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

The Origins of the Chancellorship: The Buried Report of 1948 (Chapters in the History of the University of California, No 3)
Published in Paperback by Univ of California Center for (October, 1994)
Author: Eugene C. Lee
Average review score:

Excellent!
"Lee's excellent monograph is a beautifully told tale of the lengthy and difficult history leading up to the creation of [the office of the Chancellor]."

Illuminating!
"[A]n illuminating, authoritative, and balanced account.... Lee is the one person in the best position to review this important aspect of the history of the University California.... Few people have both written so well about the history of the University of California and served that history so well."


Pepito's Story
Published in Hardcover by Yarrow Pr (October, 1991)
Author: Eugene Fern
Average review score:

PEPITO'S STORY
This book stole my heart the first time I read it to my children. It is a beautiful story and even today as I read it I feel the love of Pepito toward his grandmother as she showers him with her warm acceptance. I heard an interview with Mr. Fern's wife on PRN. I was excited to know there was interest in making this sweet story into a musical. Anybody out there happen to hear this interview? I'll stand in line for a ticket.

Outstanding read aloud title for young children!
This story takes place in a Spanish village and is about a boy who loves to dance. His friends make fun of him and only the Mayor's daughter befriends him and appreciates his talent. This book teaches the value of being different and recognizing a persons gift or talent. Children love to hear this story. Recommended by a school media specialist with 10 years of read aloud experience. Enjoy!


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!


Plymouth Colony: Its History and People
Published in Paperback by Ancestry Publishing (March, 1997)
Author: Eugene Aubrey Stratton
Average review score:

Just What I Was Looking For
There are hundreds of books out there about the Pilgrims and the first Thanksgiving and all that goes with the subject. But the majority of these books are written either in a stodgy, encyclopedic (read: Boring!) format, or they are written for children. Well, now I have one that is actually written for adults, as well as in an easy to read manner. Written mainly from a genealogical stance, the author, Eugene Aubrey Stratton, did his "putting flesh on the bones" research; that is, he sought out how the pilgrims lived their daily lives in all aspects of their time and place. Instead of the cartoonish figures we all see come November, Mr. Stratton actually gives an authentic look to these early Americans. He makes the reader feel that they now know the pilgrims, not only through their historical prominence in our early history, but by name, and we feel their hardships, especially of their first winter here. After the first time reading this book, I re-read it, only this time I read the 'Biographical Sketches' section, located toward the back of the book, first, THEN I went to the beginning. My advice to the first time reader is to do the same. You will then know who you are reading about as names are mentioned.
This book is, simply put, the best of its kind. Maybe more genealogists should write our history books! At least they bring history to life!

An excellent history of the Plymouth settlers.
In doing research on my own ancestor who was a passanger on the Mayflower and one of the original Pilgrims, I have used over 50 books. This one is by far the best. Very readable, this book provides an excellent narative of many of the events of the first 70 years at Plymouth, and detailed descriptions of many of the Pilgrims. For anyone interested in this era, this book is a must.


The Portable Karl Marx (Paper)
Published in Paperback by Viking Press (March, 1983)
Authors: Eugene Kamenka and Karl Marx
Average review score:

A rich, accessible introduction to Karl Marx
"The Portable Karl Marx" is a splendid anthology of Marx' writings, political, philosophical and economic. The book also features a selection of Marx' personal letters, his university records and various private documents, including his birth certificate, all which help to illuminate the character of one of the prophets of the modern age. The compendium of extracts traces Marx' intellectual trajectory, from his early discipleship to the critical idealism of Hegel, onto his maturity, by which time he had established himself as a luminary of political thought. The chief doctrines of his mature philosophy are expounded here, such as historical materialism, surplus value and the class struggle, which would be generated by the contradictions and tensions of capitalism itself, leading to the growth of an educated proletariat which would free themselves from their yoke and revolt to usher in the era of communism. Karl Marx is, along with Freud and Nietzsche, one of the focal points of the culture of the twentieth century. Contemporary debates on political philosophy cannot do without having recourse to, or at least coming to terms with, his shattering insights and path-making formulations.

Students of philosophy, unite and buy this book!
This book is an outstanding overview of the life and thoughts of Karl Marx. The editor masterfully weaves together Marx's published works and private letters into a rich tapestry of history and ideas.

In addition to what you might expect to find in a collection like this (the text of The Communist Manifesto, selections from Das Kapital...), there are also tidbits from Marx's hand that help you truly understand the man and the history of his ideology, from his predictions on the fates of France and Russia, even down to his favorite color (red, of course) and his old report cards.

No serious student of economic and political philosophy should be without an understanding of Karl Marx. This book provides it like no other.


Principles of Engineering Economy
Published in Hardcover by John Wiley & Sons (December, 1976)
Author: Eugene Lodewick Grant
Average review score:

This is an outstanding textbook on capital budgeting.
Eugene Grant's textbook offers a sound, theoretically accurate, and mathematically rigorous treatment of the economic analysis of investment projects (capital budgeting). Though a bit more verbose than Harold Bierman Jr's classic work, Eugene Grant provides an abundant quantity of demanding end-of-chapter problems that will turn the diligent student into a capital budgeting expert.

The text and the style of writing is somehow difficult.
What I want to mention hear is not aboat the contents of the book. I found the text and the style of writing somehow difficult for someone who knows English as a second language. Although my English is good, I still had some problems. My friends who are not so strong in English had lots of problems and many of them failed to finish the book. All in all, compared to other books from the publisher, the text is difficult and has to be simplified. I hope for the next edition of the book, the publisher and writers would take it into acount.


Psalms Prayers of the Heart
Published in Paperback by Intervarsity Press (January, 2000)
Author: Eugene H. Peterson
Average review score:

Bible Study
The review below refers to this work as a "calendar devotion," when in fact it is a bible study. It contains twelve studies, each based on one psalm. The study explores Psalms 1, 2, 3, 8, 51, 103, 23, 137, 6, 73, 90, 150. As with all of Peterson's work, you will find many great insights, as well as be led to discover your own insights.

Human Experiences of The Heart
calendar devotions that touch the deep places of the heart and lift one to experience the stedfast love of God. Book contains many deep and warm insights for mind and heart food. A JOY AND BLESSING to read.


A Reader's Guide to William Butler Yeats
Published in Hardcover by Octagon Books (May, 1983)
Author: John Eugene Unterecker
Average review score:

Guide of Choice
Unterecker's "Reader's Guide," a vade mecum for the apprentice
or seasoned reader, informs and instructs. As commentary or teaching tool, it advances a concise, systematic way to interpret the ideas, literary devices, images, symbols, and occult motifs that permeate Yeats's poetry, a thematic
analysis that connects one poem with another and reveals the visionary design at the center of Yeats's work. From the allegorical quest in "The Wanderings of Oisin" to the meditative panorama of "Under Ben Bulben," Unterecker explicates the motifs of Yeats's evolving mythology of a unified self.

Latchkey to Yeats
Unterecker's "Reader's Guide," a vade mecum for the novice or seasoned reader, informs and instructs. As commentary or teaching tool, it advances a concise, systematic way to interpret the ideas, literary devices, images, symbols, and occult motifs that permeate Yeats's poetry, a thematic analysis that connects one poem with another and reveals the visionary design at the center of Yeats's work. From the allegorical quest in "The Wanderings of Oisin" to the meditative panorama of "Under Ben Bulben," Unterecker explicates the motifs of Yeats's evolving mythology of a unified self.


Remembering Forward
Published in Hardcover by Mercer University Press (April, 1995)
Authors: Harold G. Clarke, Celestine Sibley, and Eugene Hilburn Methvin
Average review score:

A fine work by a fine man. Worth the read!
Harold Clarke is an amazing man. But before one pretends to know him, it is important to know that he voluntarily relinquished his position as the Chief Justice of Georgia's Supreme Court so that Charles Weltner, the great Civil Rights figure of Georgia's past, could become Chief Justice before he died of cancer.

Such an action is typical of Harold Clarke's character. He is an immaculate man of decency, a true southern gentleman. I will defer the fact that he knew my grandfather and cares greatly for my father and even me. The fact is that he is a hero of Georgia's often troubled judicial history, and I love him greatly.

His book is most worthy of being read. I can promise anyone who reads it that you will appreciate Chief Justice Clarke's simple upbringing and his rise to destiny.

- Jeff Berry

A pleasant trip into the past.
A pleasant trip into the past. Runs the gamut of human emotions: Nostalgia, Humor, Sadness. So very reminiscent of when times and places were simpler. I highly recommend it. Very enjoyable reading. E. F. Howard .


Revelation (Interpretation, a Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching)
Published in Hardcover by John Knox Pr (October, 1989)
Authors: Eugene M. Boring and M. Eugene Boring
Average review score:

About Time
It is good to have a book on Revaltion that goes into depth about the true meaning behind the book. There is no breaking the code, or trying to find hidden things in this book. This commentary goes straight at the text and dives into it true meaning.

A Revelation that makes sense.
I translated the book of Revelation with Gene Boring in seminary and used this commentary as a textbook. It is quite well written - demanding scholarship in a simple to understand format. There IS another way to interpret the Apocalypse without giving into faddish millennial hype.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Oregon
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