More Pages: Northeast Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95


The seed of some essential guides to Appalachian waterfalls

Day trips in abundanceThe area that was somewhat lacking was the way to piece the shorter trips together for a longer trip, since there was less camping information in the river descriptions. The inclusion of both whitewater sections as well as a number of sections of quiet water was helpful.


Great information & illustrations of native plants

Great ResourceAlso a bonus (to me) are the literally thousands of ads on nearly every page. It's kind of like the yellow pages of the camping world.
They don't give a lot of detail about the campgrounds. Just the pertinent information as it pertains to the ratings. However, there is always a way to contact the campground, usually via email (which works fine for me).
We are planning a trip to Cherokee, NC this summer. This guide helped us narrow down the field to around five campgrounds out of over 25.
Not the definitive resource, but definitely the starting place for most camping adventures.


"Righting" IndiansThe author was extremely creative in bringing the individual stories out one-by-one using the scattered writings left by the Native Americans and allowing the reader to combine the many distant voices into one chorus which, when coupled with the more familiar writings of the "winners", spoke for several generations. In my past studies of Native Americans, I seldom could picture the people outside the boundaries of either the battlefield or the front yard of some Territorial Governor (signing a meaningless treaty). This book is wonderful in that it patches together the writings of a surprising number of individuals who were in the process of developing a unique identity grounded in two cultures. It reveals the intelligence of the Natives as they sought to keep what they viewed as the better elements of their culture by appealing to thier visitors in the familair words and ideas contained in Christian thought. Wyss could only succeed in this by drawing on a great deal of reseach.
Anyone who wishes to understand and study the history of these Native Americans on the East Coast and how they actually interacted with the European population, or hopes to broaden their general knowledge of the natie Amercians should read this book.


A brilliant evocation of memory.
A book of wonder, nuance, tragedy, and joy
A fascinating read from a master storyteller

Excellent portrayal of the frontier in the early 1800s
Maybe the best on Tecumseh yet
A well balanced and thoroughly researched life and timesTecumseh's life and character are well documented and his dream of an Indian confederacy, united to resist the American seizure of Indian land, is the centerpiece of the book. Other Indian leaders, as well as Tecumseh's brother The Prophet, figure in the narative, as do the different approaches the various tribes took in dealing with the Big Knives. An understanding of Tecumseh's life is not the only reward derived from a reading of this book. One also comes away with a much deeper understanding of the divisions within the Indian world and the various problems they faced within a way of life on the road to extinction. At the end, one senses the true depth of the tragedy, and gains an admiration for a man of great character and nobility, who gave of all his energy, in an attempt to save his people and their way of life.


An annoying book
Handy Handbook to Massachusetts
i love this guide!

This book doesn't get it
This book is awful
ABSORBING LOOK AT THE PEOPLE AND ATTITUDES OF MV

Really great romance story with all the sci-fi
Wish it were longer
I wish this book were longer...