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Book reviews for "Austin,_Allen" sorted by average review score:

The Indian Wars in Stephen F. Austin's Texas Colony, 1822-1835
Published in Paperback by Eakin Publications (January, 2001)
Authors: Allen G. Hatley and Allen Hatley
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Texas Ranger Origins
Allen Hatley has done all Texas Ranger researchers a favor by helping explain the origin of this organization. Like most Ranger researchers, I have considered 1823 as the date for the formation of the forerunners of this organization. Unlike most researchers, I have put faith in this date because I am a Tumlinson descendant and have wanted to claim them as the first Texas Rangers. Hatley gives good evidence that this is not true. While that is disappointing, personally, the truth is better than a tale.

The book contains other important information on Austin's Colony which is enlightening. The book is concise, readable, and factual.

Excellent work from this emerging author/historian.

Roy B. Young President Western Outlaw-Lawman History Association


Remember the Flavors of Austin
Published in Spiral-bound by Bazaar Barbara Press (30 June, 1998)
Author: Barbara Allen
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FOUND RECIPES I'LL USE FOREVER in this CLEVER LITTLE BOOK
It was EXCITING to use the RECIPES that were contributed to this "Big" LITTLE COOKBOOK by restaurants in AUSTIN, TEXAS. Love the recipe for SALSA on page 7. The book is CLEVERLY COMPILED at a very REASONABLE PRICE and gives you the CHANCE TO TRY THE SPECIAL DISHES of SKILLED CHEFS. Barbara Allen did a "good thing" here. You don't have to be a TEXAN to use and enjoy REMEMBER THE FLAVORS OF AUSTIN! Big is not necessarily better and this little cookbook proves it!


Interesting Times: Life in Uganda Under Idi Amin
Published in Hardcover by Trans-Atlantic Publications, Inc. (August, 2000)
Authors: Peter A. P. J. Allen, Peter, Sir Allen, and Sir Peter Allen
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Judicial Decision?
Peter Allen certainly loved Uganda. He spent over 30 years there, first as a policeman when the country was still a British Protectorate, then as a law lecturer, magistrate and judge after Uganda had gained independence.

His diaries of his days as a policeman are interesting - his experiences ranged from his ADC role to the Governor in the pillared residence at Entebbe to his days working in remote Karamoja, policing warring tribesmen and cattle thieves.

The more intiguing part of the book, however, relates to his years working in the judiciary under the Idi Amin government. As Uganda degenerates into a melee of government-sanctioned murder and lawlessness, Allen's diaries record his own efforts to extract at least individual instances of judicial order and discipline from the chaos enveloping him.

Clearly, the Ugandans thought of him as a bit of an oddball - ironic bearing in mind the insanity of the behaviour of many of those in Amin's regime - and his reputation as "the only white man left" no doubt excluded him from the vicious tribal politics of the time and helped in his unlikely ascent through the Judiciary.

But should the reader feel a little uneasy at Allen's readiness to carry on regardless - however corrupt and tyrannical the behaviour of the authorities that paid and promoted him? Yes, he showed no sycophancy to Amin or his governmental colleagues - his lambasting of the government in his diary and his frequent references to the civil but cold way in which he would converse with Amin and his henchmen make that clear. But he still attended their jamborees and drove their Mercedes. Yes, as he often points out, he believed strongly in the role of the judiciary in serving as a brake on the authority of executive government. But in Uganda in the 1970s and 1980s, these rules were not applying. And yes, he clearly felt that to leave the country in its time of need would be to desert the Ugandans he loved. But did he not love just a little the power, prestige and sheer idiosyncracy that rested in being an oddball English judge in a banana republic? After all, as the title of his book records, these were "Interesting Times".

Perhaps this view is too harsh. Atfer all, the easiest thing would have been to wash his hands of it all and walk away. Interestingly, he never really discusses this dilemma in his diaries. In the end he was given little choice. He left Uganda in 1986, devastated at having to depart the country he so clearly loved.

Interesting Times: Life in Uganda Under Idi Amin
Like his earlier book about his experiences in Uganda (Days of Judgement), Sir Peter Allen's latest offering is a very well written account of Uganda's most critical era.

The diary format takes one to the scene and moment, as his life (and Uganda's story) progress from the blissful days of a British Protectorate, through the horrors of Amin's rule to the anarchy of the post-Amin period.

For anyone interested in Uganda, this is an essential document. It is the record of the experiences and observations of a man who was intimately involved with the story, yet one who was relatively detached from the political and military fighting that held the country in its grip throughout the entire period that he lived there.

I must say, however, that there is something rather unsettling about the authenticity of the good judge's entries. One gets a nagging feeling that some parts of the diaries have been edited in hindsight, so that many of his "predictions" might have been penciled in many years after they had in fact come to pass.

Of course he might have been an excellent forecaster, but he gets so many predictions correct that one just wonders. But then again, who knows.

Also there are some entries that are definitely on the wrong dates. For example he claims that President Milton Obote visited Kings College, Budo in 1968, and asked the Headmaster to stay on for another year. In fact the year was 1969, a fact I know because I was there.

Notwithstanding these minor quibbles, I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book, especially his entries during the colonial and early post-colnial years. His sense of humour comes through.

MKM

Interesting Times by Sir Peter Allen: Captivating book.
I found this book captivating. I particularly enjoyed the (almost) daily accounting of events - short and to the point There were several funny moments - such as when Sir Peter fell into a sack of flour and the episode where a witness at a trial was unsure of his age! His parents had told him many years ago that he was twenty and so he insisted that he was still twenty (15 or so years later).

I could feel the many bumpy rides over almost non existant roads and could almost taste the dust and feel the heat as he travelled to the many districts for which he was responsible. Yet these hardships seemed to be joyful for him as he made so many friends and encountered many wild experiences (like being shot at)!

The rise to power of Idi Amin is well captured and the brutality of the times is frightening.

Sir Peter's home was broken into many times and on occasion by his own servants and his life was threatened on numerous ocassions.

I enjoyed reading about his leaves to Britain and his conference trip to Montreal as I have also lived in both places and it made the book come alive.

I think the flavour of Uganda and perhaps most of Africa is well documented. It is not for the faint of heart. It certainly made me realize how well off we are in Canada where we take so much for granted. Health and Education for instance. What a struggle the Africans have - still - to enjoy what we assume is our right.

It was interesting to travel through Sir Peter's career and it was sad that he had to leave the country and the many good friends he had made. He obviosly loved them and their country.


Learning to Live Without Cigarettes
Published in Paperback by Doubleday (June, 1968)
Author: William Austin Allen
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Readings in Planning (Morgan Kaufmann Series in Representation and Reasoning)
Published in Paperback by Morgan Kaufmann (May, 1900)
Authors: James Allen, James Hendler, and Austin Tate
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T. S. Eliot; the literary and social criticism
Published in Unknown Binding by Indiana University Press ()
Author: Allen Austin
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