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JAMA book review
Or Perish in the Attempt
The bold and the naiive

A captivating, human, informed book
Save the salmon and us
A must read for anyone that loves the Northwest!

THE BEST OF ALL BOOKS ON THE TAOS SCHOOL OF ART
Among the finest books written on American art patronage
Excellent, exciting, enchanting

An Adventureous Book
Tucket's GoldI am writing about the book called Tucket's Gold. This book is an adventure for the grades of 4 - 6th.
My book Tucket's Gold takes place after the mexican war. Along the of the Oregon Trail. Francis the main character is trying to find his parents along the Oregon Trail with his two friends he found in the other books on his way towards the Oregon Trail.
One night Francis was watching out when a snake bit him. He and his friends Billie and Lottie were taken to this pueblo village to be treated for the snake bite. Billie and this pueblo boy teaches Billie how to hunt with bow and arrow.
Towards the end of the book they find some gold and silver and some wild ponies. One day they were riding the ponies towards the oregon trail when Courtweiler and Dubs that are two bad guys meet up with them and they try to kill Francis when Billie out of nowhere he shoots them with arrows and killed them. Then they were back to head towards the oregon trail.
I would give this book a 5 stars if it was a 5 star scale.
Tucket's GoldGold
4-24-02
Tuckets Gold is a adventure book. It has a lot of action and adventure. This book is very sad in some ports and some are very good. In some prots you do not want to stop in the middle crapter. In so ports you can see you in the book.
If you were in 3rd grand and up you would like this book. But if you were in 2rd grand it would not be that good. I bet 9 and up would like this book. Both grils and boys would like this book. People who like to slove problems would like this book.
The three crilderend in the story are runing away for killers through the hole story. It starts in California and it goes thorgh Utah Oregon. The oldest boy was Francis Tucket and a little boy named Billy and his sister Lottie. Their was a old man named Grime and he helped him in the first port of the story.
Iwould give this story a five star, and a rating 1-10 score. This is a very good book and I recommend it to 3rd and up.


Dude! This book is awesome!
Factual, Witty and Very Funny!
California Dreamin'

A lyric journey with 66's poet laureateMichael Wallis is the unofficial poet laureate of 66 and this book reflects exactly what the Mother Road meant to America and can mean to you. He's covered every inch of it, and he knows where it leads.
The Best at Capturing the Essence of the Mother Road
still the best book on route 66

One of the best stories you'll ever find. Period.Sidney bridges the native and white cultures so well - I think both cultures would be better off if we lived to his ideals.
The real Alaska
Shadows on the Koyukuk are enchanting!Shadows on the Koyukuk is a plain & simple memoir with unpretentious recounting of arduous survival interwoven with memories of cheerful, wholehearted contentment of where Sidney found himself in a fabled & beautiful land.
With names like Weaselheart & Schilikum, Monkey John & Cosmos Mountain, Sidney tells of his life on the edge & what happened when civilization arrived & bureaucracy took over. These are the memories of when Anchorage was a city of about 2,000 souls, after the great the Alaska Railroad system was built & the railroad crews had left. You will also find out what "tundra daisies" are. A pleasing memoir of a full life!


A Tale of a Magnificent Disaster
What Every Member of Congress Should Know...
Reclamation/Folly in the Desert

A Taste of Old Cuba
Gastronomic RetrospectionThis book, a present from my daughter, is one of the most memorable father's day present I recall.
Even a Gringa Can Cook Good Cuban Food

The best book if you want something a little deeper.Lots of maps, tips and explanations of the deeper meaning behind the sites you're visiting.
I'm bringing this book with me on my trip!
Enhanced with maps, diagrams, and photos
For any mind that is even slightly ajar, let alone open...West gives an alternative account of the meaning of the monuments and antiquities to be seen in Egypt, more esoteric (though certainly not more difficult to understand) than that which is usually presented in guide books. He points out the details which brought him to the conclusion that the Giza Sphinx is in fact closer to 13,000 years old than the 4,500 years old that has been traditionally believed, and has a different viewpoint to the orthodox school in many cases. He presents both sides of the argument, and gives the information necessary to make up one's own mind based on observation of what is actually there to be seen.
On my first visit to Egypt, my companions and I felt rather sorry for tourists in groups with official guides, because they seemed to be missing out on at least half of the story, and in many cases the whole point.
I was particularly impressed with West's analysis of the architecture of the Temple of Luxor, based on the work of Schwaller de Lubicz, and once it was pointed out how the whole building maps onto a plan of the human skeleton, I found it very difficult to refute.
Whilst I did not always agree with his conclusions on every occasion, it cannot be disputed that West has raised thoroughly pertinent questions which conventional Egyptology has either glibly brushed under the carpet or failed to address at all.
JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) July 2, 2003