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

American Revolution
Published in School & Library Binding by Franklin Watts, Incorporated (March, 1989)
Author: Carter
Average review score:

The American Revolution
This book is a straight-forward account of the American Revolution. It is fast paced and informative. There is enough personal drama to keep it interesting, but not so much as to bog down the flow. A perfect book to give basic information about the war without specific battle by battle gory details. Great for those with "non-military" interest.


The Amount to Carry: Stories
Published in Hardcover by Picador (February, 2003)
Author: Carter Scholz
Average review score:

Kafkaesque? Absolutely! But also Ivesian.
First, let me thank J. Scott Morrison, fellow Amazon.com reviewer, for bringing this collection of short stories by Carter Scholz to my attention. The title story, "The Amount to Carry," resonates with me to a degree to which Scott is fully aware. And, since this title story is not only one to which I can personally relate, but also the best story in an anthology of excellent stories overall, I'll save a good portion of my commentary for an in-depth discussion of this story, for the end.

Scholz's stories are both genre-bending and mind-bending. The "credits" page states that a number of them had previously been published in various science fiction magazines and anthologies. Since these are publications that I don't routinely read, Scholz arrives at my reading desk as a brand new (to me) author. And he is a fascinating writer; make no mistake about it.

One is hard-pressed to describe the type of writer that Scholz is, other than, perhaps, post-modernist experimental. No one story in this book could ever serve to pin him down; they cover too much ground for that to happen. Suffice it to say that Scholz has an imagination that runs wild. Further, it should be said that he is a tremendously gifted writer, even in those stories that do not resonate strongly with the reader.

If there is an overarching theme to his writings here - and I have my doubts about this - it is his use of irony, combined with his ability to play games with the nuances of time and the physics of the real world, in the sense of what these attributes mean in reality. (The results are often more surreal than real, needless to say.) But each story is so different from the others, and each is such a unique standalone setpiece, that it is an ill-begotten attempt on my part to categorize the uncategorizable through oversimplification.

Some stories remind one of what was so great about Rod Serling's "Twilight Zone" series of tales. "Altomira," for example, places the current-day narrator, one Bernard Vogel, an art historian struggling to make his academic bones, in the time frame and world of Jan van Eyck. Vogel's labors to understand the identities and placement of two background subjects in one of Eyck's most famous paintings has a nice, but unpredictable, twist of an ending. Similarly, "Mengele's Jew" is a rather manic take-off on the famous "Schroedinger's cat" paradox. (This is the famous "gedanken" ["thought"] experiment of Erwin Schroedinger regarding whether a cat, placed inside a box with a radioactive pellet which, when it decays, will kill the cat, is at any given moment "dead or alive" in the absence of observing the cat's state directly. The paradox lies in the meaning of the terms "observation" and "measurement" as they relate to quantum physics.) Suffice it to say that Mengele, in this revisionist approach to history, is treated rather poetically in the final analysis. Those readers having some quantum physics knowledge are sure to have their own wavefunctions collapse in roars of laughter at the twist Scholz gives this "paradox."

The stories not particularly amenable to the "Twilight Zone" setting can be equally mind-stretching. In "Travels," we meet up with the spirit of Marco Polo, as the spirit's thoughts travel outward in the galaxy, carrying on a conversation with a sentient computer lodged on a small planet in orbit about a dead star. The computer's gain is Polo's loss all the while the colloquy carries on. In "The Nine Billion Names of God," Scholz places himself at the crossroads of science fiction history, having a dialog with his editor over whether or not his retelling of the famous Asimov story is "original" work.

Scholz has chosen to save the best until last, as have I: the title story, "The Amount to Carry." This is as fine a flight of fancy as I think I've ever read, and the extent to which it resonated with me is incalculable. I can only consider Scholz as a "kindred spirit" in the matter of Charles Ives for having both the imagination and the knowledge of biographical detail that makes the story "work" for me the way it does.

The story finds Ives, Franz Kafka and Wallace Stevens in Berlin in 1921, for a convention of insurance executives. It is a matter of fact that all three - composer, writer and poet - "put food on the table" by working in the insurance industry. (In point of fact, Ives became very wealthy in his day job as insurance executive, and his pamphlet "The Amount to Carry" was the origin of what we call "estate planning," using whole life insurance as the means for building annuities.)

But this insurance convention is merely a plot device for Scholz to take an ultimate flight of fancy into the realm of sheer conjecture regarding Ives's fortunes as a composer during his active composing life. Kafka is there for the purpose of bringing to Ives's attention the Munich performance, ten years earlier, of Ives's Third Symphony, conducted by Gustav Mahler. (Stevens's role in the story is less essential, but nonetheless wry in its own way.)

Only someone deeply interested in the full story of this particular "twist of fate" would have the audacity to fold it into a story. And only one with an intimate knowledge of all the facts - about both Ives and the Mahler connection, and about Ives's personal life - could fold into the story such a wealth (and warmth) of detail that Scholz has. (There are only one or two very minor solecisms. Given Scholz's research, even this small number comes as a mild surprise.) The story succeeds on every level, and leaves me with the thought that Scholz and I somehow inhabit parallel universes. Or perhaps the same universe, save for the fact that we have yet to meet.

Carter Scholz, call home. I'll be glad to take your call.


Annie Bananie and the Pain Sisters
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday (October, 1998)
Authors: Leah Komaiko and Abby Carter
Average review score:

The Pain Sisters - lying hurts, too!
A beginning chapterbook which tells of Libby's plan to get into "The Pain Sisters," a group where it's two members have had numerous injuries. After faking a gall stone procedure, Libby realizes that lying hurts more than injuries.


Another Part of the Twenties
Published in Hardcover by Columbia University Press (March, 1977)
Author: Paul Allen Carter
Average review score:

the twenties
This is a wonderful book about a tough period in our history, the 20's. It shows many hardships that the people went through, even though it was a "golden" age. I am a history teacher that thought he knew everything about the 20's. This book offered me insights that I had never known about. It was a great book and I would recommend it to anyone.


The Astrological Aspects
Published in Paperback by Health Research (September, 1996)
Author: Charles E. Carter
Average review score:

This book is a masterpiece.
C. E. O. Carter was perhaps the greatest astrologer of the 20th Century. His vast experience and intellectual brilliance combine to make this book essential reading for all astrologers, beginners and experts alike. Although this book has never been out of print since first published in 1930, Carter's stunningly profound insights are remarkably contemporary. It is a classic in the true sense of the word.


Avarice : The love of money is the root of all evil
Published in Paperback by Amer House (May, 2002)
Author: Sydney Carter
Average review score:

Suspenseful
I had trouble putting the book down. Having visited the Sunshine Coast, I was totally enthralled with not only the suspense in the novel, but also being able to envision how it was all taking place. Highly recommended reading!!


Bad Behavior
Published in Hardcover by Rizzoli (November, 2000)
Authors: Bill Hayward and Carter Ratcliff
Average review score:

Photography with a nice touch...
If you like photography and humor you will like this one. This a high quality book printed on glossy paper. The photos are astonishing sometimes black and white and others in color. The life through the eyes of those photographers is much more joyful. I would recommend this book to anyone. A+++


Banners and Flags: How to Sew a Celebration
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt (September, 1977)
Authors: Margot Carter. Blair and Cathleen Ryan
Average review score:

Informative and picturesque
Truly enjoyed this book from Library. Would like a copy to own and re-read. The author is my neice and feel she has done a remarkable job on this Art of Quilting.


Battles in a New Land: A Sourcebook on Colonial America
Published in Turtleback by Demco Media (June, 1994)
Author: C. Carter Smith
Average review score:

Pictures of warfare in Colonial America 1500-1763
"Battles in a New Land" is a Sourcebook on Colonial America, which is, in turn, one of the American Albums from the Collections of the Library of Congress. This is a long-winded way of saying that here is a book containing historical maps, sketches, and engravings related to battles in the New World before the American Revolution. Because they illustrations are mostly in black & white, they can be photocopies for bulleting boards, book reports, and the like. This book is exactly what it proclaims itself to be, an excellent sourcebook of illustrations for students and teachers of American History.

This book is divided into three parts: (1) 1500-1676: Explorations and Rivalries in the New World looks at battles between the European invaders and the Native Americans; (2) 1677-1753: The Contests for North America focuses on battles between the various European powers; and (3) 1754-1763 The French and Indian War. Each sections begins with a Timeline of Major Events divided into World History, Colonial History: Battles and Conflicts, and Colonial History: Government. Each two-spread spread has a few paragraphs of text regarding the Pequot War, the Battle of Lake George, etc., with detailed captions for the illustrations, which include pictures of various military leaders, including a 22-year-old George Washington. Other Colonial America sourcebooks look at Daily Life, The Arts and Sciences, and The Revolutionary War.


Beauty's Revenge (Disney Girls, 8)
Published in Paperback by Disney Press (Juv Pap) (May, 1999)
Authors: Gabrielle Charbonnet and Ovenell-Carter
Average review score:

Beauty's Revenge(No.8) By Gabrielle Charbonnet
This story is amazing. Isabelle's (Belle from Beauty and the Beast) worst enemy, Kenny McIlhenny(The Beast from Beauty and the Beast)comes down with the chicken pox and his mom and dad are going on a trip. Will Kenny's parents stay home with him or will Kenny stay with Isabelle...Find out when you read this book! Beauty's Revenge.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Missouri
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