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

How to start and operate a mail-order business
Published in Unknown Binding by McGraw-Hill ()
Author: Julian Lincoln Simon
Average review score:

One of the best "full overview" mail order books available.
While no one book can teach you everything about mail order marketing, How to Start and Operate a Mail Order Business gives the reader a good overview of the many things that a person will come across when in the Mail Order Business. If this is your first venture in mail order it is a very good starting point. John Schulte Chairman National Mail Order Association


The Humorous Mr Lincoln: A Profile in Wit, Courage, and Compassion
Published in Paperback by Countryman Pr (June, 1988)
Authors: Keith Warren Jennison and Norman Cousins
Average review score:

Timeless...Made me smile
I read this book nearly 7 years ago and still remember a few of the anecdotes with fondness. At the time I was 13 and could appreciate the simple logic of Mr. Lincoln and his sparkling wit. I'd recommend this to anyone looking for a nostalgic read that won't confront you with questions about Lincoln's political ambitions or racial attitudes. It is simply about a man, famous though he may have been, he was also smart and funny. In an age when humor is all about hurtful, shock-value jokes, this reminds us that it takes far more to make someone laugh and be able to do so more than 100 years after you are gone.


I Saw Booth Shoot Lincoln
Published in Hardcover by Jenkins Pub Co (June, 1970)
Author: W.J. Ferguson
Average review score:

eyewitness account
a excellant eyewitness account of the lincoln assaination. ferguson although only 14 at the time, knew john wilkes booth personally ,the book only 60-65 pages is an excellant piece of work from someone who was there.


If You Please, President Lincoln!
Published in School & Library Binding by Atheneum (June, 1995)
Author: Harriette Robinet
Average review score:

Moses, a True Leader Lives Up to His Name
"We runnin' away tonight! and don't tell no one!" a fellow slave whipsers to you in the filed. Chills run down your spine and thoughts race through your head. The year is 1864. You're a slave on aplantation in the southern States. You think running away will be great, but one slave who did run away, Moses, in If you please, President Lincoln by Harriette Gillem Robinet, found out it's a bigger adventure than what you could ever imagine.

Moses' closeset friend is "Aunt" Rebekah. She always tells Moses to run away from the plantation, but he is afraid to. Aunt Rebekah later becomes sick and dies. Before her death, she wisely once again tells Moses to run away. After her death, Moses realizes there's nothing left for him, so he begins his journey.

Moses arrives at Chesapeake Bay. There he meets a blind man by the name of Goshen. they board a Baltimore clipper hoping for work. Little do they know, they board a ship taking slaves down to Isle a Vache (Cow Island) off the coast of Hiti to start a colony. Moses becomes a leader of the slaves. The colonynever flourishes. Over 60 people die from smallpox and malaria. The colonists send Moses on a water barrel customized into a boat to hayti (now Hiti) to try and get help. He makes many requests to officials to have President Lincoln send a ship down for rescue. He is imprisoned, but escapes. Moses makes his way back to Isle a Vache not knowing if a boat will come down and rescue the colonists. They live...they wait...and they hope for a rescue. Will they get it? None of them know.

Throughout this struggle, Moses learns the quality of leadership. He gets hundreds of people though hard times. This book definitely deserves five stars because it is a good interpretation of the true story of the slaves on Isle a Vache. Moses may or may have not existed, but if he did, he certainly was a true leader.


Indians, Cowboys and Farmers: 1865-1910 (The Drama of American History)
Published in Library Binding by Benchmark Books (30 October, 2000)
Authors: Christopher Collier and James Lincoln Collier
Average review score:

American History and the battle for the Great Plains
"Indians, Cowboys, and Farmers and the Battle for the Great Plains: 1865-1910" is basically The Drama of American History's volume on how the "West" was won. The Great Plains is specifically defined as the area between the Missouri River and the Rocky Mountains; the story of California and the Southwest were covered in the earlier volume, "Hispanic America, California, Texas and the Mexican War, 1835-1850"). This series is geared for students in grades 6-9, but the basic approach of focusing on the "core content" of American history rather than a deluge of names and dates, seems to me to be eminently applicable to any age group (which is a polite way of saying that teachers of American History can use these books to structure their classes in a way that might be more beneficial than simply following the narrative flow of their current textbook).

This particular volume starts in 1865 with the end of the Civil War, but actually begins by talking about the Great Plains (1) Before the White Man and focusing on the establishment of the horse culture that sprung up there after the Spanish brought the animals to the New World and the idea of reservations that was started in the 1830s. (2) The Flames of War Rise Higher tries to cover the Indian Wars that ran from 1861 through the 1890s, including the wars of conquest being fought amongst the native tribes. In the wake of the decimation of the buffalo herds there were several key encounters between the Indians and the cavalry troops: Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce, the Battle of the Little Big Horn, and the massacre at Wounded Knee.

What the White Man did once the Indians were removed as obstacles is covered in the next three chapters: (3) The Legendary American Cowboy covers the "Cattle Kingdom" that arose as the buffalo disappeared and the cities of the East needed meat for their booming populations. (4) The Railroads Go West is a bit of a misnomer because the same trains that shipped settlers out to the Plains were shipping beef back East. This chapter covers both the evolution of transportation and communication that had to meet the challenge of covering the great distances from the Mississippi River to the West Coast. (5) Settling the Plains is evidence by the maps and statistics provided in this chapter. A series of maps showing the rats of travel from New York in 1800, 1830, and 1860 gives students a real sense of how things were changing. In 1800 it would take 4 weeks to get to New Orleans, 2 weeks in 1830, and 5 days in 1860. Charts detail the population growth of the Great Plains states from 1870 to 1900 and the different in labor costs for farm work done by hand versus by machine.

The final chapter offers a transition to the 20th century: (6) The Farmers Fight Back talks about the political struggle of the farmers and other Western interests, which resulted in the rise of the Populist movement and three time Democratic nominee for presidency, William Jennings Bryan. Collier & Collier make an interesting point about how weather conditions and economic prosperity alleviated a lot of the farmer's problems at the turn of the century, but that severe reversals of both of these elements would result in the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression. This underscore the author's intent to focus on the broad strokes of American history with an eye towards how they impact the future. The volume is illustrated with historic paintings, drawings, photographs, and such, most of which are usually accompanied by informative captions that make it clear the intention here is to continue teacher and not just to give the young reader something else to look at besides column after column of text.


Inside Lincoln's White House: The Complete Civil War Diary of John Hay
Published in Paperback by Southern Illinois Univ Pr (Txt) (March, 1999)
Authors: Michael Burlingame and John R. Ettlinger
Average review score:

Unique insights.
Hay, the young Assistant Presidential Secretary, was like a son to Lincoln. The President, in the diary often affectionately and irreverently referred to as "The Tycoon", relaxed around Hay as around few others, giving the diarist an insight into the character of Lincoln which is almost unique. This alone would make the book worthwhile, but Hay's views on other personalities and events of those dramatic days are also valuable, and engagingly written.
Hay's diary has been published before, but incomplete and poorly edited. This is the first complete edition, with all the entries restored and with extensive explanatory notes, which are necesary to follow Hay's refernces to obscure persons and events.
Essential for the Lincoln scholar and highly recommended for anyone's Civil War shelf.

(The numerical rating above is an ineradicable default setting within the page. This reviewer does nort employ numerical ratings.)


The Inspirational Words of Abraham Lincoln
Published in Audio Cassette by Soundelux Audio Pub (01 November, 1999)
Author: Gene Griessman
Average review score:

When "Lincoln" Speaks, You Should Listen¿
More than words of wisdom, these are words for all of us to live by. Gene Griessman captures the virtues Lincoln possessed and shared on such topics as: freedom, self-reliance, honesty, perseverance, leadership and many more of the things that made this a great country.

Play this tape at work, in the car, at home, in the Walkman -- because these are lessons that will continue to help anyone in the quest for self-improvement. If you want a compelling, constant reminder of the values and thinking that made Lincoln one of our greatest Presidents, this audio cassette is the inspirational companion you need to change your life for the better.


Jazz: The American Theme Song
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (September, 1993)
Author: James Lincoln Collier
Average review score:

A must read for anyone interested in Jazz
In what he calls a number of assays but what reads as a complete book Collier debunks a number of popular myths and shines a new light into some dark corners. Among the myths are the fact that timing in Jazz is rigid (it ain't), blacks are the originators (a case is made that the black creoles were much more important) of Jazz and critics know what they are talking about (it seems they frequently don't). The final chapter is typical of the whole book. In it Collier describes the importance of the local amateur and semi-pro players to Jazz and argues that Jazz wouldn't be abe to exsist without these dedicated people, a fact which is frequently overlooked by almost everybody. This book definately isn't the be all and end all of Jazz studies, it is on the whole to superficial and fails to deal with any of the music except in passing, but it definately makes one think about some long held beliefs and popular 'myths' in Jazz.


The Jeffersonian Republicans: The Louisiana Purchase and the War of 1812: 1800-1823 (Drama of American History)
Published in Library Binding by Benchmark Books (September, 1998)
Authors: Christopher Collier and James Lincoln Collier
Average review score:

The broad strokes of American History, 1800-1823
"The Drama of American History" series tells the story of American History by focusing on the "central core" of that history rather providing "a swamp of factual information." This eighth volume in the series look at the period from Thomas Jefferson's election in 1800 to when James Monroe left the White House in 1823, when the country was led by "The Jeffersonian Republicans" (Technically there is a bit of an overlap with the previous volume, "Building a New Nation," which covers the period 1789-1801; but this is simply because that volume ends with John Adams, the last Federalist president, leaving the White House while this book begins with the election that put Jefferson into office). However, despite the book's title, this is not a look at the political philosophy that Jefferson and his heirs brought to the government. Instead Christopher Collier and James Lincoln Collier focus on six important topics from this period:

First, A Contested Election looks at what happened when the presidential campaign between incumbent Federalist President John Adams and Democratic-Republican challenger Thomas Jefferson was thrown into the House of Representatives because Jefferson and his running-mate Aaron Burr received the same number of electoral college votes. When Jefferson was sworn into office in 1801 it was the first time a nation had seen a civilized transfer of power in the history of the world, yet that election was also the first (of many) to reflect the tawdry nature of American Politics. Second, The Louisiana Purchase is presented as Jefferson's most significant accomplishment in office. His unilateral decision to agree to the purchase is presented as being consistent with his republican beliefs that it was important for there to be land for new landowners rather than contradicting his disdain for big government. Third, The Lewis and Clark Expedition considers the exploration of the Louisiana Purchase as representing the opening of the way west for the nation (sort of a proto-frontier thesis). Fourth, The States versus the Federal Government: The Supreme Court Steps In, provides a concise but detailed explication of the pivotal Marbury v. Madison case, when Chief Justice John Marshall established the key principal of judicial review. This is the most important chapter in the volume, and the one that does the best job of taking advantage of the format of this series to establish why this issue and its outcome are so important.

The War of 1812 is the subject of the volume's last two chapters. Fifth, The War of 1812 looks at entire confluence of issues, both foreign and domestic, that led the United States and Great Britain to go to war once again. Readers will certainly get a sense for why it was this war, rather than the Civil War, that constituted the "Second American Revolution." Sixth, The War Begins, despite its title, looks at the entire war, including the Battle of New Orleans, fought and won by the Americans after the peace treaty had been signed and which created the false appearance that the United States was the clear winner in the war; after all, we won the last battle, which is what winners do. But then again, winners do not usually have their capital city burned. Consequently, while the scope of this volume runs to 1823, you are left with the implicit belief that nothing of consequence happened between the end of the War of 1812 and when President Monroe left office, thereby ending the "Era of Good Feelings."

I think there is a lot to be said for this "central core" approach to teaching American History, which goes for depth rather than breadth. This book provides students with the broad strokes of what happened during the six terms the Jeffersonian Republicans controlled the White House and I cannot think of anything that should have been covered instead of what this volume offers. My only concern is that as a practical matter, providing students putting together classroom sets for a series that takes ten volumes just to get through the end of the Mexican War, is going to prove too much for the vast majority of schools in this nation. "The Jeffersonian Republicans" is illustrated with historic paintings, etching, and political cartoons, all of which are reproduced in color (even if it is just tinting). As always, it is the later than impress me the most, because they invariably provide more of a sense for the tenor and emotions of the time than any formal portrait of a political leader.


Josquin Des Prez: Proceedings of the International Josquin Festival-Conference Held at the Julliard School at Lincoln Center in New York City, 21-25
Published in Hardcover by Oxford Univ Pr (April, 1985)
Authors: New York International Josquin Festival-Conference and Edward E. Lowinsky
Average review score:

It was great
Lalalalalalalala. This book was cool. Lalalalalalalala. I wanna read it again. It was so interesting. I already recomended it to my friends.


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