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

City Smart Guidebook Kansas City (1st Ed)
Published in Paperback by John Muir Pubns (September, 1997)
Authors: Michael J. Flynn, Linda Kephert Flynn, and Linda Kephart Flynn
Average review score:

Good guide to the area
We used this guide in our recent visit to Kansas City and found it to be helpful. Not as helpful as our friends in the area, who knocked themselves out showing us things, but it even gave them some ideas.


City Smart: Denver
Published in Paperback by Avalon Travel Publishing (October, 1998)
Authors: Georgia Garnsey, Hilary Garnsey, and Hillary Garnsey
Average review score:

Good Denver Specific Guide
I am practically a Denver native and I was very surprised by how much there is to do in Denver! The book gives great insight into all aspects that make Denver unique, as well as giving good tips to make anyone's visit enjoyable. I bought the book to show some friends around town, and now I have used it to keep myself busy on a few weekends as well.


Cleveland Ethnic Eats 2nd Edition
Published in Paperback by Gray & Co., Publishers (March, 1998)
Author: Laura Taxel
Average review score:

Cleveland Ethnic restaurants
FAntastic Book. Very relevant, concise, practical and almost encyclopedic listing of the huge numbers of ethnic restaurants in Cleveland.


Cleveland Then and Now (Then and Now Series)
Published in Hardcover by Thunder Bay Press (January, 2003)
Authors: John Grabowski and Diane Ewart Grabowski
Average review score:

My How Things Change........
I have been a Cleveland history buff for years and have taken plenty of "Then and Now" pictures on my own. I have been waiting for a book like this to come out for a long time. I have other then-and-now books for other cities and I'm glad one had finally come out for cleveland.
The old photos used are not the same tired photos you find in other Cleveland history books or in the papers. While some of the angles in a couple of the pictures are not quite right, this book provides an excellent perspective on how busy some of Clevelands neighborhoods used to be as well as what was lost through development, urban flight, and "progress". I think this book unintentionally helps demonstrate how disposable American society is and makes one grateful for the preservationists who try and preserve what is left. Newer isn't necessarily better.
The only fault I could really find with this book is that it could have been twice as thick in order to cover the West Side and other neighborhoods better. If your a Cleveland / history buff, this book is a must for your library.


Cleveland: A Portrait of the City
Published in Hardcover by Gray & Co., Publishers (November, 2002)
Author: Jonathan Wayne
Average review score:

Perfect for the coffee table!
This book is an attractive, comprehensive collection of Cleveland landmarks. I'd highly recommend it to anyone looking for a book that shows off Cleveland.


Climber's Guide to Devil's Lake
Published in Paperback by Univ of Wisconsin Pr (March, 1995)
Authors: Sven Olof Swartling and Sven Olfo Swartling
Average review score:

Guide to one of the premier Midwestern climbing areas
One would never think of the Midwest as having any great climbing areas. While it isn't Yosemite or Joshua Tree, Devil's Lake in central Wisconsin is one of the country's best climbing spots. This guide details hundreds of great climbs in DL along with maps and climb ratings. Descriptions are short with some beta mixed in and the maps are little confusing. But since most of DL's climbing areas are hidden in the bluffs, the guide is an absolute must. It's also small enough to fit in a back pocket


Colliers Across the Sea: A Comparative Study of Class Formation in Scotland and the American Midwest, 1830-1924 (The Working Class in American History)
Published in Paperback by Univ of Illinois Pr (Pro Ref) (March, 2000)
Author: John H. M. Laslett
Average review score:

from U of IL Pr. website
"This masterful study charts the extensive common ground and telling differences between two widely separated coal-mining communities: Lanarkshire, in the Clyde Valley of southwest Scotland, and the northern Illinois coalfield that became a prime destination for skilled Scottish migrant miners in the mid-nineteenth century.

"Challenging the prevailing exceptionalist paradigm of labor history, John Laslett examines the social, economic, and political context of each of these communities in generous detail. He traces the progressive heightening of class consciousness as the coal industry evolved from skilled hand labor to mechanized extraction and the escalating hostility between miners and mineowners as their interests split along class lines. Examining the rise of militant industrial unionism in both areas, Laslett provides a sophisticated explanation of the American and Scottish miners' divergent approaches to collectivist solutions.

"Based on a profound knowledge of both communities, Colliers across the Sea tells a compelling story of democratic aspirations, community, and industrial transformation's human costs."

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"An exceptional work of scholarship. . . . Laslett's findings are important and will be widely noticed, debated, and assimilated into the labor history canon." - David Brody, author of Steelworkers in America


Contented Among Strangers: Rural German-Speaking Women and Their Families in the Nineteenth-Century Midwest (Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Centennial Series)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Illinois Pr (Txt) (February, 1996)
Author: Linda Schelbitzki Pickle
Average review score:

Very informative book
The author gives you a real feeling for the lives women emigrating from German speaking countries. It is very informative and quite a good reference. I found it somewhat difficult reading because of the numerous citations and language style.

Very good if you want to find out about the experiences of the German speaking immigrant woman.


The Covered Bridges of Ohio: An Atlas and History
Published in Paperback by Thunder Bay Press (June, 1998)
Author: Miriam Wood
Average review score:

An EXCELLENT book on early timber bridges in Ohio!
Miriam Wood has written a very fine publication on the history of the timber bridge during the early years of Ohio's transportation system. Over the past 40 or so years, she has researched the covered bridges in each county and has compiled her findings in this interesting and informative book, which all bridge and history buffs should have on their book shelves. There are many old rare black and white photographs of the bridges, along with descriptions of them and their builders. The unique, artistic drawings by her husband, Richard, are yet another good reason to own it! It is a bargain at this price!


Denver: Mining Camp to Metropolis
Published in Paperback by University Press of Colorado (October, 1991)
Authors: Stephen J. Leonard, Thomas J. Noel, and Thomas F. Noel
Average review score:

Excellent, with a need for a new edition
Published in 1990, this book functions as a dense introduction to the full span of Denver history -- from the town's beginnings as a provider of goods and services to miners leaving for the mountains, to its rise as a transportation and medical hub of the Plains, to its recent oil and high-tech booms. The book is thoughtful and intelligent (and basically the only solid semi-recent book I can find about Denver). The ten years since the book was published have seen immense change in Denver (economic revival, massive suburban growth), however, and the volume sorely needs a discussion of how the recent decade's events and growth have changed the metropolitan area.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Oklahoma
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