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

Holiday Bazaar Guide (Washington)
Published in Paperback by Gail's Guides (01 July, 1999)
Author: Gail Folgedalen
Average review score:

My review of the Holiday Bazaar Guide (Washington)
This is an excellent book for crafters that are looking to find the perfect Holiday Bazaar for them to display their craft items. Very easy to read, with many different holiday bazaars to choose from. Includes all contact information with names and phone numbers. A must have!


The Holocaust Museum in Washington
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (October, 1995)
Authors: Jeshajahu Weinberg, Rina Elieli, and Chaim Potok
Average review score:

A haunting and powerful summary of the museum, itself
Having recently visited The Holocaust Museum, I felt compelled to own this book as a tangible memory. The book captures the essence of the holocaust experience with outstanding images and words, often understated, that continue to evoke the emotions felt in the museum.


Home Mountains: Reflections from a Western Middle Age
Published in Paperback by University of Washington Press (March, 2000)
Author: Susan Hendricks Swetnam
Average review score:

Real woman; great stories
Although Dr. Susan Swetnnam is an award winning professor, public servant, researcher, humanitarian, athlete, baker and knitter, along with being a well published author, it is clear, after reading Home Mountains, she is most importantly a real woman. The collection of charming personal essays, recounts life experiences which can be read for simple entertainment, as a good read, or can be interpreted for a deeper, more individual meaning. It's easy to visulalize the characters in Swetnam's stories, fron the "heavy-set, tightly-permanented woman" taking entries at the County Fair, to the Beauty horse with "her short cocoa legs and stocky golden brown body extended in an exaggerated waking cat pull, black mane tossed out of her eyes." Her appreciation of her home mountains, located in the Caribou National Forest, will entice the reader to look again at their own home "mountains" and find deeper awareness of their physical surroundings. The lessons learned from Swetnam's life parallel meanings readers can identify with. Such as facing the fears that came from her childhood, including the fear of fire, and worse, the fear of living the mundane life of her parents. Along with using the fear of losing the love of her life, in order to keep her eyes open and alert to the life she has with him. In addition, the reader will rejoice with Swetnam as she transforms her humble, vulnerable, and often humorous experiences into insightful examples, learning, among other things, the importance of ordinary time and casual relationships, and letting go, and the pleasures of being alone and how it feels to be loved. The essays can be read individually in small doses to be thought about, or straight through with out being overwhelming. The articles stand alone, but blend together nicely. Take an afternoon and get lost in Swetnam's life, laugh at her characters, envision her mountains, and try not to fall in love with her husband.


Home: A Novel (Suny Series in Postmodern Culture)
Published in Hardcover by State Univ of New York Pr (August, 2001)
Author: Hazard Adams
Average review score:

Great book on the cultural struggles of the NW
Adams worked as an insider at the highest levels of academic administration for much longer than anyone should ever have to. This book clearly takes up much of the hatred of the culture wars. You can see this topic played out in The Education of Max Bickford, or in novels like Straight Man, but the topic is so much more painfully dissected in this novel, as the people involved in the internecine war are much more human than they are ideological machines, and it's the humanity that suffers in the present conversation between traditional academic scholars and cultural studies mavens.

It's hard to put your finger on why this book is great. I've always been interested in anarchist communes of the Pacific Northwest. There's research and a resurrection of one of these. Another strong interest is how sexual harassment is being used as a weapon to gain academic power by a very small minority, and how this weapon is destroying any sense of collegiality in humanities departments. what Adams reaches for is the humanity behind people in those humanities departments. It is this that nobody really dares to show, but which is nevertheless always there.

This novel won't be for everyone. Anyone, however, who has suffered through the culture wars while attending graduate school in English at the University of Washington, however, will find this book right on the money. I'm not sure if other graduate programs are as terribly afflicted as that one, but that school was a disaster in which all sense of conversation had broken down, and only single-issue name-calling, and lies, and the bearing of false witness remained, except for a few small circles when they were in very protected environments.

This novel astutely and rather wisely recounts that one battleground in the cultural wars. I feel almost grateful to have gone through that war just in order to have this book's psychogeography down pat. Novels like this take something horrible and make it comprehensible, and manage to create a sense of community out of the incommunicable.

I'm grateful. I suspect that those who aren't very in on the lingo and debates of the last few years in literary studies will have a tough go with this one and be unable to quite get their bearings. For me, I couldn't put it down. It was a powerful and tremendous book that moved me as deeply as literature ever has, and is likely to remain one of my favorite books. there were some characters I couldn't get a feel for, and some of the plot concerning the fin de siecle anarchists seemed slow, as I couldn't wait to get back to the sexual harassment case in present time, but finally the author managed to pull it all together into a very impressive ending. This book is a song of experience: a lifetime spent in academia distilled, and one feels the author's simultaneous gratitude, amusement, and sorrow all mixed together and in no particular order.


Honor (Thorndike Large Print Western Series)
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Pr (Largeprint) (February, 2001)
Author: Dana Fuller Ross
Average review score:

Honor picks up where other books left off in the Wagons West
Honor packs all the action of previous Dana Fuller Ross books in the Wagons West series. He leaves you hanging as to final outcome while finishing off other shorter plotlines. The details were authentic to the time period. Definitely a five star read and can't wait for the next volume in the series. Hope the author doesn't wait so long to complete this trilogy.


Horowitz & Mrs. Washington
Published in Unknown Binding by Putnam ()
Author: Henry Denker
Average review score:

An excellent story, well written with exciting characters
I read this book several years ago and enjoyed it. It came into my possession again recently and it was like meeting an old friend again. The story of Sam Horowitz and Mrs. Washington is touching and heartwarming. To sumarise this book and tell the story of Sam Horowitz, an American Jew who is mugged and slashed by black 'savages' and then has a stroke while having his face stitched, sounds so depressing, but then one meets Sam, and Mrs. Washington, his black nurse, and Mona, his typically Jewish daughter, and finds the lovely Jewish wit of Sam and the strength of Mrs. Washington. Mr. Denker, thank you for the enjoyment you have given me, not just by introducing me to Sam, but for also introducing me to Harry Spencer (in a later novel) - two of the most lifelike characters I have ever met.


Hot Showers, Soft Beds, and Dayhikes in the North Cascades
Published in Paperback by Wilderness Press (June, 1997)
Author: Sally O'Neal Coates
Average review score:

great hikes with wonderful accomodations for every budget
great hikes....easy to follow directions........very accurate accomodation descriptions and the extra little "highlight" section was a nice bonus... the pictures make you want to take every hike and the author picture on page 190 is incredible!


House of Spies: Danger in Civil War Washington (White Mane Kids)
Published in Paperback by White Mane Publishing Co. (September, 1999)
Author: Margaret Whitman Blair
Average review score:

the great book
This book was awsome. I loved it. This book made history alive for me. I thought this was actually going on and I was there with them! I loved it


How To Incorporate and Start a Business in Washington (state)
Published in Paperback by Adams Media Corporation (November, 1997)
Authors: J.W. Sicks and J. W. Dicks
Average review score:

Everything you need for starting a small business
This book is great. It's all-inclusive step by step instructions make it easy to understand what is necessary when starting a business in Washington State or elsewhere.


A Horse's Tale: Ten Adventures in 100 Years
Published in Library Binding by Parenting Pr (December, 1988)
Authors: Nancy Luenn and Connie J. Pope

Related Vacation Book Subjects: Utah
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