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

I Cried You Didn't Listen: A Survivor's Expose of the California Youth Authority
Published in Paperback by Feral House (July, 1991)
Authors: Dwight Edgar Abbott and Jack Carter
Average review score:

"ICried, You did not Listen, A Survivors expose of the Calif
This book came to me from a friend, I was stunned by the authors candor, his willingness to reveal what his experiences have been, and to tell what had happend to him as he was thrust into the 'system'. Not an offender, but for protection!! His choices spiraled him into a repetitive whirwind without a possibility of escape. How sad that adults abuse children to relieve their own frustrations and perversions. This book should be destributed to every high school in the country, so that these, so called, 'tough kids' can see their possible future in the makeing... by the choices they make. They do have them, this book will help them make the right ones. We were not put here, without a way out, that way out is to use our God given intelligence and a willingness to understand our nature..

...
I can't say much since the author tells it in great detail. I don't think a doubted any of the facts that are presented to the reader with a lot of emotion. It was by accident that I came upon the book at the Los Angeles City College Library. On the cover was a picture of this innocent boy looking at me with sad eyes. I opened the book and enetered a world where misery is welcomed, where it is a matter of survival of the fittest but stripped of any chance. Being a man, I have cried over this book like a baby. Alas, I have not been able to do much since I don't know who to contact. This book should be reprinted, and, with good marketing, distributed all over the world. IT IS POSSIBLE.

I CRIED, YOU DIDN'T LISTEN is frightening
I recently interviewed Mr. Abbott after a years wait. I sat in his office where he struggles to build his business. Before me was an imposing man, intelligent and handsome. His smile and sense of humor caught me off guard. I expected something else from a man who had lived inside a eight by ten foot prison cell for nearly forty years of his fifty seven years upon this earth. He admits he has robbed raped and murdered. He shares with me his past life has been a nightmare he will never forget. I will not go into all we discussed but, I must wonder how such a man can forgive us for creating a juvenile penal system that molded him in preperation for the life he lived when we find it so very difficult to forgive him. His book leaves anyone who reads it with haunting thoughts. Yet, few who have read it has taken the time to seek change within the system we, society, entrust our troubled youth to. I Cried, You Didn't Listen is a haunting horror story of what really goes on behind the fences and walls where we place children who need help. We learn that instead of a "rehabilitation" process there is widespread abuse in all forms, long stays in solitary confinement, beatings and a condoned by staff pecking order amongst the children that is intimadating and destructive. Will we now move to change a system that destroys what we intended for these children? Or will we turn our backs and convince ourselves it is "the best we have?" I asked Mr. Abbott what he would do if he had it all to do over. His response was, "I would ask not to be born."I left Mr, Abbott convinced he would never again offend us, societies members, by returning to criminal acts but, I now realize there are many incarcerated children being prepared to follow in the footsteps of the man who shared his shame, and his pain, with us.


In Danger (The California Poetry Series)
Published in Paperback by Heyday Books (15 August, 1999)
Author: Suzanne Lummis
Average review score:

L.A. DUES
Insightful. From someone who knows. I don't ordinarily go for poetry (with a few exceptions: Charles Bukowski, Pleasant Gehman, Bill Shields, Dan Fante, Jim Northrup, Jack Micheline, etc.) so it's rare for me to spend money on a poetry book--but when I do, it's usually something worthwhile--and this certainly is that: a gem of a book. I'd like to see Suzanne Lummis write more. The lady has paid her dues and it shows. I don't recommend everything I read--but this is certainly a book I would recommend. Too bad it's such a slim volume. There's an old saying, though: good things come in small packages--and Suzanne Loomis' IN DANGER is certainly one of those good things. I had to give it five stars. Also, that was a moving obit the lady wrote in the L.A. Times a few years back when the late great Charles Bukowski passed on. The piece was so well done that I had to cut it out and frame it. I don't know, I'm sure others have felt this way, but there they were: tears rolling down my face when I heard that Buk was no longer with us. Thank you, Suzanne Lummis.

Poet Noir
suzanne lummis take the femme fatale sterotype and inverts it, and as a result, witty and evocative poems are born out of her experience in los angeles; especially the dirty parts that no one wants to know about. the poems should be read while drinking a stiff one or listening to tom waits...astonishing....

One part earthquake, two parts heartache
Two lines to give you a taste: "City of sirens and lowdown ways, neons wincing like nerve ends, see what you've done?" and "You were the B-movie I just had to sit through again." Equally touching and jolting, these poems are one part earthquake and two parts heartache.


Lunchtime Walks in Downtown San Francisco
Published in Paperback by Wilderness Press (November, 1998)
Author: Gail Todd
Average review score:

Fun for Residents and Tourists Alike
I would make one small addition to the other reviews. Lunchtime Walks in San Francisco, Gail Todd, is as useful for tourists as is it for residents! It became a permanent addition to our library after we were able to flip through a copy at the Rand McNally Store in San Francisco. For those not having the opportunity to peek first, this is a wonderful resource for trip planning. The walks aren't too long (about an hour for most), are centrally located, and a handy map is included with each. Information is provided on the history and the architecture of the area, shops, restaurants, picnic areas (yes, even in San Francisco there are areas for relaxing and enjoying your lunch in the great outdoors), and gorgeous views. Perfect for the visitor wanting to take some delightful jaunts including the 'must see' sites in a city that is made for walking. We've already book marked several of the 33 walks for our next visit to the city by the bay.

If you live in San Francisco, BUY THIS BOOK!!!!!
Now that Spring is here, Gail Todd's walking guide to San Francisco is indispensible for anyone living in the City and looking for a new way to explore it. Beautiful pictures, detailed maps, tons of great ideas for lunchtime walks -- this guide has it all.

You'll See The City With New Eyes
As a 20-year resident of San Francisco, I'm pretty jaded when it comes to guidebooks about my city, but this book is a real treat! The author's fresh approach and clear, concise information makes this book a pleasure to read. Buy two and give one to a friend.


Miraculous Air: Journey of a Thousand Miles Through Baja California, the Other Mexico
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Utah Pr (Trd) (November, 2002)
Author: C. M. Mayo
Average review score:

Don't go to Baja until you've read this book
God, what a read! Like a novel, almost, full of surprises and little historical bits that will enrich your visit to Baja beyond measure... it was my first visit to Mexico, in 1957, and reading this book takes me back to my childhood visions of a place where the air is miraculous, the sand clean and white, the people like brothers and sisters. Read this book in the teeth of winter, to survive the snowbound months. And if you want to give someone a gift when they're Baja-bound, give them this book. Truly a miraculous treasure.

Wonderful!
I loved this book. It will make you laugh, make you cry, and make you want to go to this amazing peninsula asap. Or go there again. (What else is a Baja Buff to do?)

The best book ever written on "the Other Mexico"
Miraculous Air was very enjoyable to read. It has lots of historical & political information but it's a "page-turner" all the way to end, which was a quite a surprise.


The National Geographic Traveler: California
Published in Paperback by National Geographic (April, 2000)
Author: Greg Critser
Average review score:

Excellent trip planner
Recently we visited California for the first time. We covered San Francisco, LA and San Diego in one week. We had planned everything before-hand using the National Geographic Traveller and our experience is it turned out very useful in that respect. It exaclty tells you what is a must see and what looks good from where. So we were prepared and we expected certain things. For e.g. this book says that the views from Coit Tower are breathtaking and they really are so. We had to walk up from China Town to Coit Tower on the very steep streets of San francisco. But once we were at Coit Tower the views of the city were excellent. This book also mentions some driving tours which are very useful. One thing I would like to mention here. We had rented a mustang convertible to drive the Calif Highway One along the coast. Our friends recommended to take the 17 mile drive on our way and we were surprised why it was not mentioned in this book. But after driving through the seventeen miles we continued the drive along Highway One. And let me tell you the 17 miles drive is nothing compared to the gorgeous views on Rte One. If you ask me, please avoid the 17 miles drive it is just a rip off of 8 bucks. There is much more beauty ahead on Rte One. We should have listened to the book, the book was right by not mentioning it!

The best money I ever spent on book
Ok, may be not the best - who judge, but very close too. Do not think, just buy and enjoy reading and traveling.

The best single volume on California
As expected, this book has some of the best photographs and illustrations available. What was more surprising in a travel guide was the quality of writing, the great social insights, and the historical contextualization. While Critser touches all the necessary points of interest, he also discovers hidden marvels from excellent cheap restaurants to the often unsung corners of L. A. If you are going to buy one guide, this is it.


No beast so fierce, a novel
Published in Unknown Binding by Norton ()
Author: Edward Bunker
Average review score:

Masterpiece
This book is a gem, one of the best I've ever read. It's not sad: it's mostly a deep point of view about reality, but no space for sadness here. Ed Bunker is a really gifted writer, and I was stunned by his book: I found it as strong as any good piece of literature. So powerful, so vivid, so close to the truth. It's cruel, cynic, but so real: there's more truth in this book than in 1000 different ones. The author lets you analyze the nature of crime, without analyzing it for you, just telling a story. What a discovery.

Shocking
A crime-novel from a man who knows the inside of the criminal mind. This book is interesting both as a social study and as a suspense novel. Bunker does not keep his punches, and he writes with brutal honesty. The story of Max Dembo(the main character), is both exiting and sad, as Max tries to become a straight citizen, but soon realize that he is "born to loose". A great book, no matter how you look at it. This should be something they make the kids read in highschools.

FANTASTIC
This is an incredible book about criminals and their twisted philosophies. Bunker writes with brutal honesty. I found better psychological insights in these pages than a handful of sociologists could blabber out of their book training. This book came from the REAL DEAL! It doesn't glamorize anything-it just is what it is. Not to filibuster here, but with the ongoing debates about capital punishment and crime in general, this book should berequired reading for anyso-called "experts" on the subject. Bunker's words make a lot of sense and help you to understand a criminal's mind a little better.


In the Land of the Grasshopper Song: A Story of Two Girls in Indian Country in 1908-09
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Nebraska Pr (November, 1980)
Authors: Mary Ellicott Arnold and Mabel Reed
Average review score:

Little has changed along the river....
From early in the 20th to the birth of the 21st Century, little changed along the banks of the Klamath in 95 years. The path these women followed remains little altered from when they traveled tho now covered in asphalt, it is still a remote and rough territory for the uninitiated. They stepped off a ship in Humboldt Bay and then walked off the map into the unknown. Surrounded by wilderness, the Marble Mountains and the Trinity Alps, as spectacular and rugged peaks today as they were then. Great Grandchildren of some of those who taught these adventerous ladies the skills to survive in this wild country still live on the same piece of ground. This is the canvas Mary and Mabel painted a wonderful picture of the world they found here. Let them show you the neighborhood and see if you could follow those footsteps down the trail.

Since the world was created at Katimin, the Klamath River has been home to the salmon runs that fed the eagles and fattened bears and filled the smokehouses of the people. The river is the life-blood that flows thru the canyon veins, like a puzzle, each piece necessary to make it complete. A blood transfusion 150 miles away only slowing foreclosure on farmland in another state, no crops must die. Now less water flows downstream and is murky colored and too warm for the salmon to survive in but the life of a potato was saved! A river with no fish is a watershed dying, when the life of the river dies will life along that river follow? These hardy women managed to live without fries, but a river without salmon would be both unbelieveable and inconceivable to them.

A story from home...
Mary and Mabel wandered into my part of northern california to be schoolteachers. From their story you can see how they knew nothing of what the territory was like, how the people were, or any local customs. They seemed to have a vague sense that it was a 'wild' land. They fit in amazingly well in a land where killing another person meant you had to pay that persons family $100 and law was either non-existant or uneffective. They seem to throughly enjoy themselves and set to learn the culture around them and teach what they can. Surprises are around every corner, from rattlesnakes to mountain lions to injun devils. Surprises such as their trusted friend telling them he couldn't go into one town because he had to 'pay $500 last time.'
A great story that is easy to read and gives a glimpse of the hidden corner of northern california where the hupa, yurok and karuk indians reside.

Very adventurous women!
This is an amazing account, by two very adventurous women, of their time spent in an extremely remote area of this country. Even with the speed of modern automobile travel, the tiny communities along the Klamath River, in Humboldt & Siskiyou Counties of northern California, are still remote. Mary & Mabel's sense of adventure, humor, tolerance & joy radiate from this book. It's been 20 years since I lived near the Company Ranch, in Orleans, and read this story. I'm looking forward to owning my own copy and re-reading it. Another reader recommended a wonderful book of similar format. It's exact title is "Tisha: the story of a young teacher in the Alaskan wilderness". It is available through Amazon. I lent my copy several years ago; it's time to buy another copy and re-read it, too. These books are very difficult to find in bookstores. Thank you, Amazon.


Killer Calories: A Savannah Reid Mystery
Published in Hardcover by Kensington Pub Corp (May, 1997)
Author: G. A. McKevett
Average review score:

Forget the frog joke
This is third in the series with Savannah Reid the overweight female ex-cop. I haven't quite figured out the sex angle. She shares a bedroom with a gorgeous young female assistant and has three close male friends, two of whom are gay and one of whom she finds physically unattractive. I came to it after "Cooked Goose" which is more of a thriller. This is more of a classical whodunnit although no real clues to the killer are planted, and after I had finished I decided the murder method made no sense. It has the British cosy set-up of a closed community (a health spa) containing the detective and the likely suspects, but I don't think Miss Marples would have told the frog joke.

Another great adventure with Savannah Reid.
This was my favorite book of the three Savannah novels. She is a great character. I can hardly wait for the next one !

Delightful !
G.A.McKevett does it again. Savannah is a delight! This was my favorite book in the series. This series gets better with each book . I can hardly wait for the next one to come out.


Murder Follows Money: A Liz Sullivan Mystery (G K Hall Large Print Paperback Series)
Published in Paperback by G K Hall & Co (October, 1901)
Author: Lora Roberts
Average review score:

An "edge of your seat" adventure
This is one of the better books of a good series, funny and exciting with an "edge of your seat" narrative. Lora Roberts does an excellent job portraying the edgier side of life in her Liz Sullivan series, where money isn't always available and sometimes the Thrift Shop is a necessity. Yet, she also manages to lighten this with some wonderful and sly humor and engaging friends. Liz's friends (including her dog) bring her much needed support and enrich the stories though they take a backseat in this book (except for a couple of memorable and surprisingly funny scenes at gunpoint). This particular book in the series was mesmerizing. I couldn't put it down till I found out what happened to Liz and her latest "temp job from h-ll." If you haven't read any of the previous books I would recommend you do so to see how Lora has allowed Liz to grow into herself. Yet, this books stands alone as a wonderful and exciting adventure.

I Read it in One Day!
This book was really incredibly written. Even though I have never read any books in the series except this one, I'm sure that this book was a good one to start with. Murder Follows Money is funny in it's own way, and also provides an amazing mystery which was also fun to solve. I read this book in one entire day, all during breakfast, lunch, and dinner. I just couldn't put it down. It made me sad when I had finally finished the book. It was one of those page-turning mysteries that I absolutely love. I feel that Lora Roberts has created a never-ending series with a very interesting character. Liz Sullivan is the kind of character that you wish that you could get to know in person. Believe me, this is a great book and I recommend it to anybody who loves mystery!

Humorous and entertaining
Freelance writer Liz Sullivan takes on a temp job as media escort for food/lifestyle celebrity Hannah Couch, who, it turns out, is quite the opposite of her friendly, grandmotherly image. And her waspish, vindictive personal assistant, Naomi Matthews, is even worse. After someone downs a fatal Pellegrino with lime, and a couple of abductions at gunpoint ensue, Liz, who is a prime suspect, must find out who doctored the drink. Though two of the major characters are exceedingly unpleasant, there are plenty of more appealing ones, not the least of which is Liz herself, a likable, sympathetic amateur detective. On the whole, this whodunit is funny, sometimes outlandish, and very entertaining. This is the first of Lora Roberts' mysteries I've read, and I now plan on reading the first four books of the series.


No Man Standing: A Munch Mancini Crime Novel
Published in Hardcover by Scribner (May, 2002)
Author: Barbara Seranella
Average review score:

Another winner
I am continually impressed by this author. Her characters are wonderfully developed and the stories fast-moving. She just gets better and better.

Fabulous, Must-Read Series
I discovered Munch Mancini on a rainy, dreary Friday while cruising www.Amazon.com and went to the library and checked out all the books in the series and had a spectacular weekend Munch read-a-thon. I loved every single book. She gets better and sharper with each consecutive story. Ms. Seranella's stories have the flavor of hard-core reality with just the right touch of suspense and plot twists. No writer I've ever read has the drug scene down the way she does....you can feel the despair and hopelessness of the characters radiating from the pages....and then comes Munch, a ray of hope as one who escaped the druggie lifestyle, a true survivor. Thanks Ms. Seranella for a great series. Keep 'em coming!!

Loved it.
Love the character, love the stories that only get better with each book, love everything about it. Can't wait for the next one.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Pennsylvania
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