Used price: $4.83
Collectible price: $12.71
Buy one from zShops for: $8.65
List price: $32.50 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $19.95
Buy one from zShops for: $22.59
Dr. Taylor has obviously spent long hours and many miles in her research of the subject. The Bibliography alone consumes 20 pages! Furthermore, there are 10 pages of Acknowledgements.
The end result is a comprehensive chronicle of olives in California with a strong emphasis on ripe olive processes (both olive oil and pickled in cans). Her writing style reflects a love of the subject.
List price: $14.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $7.93
Collectible price: $8.42
Buy one from zShops for: $7.75
Used price: $10.73
Buy one from zShops for: $9.51
Sacagawea got married when she was 15 and had a baby. She guided Lewis and Clark across the Western United States. They had to map it out for Thomas Jefferson after the Lousianna Purchase. It took a long time for them to travel to the Pacific and back. She was a huge help to them because she knew what food was safe to eat and what to use for injuries, and helped communicate to the Native Americans they encountered along the way. Lewis and Clark and her took a ship to find here family and they did. Lewis shot himself. Sacagawea died in1896. I think another title for this book should be The Life About Sacagawea. I think she should have lived longer. I will like to tell people to read this book because it's a great educational book. The best part was when she had her baby. The part that I didn't like was when she died. She is a true American heroine.
Buy one from zShops for: $30.00
If you live in the Midwest, North East or Canada (zones 1-6) this book could be considered a five star book.
List price: $45.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $64.99
(crafts-w o m a n). The handbags she has designed are whimsical AND elegant, and are coveted by celebrities and socialites. The book is interesting, inspiring and a whole lot of FUN. I highly recommend it to anyone who appreciates imagination, creativity, and uniqueness. BORING it's not!
List price: $17.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $3.95
Buy one from zShops for: $5.00
Used price: $0.98
Collectible price: $4.19
Buy one from zShops for: $10.00
The narrator, Nathan Longfort, first sees his older "cousin" Aubrey in 1916 on a funeral train headed from ?Washington, D.C., back to Knoxville for the burial of Longfort's grandfather, an accomplished senator. A ward of the senator, Aubrey is also the illegitimate son of a mountain woman and the senator's brother.
The novels follows Longfort's preoccupation with, and attempts to explain, Aubrey's appearances and disappearances over the years. Longfort flashes back to his parents, his schooling, and teaching career, and his own wife and son, but he always returns to Aubrey.
For the family the death of the senator represents the fading away of an era. Aubrey takes on mythic stature. To some degree, he becomes emblematic of the modern, rootless man, created in his own image, running away from the old mouth and dispensation. Without the senator, Aubrey must make his own way in the world.
The narrative reflects this sense of dissipation. "Time is nothing," Longfort quotes a Chinese philosopher and painter. "Character and experience and precious memory is all."
A retired art professor who wanted to be an artists, Longfort shuttles between past and present, attempting to buttress piecemeal discoveries against his own motives and discontents.
In this sense the story is thoroughly modern. Where the given and fixed have been abandoned, characters become increasingly self-conscious and wayward, having become mysteries to themselves. "Gone to Texas" reads a sign on one lonely homestead. That Longfort was raised without a father merely worsens the ambiguity.
At the same time, Taylor shows that the rest of the Long fort family does little better than Aubrey in sustaining a legacy of order. The manners they claim to cherish, but abuse, confine more than they provide. To them Aubrey is simply an outsider from ignoble birth and a target for easy jokes.
An unobtrusive author, Taylor develops these conflicts and tensions, often leaving the reader, like the main characters, very much on his own. Here are two lives, each falling short in some way but each eliciting sympathy. This complexity makes them more real is a measure of Taylor's talent. With its quiet prose and nudging toward sometimes discomfiting revelation, In the Tennessee Country is a solid work.
Used price: $15.00
Buy one from zShops for: $16.19
Used price: $3.40
Buy one from zShops for: $3.49