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Right Plant, Right Place
Excellent reference for the experienced gardener

Great book that explores the big and small communities of MOThe book is great for the native Missourian and for those travelers who dream of discovering the Show Me State.
Excellent guide for travel, history, or trivia

A unique look at a rural tradition
A Fresh Look at an Old Tradition

Fantastic
Extremely Informative; A MUST for Missouri Route 66 travel

An essential guide for any mountain biker in Hoosier land.
Cameron's ATB book is an Indiana Cycling Bible

-I've been trying to get in touch with you. If you are able to contact me please do, okay?
This is a must for all Midwest mountain bikersWith his book I was able to plan a seven-day vacation this summer (1998) and tour the U.P. with a couple of buddies. We went up to the Marquette/Munising area and spent a few days on Bruno's Run, McKeever Hills and Grand Island. Awesome trails!!!!
Then we headed west and went on the Ge-che trail and got into some hardcore downhill action at the Copper peak bike park. The chairlifts make short work of some otherwise gnarly uphills. Then your on the top and fly, baby, fly!!!!!
We had a great trip on some of the best trails this mitten state has to offer. I'm planning to bring my girlfriend up there this fall or next year. She's not as hardcore as I am, but Mike's book has trails for everyone's level. I'm planning a different trip for me and her.
Another good thing about the book was the maps and descriptions. I could rule out the trails that didn't sound good to me, and knew what to expect once out on the trail like rocks, water, hills, etc. Another good thing was its size. I put mine in my backpack to use as a reference on the trail.
I always knew the U.P. had some awesome riding, and I'm glad someone took the time to do the research and put all those trails into one book.


Detailed and Easy-to-Use Reference
Wonderful Guide

Good guide
Excellent guide book for natives and newcomers.

Outstanding
poetry of commitment and activism

The Necessity of NeighborhoodsThe "particulars" of Kherdian's poems, of course, come from an immigrant neighborhood in Racine, Wisconsin, late 1930's. Those familiar with his poems will recognize this as his stock-in-trade. And, yes, the Armenians, Greeks, Poles, and Germans-as well as the children and drunks-are colorful and loveable.
However, the poems go beyond that surface of pleasant nostalgia-and it is pleasant, make no mistake. The found bicycle, the short cut across the empty lot, the fishing poles: these are ideograms, emblems of a lost America we long for and miss, even if we never knew it.
But let me return to Hillman to make a case for a deeper understanding of these poems. Growing down, as I understand it, involves an individual consciousness taking on more and more deeply the crucifixion of life in a particular body, with everything that implies: the limitation as well as the freedom, the suffering as well as the joy. Reading Kherdian's poems, I have a clear sense that the expression of this idea is what he is up to, has been up to all along.
The exact place--the living room, the crossroads, the neighborhood--of any working out of an individual destiny is precious, of course, because it is the only place we are going to have in this life. And Kherdian reminds of this often, least we forget:
"In size, only five by ten, if that,/ but inside those precious feet of space/ Old Man Cook sold live minnows/..."
Or:
"While I enter solemnly the kingdom/ of lawns and trees & moving water/ beside leaves of grass,/ and those brick-lined passageways/ over which my feet first roamed--/..."
One of the charms of the poems in this volume is the tone of the precocious narrator who speaks in such a calm voice, being both the child of the experience and the man who remembers. The language is plain but musical, relaxed yet strong.
Another of its charms is the almost reflexive reference to fishing that runs throughout the book--water, rivers, lakes, fishing poles, men who cook fish, minnows, bait-creating the impression of a personal, cohesive mythology beneath a deceptively simple surface. This volume joins David Kherdian's previous books of poetry as being a "keeper," if I may be permitted to borrow a metaphor.
New and Old Meet in this Neighborhood
McClure not only compiles lists from several regional experts, she includes down-to-earth quotes from them that lends a lot of authenticity to their recommendations.
She's upfront about what grows well in our alkaline clay soil and what plants can honestly handle the extremes of heat, humidity, drought, rain, cold and wind charactistic of this area.
Another excellent reference for those of us in zones 5 & 6 is Ezra Haggard's Perennials for the Lower Midwest. It's more conversational than a list book, but the accessible text is packed with advice and never rambles. The format gives each plant a page of text with a full-color photo on the facing page.