Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states Ada Adams Bannock Bear_Lake Benewah Bingham Blaine Boise Bonner Bonneville Boundary Butte Caldwell Camas Canyon Caribou Cassia Clark Clearwater Coeur_d'Alene Custer Dalton_Gardens Elmore Franklin Fremont Gem Gooding Hayden_Lake Idaho Idaho_Falls Jefferson Jerome Kootenai Latah Lemhi Lewis Lewiston Lincoln Madison Minidoka Moscow Mountain_Home Nez_Perce Oneida Owyhee Payette Pocatello Post_Falls Power Rexburg Shoshone Teton Twin_Falls Valley Washington
More Pages: Idaho Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Idaho", sorted by average review score:

Pure Gold
Published in Paperback by Cedar Fort (28 March, 2002)
Author: Warren Wassom
Average review score:

Pure Gold is golden
If you like a good adventure without all the profanity and sex then you will like this book. Clyde McFAdden is a very likeable character that you will naturally be drawn to. It is a plausible story with characters that are believable. The story immediately draws you in and puts you on the edge of your seat waiting to find out what happens to Clyde McFadden. The plot is very clever, especially the technology that is invented for the story. Warren Wassom has created an imaginative story full of adventure that is hard to put down. This book is an adventure you don't want to miss.


River Earth: A Personal Map (Northwest Voices Essay Series)
Published in Paperback by Washington State Univ Pr (May, 1999)
Author: John C. Pierce
Average review score:

I want to visit Jeru Creek
Next to mysteries, my favorite reading material is the essay. A book of essays by one author has special appeal because I get to see many sides of the author's personality. River Earth reveals a sensitive, caring man who has solid relationships with family and friends. He has a great sense of humor. His phrasing makes it easy to visualize him slipping and tripping over river rocks as he seeks out an elusive trout or running down the river bank to confront two workers laying white plastic pipe down the middle of his beloved river. For me, however, the playful stories are eclipsed by the poignant ones. By chance, I read "Who Am I?" within a couple of days of the tenth anniversary of my mother's death. I couldn't stop my tears.
John Pierce also describes paradise in this book. Paradise is a green place with a river and many chances for solitude and quiet reflection. The book contains photographs showing the author, some of the places already artfully described, family and friends. Beautiful illustrations, like the river on the cover, continue throughout the book. Both add to the character of the book.
Thank you John Pierce for the insights into your special places and feelings. I am buying a 2nd and 3rd copy to share with my friends.


Snake the Plain and Its People
Published in Paperback by Boise State Univ Bookstore (01 January, 1994)
Author: Todd Shallat
Average review score:

Snake is an excellent overview of this unique region from
Snake examines this unique region in southern Idaho from the perspectives of geology, history, anthropology and current politics. Snake combines excellent illustrations, graphics and photos with a very informative text. The book is a must buy for both natives and visitors who want to know more about the region.


A Stranger Here
Published in Library Binding by Harpercollins Juvenile Books (February, 1993)
Author: Thelma Hatch Wyss
Average review score:

Different...yet appealing.
A Stranger Here is not the type of book I usually read, I grabbed it at the library on an impulse. I was pleasantly suprised with the way Mrs.Wyss wove Jada's intricate personality and her relationship with everyone -including Starr Freeman's ghost- around her. Jada and Starr represent the things we can learn from those who lived, and died, before us; and they teach each other to appreciate the beauty around them. "Oh, Beauty are you not enough? Why then do I cry after Love?"


Strangers in the Forest
Published in Paperback by Washington State Univ Pr (September, 1993)
Authors: Carol Ryrie Brink and Mary E. Reed
Average review score:

an old favorite
I read the condensed Readers Digest version of this book years ago when I was in my early teens and loved it. I always thought it would make a good TV movie or mini-series akin to The Awakening Land with Elizabeth Montgomery. It's about homesteaders at the turn of the century, several very different people who have to make a place to live in the forest. They all have different motives, different experiences, and ultimately different outcomes. I highly recommend this book for anyone!


The Trail Book: Sun Valley and the Surrounding Area
Published in Hardcover by Peak Media Inc (March, 1997)
Authors: David Stilwill, Clarence Stilwill, Michael Cord, Mark Kashino, Rob McDonald, Peak Media Inc, and Inc Staff Peak Media
Average review score:

I wish other publishers would adopt this format!
Loose-leaf bound, so you can remove the pages you want to carry with you. Very clever. Covers the Sawtooth Wilderness and surrounding areas from Challis to Lowman to Ketchum. Includes detailed descriptions and good contour maps. Black-and-white photos.


Trails of Eastern Idaho
Published in Paperback by Trail Guide Books (01 June, 1998)
Authors: Margaret Fuller and Jerry Painter
Average review score:

Good reference, but lacks editorial comment
I find this book very helpful in locating trails. It has good descriptions of how to locate trailheads, including milage and Forest Service road numbers, but it lacks important comment about scenery and how one area compares to another. Also I would like to know the condition of the trails. Are they used by those repulsive four wheelers? Is this area a non-motorized use area or not? But other than that the descriptions of trails if very informative.


The Standoff (Wheeler Large Print Book Series)
Published in Hardcover by Wheeler Pub (August, 1995)
Author: Chuck Hogan
Average review score:

Very good for Freshman outing
"Standoff" takes the reader through a wild ride of hostage negotiation with all the bureaucracy that involves. From the local police, sheriff, US Marshalls, FBI agents, and every law enforcement agency in between, you really get an understanding of what must happen in these tense, unpredictable situations.

The story is told from the law's point of view throughout, and gives a good characterization of the politics of the agencies tugging and pulling for authority, attempting to work together in an explosive environment.

Hogan writes his main character, John Banish, well, although most of the supporting cast are underdeveloped. I would have liked to see him give more insight into the other side of the situation - the motivation of the hostage-taker is alluded to, but never dealt with in depth.

Overall, a suspenseful tale that kept me interested; and quite an achievement for a first time writer!

A good first outing by Hogan
The Standoff has some great tense, suspenseful scenes. Although I found some parts a tad dragged out, I would recommend this book to readers who enjoy learning deeply about main characters. I really understood and felt for the hero in this one. And one last thing, something I can never get enough of, a good ending

Hogan Humanizes Armed Conflict
An absolute gem! This story of a white supremacist's confrontation with the U.S. government could be taken from the headlines but is described on several levels. Chuck Hogan, in his initial published novel, humanizes the difficult concept of armed conflict. The mesmerizing quality is found in the realism of dialogue and the differing perspectives of all the main characters representing different branches of government and law enforcement. The different points of view and agendas come into conflict with each other and are driven by their personalities, past experiences, and personal demons, especially of the chief hostage negotiator, Special Agent Banish of the FBI. He fights his own personal Hell as he attempts to secure a safe surrender while manipulating the situation so the US Marshall or Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms will be blamed if anyone is killed or if anything goes wrong.

This is fast-paced, thrilling and suspenseful with enough depth and surprises that you'll think about it well after you've put it down. As added enjoyment, I suggest you also listen to the audio tape. Stacy Keach does a yeoman's job; his voice along with the accompanying music makes this a listenning experience of the first order. Both book and audio are highly recommended.


Idaho Atlas and Gazetteer
Published in Paperback by DeLorme Publishing (July, 2000)
Authors: Delorme and Delorme Publishing Company
Average review score:

So many errors!
I made the terrible mistake of touring Idaho with an old (1994) edition of the DeLorme Idaho Atlas. Fortunately I had a whole sackful of BLM and Forest Service maps to get me out of tight situations caused by relying on DeLorme's information. The atlas shows roads that are not there, and does not show roads that are there. The land management boundaries are incorrect in many crucial instances, and sites are drastically misplaced.

I very much like the additional topographical information in the new edition, but I also noticed they did not correct any of the cartographic errors. So-- fine for casual use or for general trip planning, but contact the BLM or Forest Service before you head out on the back roads.

good and bad
Good points: This atlas is the most available and easy to use topographical atlas on the market. It has helped me get into many off-highway areas with great experiences. The roadnames are particularly useful, as these are not on USGS topo maps. Road condition classification also seems to be more accurate than the outdated USGS quads. Bad points: DeLorme gives a false sense of accuracy. On the reverse side of the front cover they advise to measure distance in tenths of miles. No one should pretend to be this accurate at the scale they use. They do explain that the distance will be "slightly" more than measured. On windy roads this could be up to one more mile for every three. My biggest disappointment with the Idaho atlas came after I looked at DeLorme's atlases for Washington and Oregon. Although I have never used them for off-highway travel, it is plain to see that they are better scale, better detail, and there are more features and attractions shown. All the Idaho atlas is is an updated copy of the USGS 1:250K topo maps. Is Idaho not popular enough or what?

Great vacation planning tool
I use the Delorme Gazetteers, including this one, for planning my fishing trips every year. They include comprehensive coverage of the state in question with sufficient detail to identify all the major topological features one will find, including streams and lakes. Also, they show all the roads. One criticism is that they don't contain road mileages between locations, unlike a highway atlas. But, a highway atlas will not show topographic coutour lines, or indicate locations where one may launch kayaks or rafts, or show locations reputed to have good fishing. I keep a Delorme Gazetteer for each state in which I expect to travel on any extended drive. They enable me to find campgrounds (in the indexes and shown on the maps), roads, topography, and all the essentials to plan a trip.


The Case of the Missing Cutthroats: An Ecological Mystery
Published in Library Binding by Harpercollins Juvenile Books (June, 1900)
Author: Jean Craighead George
Average review score:

Case of the Missing Cutthroat
The book Case Of the Missing Cutthroat is the worst book I have ever read. There is no point in the story. me and my friends joke about suffering from the Jean Craighead George disease. By the way don't read this book.

Something fishy's going on around here
Originally titled HOOK A FISH, CATCH A MOUNTAIN, this is another Eco-Mystery from children's greatest nature writer, Jean Craighead George, author of JULIE OF THE WOLVES and MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN. However, this book never quite gets to level of those classics. The story concerns Spinner, a teenager who is taken on a fishing trip against her will. After she catches a huge, nearly extinct cutthroat troat, she ends up going on a wild adventure through the woods to solve the mystery. I never could get really into the book, as Spinner is not a very likeable character for most of the story and some of it is hard to understand. But great descriptions--like an exciting lightning storm on the side of a cliff to a dangerous grizzly bear attack--come to the rescue. Any young ecologist or naturalist will want to read this story. Don't forget the other Eco-Mysteries--WHO REALLY KILLED COCK ROBIN?, about a boy who must solve the mystery of the death of his town's feathered mascot; THE MISSING 'GATOR OF GUMBO LIMBO, which concerns a girl who must track down a majestic alligator in the Florida Everglades; and THE FIRE-BUG CONNECTION. Also, Ms. George's other eighty or so novels should be more rewarding than THE CASE OF THE MISSING CUTTHROATS.

This Is A Great Book!!!!!!!!
When Spinner and her dad go fishing for the weekend her dad promises her if she caught a whopper he would throw it back,but when she catches the family prize cutthroat trout her father keeps him. These kinds of fish are very rare in that part of the river so Spinner and her brave cousin Al set off to solve "The Case of the Missing Cutthroats"!


Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states Ada Adams Bannock Bear_Lake Benewah Bingham Blaine Boise Bonner Bonneville Boundary Butte Caldwell Camas Canyon Caribou Cassia Clark Clearwater Coeur_d'Alene Custer Dalton_Gardens Elmore Franklin Fremont Gem Gooding Hayden_Lake Idaho Idaho_Falls Jefferson Jerome Kootenai Latah Lemhi Lewis Lewiston Lincoln Madison Minidoka Moscow Mountain_Home Nez_Perce Oneida Owyhee Payette Pocatello Post_Falls Power Rexburg Shoshone Teton Twin_Falls Valley Washington
More Pages: Idaho Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22