Related Vacation Book Subjects: Oklahoma
More Pages: Harper 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
Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Harper", sorted by average review score:

Blue Monday
Published in Paperback by Patrice Pr (September, 1991)
Author: Harper Barnes
Average review score:

Great description of a time and area
I made the mistake of ownkng this book to someone who didn't retur it so will have to buy another copy.

I happen to live in Kansas City and loved the descriptons of the area. It bought out the discrimation against blacks and described the effect the Mafia had on this city. The Mafia did try to take over the town but they were too late. Tom Pendergast already owned everyone in down without his permission. Need a job, trouble with the law, what ever, just go see Tom Pendengast. ALl he asked in return was your vote. All of the corruption is exactly as written in the book. Edward R. Morrow was said as far as sin was concerned forget Paris. Shaning and PeKing might be worse but he dobuted it. As afarr as one area was concerned there was no depression. There was no building going on because of the depression except in Kansas City. Mr. Pendergast owned a concrete company. The city hall was built, as well as the county court house, the Federal Court House, the Police Buiding, a Muncipal Audition. Of course, Mr. Pendergast's concrete company got the bids. An electrican only did so much work a day as did a plumber, brick layer, ect. No labor saving devices were used. This way more people had work for a longer time. A person could rent a room, have femine company, liquor and hear the best music on earth and all in the same building. If he wanted gamble he only had to go to the basemnt---presto---gambling, liquor, etc.

all that jazz
"Blue Monday" does exactly what a novel should do: break down boundaries and make us feel how it is to live in another time and place. It's an alluring one, too - the jazz scene in Kansas City in the 1930s. Racial and ethnic divisions are brutal, the politicians are corrupt, crime is casual and cruel - a perfect place for romance. And for music, which Barnes writes about so eloquently you can almost hear the pages. "Blue Monday" is a haunting evocation of a world that's gone, and an incisive look at a bitterly divided America that persists. It's one of the most ambitious books I know, and also one of the most beautiful. Absolutely unforgettable. - Judith Newmark


Case of the High Seas Secret
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (August, 2001)
Authors: Alice Leonhardt, Harper Entertainment, and Cathy East Dubowski
Average review score:

cool
THIS BOOK IS A MUST FOR ALL KIDS! Good for all ages. If you don't get it you really missed out.

The Case Of The High Seas Secret
I really liked this book. I have all the other ones of this series and this was just as good as them all. Mary-Kate and Ashley are on a cruise with their family and take part in the scavenger hunt, they have to find three clues. With each clue is an object to prove they have got the clue, but then the objects start disappearing, can Mary-Kate and Ashley solve this mystery? Of course they can. I higly recommend it!


The Chalk Town Train & Other Tales (The Harper Chronicles, Volume One)
Published in Paperback by Trafford (October, 2001)
Author: Daniel Elton Harmon
Average review score:

This Book Isn't Long Enough
These days, anthologies tend to either be collections of the year's best something-or-other or compilations of literary short stories intended to elevate and edify. Both have their place in the scheme of things, but I suspect I'm not the only one who misses anthologies that contain just good entertainment.

If that's the case, may I offer for your amusement a slim little volume of tales by journalist Daniel Elton Harmon and featuring an historical counterpart of the author's by the name of Harper. Mr. Harper is a reporter for the fictitious Columbia, S.C., CHALLENGE in the almost-civilized era of the 1880's. The first compilation of his adventures, THE CHALK TOWN TRAIN & OTHER TALES, is billed as volume one of The Harper Chronicles, and those of us who like nothing better than a rollicking good yarn will be waiting impatiently for volume two.

The title story pits Harper against a notorious sociopath, back before such people actually had a diagnosis. "The Chalk Town Train" is a story of corporate injustice, unadulterated evil and justice administered with more than a touch of irony. Indeed, the purveyance of justice is a recurring theme in the eight stories that comprising the book, with our man Harper using his skill and insight to ferret out the truth, sometimes when no one else can.

Mr. Harmon has a superbly deft hand with the short story, and his characters are sharply drawn with a few adept strokes. From first word to last, each of Harper's adventures proceeds without a stumble, and the reader who can stop after reading just one must have a will of iron. His style is crisp and effortless, setting scenes with an economy of language that likely owes much to the author's own career as a journalist.

Indeed, the only real flaw in THE CHALK TOWN TRAIN is that it's over too soon, and before the appetite is satisfied.

Great stories!


Although this is the first book of fiction by Daniel Elton Harmon, it is far from his first published work. He has written more than thirty non-fiction books.

This is a fascinating collection of eight short stories, each featuring his late-nineteenth-century newspaper reporter hero, Harper. They held my interest to the end.

Harmon is a skilled writer, and I look forward to reading more of his work. He is a yarn spinner of the old school, reminiscent of Samuel Clemens or Booth Tarkington, who revels in story telling for the sake of story telling. A modern troubador. He lives in Lexington, South Carolina where he is well known not only for his writing, but also for his music making with his small folk music band, according to the book's introduction.

There are eight short stories in the book, all of which are quickly read and very entertaining. This is a wonderful book to read for your own pleasure, or to give as a gift. I recommend it highly.

Joseph Pierre,

author of The Road to Damascus and other books.


A Country Christmas (5 Stories in 1)
Published in Paperback by Signet (October, 1999)
Authors: Emily Bradshaw, Jodi Thomas, Patricia Rice, Raine Cantrell, and Karen Harper
Average review score:

Very Entertaining!
I really enjoyed this book. I have purchased copies to share with family and friends. I enjoyed the relationships that took place between the men and women. This book contained no sex, so my 13 year old daughter could read this book. I can't give enough praise to the authors of this book but, I will read this book every Christmas and it will remain on my shelf as one of my favorites.

Truly heart-warming!
I really enjoyed every one of the stories in this collection. I kept reading and re-reading "The Gift" by Emily Bradshaw. Another pregnant woman in a blizzard, but this time our heroine can't remember who she is or where she's from (and it's better off forgotten, anyway). But she changes the lives of the father and son who find her and she and her daughter charm their ways into a whole new life. I just loved it! "A Husband for Holly" by Jodi Thomas was enchanting! And Raine Cantrell's "A Time for Giving" was also a delight I read more than once.


Cowboys and Indians: The Shooting of J.J. Harper
Published in Hardcover by McClelland & Stewart (March, 2000)
Author: Gordon, Jr. Sinclair
Average review score:

A somber story very well told...
Once, many lives ago, I worked near Logan and Main in inner-city Winnipeg, Canada.

At the time, it was the epicenter of poverty and hopelessness, a toxic mix and this neighborhood, referred to as Urban Renewal Area II when I was there, is as bleak as any ghetto in any country. Native Canadians, the racial group who populate the area, are much like any group who are denied their place in the sun - displaced, despondent, frustrated, and angry at the power structure that oppresses them and sooner or later things reach a point where their issues must be addressed.

Sometimes it takes a riot, sometimes an assassination.

Unfortunately, it took too long after a troubled white policeman's murder of J. J. Harper, a First Nations leader, for the investigations by judicial commissions to break through the "blue wall" and place blame where it needed to go -- on bigoted cops. The police power structure was forced to examine itself and start to change. (Perhaps they all had a cold and couldn't smell the stink of institutional racism.)

Sinclair, on the side of the angels and the aboriginals, crafts a fast paced narrative, which he previously reported on as a columnist for the local paper. His style is smooth, economical, and concise and he covers the upheavals that began at Harper's death deftly and with compassion. (Almost every one here is a casualty including the victim, the cop that killed him and their families.)

The book moves with authority and slices and dices through the ultimately futile smokescreens thrown up by the police with a well-practiced hand. The recounting of this tragic story is good for Sinclair's readers and ultimately good for all of the people in the City of Winnipeg.

I was in Winnipeg last week and the centre of the city is poorer and more natives have moved in. The white flight continues. The First Nations people are still marginalized.

Maybe there's more hope because of this book.

Long Overdue
This long overdue examination of the criminal justice system in Canada vis a vis the aboriginal peoples and more particularly, the death of native leader J.J. Harper reads like In Cold Blood or a remarkable work of fiction. But it is anything but the latter. From the opening flash forward suicide to the ultimate closure, Sinclair utilizes his years of experience as an investigative journalist to tell the story, the violence, sex, corruption and human frailty in an objective yet compelling manner. Well written, painful and not for the squeamish. A must read for anyone who thinks that prejudice is restricted to one geographical area, race etc. A fascinating and remarkable first book.


Crazy for Lovin' You (Harper Monogram)
Published in Paperback by Harper Mass Market Paperbacks (April, 1994)
Author: Lisa G. Brown
Average review score:

Lisa G. Brown is WONDERFUL!
I agree totally with the other reviewer. My only complaint about Lisa G. Brown is that I can't find more of her books. When I read "Billy Bob Walker Got Married", I thought that it was one of the best romances I had ever read (and I read a LOT of them). Then I read "Crazy For Lovin' You". The characters are so honest and real, and the descriptions so powerful that I was totally engrossed in this book. The plot -- and the relationship -- developed so gradually and naturally that it was completely believable. And the scenes of the two of them in the truck are so sweet and touching and sexy, well, it's clear that Lisa G. Brown is a very gifted writer. Please, please, PLEASE, Ms. Brown, write more!

Crazy for Lovin You
Lisa G. Brown is, I believe, the best romance writer I have read. This is one talented lady, and where is she?? I'm dying to read more of her work, but can't seem to find anything. I've read the three that have been published, and will keep them forever. Can't recommend Ms. Brown highly enough.


Delfino's Journey
Published in Hardcover by Texas Tech University Press (November, 2000)
Author: Jo Harper
Average review score:

Interesting, educational, and thought provoking.
Delfino's Journey begins in an Aztec village in southern Mexico. After he and his slow-witted but intuitive cousin Salvador almost drown crossing the Rio Grande and are tricked into a slave camp in Texas, they eventually escape and make their way to Houston where they find jobs, solve a murder, and help bring about the closing of the slave labor camp. Finally, Delfino is able to send money to his pregnant sister in Mexico and faces a brighter future. The author incorporates Aztec mythology with realistic situations that illegal immigrants often face into a believable story that can be read on several levels and offers much food for thought about intelligence, languages, exploitation of immigrant workers, and Aztec philosophy and mythology.

Houston Chronicle
A new title about the im migrant experience, Delfino's Journey (Texas Tech University Press...) by Jo Harper, tells the contemporary story of a 14-year- old Indian boy's desperate excursion across the Rio Grande to earn money so his weak, pregnant sister in Mexico can get medical help. Delfino's impatience contributes to his becoming the victim of a slave-camp operation in Texas. Although the slavery issue seems to stretch reality, this exciting and suspenseful novel weaves Aztec legend and values with current issues of illegal entry into the United States. Young readers will love the tension.

--Barbara Samuels is co-director of the Greater Houston Area Writing Project and a consultant with the Rice School Writing Project.


Endangered Species: Health, Illness, and Death Among Madagascar's People of the Forest
Published in Paperback by Carolina Academic Press (August, 2002)
Author: Janice Harper
Average review score:

A remarkable ethnography
This is an excellent book that looks beyond the surface of game preserves and examines the impact of species protective programs on human populations. The author uncovers tragic consiquences of short sighted policies, and governmental agencies and NGOs who refused to deal with the consiquences of their policies. A must read for any anthropology or public policy grad student.

NOT YOUR TYPICAL ACADEMIC BOOK
Dr. Janice Harper's book is scorching in its honesty, painful in its portraits, relishable in its irreverence.

How thankful I am as a reader that Harper's editors did not slash and burn her political writing which in my view is the crux of the book. The betrayal of the village, Ranotsara, in southeastern Madagascar, where Harper lived for fifteen months, by the Ranomafana National Park Project, the United States Agency for International Development, and other organizations of "good will" is astonishing. Her writing of the events is brilliant in large part because she stops just before nailing to the wall the puppets in those organizations. She leaves them twisting in the wind, unwilling, unable, or both, to make a case for themselves, no matter how obvious their desperation and denial.

The deaths in Ranotsara Dr. Harper witnessed, grieved, and tried hard to sing about bring to the fore the absolute decay of honor in these days of diminishing returns for the written word and honorable deeds hijacked by hapless do-gooders, doing more harm than good. The moment in the book when Harper's father dies is one of the most honest accounts of the multiple shocks she was electrified by in Ranotsara, as the "Tanala" (people of the forest) grieved their ever increasing dead.

Make no mistake, this book is not about Dr. Harper. It is about a village and a people she grew to love. It is about her culture shock in doing the work she obviously loves and the Tanala who are simply trying to preserve their culture and stay alive. There should be an English word stronger, brighter, and more endearing than 'endangered'. The people of the forest deserve it.

(**Please note** My name is David Harrington Campbell, the author of the recently published novel, DANCING ON THE CELLAR DOOR, currently available on Amazon.)


Enid and the Dangerous Discovery (Our Neighborhood)
Published in Hardcover by Broadman & Holman Publishers (August, 1999)
Authors: Cynthia G. Williams and Betty Harper
Average review score:

Illustrator
It was my distinct pleasure to be able to illustrate these four books written by Cynthia Williams. When I was approached with the project there was no hesitation what so ever. What Cynthia had to say to children was too important, I wanted to be a part of it. She loves and understands the children and the problems that they face and wants so much to help them. Our children are the most important job we have for they are our future.

An Important Book
This is a beautifully illustrated book with a well written story, but that's not the only reason to buy this book. If you hope to educate a child you care about in the proper way to react to a found gun or anything dangerous that they may come across, you will want them to read Enid and the Dangerous Discovery. This is an important book that educates in an entertaining way, as do all of the books in the Our Neighborhood series.


Fashion Drawings and Illustrations from Harper's Bazar
Published in Paperback by Dover Pubns (November, 1976)
Authors: Ertee and Erte
Average review score:

Just Fabulous-bought another copy after I wore the 1st out!
Great graphics, imaginative design, fabulous period reference. Outstanding in every way!

Quaint text and dynamite illustrations of original fashion
Vogue editor Diana Vreeland once said that no one in the 20th century had a greater influence on fashion than Erte, this desite the fact that he worked for a competitor, Harper's Bazaar. That's an indication of just how revolutionary his work was for the times. Working with virtually no direction to blunt his creativity, Erte published paintings and sketches of ingenious fashions that are as playful and lighthearted as they are luxurious and exquisite. He envisioned modern women (from 1915 to 1926) as goddesses, ultra-chic stars, children of nature, and totally feminine creatures to be adored and exalted. His fashions reflect this, individualistic and charming, colorful and startlingly functional. The 8 color covers and many B/W illustrations show insight into a dimension of fashion that one normally sees only on the show runways: the never-ending well of creativity brought to life by a truly inventive mind unhampered with concerns of marketability. Peruse the illustrations and notice allusions to gardens, paper-weaving, architecture, tennis, various members of the animal kingdom, ceremonial draperies, sailing ships, and flames. Dresses, coats, masks, swimming costumes, sleepwear, and gowns all ornamented with beads, fur trim, sheer draperies, corded lacings, silver embroidery, leather and straw. Practical? Not really. Mass manufacturing? Not in a million years. This is extreme fashion, the stuff of couture, such as would be worn to the salon of writers and intellectuals. Erte loved best to design for the stage, and the drama and fantasy of theater is in evidence in each ornate illustration. Although for 3 years he produced designs for Altman and Bendel in NY, most of his work was strictly conceptual, and many readers of Harper's saved covers and sketches to muse over as they would an art history volume, as evidence of another world. Ignoring fashion trends, Erte generated innovative and outre designs that still amaze and delight those of us who appreciate true originality. I'd recommend this book to anyone interested in textile or fashion design, but also to graphic designers, sculptors, and those who really enjoy art for its own sake. This book is, in one word: luscious.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Oklahoma
More Pages: Harper 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