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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Douglas", sorted by average review score:

Fundamentals of Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging
Published in Hardcover by Wiley-Liss (15 December, 2001)
Author: Douglas B. Murphy
Average review score:

Best Introductory-Level Textbook
Dr. Murphy constructs a solid foundation on the basic concepts of geometrical optics, light, and color, and then provides excellent introductory reviews of important topics in light microscopy. The book is very well written and complex phenomena are clearly explained without the unnecessary math that often confuses students. Illustrations are numerous and help support the text very nicely, as do the suggested laboratory exercises that accompany each chapter. Discussions of digital cameras and image processing are timely and provide the essential concepts necessary to tackle more advanced treatises. In the opinion of the Molecular Expressions microscopy website team, this book is by far the best entry-level textbook in the field.

Well Written and Useful
"This well written text provides a clear, uncluttered overview of the principles and practice of modern light microscopy. It contains many helpful teaching exercises and diagrams. It should prove useful in a wide range of courses from the undergraduate to the postgraduate level."
-- Kenneth R. Spring, Ph.D., Author


The Geology of Florida
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Florida (May, 1997)
Authors: Anthony F. Randazzo and Douglas S. Jones
Average review score:

Comprehensive overview of Sunshine State geology

Florida isn't merely a drab slab of limestone; instead, it is a surprisingly complex and interesting geological lab. For example, most of what we now call Florida was once a part of Africa! In this book, the many chapter authors (edited by Randazzo and Jones) cover the evolution of the Florida platform from the origin of its crystalline basement in paleo-Africa, through its docking with the North American plate, innumerable sea level changes, and the reef building, barrier island migration and mining impacts of the past few thousand years. This text is stuffed with information! The Keys even merit their own chapter -- a wise choice.

This is a university level text; and as such, it contains some of the typically academic dryness of writing and technical terminology which probably wouldn't appeal to the mildly curious reader. But for anyone who is seriously interested in either Florida geology or in carbonate platforms in general, there can probably be no better resource. Because of its thorough coverage of the processes which have built Florida, and its rich scientific bibliography, geology students and librarians will find this book to be a solid reference.

A "Must-Have" for a Florida Geologist
I had recently moved to Florida and did not know much about the Florida geology. This book was perfect as a comprehensive guide to the geomorphology, sedimentology, paleontology, and hydrogeology of the area. There are many more interesting chapters with a wealth of information. Randazzo and Jones put together a wonderful collection with great geologists such as Bob Halley of the USGS and Sam Upchurch formerly of the University of South Florida.


Gestapo Chief : The 1948 Interrogation of Henrich Muller, Volume 2
Published in Hardcover by R James Bender Pub (January, 1998)
Author: Gregory Douglas
Average review score:

Don't Read if you Like Things the Way They Are.
Another in the series by Mr. Douglas regarding former head of the Gestapo (Geheimstaatspolizei), Heinrich Mueller, nearly each page drops bombs that will make you think. If you prefer television to thinking, you can pass it by, but if you like a purportedly nonfiction page-turner, where it is the content, not the style, that really grabs you, this is a must. Shatters all preconceptions about the 20th century.

Must read for History Buffs
This adds to data on what really happened in WWII.

You must read to understand.


Gone for the Day: Family Fun in Central Texas
Published in Paperback by Texas A&M University Press (November, 1995)
Author: Deborah Douglas
Average review score:

This is a well written,witty and insightful book.
Gone for the Day, as it is titled, would lead one to believe that it is simply a book about day trips. Naturally, I made the same assumption, purchased the book, and found a wonderfully written,humerous,folk tale of central Texas. This is a book that should be bought for the read, and not the road.

Humorous and readable descriptions of 18 destinations
Take this enjoyable book along while exploring some of Texas' most outstanding yet least known family fun spots. Full of humorous history and highlights about small towns, state parks, trail rides, boat excursions and swimming holes. Includes Enchanted Rock, Bandera, Lost Maples, Westcave Preserve, Fredericksburg and much more!


Gone the Dreams and Dancing
Published in Hardcover by Holt Rinehart & Winston (November, 1984)
Author: Douglas C. Jones
Average review score:

Unforgetable
I can't believe a book as great as this one can be out of print. I am not a big fan of westerns and before I read this book and its predecessor, The Season of Yellow Leaf, I did not have much of an interest in Native Americans. These two books absolutely captivated me, however. I am no expert, but both of these books seem very authentic and believable. The culture of the Commanches is fascinating, and the characters are complex and easy to relate to. This is not a book without flaws. For example, Jones is not always 100% consistent in his views of the Commanches and the white settlers. This is a very ambitious work, however, and its small flaws are easily forgivable. This book comes very close to being a masterpiece of American Literature and it will change the way you think about Native Americans forever.

The world of the Comanchees and the white man in the 1800s
This marvelous story focuses on Liverpool Morgan, a simple but very literate former Confederate army man who, after the Civil War, works for the Indian Agency and the army in Oklahoma Territory. His friendship with the Commanche tribe and its intelligent, perceptive chief, who are struggling to adapt to the world of the white man and the disappearance of their world in just a few decades, is wonderfully told. It's really a classic and must be based on true stories of this frontier.


Great Writers & Kids Write Mystery Stories (Great Writers & Kids Anthologies)
Published in Paperback by Random House (Merchandising) (January, 1997)
Authors: Martin H. Greenberg, Jill M. Morgan, Robert E. Weinberg, Scott Turow, Joan Lowery Nixon, Sharyn McCrumb, Wendy Hornsby, Stuart M. Kaminsky, Barbara D'Amato, and Max Allan Collins
Average review score:

A BOOK TO BE TREASURED BY ADULTS AND CHILDREN.
This is a wonderful anthology. Top-notch mystery writers and their children (and, in some cases, grandchildren) collaborated on a variety of entertaining stories.

Pay particular attention to "Releve", the story contributed by Patricia Wallace and her daughter. This story introduces us to Sydney Bryant, the private eye that Pat Wallace has featured in a terrific series for adults. The titles in the series include "Deadly Devotion" and "Blood Lies".

Other outstanding stories include those by Wendy Hornsby, Scott Turow, Stuart Kaminsky, and Sharyn McCrumb (and their collaborators). This is a book that parents can read and enjoy with their children. It might inspire them to collaborate on some mystery stories of their own!

I look forward to reading the companion volume, "Great Writers and Kids Write Spooky Stories". I

mini-lesson on mystery writing

"When you think of a mystery, what comes to mind? A dark secret? An unsolved crime? A curious detective hunting for clues?"

The only mystery, the only secret, the only crime is how this anthology could be so easily overlooked. "Great Writers and Kids Write Mystery Stories" (1996) is a collection of stories written by some of today's greatest mystery authors in collaboration with their children and grandchildren. Jonathan Kellerman, Sharyn McCrumb, and Scott Turow are three of the thirteen award-winning writers that create wonderous whodunits with their offspring, ages 6 to adult.

While written at about the junior high/ middle school level, this complilation is enjoyable to all. The stories are five to several pages. Some are written with the child as the amateur detective, some are written as a type of psychological thriller.

The introduction serves as a "mini-lesson" on mystery writing. And, each story features a short personal introduction by the adult and child writing team on what it was like to collaborate on their included story. Other contributors include Barbara D'Amato, Ed Gorman, Stuart Kaminsky, Elizabeth Engstrom, and many others.

This book has the unique ability to be educational as well as entertaining. Those that enjoy this book may also enjoy the first volume as well: "Great Writers and Kids Write Spooky Stories" (1995).


The Greatest Enemy
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Random House of Canada Ltd. (June, 2000)
Author: Douglas Reeman
Average review score:

Surprising psychological tension, same great story-telling
Douglas Reeman's standard character-types -- the valiant junior Royal Navy officer with a personal sadness, the obsessive, driven commanding officer, and the beautiful girl with the shadowy and/or tragic past -- return again. Anyone who's read other Reeman books will find these types immediately recognizable. What makes "The Greatest Enemy" different from any of the other dozen or so Reeman titles I've read is that this one isn't set during World War II. Instead, it's a contemporary story (contemporary to when Reeman wrote it, that is, in 1970). And so whereas the other titles led to the inevitable climactic clash with German or Japanese forces, it's not clear, for most of this novel, who the enemy is ... or indeed, whether an enemy truly exists at all.

Because of the setting, there are fewer instances of combat in this novel than in most of the others -- although the climax, when it comes, makes up for the dearth. In place of the combat, there's a real psychological tension -- mostly surrounding the captain and his state of mind -- that reminded me at times of "The Caine Mutiny." A good part of the book's midsection is taken up by a harrowing description of the ship's voyage through a fierce and destructive typhoon.

As I said, the main characters are very similar to ones you'll find in many other Reeman novels, and so too is the developing romance between Our Hero and The Girl -- who, like so many of Reeman's female characters serves primarily, if not exclusively, as a love interest for Our Hero. And as is also typical in Reeman novels, the ship itself, in this case HMS Terrapin, an ancient frigate due for the scrap yard, is also one of the story's central characters. You may well find yourself attracted to her as much, or more, than any of the humans populating the story.

Although I put off reading this title for a while, for fear of not enjoying a non-World War II plot, I shouldn't have worried. Instead, I think this is one of the best Reeman titles I've read so far. Reeman's ability to weave a good story usually overcomes the stock nature of his characters. If you don't mind sailing with people you'll think you've met before, I predict Reeman fans -- or any fan of the war-at-sea genre -- will get a lot out of this title.

An exceptional view of the Cold War at sea.
The Greatest Enemy is a gripping saga of the services of an old British frigate who's days of glory are long past. HMS Terrapin is in a Naval limbo, conducting routine, mundane operations in the Far East. Her previous commanding officer has left the ship to return to the United Kingdom, leaving behind a ship's company marking time until the ship is paid off and sold to a newly independent Asian nation. That is until the new skipper arrives and immediately sets about to instill a new pride in the crew, not only for their ship but for themselves. His measures are unorthodox and at times reckless. His officers are concerned for the ship and their careers. But is he right to be pushing this hard in the face of official statements that he just do his job? Reeman examines the issues of command in a time when it wasn't quite war but wasn't quite peace either. The requirements placed on men and ships to maintain this quasi-peace/war status. Reeman wrote his book shortly after the US Navy's incident whereby Lieutenant Commander Marcus Arnheiter was relieved of his command of the USS Vance based on a log kept by his officers which they felt showed he was not up to commanding the ship. Was Reeman's protagonist modeled on Captain Arnheiter and the events of his command? The reader must judge. Reeman's charecter meets a fate much different from Arnheiter's. In all, an exceptional read of a topic and situation far from the headlines of most newspapers until an incident drew it to the brief attention of people sitting at their breakfast tables or watching the evening news. A must for students of the Cold War.


Gurps Traveller: Ground Forces
Published in Paperback by Steve Jackson Games (01 November, 2000)
Authors: Douglas E. Berry and Gene Seabolt
Average review score:

Do you have what it takes?
This book has it all. Maps, history, weapons, organizational charts, slang, traditions, characters, special forces, citations, orders, military justice, battle dress, drop ships, operational procedures... (deep breath). Even if you know nothing about the military, you can read this book, and run a campaign that'll leave your players thinking you're a retired SgtMaj.
So there I was...

A good BTDT sourcebook
The author is a former US Army NCO and applies that sense of "Been There, Done That" to his writing. This is a good source book for any Traveller rule system.


Gustave Moreau
Published in Hardcover by Princeton Univ Pr (08 March, 1999)
Authors: Genevieve Lacambre, Gustave Moreau, Larry J. Feinberg, Marie-Laure De Contenson, Art Institute of Chicago, and Douglas Druick
Average review score:

Sweet decadence
I had very high hopes when I bought this book, though afraid the text would override the images; however I wasn't disappointed. The sheer quality of the printing is nothing less than remarkable. All the images in this book meet the highest standards of the printer's profession. Books on the symbolist genius Gustave Moreau are extremely hard to come by, so Between Epic and Dream (the book's title) is a rare art book being the only large volume in print at the moment.
The text acompanying the lush pictures is very informative, not only on Moreau's life's work, but there are notes on each item underneath. There is a good balance between text and images and this makes the enjoyment of viewing or reading a particular delight. Moreau's watercolors are beautifully presented and so are the paintings with both large and medium reproductions. There are drawings and studies as well to give this book a usefulness to those who would study Moreau's methods of work.
This book is a great buy at a very reasonable price. You will only need Joris Karl Huysman's novel, Against Nature (describing the painting Salome on the cover), to dream away into sweet decadence.

A must for art freaks!
It's got all the goods: scholarly essays, dossiers on Gustave's most important works, wide historical sweep, accessibility for those who are more casual art-lovers, tons of color plates, good details (for painters like me, looking for something to steal). Moreau was a super-important figure in the decadent years of 19th Century France. Not as well known as, say, Degas or Courbet, his schtick seemed pretty far out. Anticipating Surrealism as well as the the nascent Symbolist movement, Moreau made insanely detailed, obessive, jewel-like paintings whose time is just now arriving. Make your coffee table as swanky and plush as an old New Orleans hotel. Moreau knew how to mix it up but certainly has his own flavor. Super great book.


A Guide to the Wildflowers of South Carolina
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (February, 2002)
Authors: Richard Dwight Porcher and Douglas Alan Rayner

Related Vacation Book Subjects: Nevada
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