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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Jackson", sorted by average review score:

Alphabetize Your Life
Published in Paperback by Journey Pubns (20 May, 2003)
Author: Rona E. Jackson
Average review score:

Perfect Way to Jump-Start Your Day!! GREAT GIFT!!!
This little gem of a book is packed full of thought-provoking ways to "Alphabetize Your Life" and give it fresh, new meaning each and every day. Sift out those dreary thoughts that pull you down, and be inspired to achieve new goals and heighten your awareness each time you pick up the book. Great to share with others in a group, or just by yourself. This is the perfect gift for anyone and for any occasion! I refer to it daily, and can't wait for Ms. Jackson's next book!


And All These Roads Be Luminous: Poems Selected and New
Published in Hardcover by Triquarterly (January, 1998)
Author: Angela Jackson
Average review score:

Yusef Komunyaakaa meet your spiritual twin...
she is angela jackson from woodside california, by way of chicago, by way of woodville mississipi, born from the goddess...her poems speak blues, religion, jazz, down-home cooking, long lasting sugar kisses and journeys by astral travelling. she is a spider walking across the face of history a spook opening her heart to reveal her family secrets...this book is poignant, powerful, sexy, and shows the capabilities of lamguage when placed with someone who has respect for it....very few poetry books have moved me...this one does....


And They Dance Real Slow in Jackson.
Published in Paperback by Dramatist's Play Service (December, 1986)
Authors: Jim, Jr. Leonard and Jim Leonard Jr.
Average review score:

awsome!
a sad and touching story about a girl's life in a wheel chair. I was angry at how they treated the main character. i don't think many people realize how lucky they are to have legs that work.


Andrew Jackson (Encyclopedia of Presidents)
Published in Paperback by Children's Book Press (February, 1988)
Authors: Alice Csinski and Alice Osinski
Average review score:

The controversial political career of Andrew Jackson
This Encyclopedia of Presidents volume on Andrew Jackson included reproductions of several political cartoons and pamphlets from the heated elections in which he was involved. For example, there is an anti-Adams campaign booklet circulated by Jackson's supporters during the 1832 presidential race, as well as several anti-Jackson political cartoons, all of which would make fairly interesting handouts for young students studying the Jacksonian Age and the birth of the Democratic Party. Jackson was the first presidential candidate to win the popular vote three times in a row, but the first time around he did not have an electoral majority. When John Quincy Adams cut a deal with Henry Clay, it was Adams who won the White House. Given what happened in Florida in the 2000 election, certainly young students will be interested in all these political machinations.

Alice Osinski begins this juvenile biography of Jackson as all volumes in the Encyclopedia of Presidents begin, with a defining moment from the subject's life. For Jackson it is his inauguration in 1829, when crowds of rowdy citizens were welcomed into the White House. Although Jackson is called "The Frontier President," the lesson is clearly about his populism, where his election was seen as a victory for the common man. Chapters are devoted to Jackson's youth, how he made a success of his life on the frontier, and his celebrated efforts during the War of 1812. His two terms as President are divided into the Birth of the Democratic Party, which covers the infamous Trail of Tears of the Cherokee nation cause by his decision to move all Indians west of the Mississippi, and Long Live the Union, which focuses on the controversy over the National Bank and other federal versus states issues. A final chapter deals with Jackson's few years after leaving the White House. Clearly this volume is not just a substantive juvenile biography, it also takes pains to deal with all of the controversial issues of Jackson's political life, whether judged by the standards of his time or our own. Teachers and students looking to get beyond what little can be found about Jackson in a standard American History textbook will find this a good source for additional information.


Andrew Jackson (United States Presidents)
Published in Library Binding by Enslow Publishers, Inc. (September, 1997)
Author: Karen Judson
Average review score:

Andrew Jackson
I enjoyed this book.I like to learn about presidents.I like to know what people called the presidents.my favorite part of the book is when Andrew Jackson married Rachel Donelson Robards for the first time in 1791.I would think that people that who like presidents and want to learn about Andrew Jackson would like this book.I learned that in 1788 people would duel with other people.Sometimes they would be shot and die or they would be lucky and not be shot.Well I hope you read this book.


Andrew Jackson Vs. Henry Clay: Democracy and Development in Antebellum America (Bedford Series in History and Culture (Cloth))
Published in Hardcover by Palgrave Macmillan (May, 1998)
Author: Harry L. Watson
Average review score:

Clear, concise explanation the Clay/Jackson power struggle
Today we know them as Old Hickory and the Great Compromiser. However, they called each other King Andrew the first and the Corrupt Bargainer. Jackson and Clay were the opposite poles of the axis of Antebellum politics. Each man carried an ideological dislike and often personal hatred of the other man. However, each shaped the political landscape in the US perhaps more than any men after 1800. The 1820-30s were the utmost of critical in the development of the US- the crossroads where the US could prove a failed democratic experiment or emerging industrial country. In these crucial times nothing happened in Washington, DC without either Clay's or Jackson's approval. Their personal feud infulenced everything from construction of national highways, and the national banking system to slavery and tarriffs.

Watson keeps an even hand in explaining the complex relationship of these two important men. His writing is percise and insightful. The first part is Watson's explantion and analysis. Part 2 consist of over 100 pages of historical letters and writings. This allows the reader to understand Jackson and Clay thru their own words. The 200+ pages read very fast and contain all the information your likely to ever need to know about the connection between Clay and Jackson. The book was designed "to be a reasonable one-week assignment for a college course." It proves very reasonable indeed.


Andrew Jackson's America: 1824-1850 (Drama of American History)
Published in Library Binding by Benchmark Books (September, 1998)
Authors: Christopher Collier and James Lincoln Collier
Average review score:

The transformation of America under Andy Jackson
In the opening chapter of "Andrew Jackson's America: 1824-1850," Christopher & James Lincoln Collier drive home the difference between Jackson and George Washington by pointing out that Jackson prided himself on being a "man of the people," while the aristocratic Washington would have been insulted by the idea. However, as the first painting of Jackson in this volume clearly shows, no one could look more imperial than Andy By-God Jackson. This ninth volume in excellent series The Drama of American History focuses more on the Age of Jackson rather than just the two terms Jackson served in the White House. After all, Jackson was a major political figure before that time; in fact, he was the first candidate to win three consecutive popular votes for the Presidency.

This volume covers the Age of Jackson in seven chapters: (1) A Man for an Age previews Jackson's impact on American History and how he is clearly one of those figures that who validates the Great Man theory of history. However, while Jackson serves as the defining figure of his time, he is not the focus of most of these chapters; (2) The Industrial Revolution Comes to America looks at the social and economic transformation of the nation that happened during this period; (3) The New Transportation System covers the importance of being able to move people and things from one place to another by canal and railroad; (4) The Rise of the Market Economy looks at the creation of the "blue collar" and "white collar" class system that originated at this time.

Jackson's personal impact on the nation's history highlights the next couple of chapters: (5) The Beginning of the Two-Party Political System erupted after the "Era of Good Feelings" that defined the administration of James Monroe. The bitterly contested election of 1824 between the National Republicans of John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay and the Democratic Republicans of Jackson gave birth to the political division that continues to plague us today; (6) Andrew Jackson and the Modern Presidency looks at not only how he played an important role in creating the national Democratic Party, but how his political philosophy of believing in a strong president while not believing in a strong government can best be seen in the public argument over the national bank; and (7) Pushing the Indians Back Again details Jackson's policy of moving the native tribes west to allow white expansion. This chapter has a map that pinpoints 68 major Indian battles between 1829 and 1866 and certainly the Colliers provide a contemporary perspective on the Age of Jackson by ending it with the shame of the Trail of Tears.

The chief value of The Drama of American History series is how the Colliers establish what they call the "central core" of the subject under discussion. "Andrew Jackson's America" shows how the nation changed during this quarter-century and what hand Jackson hand in the nation's peculiar evolution at that point. The volume is illustrated with historic paintings, etchings and political cartoons, although if anything there are too few of the last on this list (there are some really choice examples I have seen elsewhere that would have enriched this volume). Even if this series proves too expensive to work as a complete set for students in the classroom, as I suspect is almost always going to be the case, teachers can still benefit from the organizational structure of these volumes and the emphasis it provides for understanding the period.


Andrew Jackson: A Photo-Illustrated Biography
Published in Library Binding by Capstone Press (January, 1998)
Author: Steve Potts
Average review score:

An excellent introduction for young readers to Old Hickory
Although there is a photograph of the ancient Andrew Jackson on the cover of this "Photo-Illustrated Biography" by Steve Potts, the only photograph on the inside is a contemporary black & white photograph of the Hermitage. I know I have seen at least one other photograph (or probably more accurately a daguerreotype) of Jackson, also from shortly before his death and years after he left the White House, so it is not like it is possible to have much more than what is provided here.

Anyhow, the volumes in this service are clearly geared for young readers and consist of a full-page illustration on the left side of the two-page spread and several paragraphs of text on the right. In that latter regard, Steve Potts provides a lot more information than other volumes in this series. Young readers will learn about how Andrew Jackson became the seventh president of the United States and the first born in a log cabin. Potts traces Jackson's life from his boyhood in Carolina, through his experiences during the Revolutionary War, to his early career as a lawyer. Potts deals with the facts behind Jackson's marriage to Rachel Donelson Robards and how he earned the nickname "old Hickory" during the War of 1812. Jackson was the first candidate for President to win the popular vote three times in a row, and Potts explains how Jackson "lost" that first election in 1824 (which will be of interest to those young students who remember what happened in Florida in 2000).

There is a lot of information in this little volume, which clearly makes it the best of the series. Both young students and their teachers will get a solid background on Jackson's life and political career.


Andrew Jackson: Our Seventh President (Our Presidents)
Published in School & Library Binding by Childs World (October, 2001)
Author: Ann Graham Gaines
Average review score:

A solid juvenile biography of Old Hickory, Andy Jackson
Franklin Roosevelt was the first President to win a third term in the White House, but he was actually the third Presidential candidate to win the popular vote three times in a row. Grover Cleveland was the second and Andrew Jackson was the first. The problem was the first time around the election was thrown into the House of Representatives and John Quincy Adams cut a deal with Henry Clay to win the Presidency. Certainly young readers remember enough about that mess in Florida in 2000 (not to be confused with this year's primary mess in that state) to find this aspect of Jackson's political life to be rather interesting.

As with all of the volumes in the Our Presidents series, Ann Graham Gaines divides her subject's life into four chapters, looking at Jackson's life growing up in the south during the American Revolution, how he became a national hero during the War of 1812 at the Battle of New Orleans, his quest to finally win the Presidency, and the two terms he served in the White House. The book is illustrated with historic etchings and paintings, as well as a rare photograph of the aged Jackson. The margins of the book often contain interesting facts regarding Jackson's tendency to fight duels and how he got his nickname of "Old Hickory." There are also sidebars devoted to his wife Rachel, the Trial of Tears, and Jackson's home the Hermitage.

In addition to providing all of the basic biographical details of Jackson's life, Gaines does a good job of providing a concise account of Jackson's impact as President, from the founding of the Democratic Party to the controversial Indian Removal Act and the fight to destroy the Second Bank. Young readers will get a sense for how Jackson was a pivotal President in the nation's history and how he made his impact on history.


Applied Water and Spentwater Chemistry: A Laboratory Manual
Published in Hardcover by Kluwer Academic Publishers (January, 1993)
Author: Gaines Bradford Jackson
Average review score:

Assessment of "Applied Water and Spentwater Chemistry"
This storehouse of analytical fundamentals simplifies the testing of substances and characteristics found in water and water-based slurries. This text features analytical procedures accompanied by parameter troubleshooting guides. Most of the procedures have been approved by the latest edition of "Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater" as well as the code of the Federal Register. Review Questions for each analytical procedure reinforce analytical expertise. Calculations and analytical procedures are written for the general public and not for professional chemist, with full explanation of how the final value was derived. Step-by-step instructions demonstrate how to use inexpensive, easy-to-obtain assay materials that yield reliable results.


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