Related Vacation Book Subjects: Georgia
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Dade", sorted by average review score:

Conquering Bible Interpretation
Published in Paperback by Xulon Press (September, 2002)
Author: Dade Ronan
Average review score:

THE PERFECT BIBLE COMPANION
... This book equips you with the essential principles necessary to interpret the Bible for yourself with ease and accuracy. Find all the essential principles right at your fingertips. Topics include general, grammatical, historical, and theological principles of interpretation. A perfect Bible companion to help you Conquer Bible Interpretation! ...


From wilderness to metropolis : the history and architecture of Dade County, Florida, 1825-1940
Published in Unknown Binding by Metropolitan Dade County ()
Average review score:

An excellent overview of south florida architecture
South florida as a whole has a relitive short history and it is all presented in a fantastic format. AS must read for south floridians


Probability and Measure Theory
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt / Academic Press (December, 1999)
Authors: Robert B. Ash and Catherine A. Doléans-Dade
Average review score:

Exceptionally Clear
I first used this text in the earlier version, which comprises the first half of the book, in a one-year course in Hilbert Spaces and Lebesgue Measure theory when in the first year of grad school. The material is presented in a clearly written manner and the exposition is some of the clearest mathematical writing I've seen in a subject which is replete with textbooks.

Anyone who wants to be inaugurated into the "mysteries" of measure theory and the fine points of the rigorous theory of stochastic processes and the Ito integral, will do himself or herself a favor by using this text. If it is not assigned to your class and you have the extra cash, order it anyway. It is also well-suited for self-study.


Paradise Screwed: Selected Columns of Carl Hiaasen
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Pub Group (11 October, 2001)
Authors: Carl Hiaasen and Diane Stevenson
Average review score:

A crusader with a sense of humour
I love this man's writing! I started with his fiction and having devoured all there was of that at the time I stumbled on his first book of Miami Herald columns. I bought Paradise Screwed as soon as it was out.
The really exciting thing about Carl is that he takes on the corruption and the sleaze and the bizarre goings on in Florida and makes people aware of them through witty yet hard hitting writing. He isn't afraid to make waves and when you read this book you will begin to wonder about the greasing of the wheels in State politics.
He is passionate about his home state and what is happening to it and as a visitor to Florida on more than one occassion, he has really made me think about the affects of inconsiderate development and tourism.
But even if you aren't keen on any of that, the columns are clever and well written, so it's well worth the read.

What Michael Moore is to the nation, Hiaasen is to Florida
Another collection of "baseball-bat-to-the-forehead" columns in a similar writing style as Moore. Both men use biting satire and their wicked wit to tell you what they think, and are unafraid in doing so. Hiaasen is even more impressive I think because his substantive job is still journalism and yet he can find humor in real people and events as easily as in fiction.

These columns are a selection from over the last 20 years of events in South Florida. You don't have to go back any further than 2 years to Elian Gonzalez and the 2000 presidential election to know that there's enough grist-for-the-mill here to fill much more than one book on these two topics alone. Nevertheless Hiaasen reins himself in and spreads his verbal darts around. Topics covered include "Mayor loco", the soon-to-be-gone Marlins, Chads (not a person, those bits of paper, remember?) Dolphins (both the team and the ones that frequently drown offshore), Race Riots, a con artist doctor and a pet-hating extortionist. That's the more exotic stuff. Then there's the normal South Florida fare of crooked politicians, stupid state officials, assorted mobsters and mafia, drugs, guns, and general mayhem and madness. As Hiaasen said in a recent interview "all the paths of slime and disreputability seem to lead here."

The man is a Florida treasure and for those of us who live through what he writes about his humor is a saving grace. Very few of us can express it the way he does so he is our voice of reason saying yes, it's PARADISE SCREWED allright, but we're still alive we can laugh about it.

More Greatness from the Mencken of Greater Miami
I think that the previous customer review misses the point of this collection. Its predecessor, KICK ASS, was mostly intended to showcase Hiaasen's brilliance of style. PARADISE SCREWED is not aiming to be KICK ASS, PART TWO; it's not a gathering of columns that did not make the cut for the first volume. Instead, it expands outward to focus on issues. Its purpose is entirely different (as is evident from the title), and so is the principle of selection. The writing itself, though, is as biting and as crucial as that in the first collection. Both books are vital and essential.


Dade's Last Command
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Florida (January, 1995)
Authors: Frank Laumer and John K. Mahon
Average review score:

Before Custer There Was Dade
This book is the product of years of study and of walking over the ground of Dade's massacre. Unlike Custer, Dade left some survivors to tell the tale. Those of you familiar with the enormous literature on Custer will recognize the type of book "Dade's Last Command" is, a study of a single battle from as many angles as can be researched by the author. Yes, the last stand of Dade and his men mark the official opening of the Second Seminole War, a war that made and tarnished the reputations of Zachary Tayor and Winfield Scott, whose career streatched from the War of 1812 to the Civil War. But be clear this is a battle study centering around the end of Dade and his 108 men. So don't be mislead by the book jacket description.

Dark tragedy in the Florida wilds
I have just finished reading this excellent book, and I am certain that the scenes of the march and ultimate annihilation of Major Francis Dade's column by the Seminole Indians will haunt me for a long time to come, just as the movie version of this event, Naked In The Sun, did when I saw it as a child in 1957. However, unlike that film, this book is hard, unadorned reality, with the facts more incredible than any fictional trimmings. The Dade Massacre remains less than a footnote in the popular imagination only because the fall of the Alamo occurred less than 3 months afterwards; but Mr. Laumer's book will surely enlighten those who don't know about it as well as those who think they do, for the author has combed every possible avenue of research in putting together the widely scattered pieces---and often they are mere crumbs---of this story. The suspense and high drama is quite palpable, and the reader is made to feel as if he is one of Dade's soldiers as they are whittled away first on the road, and then within their pathetic log breastwork. The saga of survivor Ransom Clark, and how he somehow managed to limp and crawl his way back to Fort Brooke---over 60 miles in three days----despite multiple wounds, is truly incredible, and would not pass muster in a work of fiction. The only thing really lacking in the book is a map of the Florida of the period---1835---that would have helped readers unfamiliar with the landscape better understand where the events were taking place. However, a collection of contemporary maps and drawings of the immediate battlefield certainly make an understanding of the action there as clear as a bell; and rare portraits of some of the men involved, on both sides, provide an immediacy and a humanity to the history.

NIGHTMARE FOR THE HOLIDAY
This is a great book! researched exhaustively,and for 30 years the author writes this as if you are marching right beside the doomed column.You can hear the shuffle of the feet feel the tension as they march to their deaths,and above all you feel the forlorn hope diminish with each passing hour. A GREAT GREAT BOOK. A MASTERPIECE! I CANNOT PRAISE THIS TOO HIGHLY! A great book on a forgotten time and place. WISH TED TURNER would make this into a TNT ORIGINAL MOVIE!And follow the truth of the format. A VERY GOOD STORY!


Quest for Megalodon
Published in Paperback by Swan Pub Co (June, 1993)
Authors: Tom Dade and Pete Billac
Average review score:

Great, another MEG
Well, just when you thought it was safe to go to the bookstore, another laughable novel about a giant man-eating shark. Definitly a wannabe, if not incoherant copy of Jaws. When will this "Megaladon lives!" kick be over?

Ejoyable for quick summer thrills; not for realist buffs.
If you like fish stories that are "the bigger the better" without all the scientific jargon, then by all means read this book.


You Must Remember This
Published in Library Binding by Disney Press (February, 1997)
Authors: Karen L. B. Evans and Pat Dade
Average review score:

A sappy book with too much preaching makes for a boring read
I gave this book one star because you can't give a zero. I'm fifteen and my mother handed me this book because she thought it would be a good read. It was terribly boring and didactic. There are moments where the story could really haven taken off; however, the authors seemed weighted down in their attempt to create a "children's book." The subject/theme is really for young adults. These two adult writers should have realized that and carried on. I threw the book away after reading it. I want my money back.

P.S. It doens't help that I've read a play by Karen Evans called My Girlish Days. That was stupid, too. I think she's to blame for this book's banality.

P.P.S. Ms. Evans must have some real problems with her own childhood. It's all she seems to write about.


Access and Excellence: The Open Door College
Published in Paperback by Community College Press (Duplicate of AMAJC) (January, 1987)
Authors: John E. Roueche and George A. Baker
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Amanda Dade's New Year's Parade
Published in Library Binding by Turtleback Books (September, 2001)
Authors: Harriet Ziefert and S. D. Schindler
Average review score:
No reviews found.

1910 Dade CO, FL Federal Census
Published in CD-ROM by Allcensus, Inc. (01 June, 2001)
Author: Allcensus Inc.

Related Vacation Book Subjects: Georgia
More Pages: Dade Page 1 2