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

Sylvia and Miz Lula Maye
Published in Unknown Binding by Carolrhoda Books (E) (March, 2002)
Authors: Pansie Hart Flood and Felicia Marshall
Average review score:

What the Other Reviewers Missed
The book is a great story of how two vastly different generations developing relationship is reminicint of a time when family was important. What the Publishers Weekly reviewers and others seem to miss is that a story that takes the reader through the developing relationship of Sylvia and Miz Lula Maye. A straight forward story of a child's relationship with a centarian, what an interesting idea. Why do children stories all have to be mystical or fantasy. Why not just tell a story about life. That is what this book does. An authentic voice and good story.


Tarantulas and Other Arachnids
Published in Paperback by Barrons Educational Series (01 February, 2001)
Authors: Samuel D. Marshall and Laura Barghusen
Average review score:

A Great Book
Whether new to having a pet tarantula, or a little further along in the hobby, this is a great book to have on hand. All the basic questions/concerns about keeping a tarantula are well-covered in this book. There are also many beautiful color photos of tarantulas that will make you want to keep expanding your collection! There is far less information on keeping other spiders and scorpions, but it is still very helpful if you are starting out.


Tequila!: Cooking With the Spirit of Mexico
Published in Hardcover by Ten Speed Press (April, 1995)
Authors: Lucinda Hutson and Julie Marshall
Average review score:

A delightful cookbook, great party suggestions.
The first "cookbook that I've read cover to cover! A wonderful combination of party recipes, information about tequila, stories of rural Mexico, and beautiful folk art, this book makes a wonderful gift and an indispensable addition for the library to anyone who likes to give parties. Reading this book will go a long way towards making you a connoisseur of tequila and margaritas (going out and sampling the wide variety of tequila will complete your education). The party recipes are intriguing and the suggestions for presentation and will help make your next "Mexican" theme party a great success. I heartily recommend this little gem of a book.


Textbook on Spherical Astronomy
Published in Paperback by Cambridge University Press (June, 1977)
Authors: William Marshall Smart and Robin Michael Green
Average review score:

"The" reference for position astronomy
If you are interested in any subject of position astronomy (motion of the moon, stellar navigation, astrometry, etc.) you must stat by reading this book. Eventhough it is basically a reviewed old text, it is still the most concise and complete reference on the area.

It contains from the basic formulas of spherical trigonometry to the full explanation of the conditions necesary to observe a solar eclipse, or principles of star parallax measurement, for example.

I think this book is useful not only for amateur and pro astronomers, but also for undergraduate mathemathicians and physicists, and even for highschoolers.


Theatre and Empire: Great Britain on the London Stages Under James VI and I (Politics, Culture, and Society in Early Modern Britain)
Published in Hardcover by Manchester Univ Pr (November, 2000)
Author: Tristan Marshall
Average review score:

One for all Shakespearean Theater students
Interested in the later Shakespearean plays I didn't expect to be recommended a book on Shakespeare's theater quite like this one. What makes it unusual is a focus not just on Shakespeare, though he is here. He takes a back seat sometimes but only so you can get to see how something big was happening in London after the death of Queen Elizabeth and how a whole host of the leading playwrights of the day contributed to it. The importance of Jacobean Londoners' interest in Great Britain that Dr Tristan Marshall describes is a major theme and it makes for a fascinating read. King James I is rarely viewed in a positive light and this informs the way we see the dark brooding tone in plays by Webster like 'The White Devil' and in Jonson's 'Volpone'. Dr Marshall's analysis provides a context for understanding how an alternative focus for a royal interest could be communicated via setting plays in ancient Britain. As King James's biggest political manoeuver, making a British kingdom out of England, Scotland and Ireland was a highly contentious issue. The fact that so many playwrights were interested in it - and most of them very positively - means that we need to fundamentally re-think the way we view Jacobean political culture. This really is well worth reading. Dr Marshall has made an extremely valuable and timely contribution to a field of study whose champions have rarely spent time in this early seventeenth century period.


Theory of Groups
Published in Hardcover by American Mathematical Society (July, 1999)
Author: Marshall Jr. Hall
Average review score:

Its just that good
If you are looking for an introductory book on group theory, I suggest Herstein or Dummit & Foote, but for an intermediate to advanced group theory student, you can't do much better. Marshall Hall is an excellent mathematician who writes an excellent book, full of examples and expository that makes for the book being a good read, and an astounding reference. As for learning the material, even now I go back to sections of book I didn't cover in the class I used it, to learn material for classes I am currently in. It covers the basics of group theory (in fact, he gives several versions of the definition of a group), free groups, compostion series, solvable groups, nilpotent groups, p-groups, cohomology, and does and incredible introduction into representation and character theory. This book does the best a math book can do, it teaches well.


Third World War
Published in Paperback by Rowman & Littlefield Publishing (28 April, 1999)
Author: Monty G. Marshall
Average review score:

Deeply Important to Our Future, Scholarly, Practical, Urgent


This book is deeply important to our future, for it is the first over-all comprehensive look at the global reality of failed states, spreading non-state violence, and the emergence of complex emergencies where 90% of the casualties are civilian.

Drawing on a wide-variety of databases and field studies around the globe, the author focuses the societal groups and their migration toward protracted violence in the context of failed states. He puts forward a theory on the diffusion of insecurity, how this leads to arrested development, and why, for very practical reasons, the more developed nations must devise new means of structured and focused intervention leading to the creation of peace.

The author does not advocate intervention willy-nilly--if anything, he joins Jessica Matthews, William Shawcross, and others in pointing out that incompetent interventions actually make matters worse--external actors and external resources have a way of prolonging internal conflicts rather than resolving them. Military forces, the ones most often used, are also the least effective--new combinations and new capabilities are needed.

He is especially effective at criticizing, in a very gracious but pointed manner, the institutionalist and realist schools that have never moved beyond sovereign states, political boundaries, conventional militaries, and a Euro-centric perspective.

He is much better than Fukiyama at dealing with reality, and the equal of Huntington in considering cultural clashes rooted in social identities and real-world resource difficulties.

I found two major observations in this work that merit broad repetition:

First, and the author gives due credit to the path-finding work of Ted Gurr and the Minorities at Risk project, there is an established pattern, world-wide, in which violent political action is always preceded by a period of nonviolent activity that was either ignored or repressed.

Second, once violence has been inculcated into a social group as the normative condition, there is a distinct loss of capacity to engage in meaningful exchanges, negotiation, etcetera. Outcomes become irrelevant, and as Ralph Peters has pointed out so often, war and conflict become the raison d'ĂȘtre rather than any kind of rational means to a political end.

Throughout the book, and worthy of a focused chapter or future article, there are comments on data, information, and analysis that are extremely valuable when embraced and integrated. Apart from numerous observations on the difficulty of obtaining reliable data on sub-state violence when the state is the normal analytical unit and also the repressor of information; the author has insights into how models drive what data is visible, collected, or accepted; and how the social units in conflict themselves become filters, channels, or barriers to communication.

The concluding recommendations for systemic policy call for a global arms moratorium; a migration from regional collective security arrangements to global normative security arrangements including an international stand-alone range of capabilities for monitoring, facilitating, and imposing non-violent conflict resolution; a general proscription of force by any nation or social group; regional associations or what he called a "complex federalism"; a decentralization of systemic authority, which really means a reduction of U.S. impositions in favor of localized influences with greater legitimacy; and a criminalization of individual acts of violence within war--the ending of war (or state sovereign direction) as an excuse for individual acts of violence and depravity.

If I had one criticism of the book--and in no way does this undermine the brilliance and utility of the work itself--it is that it does not include, either as a preface or as an appendix, a summary of the actual "state of the world" such as the author has helped create in the World Conflict and Human Rights Map project out of Leiden University (PIOOM). A description and enumeration of the 29 complex emergencies, 67 countries with hundreds of thousands of refugees, 59 countries with plagues and epidemics, 27 countries with massive famine--as well as the torture, child soldiers, and other distinct manifestations of the sub-state instability the author studies so well--would have helped the non-academic and policy readers to better grasp the urgent vitality of this seminal work.

The author and his insights deserve the very highest levels of attention, for all that he has done here is call into question the out-dated political science concepts and the policies--including the defense acquisition and force structure policies--of every so-called modern nation. The globe is burning, every President and Prime Minister is fiddling, and the author documents very clearly that this fire is headed straight for our homeland.


Those Who Fell From the Sky : A History of Cowichan Peoples
Published in Paperback by Sandhill Books / Sandhill Book Marketing (01 May, 1999)
Author: Daniel P Marshall
Average review score:

First Official Cowichan History Wins BC 2000 Book Award
This book has been named one of 61 winners of the British Columbia 2000 Book Award. Those Who Fell From The Sky is the first-ever published record of the Cowichan peoples, written for and approved by the Cowichan Tribes. The book chronicles the rich culture, spiritual practices and local history of local First Nations using an effective mix of documented records, archeological evidence and oral tales from prehistory to European contact. Historian Dr. Daniel Marshall's informative tale begins with the 12 original Cowichan peoples that fell from the sky to populate the Cowichan Valley's pristine wilderness and build a society from cedar and salmon -- the foundation of West Coast Native culture. But the the book also sets the stage for modern land claims, recounting the Cowichan people's early relationship with government, the Crown and colonial settlers that started arriving in huge numbers during the mid-1800s.

The underlying message within is the Cowichan people's unshaken sense of place in the face of massive changes resulting from European expansion. "The history of the Cowichan peoples is all about their relationship to the land and the incredible permanence of place that they have achieved," states the book's postscript. "While the transient nature of Vancouver Island's white society continues to ebb and flow like the tide, the Cowichan peoples will always remain connected to their warm land."

As a British Columbia 2000 Book Award winner, Dr. Marshall's work will now display the unique gold-embossed seal created by the BC government and the BC Book Publishers Association as part of the province's Millenium Legacy Programme. The provincial government will also provide up to $300,000 to school libraries to buy more than 22,000 British Columbia 2000 designated titles of which Those Who Fell From The Sky is one. For a complete list of the titles log on to http://www.BC2000.gov.bc.ca.

BOOK CONTENTS CH.1 The Ancient World of the Cowichan/ CH.2 The First Cowichan Peoples: Those Who Fell from the Sky/ CH.3 The Story of the Flood/ CH.4 The Natural Landscape Encountered/ CH.5 The Traditional Landscape Expands/ CH.6 Prophetic Patterns: Contact with the European World/ CH.7 Drawing the Line across the Cowichan World/ CH.8 Hecate's Spell is Cast upon the Land/ CH.9 Crown & Anchor: Cowichan Peoples 'Join' Canada/ Postscript: Words from the Warm Land/ Bibliography.


Three by the Sea
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (October, 1999)
Authors: Edward Marshall and James Marshall
Average review score:

Hilarious Easy Reader -- Fun on Several Levels
This is the story of Lolly, Spider and Sam, three kids who have just eaten lunch and have to wait a while before they can go swimming. To pass the time, they decide to tell each other stories about rats and cats.

The first story, Lolly's, is a dead-on parody of an old-style phonics reader:

'The cat sat by the rat. "I see him," said the cat. "I see the rat."

The rat saw the cat. "I see him," said the rat. "I see the cat." And that was that.'

Spider and Sam naturally hate this story, and they work to top each other with much more entertaining stories, always about cats and rats. This is one of my favorite kids' books, by one of my favorite kids' author/illustrators, the late, great James Marshall.

I think it's an overlooked classic -- even better than some of Marshall's more popular works (such as the "George and Martha" series), and right up there with his other masterpieces: "Miss Nelson Comes Back" (written with Harry Allard) and "Fox and His Friends". All three feature very funny and surprising twist endings.

If you find you like this book as much as I do, you'll want to check out its two sequels: "Four by the Shore" and "Three Up a Tree". Those are also highly enjoyable, but this one is the creme de la creme.

Parents: This is a book they will love, although you may love it more. School librarians: BUY THIS BOOK! Publisher: Please restore this to print in a library-binding edition!


Thurgood Marshall
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (October, 1999)
Authors: Lisa Aldred and Nathan I. Huggins
Average review score:

Great Book!
In the book 'Thurgood Marshall, Supreme Court Justice' Lisa Aldred acurately tells the story of lawyer/judge Thurgood Marshall and his struggle to fight racial inequality. This book is very detailed and helpful. It mentions interviews with Marshal, speeches he made, and comments his family made about him. Wonderful!


Related Vacation Book Subjects: West_Virginia
More Pages: Marshall Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100