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

Unknown Shore: The Lost History of England's Arctic Colony
Published in Hardcover by Henry Holt & Company, Inc. (June, 2001)
Author: Robert Ruby
Average review score:

Split Level Arctic Adventure
Robert Ruby's Unknown Shore is a little misleading in its subtitle (The Lost History of England's Arctic Colony) in as much as the history was not quite lost nor was there actually a colony, only the briefest of attempts at a colony in a farcical plan to mine the soil for gold. That said, the book is quite entertaining as it pieces together the story of Martin Frobisher and his ill-fated Elizabethean Arctic adventures and the always fascinating Charles Francis Hall's discovery of the location of Frobisher's Meta Incognita in the nineteenth century. (For a wonderful and full account of Hall, see the very fine Weird and Tragic Shores by C. Chauncey Loomis). The two stories blend fairly well and the author keeps the narrative sparkling along at an entertaining clip. This was a good Arctic read for those addicted to these books and a good place to begin for someone who wants to learn what the addiction to these Arctic books is all about from a book that shows men whose addiction to that cold world ran so much deeper than merely reading about it.

Excellent
An unfortunately rare example of an eminently readable work of history. Ruby does an outstanding job of setting his story in the context of the times with a modern historian's insight into social and cultural history. This is far more than just another in a series of the latest vogue in Arctic exploration narratives. Through skillful use of his sources, the author brings both his European and Inuit protagonists to life. The reader is left with the haunting image of fragments of a remote Arctic island studding the landscape of a prosaic London suburb as testimony to both the folly and awe-inspiring tenacity of the sixteenth-century explorers. This is fascinating complementary reading for students of the colonization of other areas of the world.

Adventure, pirates, history, alchemists and Inuit
This is a tale about an English pirate-turned-explorer who few people have ever heard of, and the establishment of British colony on an Arctic island that is perhaps even less known...but that's short-changing this elaborate true adventure. Bought this one because I liked the author's last book, "Jericho," which was a history of a place, but also of archaeology itself and of wave after wave of quirky scientists who came to study the ruins of the famous city. This new book has an even broader sweep, from pre-naval power London where morality always took a back seat to fortune-seeking, to the coast of West Africa where a ship's crew was worth less to investors than a few tons of pepper, to the Czar's palace in Moscow, the roiling North Atlantic and the confusing, ice-packed passages above North America. This is a tale festooned with accurately-drawn characters. The scholarship is so clearly reliable that you know that you're not getting the pop-magazine caricatures of, say, Sebastian Junger's "The Perfect Storm." Also, with Ruby's style of examining a place through the eyes of multiple adventurers from several eras, you're getting a deeply-textured tale that makes Krakauer's "Into Thin Air" seem one-dimensional. And you also get a fun - and often funny - yarn featuring modern reporters in polar bear pants, privateers who seize all shipping - even that of their countrymen - a pompous alchemist, mutual puzzlement as white man meets Inuit, horrific storms at sea, and discussions of the how Queen Elizabeth's sex life affected exploration. By the end, I had not only enjoyed myself but absorbed an extraordinary amount of the FEEL of an era - or two - and a place. In this sense it's also comparable to Patrick O'Brien's seafaring Maturin and Aubrey series.


Washington for the Curious
Published in Paperback by Peak Media Inc (March, 1997)
Authors: Rob McDonald, Clarence Stilwill, and Shawn Carkonen
Average review score:

Excellent car book!
We keep (or try to) this book in the car as we roam about Washington. We've found out some nifty facts about otherwise seemingly remote places and often are able to answer questions "we're curious" about. It's not a complete travel guide, but it does contain a lot of information I've not seen anywhere else and it is extremely easy to use.

Jammed with interesting info
If you're at all interested in the state of Washington, and its history, people and roads, buy this book. i've learned so much about how towns were named and formed and interesting geography about our beautiful Evergreen State. this is a fun, down-to-earth book!!

wonderfully researched, stunning photos
My husband & I travelled around Washington in our car, following this interesting road guide and we were pleased to be able to hear the stories behind the places we saw. A very well-written book!!


Whelks to Whales: Coastal Marine Life of the Pacific Northwest
Published in Paperback by Harbour Pub Co (June, 2003)
Author: Rick M. Harbo
Average review score:

Excellent source for scuba divers around the Pacific NW
This book is a must for any scuba diver venturing into the waters of Puget Sound, coastal British Columbia and Vancouver Island. It was a great resource during a recent 4 day diving trip to Barkley Sound on the west coast of Vancouver Island. It provided us with hours of conversation about what we had seen and what to look for next.

Excellent all purpose criter ID book with photos
This book has been very helpful in identifing the many different creatures I have seen while diving in Washinton State's Puget Sound as well as around Vancouver Island. It is perfect for any recreational diver because while it does list Phylum and Species, it also gives the commom name and even alternate common names if applicable. Each entry also gives the Size, Range, Habitat, Description and a brief comment about the entry. The photos are clear and sometimes include photos of the fishes egg mass. This book covers the most common of the marine life that you are likely to encounter while diving in the Pacific Northwest. I take it with me when I go diving and use it after the dive to show what I saw and for others to identify what they saw. It also helps me at home latter when I want to put a name to a photo I took while diving. I whole heartedly recommend this book to anyone slightly curious as to what that thing is called they saw on that last dive.

A Park Ranger-Naturalist's comments
This book's easy-to-use key immediately helps visitors to Olympic's coast identify dozens and dozens of marine animals and plants. We bring it on ranger-led tide pool explorations because it complements our journeys so well. Each section provides structural, behavioral, and habitat information about the type of creatures. Then, many individual species are photographed and described, including known life cycles, predator-prey relationships, and other unique aspects. The book is particularly good because it includes several marine mammals, enhancing tide pool exploration with ocean discovery. This is a wonderful aid in introducing visitors to the intertidal zone, the marine sanctuary, and the abundant life thriving within.


The winning of the West
Published in Unknown Binding by Scholarly Press ()
Author: Theodore Roosevelt
Average review score:

A bully read, but patience helps....
Roosevelt does quite well to capture the essence of what went on during the period when the colonists began westward. The point made by the editor that it is indeed a wonder that this work was ever created at all is well taken when one considers Roosevelt's involvement with so much else in his life while he produced what, for the time, was a very scholarly opus.

One must be patient with the narrative; it tends to be choppy. One must also be patient with, or at least understanding of, TR's view of the world and especially his notion of upon whom the greater glory of the westward expansion rests.

All in all, it is seemingly a must read (as is the entire series) for anyone having either an interest in the history of this time, or an interest in TR and his works.

Excellent descriptions of early frontier life
Before Roosevelt begins sensationalizing in the second volume, he describes the utter wilderness of the region and characterizes both the individual settlers and Indians who would play decisive roles in the settlement and migration of whites westward, and also gives sweeping portraits of the Indian nations encountered during our westward expansion. The hardships of the settlers due to the ruggedness of their new mountain home, their self-reliance, the cold winters, the need to fell forest for pasture and tillage, the daily peril of Indian attacks, and the distant relations with their origins to the east complete this wonderfully written and diversified study of early American frontier life.

A Great Man Writes a Great History
Theodore's Roosevelt's "The Winning of The West" volume one is unlike most modern histories. His is a story of the founding of the American Republic West of the Original 13. This volume is of the late Colonial Period. He is unafraid to make very harsh judgements, attacking both the American Indians and the Pioneers, although it is clear who he favours. He does have many prejudices, but, to be honest, most Historians do. President Roosevelt's were just of the less respected, today at least, kind. The whole series is very much worth reading, and is a worthy investment of capital and time. Ryan M.


A Clean, Well-Lighted Stream
Published in Hardcover by Soho Press, Inc. (November, 1995)
Author: Michael Checchio
Average review score:

Clean, Bright Journalism
This little book is a sleeper, it got me back into real fishing again after an on-and-off few years of chasing bluegill in neighborhood creeks. The best thing is the author's genuine enthusiasm for the rivers of the West & the natural history around them. The only drawback may be that a few of the pieces are a little too journalistic, but most have an aura of wonder almost as if written on a gravelbar or nearby tavern.

Modern state of wilderness written with timeless eloquence
It's nice to hear from an author writing in our time. His words are written with timeless eloquence, yet cars emit exhaust and humanity encroaches. But Nature still is glorious. To read Checchio's descriptions, which are so well crafted yet so contemporary, is inspiring.


Cohassett Beach Chronicles: World War II in the Pacific Northwest
Published in Paperback by Oregon State Univ Pr (March, 1999)
Authors: Kathy Hogan, Klancy De Nevers, Lucy Hart, and Klancy de Nevers
Average review score:

Mostly gems in this kitchen sink
If you are a Grays Harborite of past or present and have an interest in World War II, this is definitely a book for you. The book also has some fascinating revelations about the curious interactions that occur when military culture collides with civilian culture. Though happily there was no foreign occupation as such, our Pacific beaches were taken over by the gentle and the wild - a crazy assortment of young men from all across the U.S.A. As the author poignantly observes, many were indulging in what simple pleasures remained before going off to war and possible oblivion.

Kathy Hogan was an extraordinarily talented woman and her gift for writing as revealed in "The Kitchen Critic" suggests she could have done great things. She balances a city-bred sophistication with a storytelling talent honed by a keen ear for dialog and an eagle eye for local color which, for those who know the Harbor, is basic gray. (But what a splendid gray it is!) Cohassett Beach Chronicles is truly an endearing collection of homefront yarns, whether about rationing, billeting troops or topics as perennial as weather and wildlife.

But despite her intellect and breeding, Hogan was not a woman ahead of her time. She is at her best when writing about the funny folks in the neighborhood and their uniformed guests. She can be forgiven for her mumblings about Eleanor Roosevelt's activism (which echo many of the criticisms towards Hillary Clinton), but it is embarrassing to read her racist ramblings about Japanese and Japanese-Americans. She shows us the pervasiveness of hatred and ignorance of Japan at that time, even among those citizens you'd think would have known better. Granted, few readers of the Grays Harbor Post who had boys fighting in the South Pacific could be bothered with the notion that Japan has a highly developed civilization, but it is a fact and a plain fact at that. Only writers with true pluck would have acknowledged it in those days.

The editors provide the reader with a marginal chronology for each month of the war. Occasionally Hogan's racism is parroted even here, though I want to think this is more a sin of carelessness than design. For example, the entry for November 1942 reads: "U.S. air force bombs Japs daily on Aleutian Kiska." Many will agree that "Jap" these days is a racial epithet regardless of how conveniently short it might be. "Japanese" is the term to use now. I am an ex-Harborite and have been living in Japan for almost 20 years now. There is a great deal of affection for things American here and I have spent the happiest years of life in this country. The war is long over. In this borderless age the thoughtless use of "Jap" is more inappropriate than ever.

My other beef with this book is that photos don't have captions (and photo acknowledgements at the back of the book aren't all that helpful). Yes, some of the pictures are pretty obvious and require no explanation. And yes, a picture may be worth a thousand words. But Hogan wrote for a newspaper, after all. When have newspaper photos not had captions?

But these are minor complaints. Despite the one problem with the chronologies, the editors did well by providing them. A useful glossary is also included which tells the book's reader what few of Hogan's original newspaper readers needed to have explained - such as who Mme. Ernestine Schumann-Heink was (an opera singer who was "a mountain of a woman," says the glossary). The fine illustrations by Lucy Hart render the essence of Grays Harbor flora and fauna and put a lump in this expatriate's throat.

All in all, this is a fun read - and an essential addition to the library of anyone interested in the history of the Pacific Northwest, particularly where that history coincides with one long and bloody nightmare that consumed the world six short decades ago.

A wonderfully nostalgic slice of the old Northwest
Remarkable for almost entirely ignoring the ongoing war, focusing instead almost exclusively on local doings (from Westport to Grayland). Her gently self-deprecating accounts of her various Victory Garden fiascos are alone worth the price of the book. I spent my childhood in Aberdeen in the '50s (from 5 to 13) and may even have met Kathy Hogan (her face, in the one picture in the book that shows it, is hauntingly familiar).


First Crossing: Alexander Mackenzie, His Expedition Across North America, and the Opening of the Continent
Published in Hardcover by Sasquatch Books (September, 2001)
Author: Derek Hayes
Average review score:

Not much new!
OK, there is some new information here. Mostly it seems that Hayes has helped illustrate the travels of Mackenzie, something that was not available previously. Barry Gough's book is notoriously lacking in any illustration of Mackenzie's voyages and Mackenzie's own book is virtually without useful illustration. Maybe having read the previous two books makes me jaded but Mackenzie's voyages can only be retold so many times.
Hayes has presented us with a slightly new take on telling the story with pictures, maps and historical vignettes but I hunger for a more thorough job. Perhaps more in the nature of Moulton's "Journals of the Lewis & Clark Expedition". Finding someone willing to wade through Mackenzie's rather impenetrable prose may be a challenge.
Notwithstanding the above this is probably the best explanation of Mackenzie's voyages since the original journals.

Illustrated throughout with maps and photographs
First Crossing by historian Derek Hayes is the amazing story of Alexander Mackenzie, and his trailblazing journey across the North American continent before civilized society conquered the North American wilderness. Illustrated throughout with maps and photographs in black-and-white and color, the deftly researched and meticulously reported details of Mackenzie's voyage vividly reconstruct an 18th Century expedition of truly insurmountable bravery and pivotally important discovery.


Gone Whaling: A Search for Orcas in Northwest Waters
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (July, 1994)
Author: Douglas Hand
Average review score:

This Author Deserves a Better Editor
I read this book a few years ago, and I remember thinking that the ideas were extremely interesting, and that the book was reasonably well written. However, the editing was absolutely terrible. It was quite distracting at times, and made the author look bad (but something convinced me at the time that the majority of problems really were editorial ones). Very frustrating. Anyhow, if you're willing to wade through those errors, or if there has been a second edition published, I recommend it. This is a fascinating read for anyone with an interest in a mammal found in every ocean in the world, whether you know more about orcas than the author, or whether you are as new to orca legend as he.

Amazing
This book is spell binding. I haven't even finished it yet, but I have enjoyed every word thus far. The author paints a watery world of murky human-orca relations, and lets the reader accompany him on his quest. If you are at all interested in orcas, their history with humans, native american totems, etc., this book is well worth the price. I have found it to be both spiritual and educational.


What the River Reveals: Understanding and Restoring Healthy Watersheds
Published in Paperback by Mountaineers Books (June, 1903)
Author: Valerie Rapp
Average review score:

A typical eco-whining book on Oregon Rivers
I did not really care for this book. The title is a misnomer, this book is not about defining&restoring healthy watersheds. It's more about the damage that dams and logging have done to rivers in the Pacific Northwest. Although the author talks about her conversations with various foresters, ecologists, etc. there is very little science in this book. There is too much focus on Salmon runs, breeding grounds, etc and while the dams in the northwest have devestated these, this subject has no bearing on restoring watersheds in say....Indiana (where I live). Also, Ms. Rapp seems to offer no real alternatives or large scale solutions, just continual re-iterations of the problems with daming rivers. After several stories about her hiking along rivers, attending conferences in the Northwest, etc...I got the impression that Ms Rapp is more interested in preserving places of natural beauty, rather than sustanability in the broadest sense of the word. Ms. Rapp reminds me of the folks who like wilderness hiking and camping, but complain about oil companies, Nukes, etc. Somehow they don't see anything wrong with driving their SUV 50-300 miles into the mountians every chance they get.

Further , I think a book with this title ought to give a few detailed "success stories" of rivers that have been restored to a more natural state. There must be better books out there on this subject.

As an FYI, my interests are woodlot and habitat restoration, and sustainable agriculture, so this review was not written by an ATV owning, cattle rancher who doesn't give a damn about our environment.

Excellent overview of watershed ecology
This book is written in an informative and entertaining style which pulls you to finish the book. There is a lot of good information on how watersheds work with pleanty of real worl examples, mostly from the Pacific Northwest. What looks "normal" to us now is not the natural state of rivers. The book has a Northwest focus but should be useful in any area. If you want to understand more about how rivers interact with their surroundings and how man has changed that over the last 100 to 200 years, this is a good book to read.

Informative and enjoyable
If you are intersted in learning more about rivers and watersheds, this is a good place to start. Without being too technical, Valerie Rapp conveys a lot of information on how watersheds work. I bought this book as a gift for my husband, but couldn't put it down when I started to look though it before wrapping it up.


Wines of the Pacific Northwest: A Contemporary Guide to the Wines of Washington & Oregon
Published in Hardcover by Mitchell Beazley (October, 2001)
Author: Lisa Shara Hall
Average review score:

Beautiful book but lacks some information for those touring
I thought this book was a beautiful book, but lack some information that is useful for those wanting to tour. The book is in order by geograhic location which is very useful and there is good information about the wineries, such as what they produce and a bit of history about the vineyards. But, I found it is not a great touring book. There is no mention of directions to the wineries, there are maps, but having done much wine touring in the Northwest directions are needed. There was also no hours of operation listed for any wineries, this would also be another useful piece of information for planning your tour. It would have also been nice to have some information about the area regarding hotel accomodations and food. My conclusion is if you are a Northwest wine lover, which we are, it is a great coffee table book.

An amazingly thorough look at an emerging wine region
This book offers all levels of wine lovers great information. While the geographically-organized chapters are heavy on trechnical topics, the author really tries to explain the reasons each area makes wine and what influences its taste, without talking down to the reader. It also makes a super resource for someone who seeks a touring guide. Every producer in each region is profiled, too, with comprehensive contact information, making planning a wine tour easy. The photos of both winemakers and vineyards are also wonderful. For anyone who loves NW wines or wants to understand them better, this book can't be beat.

Not just some fluffy picture book
I love this book. It has inspired to venture out to the Pacific Northwest and go on a tasting tour of my own.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states
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