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Book reviews for "Rivers,_Karen" sorted by average review score:

Northwest Arid Lands: An Introduction to the Columbia Basin Shrub-Steppe
Published in Paperback by Battelle Pr (2003)
Authors: Georganne P. O'Connor and Karen Wieda
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The Original Columbia Plateau
As exemplified in song by Woodie Guthrie when he extolled the virtues of the great dams on the Columbia River and the subsequent development of irrigated agriculture, man's focus on the Columbia Plateau has been on how it can serve him. Now a new book has emerged that explores the geology, soils, flora and fauna of the region and its shrub-steppe ecosystems. This book serves as primer for all who would seek to understand these natural systems...a starting point for further exploration, both on the ground and in the regional libraries. The book is a gentle reminder of the natural richness of this region and the need to preserve the remaining habitat for future generations so that the land can continue to serve man, but in a different way, enriching our lives through the knowledge that soils derived from the harsh reality of volcanic eruption in conjunction with simple associations of grasses and shrubs can form the basis for a complex and enduring living system.


One More River: A Traditional Spiritual
Published in Paperback by Augsburg Fortress Publishers (1995)
Authors: John J. Blumen and Karen L. Blumen
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Kids Love It!!
My children read this book over and over. The illustrations are wonderful


River of Sky
Published in Hardcover by E P Dutton (1994)
Author: Karen Harper
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A well written book
I first came across this book as a story in a magazine. I enjoyed reading it so much I intended to go to the bookstore and buy it, but I never got around to it. Then 4 years later I came across that magazine again boxed up with some books and papers. I flipped through it until I found the story "River of Sky" and right then I looked the book up here on Amazon.com. Karen Harper has done a great job of weaving in the fictional characters so they fit into the story with the actual historical characters that lived in that day. The book had lots of nice twists, but also a great story. This is a book about self-discovery, following your dreams and your heart, and also about a tribe of Native Americans called the Mandan. Some of the actual historical events included in the book about the Native Americans are indeed very sobering, and sad. If you like books with romance, adventure and enjoy reading about the Native Americans in the early days of the frontier I recommend it to you.


Seeking St. Louis: Voices from a River City, 1670-2000
Published in Hardcover by Missouri Historical Society Pr (2000)
Authors: Lee Ann Sandweiss, Robert Boyd, Jan Garden Castro, Gerald Early, Wayne Fields, and Karen M. Goering
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A Great Primary History & Great Read
If anybody asked me--describe St. Louis--I can now just hand them a copy of this book. Beginning with Pere Jacques Marquette and concluding with Gerald Early, 300 plus years of St. Louis are illustrated through various memoirs, stories, poems, essays and plays as told by St. Louisans (both well known and lesser known).

Not just mere public relations ad campaign for the region, the collection also confronts issues head-on that have plagued the region for quite some time. However many selections also remind us how many great aspects there are in this region to offer its citizens.

The introductions and bios for the individual authors also provide great context and insight to the pieces, as well as including many interesting tibits of information that even the most knowledgable St. Louisian wouldn't know. Kudos to Lee Ann Sandweiss and everyone at the Missouri Historical Society for assembling an anthology very worthy of anyone who "seeks St. Louis."


Through the Arc of the Rain Forest
Published in Paperback by Coffee House Press (1990)
Author: Karen Tei Yamashita
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Taste The Rainbow

I have heard Brazilian children say that whatever passes through the arc of the rainbow becomes its opposite. But what is the opposite of a bird? Or for that matter, a human being? And what then, in the great rainforest, where, in its season, the rain never ceases and the rainbows are myriad?

This epigraph precedes Karen Yamashita's novel, "Through the Arc of the Rain Forest." Yamashita's novel focuses on the journey of Kasumasa Ishimaru as narrated by a ball revolving several inches from Kasumasa's head. The examinination of this piece, however, will revolve (literally and figuratively) on the motif of a rainbow through different parts of the novel, including the epigraph. Yamashita uses rainbows and arcs as symbols relating to consistent negative and positive patterns, imagery, and meanings within the novel.

The first introduction of the rainbow as a symbol occurs when Kasumasa encounters American J.B. Tweep, who is employed within a company Kasumasa holds controlling stock. J.B. chides Kasumasa into searching for more Matacao, which is the material that will create economic profit for Kasumasa's conglomerate. Within their search, J.B. Tweep hides protagonist Kasumaza Ishimaru from his competition. Tweep's undercover agents had been described as hiding themselves "at the arc of every rainbow" (149). The rainbow in this sense takes the meaning of a vast, unending space. The percieved sense of unrest, searching, and mystery contrasts the allusion of a peaceful rainbow. The arc represents an unexplainable plain which can be pilifered for special interest. In this instance, the rainbow does not take the shape of a beautious vision, but rather a vision of greed and deception.

The journey from new to old and back again to new is another presentation of the rainbow as an arc, a curving storyline with a significant purpose. Yamashita explains, "The old forest has returned once again...pursuing the lost perfection of an organism in which digestion and excretion ! were once one and the same." (212) The forest in this setting has been destroyed by extrordinary events. However, the forest continues to grow, to recycle. The theme of recycling and a cyclical pattern echo from this passage. Where a circle is said to have "no start and no end," an allusion is made towards a pattern of infinite possibilities and of rebirth and regeneration.

To give a greater context in the presentation of the rainbow as a symbol, one need not look further than the table of contents. The contents are broken up in six parts: The Beginning, The Developing World, More Development, Loss of Innocence, More Loss, and Return. Through careful examination, the pattern of an arc is presented through the first three parts relating to the setting and inciting incident and the last three parts regarding climax and conclusion. The first parts correlate to the rise of an arc, and the last parts correlate to the fall of the arc. In essence, the plot of the novel is like an arc, a rainbow-like pattern filled with emotional leaps and downfalls, of stunning portrayal and imaginative resolution.

The epigraph ties the novel neatly is discussing the rainbow as a symbol. The epigraph is directed through rumor, question, and pending answer, much like an arc. The breakdown of the epigraph is made to mirror the story. The rumor of Brazilian children within the epigraph relates directly to the rumors spread by the many characters within the early part of the novel, whether the rumor is contrived by the Brazilian people from Kasumasa's ball, J.B. Tweep three arms, or Mane Pena's feather use. The questions arise within the epigraph to symbolize the characters' situation, to find methods of practicality or exploitation of the rumors. In one such case, Kasumasa give his riches to both needy and greedy, many people within the novel question his motives including Kasumasa questioning his own motives. The pending answer within the epigrapgh relates to the ultimate destruction of the rain forest, the f! inal answer to human waste and stupidity.

The rainbow, through a final analysis resonates as a symbol for identity formation. Kasumaza is seen as an Asian American subject, even though his journey takes place in Brazil. In the context of whatever passes through the "rainbow becomes its opposite," Kasumaza symbolizes that choices can not be simplified to a basic premise of either/or, to whether Kasumasa is Asian or Brazilian, that a literary work is Asian American or not. Therefore, a rainbow's own identity can also be seen within the same light: multicolored to escape a single colored dimension; untouchable to resist a concrete ownership or state of being; unending to prevent an imaged start and finish.


Vandals to Visigoths: Rural Settlement Patterns in Early Medieval Spain
Published in Hardcover by University of Michigan Press (2002)
Author: Karen Eva Carr
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Much needed scholarship
An easy to read, inclusive study of a little-known period of Iberian history, highly recommended for those interested in Roman or early Iberian history. This work merges history and archaeology and bridges a gap between Roman Iberia and the Gothic era. Graphs and maps help illustrate key points. Hopefully this author (or another) will follow-up with similar studies of subjects from Roman Iberia and the much-neglected Gothic era.


Rites of First Blood
Published in Paperback by Paradigm Pubns (01 May, 1995)
Author: Karen Dale Wolman
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Really good
I read a selection of this book in another book. It was called Telling Mom. It was funny yet serious. It was the perfict monologue I was looking for. It was something that I showed all of my friends. If you are looking for a good book to use for Monologues I would say to use, The Actor's BOOK OF Monologues FOR Women.

Read This Book!
I heard about this book at a party. I've read short stories by the author before in Lesbian Bedtime Stories and Dykescapes and they were pretty good, but this book took me to another world. Hot lesbians running around the jungle all cloaked in a shroud of spirituality!

I can't wait for her next book. Is The Ancestor the correct title? Does anyone know when it's coming out?

Awesome Book
Most lesbian novels are very formulaic, with no depth. Rites of First Blood is an amazingly intriguing story with love, passion, adventure, compassion and a deep exploration of fascinating issues. It's a sexy book, but it also made me think. What would you do if you found the person and life you loved, but keeping it meant completely abandoning everything you ever knew? I recommend this novel highly. Travel along as she opens her mind to explore healing, spirituality, love and strength in a tribe of women.


The River Road : A Novel
Published in Hardcover by William Morrow (22 October, 2002)
Author: Karen Osborn
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A Love Triangle Out of Control.
In the book The River Road by Karen Osborn, Kevin, a father says, "You think you know people, but when something like this happens, you really don't know anyone at all." Surely this new book by Karen Osborn clearly and unfortunately illustrates this point all too well.

The River Road, told from the point of view of the three main characters, immerses readers in the story of two brothers who are in love with their neighbor Kay. Friends since Kay moved into this rural Connecticut area, David and Kay become lovers during college leaving Michael out of their customary threesome. As younger children, the three of them played childhood games and survived the angst filled world of high school in part because of their strong ties to one another. But then a tragedy occurs leaving parents and these young adults to wonder what went wrong and what really happened. As the remainder of the book attempts to unravel the mystery and what led up to this tragedy, readers have a front row seat as family and friends become accusatory and introspective, The book, told partially through flashbacks culminates in an ending which depicts how individuals suffer after a tragedy and the indomitable spirit to survive and love again. Certainly for those who enjoyed The Pact by Jodi Picoult concerning teenage suicide, this book will serve as a comparison to the repercussions that can occur when young adults fall in love.

Previous to reading The River Road, I read Karen Osborn's second book, Between Earth and Sky, that was set in the late 1800's in New Mexico. Told in the form of letters by a woman pioneer to her family in Virginia, Osborn presents strong women characters and wonderful descriptions of the land. While she does an equally fine job in this book of describing the characters and description of rural Connecticut, The River Road is a much sadder and more intense book in comparison. One can only wonder how life can spiral so badly out of control for something like this to happen.

Riveting
Kay Richards and brothers, David and Michael Sanderson have been friends since childhood. But one tragic night changes not only their lives, but the lives of their families and even the town they live in.

In one careless moment, a life is lost and nothing will ever be the same.

We get all sides of the story as it unfolds in alternating chapters told by Kay, Michael and Kevin (the boy's father). They all loved David and his death affects each in different ways. What first looks like an accident takes an unexpected turn and there's a police investigation and then a trial.

The verdict is riveting and so is this well written book.

the darkness in the best of us
This fine book held me in its grip from beginning to end. The writing is unobtrusive and I was lost in the lives of the characters, until I realised that something unexpected and subtle was being achieved: an examination of the fine line between love and decency, and the unacknowledged capacity for harm in us.


The Tree Tattoo
Published in Paperback by Stoddart Pub (1999)
Author: Karen Rivers
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powerful and gripping
A friend actually recommended this book to me,and I was a bit unsure if I would like it.The title didnt sound too interesting,but boy was I wrong.This book is powerful and gripping,pulling you into the story and making you want to read on.The plot and characters make you feel a little different about your life.I recommend this book to anyone who likes to read good literature.

Refreshing and raw.
Karen's lyricism and prose is a refreshing splash in the face while her raw language made for many firey discussions in my local book club. 1st novel -- 1st rate!


The Alaska River Guide: Canoeing, Kayaking, and Rafting in the Last Frontier
Published in Paperback by Alaska Northwest Books (1998)
Author: Karen Jettmar
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Outstanding guide book
Great book on numerous trips on both slow and fast water. This combination makes the book a worthwhile purchase. Living in AK for five years and doing a number of the trips makes this a great way for me to stir up a few memories. Put-ins and take outs are accurately marked. Overall excellent book.


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