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

What People Wore During the Civil War (Clothing, Costumes, and Uniforms of the Civil War)
Published in Library Binding by Powerkids Pr (January, 2003)
Average review score: 

AVOID! Full of inaccuracies (many outright ludicrous)
Life Is a Poem-- Often Set to Music
Published in Hardcover by Southfarm Press (July, 1999)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Stark Naked
Published in Paperback by SunInk Publications (September, 1980)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

100 Q&a About Brain Tumors
Published in Paperback by Jones & Bartlett Pub (September, 2003)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

1983 Ward's Automotive Yearbook
Published in Hardcover by Wards Communications (June, 1983)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

7 Steps to a Successful Small Group Ministry
Published in Paperback by Church Innovations Publishing (01 January, 1994)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Abenaki Captive (Adventures in Time Books)
Published in Library Binding by Carolrhoda Books (November, 1994)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Abolition of Privateering & Declaration of Paris
Published in Hardcover by AMS Press (June, 1992)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

The Abolition of Privateering and the Declaration of Paris
Published in Paperback by University Press of the Pacific (August, 2002)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Absolutely Every (Almost) Bed & Breakfast in Washington (*Almost)
Published in Paperback by Travis Ilse Pub (December, 1998)
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Other fanciful and utterly undocumentable statements include, "Day dresses had narrow sleeves. This was so the sleeves would not fall into a pot of soup or get caught in a piece of needlework." (actually, sleeves were narrow in the 1840s, and much wider in the 1860s) Or, that soldiers themselves dyed their civilian clothes gray "to match the other soldiers" (carrying big cast iron dyepots on their backs as they marched along, presumably?) or that they tried to boil the blue dye out of Federal uniforms (doesn't work with indigo, sorry). The author also asserts without further explanation that, "boys sometimes wore skeleton suits". (THAT ought to confuse readers! Happy Halloween!)
As well the various myths and mistatements of the author's own invention, the book also manages to perpetuate in 24 short pages many of the worst myths and false "reenactorisms" about clothing of the era -- (1) that by late war Confederate soldiers were ragged and short of clothing (all serious primary source research has debunked this), or that (2) Confederates were largely clad in the clothes of dead Federal soldiers (nope, see above) or that (3) women laced their corsets so tightly that they fainted a lot. (wrong part of the 19th c.)
The book is a veritable gallery of photographs of reenactors whom one might politely term "authenticity-challenged", including two ladies wearing bangs (no!), one of whom also has frosted nailpolish (double no!) Apart from the lady on pages 14-15 (who looks VERY good -how'd she get in here?), the overall outfits shown range from outright wrong to merely so-so mass-market sutler stuff.
The book also gives only two recommended internet links, neither of which are key Civil War costuming sites and both of which are no longer functioning. One hasn't been updated since early 1998. However, this book just came out (July 2001) - apparently nobody checked.
For a clothing history book focusing on the Civil War period. it appears the author knows next to nothing about either topic. It reads like it was thrown together in haste to meet a deadline by a non-specialist, operating on pure hearsay without any checking of facts whatsoever. What's sad is that this is meant to be a children's book for grades K-5. If it's bought by school libraries, there's a danger it will be many childrens' only exposure to this fascinating topic.
Sorry to have to be so negative, but this really IS one to avoid. Buy your children Juanita Leisch's "Civil War Civiiians" or "Who Wore What" or -- Time Life's "Echoes of Glory" instead -- even if the reading in these books is well above K-5 level, there are abundant pictures to hold a child's interest -- of REAL people of the era and of original articles of clothing. At least that way, they'd get an accurate picture of what people REALLY wore during the Civil War era.