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Races Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Races
The Race for Bandwidth: Understanding Data Transmission (Strategic Technology Series)
Published in Paperback by Microsoft Pr (1998-08)
Author: Cary Lu
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Average review score:

A "must have" for the lay man and professional alike.
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-13
An excellent explanation of what bandwidth is all about and what it means. Gives information not found in textbooks or industry documents. Answers such questions as why digital isn't always better than analog. Very well organized and treats subjects such as audio bandwidth and video bandwidth in different chapters. Filled with interesting tidbits, the book makes for some excellent reading. Some will see the book as leisure reading, others as something more serious. I saw it as both!

Bandwidth for Dummies-BUY THIS BOOK!
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-30
Wow, this is the best book I've ever read on a technological subject. If you are a non-technical person and want to know how your phone, cell phone, fax, modem,TV, radio, internet work in layman's terms; this is your book!. Better yet the book does all that in under 200 pages. Oh yeah, it also tells explains bandwidth and how we're never going to have enough despite what you may have heard about the coming "broadband revolution".

Although I've been involved in professional video production for the last 25 years in the non-technical area, I finally understand how a TV signal is transmitted and received after reading this book. I take back all the bad things I ever said about Microsoft, because they're the ones who published this outstanding book. I'm sadden that the author has past away. He had a unique ability to take very complicated stuff and explain it to liberal arts majors like myself and it's too bad he won't be around to write more. His clear thinking and economy of words is in very short supply in the technical book area...kind of like bandwidth.

Bandwidth made clear! An entire book about it!
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-02
If you've ever been puzzled by bandwidth or wanted to know more about it, this book is for you. For most of us, bandwidth is how much information we can get in front of us how quickly. But how does it happen? How can the same piece of copper wire that carries a low-grade voice signal to us at a mere four thousand bits per second also carry a high-quality mixture of images and text, even motion video, at over a million bits per second? What's the difference between the original bandwidth of radio broadcast frequency bands and bandwidth as we usually read about it in the popular media? Lu starts from the beginning, not neglecting the Stone Age, and carries us through the telegraph (including a widely-used system we had never heard of called the optical telegraph) into today's computer and telecommunication networks. In two chapters, "Thinking about Bandwidth" and "Looking at Bandwidth," he provides fascinating comparisons of bandwidths, proving, among other things, that it would be 640,000 times faster to fly 6 million CD-ROMs to Europe on a Boeing 747 than to upload them over the European E-1 lines under the Atlantic. But the book is practical, too, containing compact tables that define and compare various bandwidth measurements, starting with the hertz (cycles per second) for analog bandwidth and bps (bits per second) for digital bandwidth. Two chapters explain broadcast bandwidth, audio and video, the latter including brief explanations of TV standards, cable TV, color TV, and satellite TV. Datacasting is explained, too - how non-video data can be carried along with the video signal. In another long chapter, Lu explains Point-to-Point (rather than broadcast) Bandwidth, both wired and wireless transmission media and methods. A final chapter, devoted to bandwidth on the Internet, compares in human terms the ways to access the Internet (ISDN, DSL, cable modems, and wireless and satellite). Lu, the former science and technology editor for the Children's Television Workshop in the U.S., hopes that future bandwidth growth will be filled by better science content for children. He wonders whether bandwidth will be shared fairly among the world's peoples, rich and poor. He notes that bandwidth bottlenecks will persist and that the amount of bandwidth required for widespread video-on-demand and full-motion videoconferencing is not likely to arrive in this generation.

Cary Lu, a well-known science writer and editor, died shortly before the book was completed and final sections were written by his friends, New York Times computer columnist Stephen Manes and Adam Engst, author of the Internet Starter Kit series. Without in any way stinting on the details, this book aims for the general reader who needs help with technical explanations. It's also written by someone who has thought carefully about the significance of bandwidth. At whatis.com, where we continually fine-tune our definition of bandwidth, The Race for Bandwidth is a book that we have been unconsciously waiting for. Now that it's here, we plan to keep it very handy.

No matter how much you know, you'll learn something here
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-18
A great read -- very informative, not too technical (or, more properly, technical, but without jargon), and wide-ranging. Stephen Manes and Adam Engst deserve our thanks for shepherding it to completion after Cary Lu's death in 1997.

I find it unfortunate that the book is published as part of Microsoft Press's "Strategic Technology" series, whose other titles seem to be much more geek-specific: "Understanding ActiveX and OLE", "Understanding Electronic Commerce", "Understanding Intranets". Perhaps they are also aimed at a general audience, but since Lu's book covers so much about non-computing activities such as telegraphy, broadcasting, telephones, and even shipping and air flight -- stuff that should be interesting to people who aren't that computer-focused -- it seems that it's been relegated to a publishing ghetto from which it deserves to escape.

The cover doesn't help much, describing it as the "guide to key technologies behind fast Internet connectivity, wireless communications, video conferencing, and interactive television." It's more than that. It's a guide to so much that we use already today, not just these technologies of most people's future. The most interesting sections for me so far have discussed FM radio and shutter telegraphs, for instance.

This book should not live in the Computing section of bookstores, but in the general science section. It will surely outlive every other title in the

"Strategic Technology" series, because it deals with more universal topics in a less time-limited way. It would be sad to see it in the ubiquitous computer title remainder bins in a year or two, when it should really continue to be printed like other wonderful general science books such as James Gleick's "Chaos" or Stephen Jay Gould's essay collections.

It's also a shame that Lu wasn't around to promote the book. I think it could have reached a wider audience if he were able to do the promotional and talk-show circuit to entice people with its broad scope and easy fascination.

Don't think of this as just another "neato new technology" book. The book is good enough and concise enough that I read it voraciously in a little over a day. It's a miracle of brevity that rivals Strunk and White's "The Elements of Style" guide to writing good English, and E. Annie Proulx's novels.

I'm amazed at how much is packed into a relatively slim volume, and how much of that information likely won't require revision for a long time. In particular, the early chapters discussing what bandwidth is and how it plays into the history of communications are, with a few exceptions such as pricing examples, pretty timeless.

Other sections seem (understandably, given the author's death before completion) a bit rushed and muddled, and could use clearing up. Some of the discussions of digital cell phone technology, and particularly granularity, seem dropped in from somewhere else, without proper context or explanation -- as if surrounding parts were missing.

The glossary is sometimes helpful, sometimes tautological -- having separate listings for each acronym, when the full definition is often a line or two away, also seems redundant.

Despite its flaws, I encourage you to buy it sight unseen. Not only will it outlast most more expensive technology titles you could purchase, it will give you a broad understanding which those books can't touch.

Even if you work for the phone company and live and breathe bandwidth every day, you'll certainly learn something -- such as why the world's best AM radio is made in New Zealand, that 18th century French optical telegraphs had bandwidths of a fraction of a bit per second, or that someone with graduate degrees in Physics and Biology once worked on "Sesame Street".

Races
A Race of Singers: Whitman's Working-Class Hero from Guthrie to Springsteen (Cultural Studies of the United States)
Published in Paperback by The University of North Carolina Press (2000-09-11)
Author: Bryan K. Garman
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Average review score:

Stimulating, Challenging, Fascinating and Important
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-19
This is a superb book. Its very well written and exceptionally well researched and thought through. Anyone who's interested in the work of Springsteen, Guthrie and Whitman or the liberatory potential of popular culture will find this book fascinating. I read it like a thriller - staying up all night.

Garman works from a rigorously principled political position which leads him to be very even handed in his assesment of the achievments and failures of the subjects of his study. This is no hagiography but it also has none of the self righteous contempt for the popular that infects so much cultural studies.

This is exemplary work.

Expanding popular music horizons
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-26
Bryan Garman's book provides an indepth study of those singer-songwriters who, according to the author, follow in Whitman's footsteps. He analyzes Woody Guthrie and Springsteen's work thoroughly. The consideration of Guthrie's "hurt song" is fascinating. The author also makes a good case for expanding our horizons beyond the white male heterosexual dominant order. I was rather taken aback to learn that some of my old favorite English folk club singalong songs smacked of homoeroticism. In particular, we are told that Tom Paxton's "Rambling Boy" is "a love song that contains and expresses a homoeroticism that permeated the work of socially engaged artists from Whitman to Traubel, Hughes to Guthrie" (p 159). Gosh, I wonder what Paxton would say about that! I agree with Mr. Garman, however, that much of this New Left rhetoric marginalizes women. That is why folks like Ani Di Franco seem far more engaging and even revolutionary than Springsteen. A Race of Singers has proved an invaluable book for me as I prepare my PhD dissertation at a Spanish university. I recommend it to anyone studying contemporary folk music and its place in recent history.

Very well written
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-26
Garman's analysis of Springsteen, Dylan, Guthrie, and Whitman is very provocative. Especially his insights into Springsteen and the way in which his music played off against (or was interpreted as being in sync with) Reagan's politics, and pop culture in the 80s, such as Rambo. Definitely a worthwhile read for someone who considers her or himself a fan of any of the aforementioned singers, or someone interested in an in-depth analysis of the politics of these singers.

New Academic Insight on Springsteen
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-21
As a cultural figure of the late 20th century Bruce Springsteen has long been admired as well as the object of derision in some circles. Garman's work places Springsteen in a context far removed from the fickle nature of fame. By linking Springsteen with Guthrie and with Whitman Garman allows us to appreciate Springsteen as far more than his icon status as "the boss", but rather as the latest in a long line of cultural critics who allow us to "hold a mirror up to nature" as Shakespeare had Hamlet say long ago. Garman's book is not just for an admirer of Springsteen, but also for anyone with an appreciation for social commentary and its long rich history in the US.

Races
Race to the Moonrise
Published in Paperback by Western Reflections Publishing, Inc. (2006-06-08)
Author: Sally Crum
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Average review score:

Ditto!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-25
The previous reviewers said it all; this book is great! I used it with my Honors Social Studies and Language Arts class, and you could have heard a pin drop! Well done, Sally Crum!

Exciting, fascinating, exceptionally well written.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-07
Race To The Moonrise is a carefully researched adventure tale of two young Mogollon trader children who run an exciting race against the full moonrise in prehistoric (1200 A.D.) northern Mexico and southwestern U.S. Little Basket, the young girl prophetess and her brother Long Legs make the arduous journey from their village in northern Mexico to the area of Chimney Rock and Finger Rocks, near the Four Corners area of today, before the 19th full moonrise to participate in a religious ceremony. All details are carefully researched and help authenticate this exciting children's educational action adventure book. Note: Race To The Moonrise was approved for use with Native American children by the Intertribal Cultural Committee of the Council for Indian Education. It is fascinating to follow the ebb and flow of this exciting tale. So much of early Native American prehistory is not known, yet what can be surmised of these ancient MesoAmericans is both intriguing and of enduring value to the young people of today. Race To The Moonrise is a fine work to honor one's ancestors with.

Race to the Moonrise
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-31
Race to the Moonrise, by archaeologist Sally Crum, is a wonderful resource for teachers teaching the history and cultures of the Southwest and Colorado. It is a fictional story which contains a vivid picture of the cultures of the Southwest from Casa Grande to Chimney Rock in Colorado. I used it with my fourth grade students to enable them to visualize the people and their lifestyle, compare the environments, weapons, religions, clothing, tools, foods, building styles, use of natural resources, trade, household objects, and travel of the Pre-Puebloan people. The story is appropriate for fourth grade and above and through a fictional narrative with carefully researched background, keeps students interested and learning throughout. The author has also published a teacher's guide with questions and activities to use with the book. I would recommend Race to the Moonrise to other teachers. It has been a great addition to my unit on Colorado History.

It is a wonderful book for any age level
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-29
I have a really difficult time reviewing children's books. Until now. I have just finished "Race to the Moonrise: An Ancient Journey" by Ouray, CO author Sally Crum. It is a wonderful book. It was written for the fourth grade level, but let me tell you, I think readers of any age will not only enjoy the book but will finish it with a greater understanding of native American culture and feel good about having read it. The setting of the book is around 1200 AD and centers around Little Basket, a young girl with some very special powers, and her brother, Long Legs. These two, with their uncle, embark on a journey from their home in Mexico to what is now southwestern Colorado. The purpose of the journey, which takes them through the country of the Mogollon of New Mexico, the Hohokam of the Gila and Salt River Basins, the Sinagua of Wupatki Pueblo, the Hopi, and the Chaco Canyon, Aztec, Mesa Verde and Chimney Rock Pueblo peoples, is to save their village. Besides being a great read, the book is impressively accurate in its description of the native American cultures, and geographic and archaeological places which exist today. On a recent trip which included many of those places I was amazed at the author's accuracy. Do Little Basket and Long Legs save the village? To be sure, it's not here today. But then, when a little girl has special powers and a strong, brave, and protective brother...who knows? Sally Crum is a working archaeologist and has worked for numerous national parks and monuments over the past 16 years. The book has been approved for use with Native American children by the Intertribal Cultural Committee of the Council for Indian Education and published by Western Reflections Inc., so you know the quality is second to none. This is a wonderful, enchanting book. It is truly for children of all ages...right up into geezerhood!

Races
Race Work: The Rise of Civil Rights in the Urban West (Race and Ethnicity in the American West)
Published in Hardcover by University of Nebraska Press (2005-08-30)
Author: Matthew C. Whitaker
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Average review score:

A Long Overdue Study of Race Relations in the West
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-29
In Whitaker's heavily researched and well-documented study of the struggle for African American equality and rights in Phoenix, he proves without a doubt that racial discrimination was not confined to the South and some Northern cities during the latter half of the twentieth century as is commonly believed, but thrived in the West as well.
However, Whitaker's study does not focus on activist groups or civil rights legislation as one might expect. Instead he looks at the "race work" of the Ragsdales, a wealthy and influential black Phoenician couple who had achieved their career goals against all odds and through their own perseverance. Whitaker chronicles their rise to prominence, but more importantly, examines their contributions to their community and to the civil rights movement, as well as the influence and knowledge they imparted on colleagues and activists.
Their personal experiences along with that of other black Phoenicians provide compelling, but disturbing evidence of racial discrimination in Phoenix from the 1940s through the 1990s in areas such as housing, employment, and public accommodations. Whitaker also includes some discussion of the controversial MLK Holiday issue that earned Arizona the reputation as a racist state during the late '80s and early '90s (as a Californian, I know that Arizona continues to have this reputation in the minds of many people here today).
Dr. Whitaker's book not only helps to fill a gap in the literature on the Western civil rights movements, it also expands the discussion of civil rights from the activists and ministers to other members of the black (and sometimes Hispanic and Jewish) communities who generally do not get recognized for the efforts.
Whitaker cannot discuss every aspect of civil rights and race relations in Arizona during the late twentieth century, but his book is an excellent place to start. Hopefully "Race Work" will encourage more scholars to research this relatively unexplored area of inquiry and expand on the issues Whitaker brings up. Perhaps even more significantly, "Race Work," if read widely, also has the potential to cause many Arizonans, and Americans in general, to re-examine their own attitudes and feelings about race, if they have even examined them at all.

Race Work Review
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-20
Race Work fills a much needed void on the topic of civil rights in the American West. Dr. Whitaker has written a very readable and insightful book on this topic. Arizona has been overlooked for its trailblazing in the areas of school desegregation, and integration of housing and public facilities. This book is a tribute to Dr. Lincoln Ragsdale, and his wife Eleanor. This is a must read for anyone interested in civil rights, historical perspectives of the American West, and biographies.

Race Work is fresh, astute and long overdue!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-18
Scholars are finally beginning to recognize that African American history, the history of the civil rights movement, and the intersection of race, class and gender in U.S. history, can be examined in areas west of the Mississippi River! Whitaker's work is the latest in a growing body of literature in this area. His book is original, well-researched, and readible. More importantly, it truly offers readers a dramatic and colorful history of African Americans and "race work" in the American west...a region still ripe for further study.

African American Struggle and the New American West
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-17
This is the most important book on African Americans in the West in recent years and builds excellently on the scholarship of Quintard Taylor and others.
Dr. Whitaker shows how the Ragsdale's livelihood came through the mortuary business, but was not a dead end for the family, in fact it infused them and the African American community in Phoenix with the lifeblood of cultural and economic resistance and eventually the Valley with changes of integration. The Ragsdale's lives read as a textbook example of change and struggle as their stories are so intertwined with the national narrative for racial equality. Both Lincoln and Eleanor grew up with strong notions of "race work" the idea that you have a responsibility not only to succeed, but to help others in your community succeed too. Lincoln was a Tuskegee airmen and later part of an experiment to see about the integration of the Air force before following in the footsteps of his parents and entering the funereal business. Eleanor was a schoolteacher, prior to leaving her paying work to raise children and focus on the family's business interests.
As the Ragsdale's tried to break into the Phoenix economy and community they found closed doors and prohibitive racial barriers at every corner in the form of segregation and institutional racism. Through "education, entrepreneurship, political activism, integrationism, and philosophy of non-violent protest" the Ragsdale's helped to desegregate businesses, schools and social institutions throughout Phoenix and the Valley of the Sun. This was largely achieved through their social activism and leadership in groups like the NAACP, again tying them to the larger US historical narrative.
This work is very important as it dispels the historiographical myth that African Americans were not Westerners. Instead, it shows how African Americans fought the same kinds of racism and segregation as their counterparts in other regions, but with much less national support. The fight for the Ragsdales was carried out through the strong personalities of a few individuals in the Phoenix Valley, using tactics of national organizations within community associations.
This is an outstanding work and should be used in classrooms of the US West and courses dealing with race relations, as well as community histories. This work is both impressive and comprehensive and is a must own for general readers and scholars alike!

Races
The Race/Eagle's Wings/Go for the Glory/Kentucky Dreamer/Call for Courage (Golden Filly 1-5)
Published in Paperback by Bethany House Publishers (1993-06)
Author: Lauraine Snelling
List price: $29.99
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Average review score:

Great series!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-14
I read these books as a teenager and loved them. They dealt with real life and covered a spectrum of emotions. Reading these books actually helped me deal with issues in my own life. I highly recommend the whole series!

Golden Filly Series
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-28
The Golden Filly series was absolutely fantastic! I would highly recommend this series. You will be blessed in a very special way and inspired by these books whether you're a Christian or not. I will definitely reread and save these books for the rest of my life. I've read a lot of books, but none have touched me in the same way as this series has. If you love horses and enjoy reading about a person's life, even if it is fiction, you'll love these books.

It was great!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-04
I have read all 10 books in this series. They are great! I would not put a book down once I started reading it! THe longest it took me too read one book was 3 days! I wish there was 10 more books! I encourage everyone too read this series!I put my books up in my hope chest to save for my kids. If i ever have kids that is!

Great series!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-15
Started reading this series in 5th grade and I am now in college but I will never forget this series. You will laugh and you will cry but you will definetly be impacted by Trish's story.

Races
The Racial State: Germany 1933-1945
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1991-11-29)
Authors: Michael Burleigh and Wolfgang Wippermann
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Average review score:

Excellent book to help one understand how this happened.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-26
Many Americans can't understand how Germany developed a racial state in the midst of modernism. This book gives vivid insight into the mechanisms & development of fascism. The National Socialist Party didn't just happen. The machinery of the state developed under the right conditions with the help of many non-military individuals, including both professors & doctors.

Not only is this book interesting for its historical information, reading it enlightens the reader to more recent fascist development. After reading this book, you will never say it can't happen here.

Useful, enlightening text
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-01
This insightful text takes several perspectives in analysing the radical social engineering project known as National Socialism. Although not all of the Nazis' victims were racial 'undesirables,' all came under the boot in one way or another as a way of advancing that racial project. Wippermann and Burleigh have done an impressive job in exploring this theme, approaching it from Nazi policy to broad implementation, as well as looking at the refashioning of society by segments along Nazi lines.

The concept of the untranslatable _Volksgemeinschaft_ can be somewhat difficult to convey to students in our atomised and pluralised culture. Not only does this text provide "thick description" of this social construct, but it also supplies a useful framework for comparative analysis without resorting to useless relativising and hierarchising of suffering. Highly recommended as a classroom text for undergraduate level and above.


Extremely Informative and Interesting
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-04
Techinically I was forced to read this book for a history cause I'm taking. However, instead of reading all the other source too, I read the whole thing instead of just the assignments for this book. If you have any interest in the Holocaust, this book is a must. The integration of documents and survivor's account gives the information alot of different perspective that really helps to better understand a situation that is so unimanigable.

Only in Germany?
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-31
This is an excellent book and I recommend it to anyone interested in the institutionalization of National Socialist racialism. However, I must disagree that Germany was unique in this. One has only to look around to see that the United States is pursuing similar social policies under the guise of "fairness" or "tolerance" as are all the Western democracies--which should tell you something about democracy.

Races
Rebound
Published in Hardcover by Marshall Cavendish Children's Books (2006-10)
Author: Bob Krech
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Perfect book for Teens who like sports and for those who just love a good story!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
The characters in the story grow on you throughout the book. The become real and their problems become real. When the book is finished, you want more. It is excellent and for teachers who teach in the Middle School and High School your students will love this book. In the school in which I teach, the book hardly stays on the shelf. The personal story of a boy who wants disparately to be a part of a basketball team but he must overcome obstacles, one of which is prejudice. A delicate subject handled extremely well by the author.

Whirl
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-18
Heart-thumpingly terrific! Fast-paced court action, and solid, credible off-court high school experiences. Krech knows kids. A real winner!

Satisfying story of sports interactions and change.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-10
Bob Krech's REBOUND tells of basketball dreams, a Polish boy's determination to fight prejudice to make the team, and a new coach who allows him to compete. As Ray's game improves he uncovers truths about prejudice and appearances which will change his life in this satisfying story of sports interactions and change.

Courtesy of Teens Read Too
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-04
Ray Wisniewski is growing up in the Polish-American town of Greenville, New Jersey. His game is basketball, but he is in the minority. All the black kids play basketball. Ray's supposed to be into wrestling like the white kids.

Basketball - Ray lives and breathes basketball. He plays pick-up games and organized ball, whatever kind of game he can rustle up. His only disappointment is that he has never been able to make the varsity team. He tries out and plays his best, but Coach Malovic never picks him. Finally, during Ray's senior year a new coach is hired, and Ray is suddenly one of the starting five.

Another surprise is the attention Ray is getting from the cutest and most popular girl in school, Stacy. He never considered even talking to her -- much less dating her -- but his luck is changing. It isn't until his first date with Stacy that Ray begins to realize that some people are bothered by the fact that he has perhaps crossed some sort of line by playing basketball instead of choosing the more "white" path of joining the wrestling team. Even Walter, his best friend, seems to be keeping his distance.

Early on, REBOUND is non-stop basketball action. Bob Krech shows Ray playing constantly in an effort to make the high school team. As the book progresses, another dimension begins to appear -- prejudice. Racial tension begins to rear its ugly head between players, friends, coaches, and parents. Ray finds out that not everyone is happy with just basketball and the competition on the court. The real world and its sometimes hateful nature cast a shadow over his success.

Readers who enjoy good basketball play-by-play action will be hooked at the beginning of REBOUND. Hopefully, they will connect with Ray as a person, too, and stick around to see what lurks beneath the surface of the basketball action.

Reviewed by: Sally Kruger, aka "Readingjunky"

Races
Reforging the White Republic: Race, Religion, and American Nationalism, 1865-1898 (Conflicting Worlds: New Dimensions of the American Civil War)
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (2007-02)
Author: Edward J. Blum
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Average review score:

How the South lost the war and religion helped it win the peace
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
This book is required reading for anyone who wants to understand why Reconstruction failed, when it was working so well in the beginning, and why the South won the peace after losing the Civil War. This outstanding book takes you through the transformation period of the United States after the Civil War. It starts out discussing the pain of the nation over the death of Abraham Lincoln, describes the hopeful northern missionary teaching work among African Americans in the South, and then moves on to show how "temperance reform, the yellow fever outbreak, and the Great Awakening were crucial to remaking the American nation in the late nineteenth century."

Many Americans were raised in a school system that perpetuated the myth that Reconstruction failed because of the misdeeds of northern carpetbaggers, southern scalawags and illiterate former slaves. Not only does this book dispel that myth, it gives you a blow by blow account of what went wrong, among a well-meaning nation of abolitionists, who cared about the freedom of slaves and wanted to forever do away with the "peculiar institution" of slavery. Although this book may appear academic in nature, it is very easy to read, and what is more, it should be required reading for every citizen of the United States. It tells the sad tale of how and why Reconstruction failed, and it shows the circumstances that allowed the white South to impose one hundred years of de facto slavery after the Civil War. Read this book and you will understand the lies we were told in high school. After you read this book, you will never stop talking about it with friends and family.

This review applies to both the hardback and paperback editions of the book, even though the reviews only appear under one or the other, not both. I have chosen to review this under the paperback version because it is still in print.

A different view of Civil War Reconstruction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-17
In Reforging the White Republic Blum takes a different angle at exploring the post Civil War/Reconstruction era. He writes on the different roles religion played in attempting or not attempting to reconstruct the United States. The book flows well and avoids verbose and complicated language that usually turns readers off. It is startling to learn of the different stances religions and religious leaders took, in terms of race relations between whites and African Americans, after the war. Between hypocrisy and outright dedication and heroics, the challenges of reuniting a nation are examined in Blum's work. This is an asset in the college classroom.

A Must Read for American History Buffs
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-17
Drop any preconceptions you may have had about the social climate following the Civil War in America. Historian Blum does an excellent job of not simply giving you a page by page analysis of why Reconstruction faltered in America; he also explains how religion, nationalism and white idenetity played huge roles(negative and positive)in the successes and failures of Reconstruction. Blum has decided to keep his analysis more centered on how the cultures of the white and black Americans of the North and South continued to meet and change themselves in order to keep pace with times. This book will allow you to see the struggle of maintaining belief systems rather than that of an Army. The battle fought in the psyches of Americans following the Civil War was just as important as those played out on the battle fields.

Essential Added Reading
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-14
If you ever have a class in American Religious History or Church History it is worth including this even if it's not on the syllabus. It is valuable info overlooked; fully footnoted with plenty of quotes revealing the rest of the story regarding American legends like Beecher, Beecher Stowe, D. L. Moody, et al. If you wonder how people can be abolitionist but during reconstruction flip so that they are more interested in forgiving rebels who've committed treason than justice and advocacy for freedmen, this will help you understand. You will also be exposed to the heroism of whites who went South to live and act redemptively in the face of repudiation and true danger.

Races
Road to Riches: The Great Railroad Race to Aspen
Published in Paperback by Western Reflections Publishing Co. (2003-05-19)
Authors: Cathy Clamp and C. T. Adams
List price: $12.95
New price: $10.49
Used price: $1.99

Average review score:

An enthralling, original, deftly woven tale
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-12
The collaboration of Cathy L. Clamp and C. T. Adams, Road To Riches: The Great Railroad Race To Aspen is an historical novel set in late 1800s America, and about the men of the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad who put their backs into a no-holds-barred race against the Colorado Midland Railroad to determine who would be the first to reach Aspen Colorado in 1887, and with that achievement, reap the rich rewards of serving as transportation for tourists, businessmen, and anyone who would buy a ticket. An enthralling, original, deftly woven tale of cut-throat competition, backstabbing, war against the elements, amazing human feats and so much more, Road To Riches is exceptionally well crafted and highly recommended reading.

enjoyable read...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-30
Road to Riches is an enjoyable book, with a flair for western United States history mixed with a nicely woven tale of humanity. Ms. Clamp and Ms. Adams have succeeded in bringing the trials and tribulations of crossing the Rocky Mountains to life. The sources cited and historical documents provided only add to the scope of the story. A must-read for railroad enthusiasts everywhere!

Road to Riches: The Great Railroad Race to Aspen
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-29
This book is superb in combining historical events and the personal challenges leading to the construction of a railroad line to Aspen. An outstanding representation of the race between competing companies. The photographs from that period are very interesting and help 21st Century readers better understand some of the obstacles. I would highly recommend this book.

Road to Riches: Great RR Race to Aspen
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-27
I have read voraciously for decades and have frequently found that an historical novel can be a great read. Such is the case, here, with Road to Riches: The Great Railroad Race to Aspen. The authors have picked a great historical topic which would have stood on its own AND they added compelling fiction to raise it to the level of a "great read."

Races
SAFE : The Race to Protect Ourselves in a Newly Dangerous World
Published in Hardcover by (2005-02-01)
Authors: Martha Baer, Katrina Heron, Oliver Morton, and Evan Ratliff
List price: $24.95
New price: $2.64
Used price: $2.63

Average review score:

Well thought out plans for today
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-27
This is an excellent book to inform persons with above average intellect regarding modern technology's ability to keep us safer in today's world. Every chapter is interesting and, it seemed, every sentence is packed with information. The book approaches safety from many different areas, and probably every person interested in the overall topic will say "Ah, I didn't think of that." Take your time reading this one, as there is so much information regarding the people and their ideas in several areas. My possible only complaint was there may have been too much information to digest - my reason for only giving it a four...

All the high-level risks and efforts to protect the public
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-05
It's difficult to easily peg the appropriate place for Safe: The Race To Protect Outselves In A Newly Dangerous World. It is equally important to health libraries, political and social science collections, and surveys of terrorism. It's the first to explore the work being done around the world in areas of security and defense, and the mechanisms which might thwart efforts to increase safety in the world. Safety covers all the high-level risks and efforts to protect the public in a post-911 world.

What We Should Know About Our Methods for Combatting Terror
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-03
For the reader interested, but not expert in technologies, this is a fascinating account of the wide range of methods available or under development for combatting the terrorist threat. Some of the information is quite surprising, revealing the inadequacies of some conventional wisdom about appropriate ways of preventing or responding to terrorist attacks and ways in which we fail to take full advantage of familiar tools. Most impressive is the eminently readable manner by which the authors have made many advanced technologies and systems understandable to the lay reader. This will be a valuable reference book to assist the reader in the future to process news and discussions of public policy.

Interesting Information!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-02
This book is filled with fascinating facts about our attempts to stop terrorism. I would like to thank the wonderful people that we read about in this book for making our country a safer place!


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