained therein is just publicly available facts that could be obtained from numerous government websites, all without editorial comment or useful descriptions. I don't know why Amazon would even carry this product, or if they feel they have to carry everything, they should at least give you a warning.

Too old to be relevant -- a 1992 book with a new titleReview Date: 2000-03-22
Great diversionReview Date: 1999-01-14

Enjoyable ReadingReview Date: 2001-05-17


Not what I thought it would beReview Date: 2008-03-09

Study of Injustice in NevadaReview Date: 2006-12-09
As a result of this and other prosecutorial shenanigans, Guyette found himself convicted and sent to prison. He was released in 1972 on a Writ of Habeas Corpus.
I gave this book 3 stars because the author lacks some writing skills, however it is worth reading for the detailed picture of the justice system in the mid 60's with regard to this particular case that it paints. Guyette also has a web site where he talks about his case.

Answering The Call To WriteReview Date: 2007-10-30

How to appreciate the natural side of NevadaReview Date: 2008-09-17
By the way, this is not the official Amazon entry for this book. Instead, visit "Earthtones: A Nevada Album." At the time of review, used copies of the book were available on the official page for under $5.00, which is a great deal compared to the $40.00 that it was going for on this page.


Lacks A Unifying ThemeReview Date: 2005-02-05
To me, the Basques are the Irish of the Latin world. All through their history, they have fought for liberty against one oppressor after another. And like the Irish, millions of them fled overseas to become people of substance and influence in their adopted countries. The Irish diaspora has produced many great men and women in the Anglo-Saxon world and beyond. The Basque has done likewise in the Latin world and beyond. The Irish finally got their own state in the twentieth century, but the Basques are still waiting for theirs.
Escape Via Berlin sounded to me like it would be an exciting book, full of intrigue and harrowing escapes, and in some ways it is. But in other ways it plods along and gets bogged down in minutiae that occasionally exasperated me.
The book is really three-in-one, with a series of unconnected dissertations at the end. Part One sets the scene, gives the background of the Spanish/Basque conflict, and finds Aguirre trapped in Belgium after the German occupation. I found this section maudlin, preachy, and repetitious.
Part Two is the meat of the story and shows that in addition to being earnest and whiny, Aguirre could often be very funny. In this section, Aguirre assumes the persona of the Panamanian Dr Alvarez with the help of a score of sympathetic Latin American diplomats and after much bureaucratic finagling, is able to leave Germany and its occupied territories via Sweden. Aguirre recounts many incidents during his residence in Berlin and Hamburg that leave the reader wondering just how he ever managed to get out without being discovered. There is the added benefit of Aguirre's first hand observations of ordinary life in Nazi Germany under wartime conditions.
The third part recounts his escape to Sweden, conditions in Sweden, the difficulty of leaving Sweden, then finally getting passage on a ship and having to undergo one last brush with the Gestapo on the way into the North Atlantic and onward to South America. Here he resumes his preachy hand-wringing but manages a few nice slaps at bureaucracy wherever he encounters it.
The reader can stop after Part Three unless he/she wishes to read through Aguirre's musings on a variety of topics, most of which touch on the postwar political dispensation in the world, but especially Spain. The Basque President is quite the thinker, naive in some ways but realistic and original in many others. When reading of Aguirre's thoughts on the role the spread of liberty will play in bringing world peace, I thought of George W Bush and the neocons. When he wrote of some of the reforms he was able to effect in the Spanish Basque provinces before he was exiled by the Falangist victory in the Spanish Civil War, I thought of socialism at its core ideal: a hand up, not a hand out. When he wrote of a meritocratic society with minimum standards of living for the working poor, I thought of a man who was in many ways ahead of his time. But at the end of that appendage I was left wondering why it is that any talk of Basque autonomy never includes those Basque provinces controlled by France?
Though I enjoyed Escape Via Berlin overall, I found that it lacks a unifying theme. Part of that may be the fault of the translators and part of it is surely the fault of the editors who freely admit in notes to bowdlerizing many passages to avoid offending certain unnamed groups. Despite the book's many faults,it should be of interest to anyone who is interested in the Basques.


handy guideReview Date: 2008-09-14


SF Chronicle Review from 9/12Review Date: 2006-09-13
"Once you're in the cancer world, everything's iffy," says one the main characters in Gerald Haslam's new novel, "Grace Period." That honest fatalism, informed by a medically undeniable grasp of mortality, pervades this book and makes it both a sad tale of ever-approaching loss and a moving story of love and redemption.
Marty Martinez is a Sacramento journalist in his mid-60s when, in the course of a few fast years, his son dies of AIDS, his wife leaves him and he is diagnosed with prostate cancer. So undone by his traumas, one evening he is sitting out in his backyard with a can of gasoline and a box of matches. But he soon enough realizes there is help for him yet. It comes in many forms: counseling, a support group, an uneasy return to his Catholic faith, and eventually it comes through the love of a woman, Miranda, who is also battling cancer, and the love of a family from whom he's been estranged.
There have been a lot of good books of late about aging and dying, and not all of them have been written by Philip Roth. Unlike Roth, Haslam is not much of a literary stylist, but his novel is a straightforward and unvarnished look at the struggles in cancer world. He fully immerses the reader in the excruciating particulars of living with and battling the disease. As if taking heed of Susan Sontag's exhortations in her famous essay "Illness as Metaphor," he seeks to rescue this all-too-common experience of cancer from what Sontag deemed the general perception of it being "obscene."
And so Haslam spares no details. Perhaps because the main character is a reporter, and one who will come to write about his battle with prostate cancer for his newspaper, there is an abundance of medical information that sometimes bogs down the narrative. He takes you very specifically through the many tests, check-ups, exams, chemo and hormone treatments, and post-op side effects (ever wonder about the workings of a penile pump?), and it can get a little clinical and monotonous.
But it also gives the novel authenticity. This is no slapped-together compilation of research. This is lived experience, the often tedious and painful routine of fighting sickness, an insider's look at the "ethnicity of the ill." Haslam captures the constant fluctuations, the increasingly ephemeral joys and, ultimately, the fateful resignation of Marty and Miranda in cancer world. Toward the end, Marty reflects, "The amazing thing to me about all this -- my health problems as well as hers -- was how matter-of-fact they'd become; there was no movie background music, no crescendos or diminuendos, just two people alive and responding as best they could to tough problems."
That said, the book does have its flaws. Some readers may be bored and even put off by the heavy reportorial vein of the narrative. Though Haslam knows he's writing fiction, and knows the "cut burn poison" particulars only work within the larger context of real human drama, too often that drama is mawkishly rendered and over-determined.
Difficult family relations are too easily resolved, hugs of forgiveness abound, and other than the two damaged lovers, the rest of the characters are paper-thin. If only the stress and strain and resentment that surface -- and sometimes in surprisingly ugly ways -- amid lingering illnesses could be as easily managed in real life as they are in this novel. If only borrowed time could be so reassuringly well spent and tidily ticked down. This is to say that the novel's secondary story lines lack true complexity.
Then there is Marty and Miranda's relationship with Catholicism. In the theology classes they attend, and later in one of Marty's investigative assignments, we get a neat little sampler of all the contemporary church issues plucked from the news. From pedophile priests to debates about homosexuality, the virgin birth and celibacy, none of this is especially fresh or well integrated. The mystery and vulnerability that arises when Marty, a self-described "foxhole Catholic," searches for spiritual comfort during his illness is too quickly co-opted by headlines. A better-realized and more personally oriented struggle with his faith would have added another, richer dimension to him.
But we all know there are books with obvious flaws that nonetheless seduce us. This, for me, was one of them. Perhaps I am simply a sucker for stories of perseverance and desperate love, but aren't we all? Haslam shows us that grace can indeed conquer the indignities and impoverishments of dying. By the book's end, I was genuinely moved, and I suspect you will be, too.
Adam Hill teaches literature at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo.
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