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

The Pig War
Published in Library Binding by Harpercollins Juvenile Books (November, 1969)
Authors: Betty Baker and Robert Lopshire
Average review score:

Good Easy Reader History for Washington State Kids!
"The Pig War" was written as part of the "I Can Read" series of books for beginning readers. It tells about an event in 1859, when San Juan Island, in what is now Washington State, was claimed by both British trappers and American owners. Tensions were rising, when a British pig was shot in an American garden. The real potential for war existed following this incident. Eventually this was peacefully resolved, resulting in the establishment of the border between what is now America and Canada in that region.

Betty Baker does an excellent job of making this ultimately humorous event readable for young readers. This little book experienced a revival of interest during the Washington State Centennial in 1989. In my opinion, it's still a must-read for students in Washington.

The one drawback to this book is that the illustrations depict the local natives as Plains Indians, and not as Coast Salish. This is a minor distraction, since the story centers on the struggles between the white settlers.

Hilariously funny history
History is rarely an engrossing subject for young readers, but Baker has managed to engage them with a humorous and simple text. This story of the Pig War on the San Juan islands is a must-read for any children from Washington State.


Plants and Animals of the Pacific Northwest: An Illustrated Guide to the Natural History of Western Oregon, Washington and British Columbia
Published in Paperback by University of Washington Press (June, 2003)
Author: Eugene N. Kozloff
Average review score:

Plants and Animals of the Pacific Northwest by E.N. Kozloff
This is the best PNW plant and animal identification book on the market (and I have lot of such i.d. books). Lots of really good color pictures and detailed b/w's. Informative text on life history/cycles. Good index and well-organized. Great for helping children get going on school projects (the Latin names are there, but the text is plain English, flows well, and provides information that interests ordinary persons of all ages who enjoy the out-of-doors). Would make a nice gift for someone new to the area or otherwise interested in the topic.

What a beautiful book!
I fell in love with wild plants at the tender age of 11 when I went to camp with my 5th grade class. We did plant identification and I became intrigued by all the wonderful plants in the NW. WHen I got home I poured through my mom's copy of this book. I had been seeing it on our coffee table since I was like a tot! I fell in love with plants. This book has beautiful color pics of all kinds of wonderful plants and animals. It's awesome!


The Portland Collection: Contra Dance Music in the Pacific Northwest
Published in Spiral-bound by Susan M. Songer (20 May, 1997)
Authors: Susan Songer and Clyde Curley
Average review score:

A Staple
While the fiddler's fakebook has a greater quantity of songs, this particular collection has consistent quality of songs chosen. There are so many great tunes in here, jamming out would not be quite the same without it. My personal favorite is "Lady of the Lake". Yes, I know there are two of them... but they're both good! Go figure.

Don't leave home without it!
After the "Fiddler's Fakebook" this is the tune collection to own. Hundreds of reels and jigs in clear notation with, usually, good chord suggestions. Little, if any, overlap with the tunes in the FF. Very durable spiral binding, sits easy on a stand or table. Includes many recently composed tunes including my favorite, Erik Sessions' "It Ain't the Heat, It's the Humidity." Many hours of playing pleasure, fast becoming a standard collection.


President Washington's Indian War: The Struggle for the Old Northwest, 1790-1795
Published in Paperback by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Trd) (September, 1993)
Author: Wiley Sword
Average review score:

Outstanding
Very well researched, very readable. I bought the book originally because I was interested in the period, and was glad I did.

Oustanding book on the Federal period!
This is one of the most well-researched books on the Federal period of our country that has been written. It has become the "bible" of anyone interested in this turbulent period of our nation's history. If you want to know anything about the settlement of the Northwest Territory, this is the book to read. It has a lot of historical detail in it, but it is still a very readable book. I use it for reference all of the time, living is one of the historical towns mentioned in the book


Rainforest: Ancient Realm of the Pacific Northwest
Published in Paperback by Greystone Books (April, 2000)
Authors: Graham Osboe and Wade Davis
Average review score:

capturing complexity
This is, quite simply, the best set of pictures of North America's west-coast maritime forests that I have come across. These forests are interesting, beautiful, and abundantly alive; they are also very hard to photograph. Through the lens they can seem messy and disordered. The unaided human eye screens out extraneous clutter, but the camera eye does not. There is order there, of course, but it is a chaotic sort of order, with many levels of order-within-disorder. Some photographers strive for excessively neat, tidy compositions, which give an entirely misleading impression of these forests; Graham, on the other hand, conveys the rhythms within the disorder. Many of the pictures are texture-rich without a sharp focus of interest. It is a style well suited to the subject. The text by Wade Davis, what there is of it, is good, but this is most definitely a picture book first.

I spy with my 'large-format' eye...
This book is really special. Ok I am a mate of Graham's which some might see as a bias - but this book is oustanding none the less. Osborne is a biologist (infact a botanist) by trade I believe. It simply doens't matter though, because clearly what he does best is take photos. *Very* good photos. I don't mean as in 'Oh, thats a nice photo' as my mum would say to me when from four packets of snaps I produced one relatively balanced composition. I mean as in drop-that-frying pan, walk-into-that lampost, draw droppingly good photographs. This guy has had three or four calanders of his work produced for goodness sake. The book, which, ok I admit, he gave me, is always on my coffee table, and I must confess, I have chopped up the calendars and made them into nice framed pictures.

Reasons to buy it:

i) it will enhance your life ii) it will take your breath away iii) it is pretty reasonably priced

reasons not to buy it..

i) you hate temporate rainforests...


Rebels of the Woods: The I.W.W. in the Pacific Northwest
Published in Paperback by Univ of Oregon Pr (January, 1967)
Author: Robert L. Tyler
Average review score:

Great book
This entire book is online at http://www.winfinity.com/beachwalla/rebels/rebels.htm

Check it out!

This classic book in labor history combines the highest level of historical research with riveting story-telling. It is dramatic, poetic, honest - and indispensable in understanding the wild history of the I.W.W. in the Pacific Northwest.

A wonderful history
The entire text is available free online at ...

This classic book in labor history combines the highest level of historical research with riveting story-telling. It is dramatic, poetic, honest — and indispensable in understanding the wild history of the I.W.W. in the Pacific Northwest.


Reptiles of the Northwest
Published in Paperback by Lone Pine Publishing (15 June, 2002)
Authors: Alan st John and Alan St John
Average review score:

Good IDs, beautiful photographs, entertaining field notes
This is a marvellously well-done little book whose only (minor) fault is that it skimps a bit on information about the animals themselves; facts about their diet, reproduction and behaviour are condensed into a paragraph each. Instead, we have a field guide worthy of the name that tells you where and how to find reptiles in northwestern North America and how to identify them, and that provides very good subspecies data (a rare thing nowadays), excellent range maps, and beautiful photography. Most enjoyable are the field notes at the end of each species description, in which the author tells a story about finding the animal in question in the wild (often so that it could be photographed for this book). This feature alone makes this book one of the most unique field guides I have encountered in years, and reminds us that a field guide is really about encountering and interacting with animals in the field -- and this point is ably illustrated by the often-funny photos of snakes dangling off someone's ear or lizards biting someone's hand. Highly recommended.

A Unique Field Guide to Unique Animals
Reptiles are one of the most successful classes of animal that inhabit the earth. They occur in almost every climate and it should be no surprise that the Pacific Northwest has its share of fascinating reptiles. There are 42 species of reptile found from British Columbia to Northern California and Reptiles of the Northwest by Alan St. John is the guide to them. Comprehensive, with brilliant photographs, it is simply a must-own for not only budding herpetologists but naturalists and outdoor enthusiasts of all ages. Reptiles of the Northwest by Alan St. John has an easy to access and understand quick reference guide and detailed introduction to reptiles and herpetology. Each species of Northwest reptile is given a complete introduction with detailed description and information on its distribution, habitat and behaviour. What sets Reptiles of the Northwest by Alan St. John apart from other field guides are the 6 beautiful and informative color photos of each species and the informative and whimsical field notes describing each reptile. These are accounts of encounters Alan St. John has had with these reptiles and they give the reader experiences that you don't find in the average field guide. They are filled with the author's wonder and joy in these creatures, written with humour and warmth in a casual biographical style.
This is a special field guide. Its soft cover allows for ease of slipping into any backpack enabling one to take advantage of the great inclusion of the Northwest Reptile Life list note pages. Reptiles of the Northwest by Alan St. John is definitive and comprehensive It is a unique field guide to unique animals.


Rest Area Review: Northwestern Edition
Published in Paperback by Newjoy Press (01 July, 1999)
Authors: Gerald C. Hammon and Sharon L. Hammon
Average review score:

A "must" for motorized travelers touring America's northwest
In Rest Area Review: Northwest Edition, RV travelers Gerald and Sharon Hammon share their personal reviews for every roadside rest are in the states of Washington, Oregon, Wyoming, Idaho and Montana. The provide the car, truck, and RV traveler with maps, details about amenities, the names and addresses of the state tourist bureaus, and more. Each of the 201 reviews is engaging, informative, and fun to read with generous infusions of humor and common sense. Rest Area Review: Northwest Edition is a regional, thoroughly user friendly travel guide, and a "must" for all motorized travelers passing through or touring the American northwest.

Review from the Dec issue of Bookwatch
Review from the Dec. 2000 issues of Bookwatch, the official newsletter of the Midwest Book Review. In Rest Area Review: Northwest Edition, RV travelers Gerald and Sharon Hammon share their personal reviews for every roadside rest area in the states of Washington, Oregon, Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana. They provide the car, truck, and RV traveler with maps, details about amenities, the names and addresses of state tourist bureaus, and more. Each of the 201 reviews is engaging, informative, and fun to read with generous infusions of humor and common sense. The book is a regional, thoroughly user friendly travel guide and a "must" for all motoring travelers passing through or touring the American northwest.


The Rogue River Indian War and Its Aftermath, 1850-1980
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (Trd) (April, 1997)
Authors: E. A. Schwartz and A. E. Schwartz
Average review score:

Magnificent work of art
This book was wonderful. I love hearing about the history of my tribe (Siletz). Also, the author included information about my great-great-great grandfather Charlie Depoe. I learned about my own family from this book. I cried to see a picture of my ancestor for the first time ever. I thank you E.A. Schwartz for putting together such a comprehensive piece of what is essentially a very important, yet small piece of history for many American Indians. I waited patiently for years for this story to be told. Now I can pass this piece of history on to my children and all of their children. Thank you.

best history to date of Oregon coast tribes
Detailed and thorough, full of entertaining anecdotes andtranscriptions of correspondence; covers major political figures aswell as tribespeople.


The Smithsonian Guides to Natural America: The Pacific Northwest Washington and Oregon (Smithsonian Guides)
Published in Paperback by Smithsonian Books (October, 1995)
Authors: Daniel Jack Chasan, Tim Thompson, and Thomas E. Lovejoy
Average review score:

A great guide to the Northwest
As a resident of Washington state who enjoys the natural beauty of the area, I found this book to be a most helpful and inspiring guide. The authors are knowledgable about the natural history of the region, and the text is accompanied by many beautiful photographs. I'd highly recommend this book to anyone planning to visit the area for the first time, or to residents of the Northwest who want to learn more about the natural bounty that their region has to offer.

The best guide to natural areas in the Northwest
As a resident of Washington state who loves the natural beauty of the region, I've found this to be the most helpful, informative and nicely illustrated guide to the natural areas of Washington and Oregon. The book is well written, with beautiful photographs, and has not only inspired me to visit a lot of new places but has enriched my experience of those places I was already familiar with. I'd highly recommend this book to anyone planning on visiting the Northwest --- and especially to those already living here!


Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states
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