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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Park", sorted by average review score:

Idora Park: The Last Ride of Summer
Published in Paperback by Charles Jacques Jr (May, 1999)
Authors: Rick Shale, Karen Morrison, and Charles J., Jr. Jacques
Average review score:

Excellent, interesting trip back to Idora Park!
Another fantastic trip back down the amusement park midway, courtesy of Mr. Jacques. This well researched and colorful book manages to chronicle the life and times of Youngstown's Idora Park - without reading like your typical history lesson. Filled with hundreds of pictures, this book is a must read for any amusement park enthusiast. Although I have never been to Idora, or even Youngstown, this book put me right back on Idora's midway and in the front seat of their infamous Wildcat and Jack Rabbit roller coasters.

Mr. Jacques' book also includes many unique behind the scenes stories and anecdotes from countless interviews and local archives. Personal photos and individual recollections of time spent at Idora Park take the reader back to a time when the traditional amusement park was the highlight of our summer days.

A must have reference
Anyone who lives in and around Youngstown, Ohio and those who are devotees of the amusement park tradition in America will find this attractive book to be both informative and nostalgic. The Last Ride... is an intelligent, intriguing look back through time to the park's opening in 1899 through to the fire which sealed its fate! The book is beautifully and thoroughly illustrated with copious photos and other interesting items; including a summary list of the events, groups, bands, etc. who were part of the park's history. This book is a must for everyone who's ever set foot in the park wither during its glowing years or during its decline.

Don't go there at night
I found the book to back great old memories of the greasy french fries and rattly old coasters. The old train was my favorite


In Search of Lemurs
Published in Hardcover by National Geographic (September, 1998)
Author: Joyce Powzyk
Average review score:

An accurate & entertaining account of life in the rainforest
The illustrations in this book are a delight, and add to the story that this author has put together about her work in the rainforests of Madagascar. She depicts both the positive and the challenging (sometimes not so rosy) aspects of living and working in a remote rainforest location. It would be a treat for any young reader you know. Nature loving adults (lemur fans in particular!) will also get a kick out of this one. The stories are heartwarming, and accurate(I have worked at the site that inspired this book).

buy this for yourself!!! Great book.
Learn why Madagascar is famous for wildlife, see the lemurs through the eyes of a gifted naturalist. This is a fantastic combination of gorgeous art, realistic science, and hopeful conservation, by the author of many notable children's books on wildlife in Africa and Australia. Buy it for your children, your grandchildren and for yourself, it is a wonderful book.

wonderful classic naturalist's account
This is a wonderful account of what it is like to be a primatologist, searching for the world's most beautiful and rare primates on the most exotic island of Madagascar. The text is engaging and the illustrations, also done by the author, are spectacular. This is a great book for grown ups who want to learn more about lemurs and Madagascar, or for children who want to do a book report. The book provides a hopeful message of conservation.


The Incredible Scream Machine: A History of the Roller Coaster
Published in Hardcover by Popular Press (March, 1986)
Author: Robert Cartmell
Average review score:

The Incredible Scream Machine--absolutely a must reading
This book is simply the most complete treatise on the subject of wooden roller coasters that anyone will ever read. Tracing the coaster back centuries in time, Cartmell then brings us through the complete historical time line of designers and coasters. It would do no good to try to describe the book's contents much further here. Even a non-enthusiast will find this a fascinating read into a very interesting subject. Enthusiasts will find it very difficult to put down once they begin reading.

Roller Coaster History Bible!
I agree totally with the above reviewed. Just two things to add: the Notes and Bibliography sections are very good, and a superb resource for scholarly research. This is a "classic" and should be in your library!

Exellent book on the History of RollerCoasters
This book should be in everyone RollerCoaster Entusiast Collection. Written Dr. Robert Cartmell, The Great American Scream Machine tells about the Golden Age of Rollercoaster and The Legendary Builders. It has some rare photo of Herny Traver's Classics including the Cystal Beach Cyclone. The Book was written in 1986 and it nice to see how far coasters have grown since then Also encluded are is a Chroniclogical history of all PTC coaster building and modification.


The Island of Refuge
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (June, 2002)
Author: Abby M. Parks
Average review score:

No woman is an island...
In this thoughtfully crafted Christian genre tale of finding self and finding out a lot more, author Parks hits the mark. This description-laden book paints many portraits with words and leaves the reader with a real sense of what the author seems to be trying to convey; not everyone has it easy, but there is hope.
A troubled young woman caught in a dangerously complex triangle between her and her parents runs the gamut of emotions in The Island of Refuge and discovers more than she bargained for, for sure.
To spill the beans and report on every plotline would spoil the read, so suffice it to say that if you are in the mood for a wonderfully wordy, thought provoking mysteriously kind of romantic story you'd be foolish to pass up this book.Good job, Parks!

A Tale of Gripping Drama
After reading "The Island of Refuge," I understand why so many reviewers have awarded it five stars. This is a story like "To Kill A Mocking Bird," a classic conflict of good versus evil in the guise of human weakness and deceit. The plot unravels a murder mystery, and the truth wreaks devastating results. There is everything here: abuse, moral corruption, twisted sanity, but most of all there are memorable characters who capture our hearts in their struggle to achieve human dignity and respect, and ultimately to find love. This is a story that reflects any age any time and would make an unforgettable movie worthy of an Oscar for the right cast.

Mystery and suspense in 1940's Florida
As a child Tara Madison has been given her own island in Tampa Bay. Over the years the island is her refuge, a place to escape the tirades of her abusive father, and the sorrow of watching her invalid mother waist away. One night when Tara is a young woman, she heads out for her island in hopes of finding solitude. Instead she faces the unimaginable. It is the eve of WWII and intrique is everywhere, and has now invaded her private world. She discovers Tommy Bentley, an escaped convict hiding in her island hut. Instead of reporting Tommy to the authorities, Tara insists on helping him prove his innocence. While reading Island of Refuge, I was reminded of those 1940's Hemmingway novels made into movies such as Key Lago and To Have and Have Not that, to this day, glue you to your seat. Island of Refuge is a tightly woven suspense mystery. It keeps you questioning with every turn of the page. You suspect that the book is about uncovering Tommy's innocence, but it is much more than that. Tara discovers the truth that sets her free. I enjoyed this novel very much and highly recommend it.


It Will Live Forever: Traditional Yosemite Indian Acorn Preparation
Published in Paperback by Heyday Books (October, 1996)
Authors: Beverly R. Ortiz, Julia F. Parker, and Raye Santos
Average review score:

The only guide for processing acorn!
As a friend of Julia Parker, I know her gentle spirit to be true to the Old Ways. She grew up in the last days of the government-sponsered "Indian Schools" which basically stripped native children of their heritage and turned them into little white kids. So on the surface this book is a guide to processing acorn in the ancient ways of the native California Indians, but it's also testimony to Julia's spirit and the rediscovery of the life skills and spirituality of her people.

Acorn is central to The People -- it is the primary staple food of the Indians of California and sustained them through the winter. A bad crop of acorn meant possible starvation, so the food is treated with respect and tradition throughout the process of turning it from a bitter nut to a sweet flour for making soup or bread.

The book is beautifully photographed and gives detailed instructions for how to make acorn both the traditional way with a granite mortar and sand pit and the modern way with a blender and kitchen sink. I have watched the Indians of Yosemite Valley make acorn many times and have made acorn myself, so I can assure you that the instructions will help even beginners make acorn for themselves.

The absolute best guide to acorn processing
I spent years learning how to properly process acorns, so that they were yummy to eat. I tried all the recipes in the wild edible books, and my own experiments. Reading this book gave me the simple but crucial details I was missing to turn out good acorn every time. Its not hard, you just got to do it right. This book is the only one I know of that will show you all you need to know. Otherwise its a fairly bland book, with a little too much heroine worship by the author.

Food for bodies and spirits in Native woman's account

California Native Americans used acorn as a staple food, and still reverence it. "One must create a relationship with the tree, one must understand the ground which cherishes the fruit so lovingly." But that understanding is not mere words, it is a vast array of knowledge -- and a special technology of place. Julia Parker, Kashia Pomo, who married into the Yosemite Mono/Paiute family headed by elder Lucy Telles, spent many years learning the lifeways that Lucy taught by example.

Julia tells anthropologist, writer, and friend Beverly Ortiz the story. of acorn preparation through a seasonal round. It is Julia's story, but it is also the story of California Native women over thousands of years. Many photos (by Raye Santos, of Julia preparing acorns; family activities and people from the Telles and Parker family albums; and from 19th and 20th century Yosemite National Park Service collections) make clear the intricate technology these women developed. The process, followed step by step from the story and photos, is shown as part of a life-and-seasonal cycle. The acorns, gathered from the ground, should be dried for a year before being shelled and pounded into meal and flour. The meal is then leached of bitter tannin in shallow sand basins, then separated and cooked with hot rocks in water-tight woven baskets.

The careful explanation of each step in the long process of food preparation is enlivened by Julia's personal recollections of traditional family life, and the cultural/spiritual/social meanings of all the activities. This is a fascinating way to understand Native lifeways, full of life and meaning. Readers will understand, from this woman's inside view, why the book's title -- It will live forever -- is true. This is not an academic account of a dead past; it is a lifeway still alive. At Native events in California today, women still take the time and trouble to prepare this traditional food and experience their closeness to the earth, and their cultural survival as a people.

There is enormous contrast between this lively account of Native women, maintaining life, and the distancing, dead accounts by male anthropologists and historians, which mount Native cultures and lifeways with a freezing academic objectivity, as if they were bagged specimens dead and long gone. This book is highly recommended for young people, as an alternative to the deadly, boring, and incorrect accounts prepared for young people that purport to present archaic Native societies. Those awful books form a minor industry among textbook publishers. This book is a delicious antidote to such multicultural poisons. -- Reviewed by Paula Giese, editor, Native American Books (http://www.fdl.cc.mn.us/~isk/books/bookmenu.html)


Last Vanities
Published in Paperback by New Directions Publishing (April, 1998)
Authors: Fleur Jaeggy and Tim Parks
Average review score:

dark, precise gems
These short stories reflect a very dark view of humanity but do so in a quiet, understated manner with such realistic characters that the reader is often taken by surprise. "No Destiny" explores the decisions of a reluctant mother, a mother who hates her child. The title story "Last Vanities" explores the aged through a couple nearing their golden annivesary. "A Wife" explores disapointment in a traditional farm family and the responsibility of an author in closing the story. "The Free House" is explores social services, "The Promise" explores a long-term non-traditional relationship ... in each context Jaeggy writes succinctly, controlling the readers response through carefully chosen words. This author is worthy of your reading time.

dark, controlled, brilliant
These short stories reflect a very dark view of humanity but do so in a quiet, understated manner with such realistic characters that the reader is often taken by surprise. "No Destiny" explores the decisions of a reluctant mother, a mother who hates her child. The title story "Last Vanities" explores the aged through a couple nearing their golden annivesary. "A Wife" explores disapointment in a traditional farm family and the responsibility of an author in closing the story. "The Free House" is explores social services, "The Promise" explores a long-term non-traditional relationship ... in each context Jaeggy writes succinctly, controlling the readers response through carefully chosen words. This author is worthy of your reading time.

Merciless lucidity
Fleur Jaeggy is a major surprise. Not so many writers have the ability to make you shiver as you read--Last Vanities was certainly written with a firm grip, placing the words carefully on the paper, as not to miss a chance to make the reader tremble. Forget about Mr. Amis-who-lives-in-London cynicism--Jaeggy's shortness is explicit and lucid, even arid, beyond any imaginable language juggles. Simply merciless.


Light & Shadow: The Photographs of Claire Yaffa
Published in Hardcover by Aperture (May, 1998)
Authors: Claire Yaffa and Gordon Parks
Average review score:

Inspiring collection of abstract images.
Yaffa shares her sensual vision of the elusive patterns created by light and shadow. In an intimate format, images celebrate line and form the beauty and grace of botanicals, and nudes, demonstrating a humanity inseparable from nature. Her work is tender, poetic and gentle. Her images remain with us as a reminder of life's beauty and its fragility.

Inspiring and beautiful collection of elusive images.
Yaffa shares her sensual visions of the elusive patterns created by light and shadow. Presented in an intimate format, the images celebrate in line and form the beauty and grace of that which encompasses nearly The self portrayed in her work is tender, poetic and gentle Her photographs invite a detailed perspective of our world, from the broad, sweeping motion of a forest to the fluid line of a leaf.

exquisite black and white forms of light and shadow
very sensitive yet stimulating representations of leaves , plant life, and the human form. The lighting and the shadows are both sensual and sensitive. Appreciated by such giants of photography as Gordon Parks, Cornell Capa, and Duane Michels.


Lost in the Yellowstone: Truman Everts's "Thirty-Seven Days of Peril"
Published in Paperback by Univ of Utah Pr (Trd) (September, 1995)
Authors: Truman Everts and Lee H. Whittlesey
Average review score:

An excellent book - especially for the kids!
Besides being one of those - Why haven't I heard of this story before? - adventure stories, this book offers a great opportunity to further enhance the Yellowstone experience.

I read this book while staying in a ranch outside Yellowstone National Park. As luck would have it, our first day of "touring" the park via automobile closely paralleled Truman's path, and I managed to read this story aloud to the kids later that night, in front of a big cast iron stove, while Clark's Fork gurgled 30 feet from the door. I'm not sure if it was the story or the setting, but they were captivated! They were able to tie Truman's adventures in with many of the places we had been earlier that day, and it gave them an entirely different perspective of the park. In addition to bringing the book to life (again - what a story!), it contributed immensely to their appreciation of Truman's ordeal, the magnitude of the park and the wilderness that lies 100 yards off the main roads... Highly recommended.

AVENTUROUS! DEFINITELY READ IF YOU ARE EXLORING YSNP
Knowing the history of the exploration of this magnificent park makes me even more anxious to visit this beautiful country. After reading this book, when I visit YSNP, I will focus on a time long ago, when all the modern conveniences were not there. It is a great book to have read to get some of the background knowledge of this area, before you go out and explore yourself!

An excellent adventure story
Today, being lost in Yellowstone National Park is as simple as turning on the wrong road after you lost your complimentary map or you can not locate the restroom in the Old Faithful complex. For Truman Everts, being lost in Yellowstone was a struggle between life and death. Everts's account details his 1870 adventure in Yellowstone after finding himself separated from his travelling companions. The separation began Everts's thirty-seven day struggle for survival in a pre-developed Yellowstone in which Everts had to find what little food and shelter he could just to survive. Readers will find this account to be a real-life struggle for survival reminiscent of Jack London's fictional work. The editor, Lee Whittlesey, does a superb job of editing Everts's story by providing the reader with additional information and the historical background of the book. The work is also illustrated with many early day photographs of Yellowstone which provides an stunning visual account of early-day Yellowstone National Park. This book will be appreciated by anyone looking for an exciting true-life adventure story as well as historians of the American West. People who have been "lost" recently in Yellowstone will also appreciate the book, even if their modern-day adventure pales in comparison to Evert's


Magic in the Park
Published in Paperback by Scholastic (August, 1986)
Author: Ruth Chew
Average review score:

*God I Miss This Book*
man, what can i say, this book was apart of me years ago, about 10-15 years ago, i lost mine i guess and i have been wondering for years how to get another one, i want to read it again and recapture that youth, and have it to share with children, if i ever have any, when i had this book, i read it so many times, it is truly a classic, and i cannot wait to find it again so i can remember what i so cherished about that story of the Magic In The Park.....and of the children who were allowed to explore.

Great fantasy book.
LOVE THIS AS A CHILD AND A MUST FOR ANY CHILD TODAY. GREAT FOR A ADULT LOOKING FOR A WAY TO RELAX AND FIND A WAY TO GO ON VACATION AND LEAVE YOURSELF AT HOME.

DAVID

GREAT FOR CHIDREN, LET'S YOUR IMAGINATION GO FREE!
I READ THIS OVER 25 YEARS AGO AND IT'S A EXCELLENT BOOK. IT STANDS IN MY MIND LIKE IT WAS YESTERDAY. YOUR IMAGINATION WILL FLY FREE AND YOU'LL UNLOCK SECRETS AND MYSTERYS IN YOURSELF YOU FORGOT ABOUT YEARS AGO.GREAT ON A COLD NIGHT WITH A CUP OF TEA,WITH THE WIND HOWLING OUTSIDE AND BRANCHES CRACKING. THIS IS AN IDEAL BOOK FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS ALIKE. TAKE YOURSELF BACK TO A SLOW RELAXING TIME WITH THIS CLASSIC. I HAVE TO OWN ANOTHER, MAYBE 2 COPIES! LOVED THIS WHEN I WAS A CHILD AND NOW I WILL LOVE IT AS A AN ADULT.


Indian Nocturne
Published in Hardcover by Vintage/Ebury (A Division of Random House Group) (21 November, 1988)
Authors: Antonio Tabucchi and Tim Parks

Related Vacation Book Subjects: Wyoming
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