

Meanings
Powerful use of line, comments on race, folklore-- James W. Byrd, Professor Emeritus of Literature and Languages, Texas A&M University- Commerce Emerituds
My favorites

An invaluable bookMcElroy has given readers a book that can be appreciated on different levels. It can be read as a straightforward biography, detailing not only Queen's life but that of her mother, Grace Vaughn Silver, socialist lecturer and union advocate, who was the dominant figure in Queen's life. At 17, Grace left an abusive home with 5.00 in her pocket and the determination never to be anyone's slave. Ten days after giving birth to Queen, the pair resumed the lecture circut and Queen's life of freethought and self-education began.
This book also serves as a valuable collection of lectures and essays, illustrating Queen's diverse interests. These writings cover a wide variety of subjects, from the lesser known subversive works of Mark Twain to one of the earliest explorations of the Salem Witch Trials.
McElroy has written an engaging history of one of America's more intriguing subversives.
An astounding story of an authentic child prodigy.
Wendy McElroy makes me wish I had met Queen Silver

Simply the greatest . . .7 years later, I came across a 90 year old copy of Adventures in Contentment, and found that it struck me as even more profound, having tasted a little of the cynical world that drove the main character from the city to the farm. This is the only book I have ever read that made me cry tears of human experience -- and then the very next chapter had me laughing out loud. (I was sitting at a coffee house with my friends when this happened, after which they wanted to borrow the book.)
If you are a person of thought, this book will move you. Grayson will take you on a tour of his farm and his mind. You will give him a voice, and you will hear that voice speak the words as you read. You will quote this book, you will reread this book, you will think of this book with the fondness of a close friend.
The simplicity of the essays will charm you, his masterful vocabulary will force you to grab your dictionary, and his expressive literary patterns will strike you as being as close to poetry as prose could possible come.
A picture may say 1000 words, but David Grayson's simple essays about small town life in the early 1900's will paint more vivid images in your mind than 1,000,000 Michaelangelos ever could. Simply stated, this is the greatest literary work ever written. Unfortunately, modern literary critics refer to this type of work as unimportant, sentimental and preachy. So this book will probably never be placed in its rightful spot in the literary canon.
Still, don't think the author died in obscurity without his talent being discovered. He was a lifelong friend of Woodrow Wilson, and in his old age, Ray Stannard Baker won the Pulitzer Prize for his biography of his famous friend.
Most delightful book I have ever read.

Hedge Away brings Amherst alive like never before
Real Life in 19th Century New England"A Hedge Away" brings alive the people and institutions of one small, but vibrant New England community in a way that challenges our preconceptions about what Victorian American small towns were like.
Refreshingly free of heavy-handed political interpretation, Lombardo's text gives us enough detail to draw our own conclusions.
Though I live only a few miles away from the small town that is the subject of this book, until I read it, I had no idea of the richness of the characters who populated its streets a hundred years ago, or of the many tragedies and scandals they endured.
This book is a "must read" for anyone interested in 19th century New England!


Indian Island In Amherst County
Entry Point for Students of Monacan Indian History

A must have if you are interested in land use planning!
The best book of its type I have seen

Peaceful and Satisfying

Useful for Canoeists and Kayakers

The Mouse and "the Myth".....
An engaging taleThis was an excellent book, and I recommend it to everyone.
An engaging and memorable tale
-- Gilbert E. Fleer, Professor/Counselor, Social Science, Wester Texas College