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Environmentalist waxes Ethnographic

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The Covered Wagon Rests on the HillI want to buy this book for my family members. However, others must agree with my review because I've had no success finding this title anywhere else. Hopefully, Amazon.com can hook me up with someone that has this out of print work of art.


A History Worth Having!

An Excelent Overview of ScotlandAuthor, Jamie Grant, touches uses his "Guide to Customs and Etiquette" to describe history, stereotypes and the nature of the people, "fitting in", doing business, arts & entertainment, food & drink, the outdoors, The Highlands, and Do's and Don't. His humor makes helps to make an already interesting book fresh.
I HIGHLY recommend this book to anyone going to Scotland who wants to get a comprehensive overview of Scotland, especially if it is their first time. I learned a lot from it.
-EH


The Army of the Potomac lays seige to PetersburgThe Petersburg siege is divided into five chapters: (1) An Opportunity Bungled tells the story of the last great lost opportunity of the Civil War for the Union forces as the initial assault on Petersburg failed to capitalize on Confederate weaknesses and the two armies were committed to a siege; (2) Crossing the James is essentially about how both sides established their lines, but includes the story of Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain's miraculous recovery after being wounded during the attack on Rives's Salient; (3) Valor and Calamity at the Crater tells of the Union army's last debacle, as the brilliant plan to open the Confederate lines succeeds in creating an enormous hole, 200 feet long, 50 feet wide, and 30 feet deep at the center, but inept leadership once again keeps the Federals from taking advantage of the situation; (4) Tightening the Noose records how Grant and Lee both extended their trenches throughout the summer of 1864; and (5) Portents of an Arduous Winter simply covers the drawing out of the siege over the final winter of the war.
Of course this volume is illustrated with dozens of historic photographs, paintings and etchings, most of which will be new to most Civil War buffs. There are also several photo essays throughout "Death in the Trenches," such as the baptism of black troops during the Battle of the Crater and how City Point wharf became the Southern terminal for the abundance of Northern supplies that would keep the Union troops well fed during the siege. Historically it is interesting to look at the difference between this siege and Grant's earlier efforts at Vicksburg. Davis does a fine job of covering the significant aspects of the siege as the Civil War played out to its inevitable conclusion.


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His other interests--race--were much more predictible--being as he was a man of his times. Oddly enough the situation today is reversed--anyone worth his salt finds environmentalism a worthy cause--while racial issues are fraught with controversy.
To Grant, though, the two issues had a close relation--with only limited room for people if he wa to help preserve his beloved land the question of just who owuld occupy the land was of top importance.
Grant was not necessarily a "racist"--he had as little desire to see non-Anglo-Saxons like Italians etc. in the US despite the fact that they too are "white" and share certain values with the WASPs he endorses.
Needless to say the book is controversial, and his Malthusian presuppositions are typical of his era. Still as an historical piece The Conquest of a Continent is an interesting read, especially for environmentalists. For eg. few of them know that a lot of the "first" greens were none other than the Nazis!