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

The Faroes and Iceland: Studies in Island Life
Published in Hardcover by AMS Press (August, 1982)
Author: Nelson Annandale
Average review score:

Cool Book
I loved to read this book, very informative and true. I can say that because i live in Iceland!


Fawn Island
Published in Hardcover by University of Minnesota Press (February, 2001)
Author: Douglas Wood
Average review score:

Evokes charm and adventure
Fawn Island is a place where crows serve as alarm clocks, white-throated sparrows leave the tracks of their songs upon the even hush, and chickadees help a woodsman learn to whistle. The island is also a gateway to the sprawling Voyageurs National Park. An accomplished author, Douglas Wood takes the reader into the heart of the deep North Woods with his text (illustrated by his own artwork) that evokes the charm and adventure to be found in the quite of the pine-clad shores, as well as the neighborliness, and independence of those who live in this remarkable place. Fawn Island is enthusiastically recommended, entertaining, and occasionally inspiring reading for naturalists, armchair travelers, and anyone else who enjoys experiencing the what a wilderness retreat in the North Country has to offer.


Fearless Warrior: A Gunner's Mate on the Beach at Guadalcanal
Published in Hardcover by McFarland & Company (October, 1991)
Author: Bill Kennedy
Average review score:

Excellent picture of life on Guadalcanal during the campaign
Bill Kennedy spent almost the entire campaign at Tulagi and Guadalcanal. His well written book is informative and humorous. Although hundreds of sailors (USN & USCG) served at the Tulagi and Lunga Point bases, little has been written about them. Unfortunately, this book provides few names and dates. It does, however, provide an accurate description of a sailor's life ashore during the Guadalcanal campaign.


Field Guide to the Samoan Archipelago: Fish, Wildlife & Protected Areas
Published in Paperback by The Bess Press (01 October, 2002)
Authors: Meryl Rose Goldin and Meryl Goldin Rose
Average review score:

beautiful
Beautiful pictures. Alot of effort and time went into this book.


The Fight for the 'Malvinas'
Published in Hardcover by Viking Press (March, 1992)
Average review score:

An excellent account of the Argentinian side of the war
This is one of the few books I've read that deals with the Argentinian side of the conflict that I can find in English. The numerous interviews the author conducted with members of the Argentinian Armed Forces lend an excellent personal touch; a 'must have' for your personal library


Fight the Wild Island: A Solo Walk Across Iceland
Published in Textbook Binding by Olympic Marketing Corporation (March, 1987)
Author: Ted Edwards
Average review score:

Uplifting diary worth recording for posterity - Edwards was
Worth reading for insights into Iceland's rural rigours and to understand how mad this unassisted project seems to have been. Edwards may not have undertaken the trek had he been fully aware of the dangers. I enjoyed travelling vicariously with him and admire his achievement.


Fighting Fictions: War, Narrative and National Identity
Published in Hardcover by Pluto Press (01 November, 1998)
Author: Kevin Foster
Average review score:

Brilliant analysis of media during Falklands war
In this fascinating book, Kevin Foster looks at the ways in which Britain experienced the Falklands war. He makes sense of the vast number of accounts, and of the various themes rehearsed.

The Thatcher Government portrayed its decision to fight, and its conduct of the campaign, as expressions of the essential national character, the 'true Britain'. The mass media at once swung into line. In fact, the war primarily served a purpose hostile to the nation, Thatcher's political survival.

Government and media equated Argentina's initial recovery of the Islands with the Nazi invasion of Poland, as they immediately identified the war with the Second World War, and Thatcher with Churchill. They saw the Falklands as the image of Britain, a ravished island Eden. They ignored the harsher similarities, of economic dependence, under-investment and social inequality.

The media depended on the military for information, which turned the journalists into what one called 'troopie groupies'. The media became a single, responsible voice speaking for 'our common cause'. According to their account, 'our' Government never faltered, 'our' flawless heroes carried out a perfect campaign. On the other side, their corrupt, undemocratic Government and its murderous thugs waged a campaign of Latin incompetence.

The war was supposedly unavoidable. There was no alternative; the British Government, guileless innocent in a naughty world, was forced into war by the Satanic enemy. Our supreme temptation was the serpent 'appeasement', diplomacy a cunning trap set by wily foreigners. Peace demonstrators were described as pro-fascist, dissenters as collaborators. In practice, this meant rejecting in principle all ceasefire proposals and negotiations; it meant war without compromise. The only acceptable ethical outcome was the enemy's total surrender.

Government and media celebrated the war as the source of national salvation, even, in Thatcher's memoirs, of world salvation. War was rebirth, welfare, humanitarianism.

This presentation of the Falklands war has become the media model for all subsequent wars. Kevin Foster's book is a model of sanity; its publication now is especially timely.


Finding Providence: The Story of Roger Williams (An I Can Read Chapter Book)
Published in Library Binding by Harpercollins Juvenile Books (February, 1997)
Authors: Avi and James Watling
Average review score:

A book every child and adult should read.
I read this book to my two boys, ages 5 and 9. They enjoyed learning about such a great man. Of course, we unlike many Americans, knew something about Roger Williams before we read this book. We are descendents of his, through his son, Daniel. I was very proud to read about such a great man, who did the courageous things that he did at the time that he did them and to be able to call him Grandfather, was a treasured moment. Thank you to the Author for writing the book. What most people do not know is that Freedom of Religion and Separation of Church and State were ideas that he was the first to fight for in America. So whether you are Baptist, Catholic, Muslim or Buddhist, you should Know that the men who wrote the American Constitution, got some of their ideas from a man who lived 150 years before their time; and that he fought for you to be able to worship as you choose.


Fire Island (Harlequin Presents, No 1334)
Published in Paperback by Harlequin (January, 1991)
Author: Sally Wentworth
Average review score:

Sly male chasing cunning Casey. *L*
Loved the smart dialogue back and forth. Moving romance about
a woman who is a director for an art and design agency struggling
to keep out of the wanton clutches of a handsome and crafty
new business associate.


Field guide to the birds of Java and Bali
Published in Unknown Binding by Gadjah Mada University Press ()
Author: John Ramsay MacKinnon

Related Vacation Book Subjects: Washington
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