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Book reviews for "Miller,_Bernard_S." sorted by average review score:

Executing the Mentally Ill : The Criminal Justice System and the Case of Alvin Ford
Published in Paperback by Sage Publications (1993)
Authors: Kent S. Miller and Michael L. Radelet
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One of a kind masterpiece!
This book is very informative and provides the reader with amazing detail of how the justice system works.


The Gifted Child, the Family, and the Community
Published in Hardcover by Walker & Co (1981)
Authors: Price Merle, American Association for Gifted Children, Merle Price, and Bernard S. Miller
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This is the greatest, most well writen book of its kind
This book provides valuable insites to a much overlooked area. I highly recommend it to everyone.


Across the Wide Missouri
Published in Paperback by Houghton Mifflin Co (Pap) (1980)
Authors: Bernard Augustine De Voto, Bernard DeVoto, Alfred J. Miller, and Charles Bodmer
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Detailed catalog of names/dates/locations--not a good read!
If you are doing historical research you will love this book. It is an extensive listing of names, locations and dates. However, I'm not sure what the point is of knowing that so-and-so was at xxx creek on a certain day. I would have liked more insight on individuals, more character development, a better understanding of what their lives and daily challenges were.
The book doesn't flow--it is a collection of facts that are not well synthesized.
Although the characterization of the Indians is certainly not politically correct today, it does reflect the experiences and attitudes of the time. It makes it clear that relations between Indians and the frontiersmen varied greatly by tribe, the individuals, and circumstances.

This is the one that got me going
Whereas Ambrose's "Undaunted Courage" got me interested in the early exploration of the American West, "Across the Wide Missouri" got me interested in the actual lives of the mountain man and fur trapper/traders, and how they also explored unknown regions of the west. Their day to day existence and survival amongst the Indians, dealing with the forces of nature, the early stages of Manifest Destiny, etc. were all to me mind boggling. DeVoto brings to life the fur trade at the peak of its industry. I must agree with a couple reviewers though on how the text does get somewhat wordy and complex, the list of characters involved is quite lengthy and one is always flipping back and forth to the maps and notes. But this is what it takes to tell the whole story. From his bibliography one can pick and choose which books are of interest to the reader and take it from there, that's what I have done. I would recommend this book to those of you that are interested in this time period.

A flawed epic of the mountain men
There are a lot of things about this book I don't like. First, and most seriously, it's incredibly complicated and dense, a virtual catalog of the comings and goings of hundreds of characters over a six year (1832-1838) period. You need a scorecard and an atlas to keep track of the players. Secondly, the author's judgments about Indians are politically incorrect and come close to being racist. Example: the "laborious accretion which convolutes the fore-brain and increases the cultural heritage" makes the white man superior to the Indian. And, third, DeVoto's wordiness (see preceding sentence) and flip judgements are ever so cute. But I've had this book on my shelf for many years and have read it through more than once. I can overlook the irritations because DeVoto tells a magnificient story about a magnificient land. "Broken Hand" Fitzgerald, Bridger, Carson and their colleagues are great American heroes, warts and all. Someday, I hope that a writer with the soul of a poet and the diligence of a scholar writes a better book than this about the mountain men. Until that happens, we have Across the Wide Missouri.


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