No One Belongs Here More Than You: Stories
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Miranda July definitely belongs in your collection.
  • A unique voice
  • No one belongs in future anthologies of present zeitgeist more than Miranda July
  • Awkward for the sake of being awkward
  • Amazing. Brave. Daring. Odd. Beautiful.
No One Belongs Here More Than You: Stories
Miranda July
Manufacturer: Scribner
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

ContemporaryContemporary | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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United StatesUnited States | Short Stories | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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  1. The Boy from Lam Kien The Boy from Lam Kien
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ASIN: 0743299396

Book Description

Award-winning filmmaker and performing artist Miranda July brings her extraordinary talents to the page in a startling, sexy, and tender collection. In these stories, July gives the most seemingly insignificant moments a sly potency. A benign encounter, a misunderstanding, a shy revelation can reconfigure the world. Her characters engage awkwardly -- they are sometimes too remote, sometimes too intimate. With great compassion and generosity, July reveals their idiosyncrasies and the odd logic and longing that govern their lives. No One Belongs Here More Than You is a stunning debut, the work of a writer with a spectacularly original and compelling voice.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Miranda July definitely belongs in your collection. .......2007-10-05

"No one belongs here more than you" is a great short story collection. Miranda July has an interesting style of writing and great stories to tell. I purchased this book after falling in love with her film, "Me and You and Everyone We Know." Similar themes of sexuality, relationships, and personal perception are explored throughout all the stories. "The Boy from Lam Kien" and "How to Tell Stories to Children" especially continue on in the same vein as "Me and You." There are 16 stories within this collection's slim 201 pages, but each one is packed with a lot of heart.

5 out of 5 stars A unique voice.......2007-09-13

It was really exciting to read her stories. Her narrators are incredibly vulnerable and honest, and although their obsessions are child-like and humorous, they strike a chord below the defenses built up around your heart and make you smile with recognition.
If nothing else, she's funny as hell, and her work won't resemble anything else you've read before.

5 out of 5 stars No one belongs in future anthologies of present zeitgeist more than Miranda July.......2007-09-03

These are among the most accessable stories with literary merit I have ever read. Actually, that does not say enough--allow me to revise the former statement: These stories are among the most relevant stories in contemporary literature I've ever read. They are also among the most accessible stories I've ever read.

Miranda July cites her acting history as a guide for capturing the voices of characters who vary in age from approximately 5 to 60. From a woman in her early thirties, both ends of this spectrum are far-reaching. You will laugh, you will cry, you will laugh out-loud publicly if you are in public, you will cry because you're already sad that eventually you will finish the book and it's the only thing she's written so far (except for one ultra-recent story called "Roy Spivey," which appeared in the New Yorker in that perhaps you could locate online or back-order the issue to read).

July is one of the most intimate writers you will read. This book makes an excellent gift. I have already given it to several people in all walks of life and heard positive reviews from all.

TEACHERS of creative writing/american literature/composition:

Many of the stories in this book would be enjoyable and easy to teach with as they engage on many different levels. The first story in the collection, for instance, is unexpectedly interrupted by bizarre italicized advice (as one would see in a magazine). It is never addressed directly, however, at the end of the story the reader realizes their purpose and it becomes a vital and poweful ending (apologies if this is too vague--I am trying not to spoil). The story is hilarious, emotional, and written in a totally unconventional manner that opens it to analysis in a larger, cultural light. Point of View and Voice are handled with the utmost authenticity throughout the collection, but an excellent story for teaching either is the last story, "How to Tell Stories to Children."

3 out of 5 stars Awkward for the sake of being awkward.......2007-08-29

This collection had a lot of promise. There certainly are a few gems of stories in this slim volume, but on the whole Miranda July's collection of short stories is as wanting as most of its characters.

5 out of 5 stars Amazing. Brave. Daring. Odd. Beautiful........2007-08-24

Miranda July stomps through the delicate lands of human oddities, dysfunction, sexuality and reality with an uncanny and uncomfortable accuracy. I've never read anything like it, anything that so innocently and blatantly exposes humans for what they are and how they think in such an amusing and accepting and light-hearted manner.

Unfortunately, you can't pick whether you want pink or yellow book jacket. They sent me the yellow, so I had to think of new yellow outfits to wear everyday on the bus. It was a little challenging, since I definitely own more pink things and wasn't in the mood to go shopping for yellow things. Luckily I read fast, so it was only a few days of the Yellow Challenge. I would recommend that you don't buy any new outfits until after you get your copy. When amazon has decided your fate to be either a Pink or a Yellow Reader of Books you can dash out and purchase as many matching items as you like.
4th of July
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Now this is more like it
  • Better than 3rd Degree
  • Is this really a book written by James Patterson?
  • Fun
  • 5 Stars Without A Doubt
4th of July
James Patterson , and Maxine Paetro
Manufacturer: Little, Brown and Company
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0316710601
Release Date: 2005-05-02

Book Description

After losing one of its own, Lindsay Boxer and the Women's Murder Club make a courageous return for their fourth and most chilling case ever-one that could easily be their last. A young girl is killed in crossfire after a routine arrest goes terribly wrong, and Lt. Lindsay Boxer has to defend herself against a charge of police brutality. In a landmark trial that transfixes the nation, Lindsay fights to save her career and her sanity.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Now this is more like it.......2007-09-30

After reading the mediocre 2nd and 3rd installments in the Women Murder Club series, I almost gave up. But I'm glad I didn't; 4th of July was able to recapture most of the excitement and thrill of 1st to Die. Fairly early on into the story, Lindsay and Jacobi are following a lead on the new string of murders. The victims are killed in a suicide-appearing manner and the words 'nobody cares' are painted at the scene. The two are following the suspect's vehicle, which escalates to a high-speed chase. The vehicle crashes and they go to apprehend the suspects. But things don't happen as they should and shots are fired. Lindsay becomes the target of a wrongful death lawsuit. This drama was a good chunk of the story- which wasn't necessarily a bad thing. It was riveting and interesting to 'witness' the whole process - the waiting, trial, more waiting, and the long-awaited verdict.

The mystery surrounds the series of murders near Lindsay's sister's house, where she conveniently goes to avoid the press. Multiple seemingly-happy married couples are turning up dead. The 'mystery' aspect is the downfall of 4th of July. I suspected early on who was involved and my conclusions weren't that far off. Though, still a much better, interesting, riveting, and involved story than the prior two installments; this story mainly focuses on drama- i.e. Lindsay's court battle and a predictable mystery. Hopefully Patterson continues taking the series in this direction instead of backtracking into the mediocre stories of 2nd Chance and 3rd Degree. I was also happy to find that the profanity had greatly decreased. The greater focus was on the story which was much stronger, especially in human interest, and less so in the mystery. Still a great, rapid paced read. 5th Horseman better continue in this same vein and keep up with the excitement. This series had such a strong premise and starting point. It needs to keep going on this strong note and not fall off, otherwise I don't know if I'd bother continuing with it.

4 out of 5 stars Better than 3rd Degree.......2007-09-29

This was a good book. I had lost hope in the series after 3rd degree, i thought it was lame. But knowing how well all his other books are, I decided to read 4th of July and glad I did. I give it a 4, because I also read the quickie this week and that was a 5!

1 out of 5 stars Is this really a book written by James Patterson?.......2007-09-16

I used to love James Patterson's books. Bought them all in hardcover and was eagerly looking forward to the next one.

But that was a while ago.

When I first felt he was slipping, I thought it might only be temporarily. He would certainly soon be back in good old JP form, right? Not so. After a few attempts I realized that the James Patterson I used to enjoy so much, seemed to have disappointed for good. My attempt with this book was so bad that I did not even finish it properly. Boring, unimaginatively B-movie story making me think of mass production. Mediocre writing style at best, and the end was obvious anyway.

I have lots of James Patterson books in hardback proudly on display in my antique bookcase where my favourite authors' hardback editions have pride of place. It's a long time since a work by James Patterson found its way there though.

By the way, the co-author he has taken on does not make the quality any better. Or is this the real author??

If James Patterson does not get back to being the brilliant writer of quite long ago, it's goodbye with many regrets. It was fun as long as it lasted.

5 out of 5 stars Fun.......2007-09-13

Worth the time for a pleasant time passer. Would not be confused for great literature, but fun to listen to while on a road trip

5 out of 5 stars 5 Stars Without A Doubt.......2007-08-21

Add me to the list of those giving this James Patterson book 5 stars. Good fast paced reading, great twists & interesting story lines. Descriptions of murder scenes and court room testimony makes the reader feel like they are there.
In the Bunker With Hitler: 23 July 1944 - 29 April 1945
Average customer rating: Not rated
    In the Bunker With Hitler: 23 July 1944 - 29 April 1945
    Bernd Freytag Von Loringhoven
    Manufacturer: Pegasus Books
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

    Military & SpiesMilitary & Spies | Professionals & Academics | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
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    ASIN: 1933648392

    Book Description

    Throughout the last nine months of the Third Reich, from July 23, 1944, to April 29, 1945, Captain Bernd Freytag von Loringhoven-aide-de-camp to Adolf Hitler's last two army chiefs of staff, the generals Heinz Guderian and Hans Krebs-daily attended Hitler's military briefings with his highest-ranking officers. Daily, too, he maintained contact by telephone or radio with commanders at the front, and often he himself transmitted to them Hitler's orders and the latest intelligence from the bunker. He also watched-while recording his experiences in his private logs-as the gap increasingly widened between the reality of the war outside the bunker and Hitler's willful illusions of imminent victory in the face of absolute ruin.

    In the last catastrophic week of Hitler's regime, Loringhoven, now holed up night and day in the bunker, saw the final hopes of officers and staff dissolve into drink and fade into suicidal despair. He saw, too, his chance to survive: On April 29, when all communications in the bunker broke down, he could no longer do his work, and with Hitler's unexpected blessing, he left. On April 30, Hitler was dead.

    Those wartime logs by a young army officer who found that his duty as a soldier lay at the behest of a criminal have sixty years later become this book.

    Near the end of World War II, Bernd Freytag von Loringhoven was appointed aide-de-camp to Hitler's headquarters and finally to his bunker, where he experienced the last nine months of the Third Reich.

    Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlock'd: The inventories of the Wardrobe of Robes prepared in July 1600, edited from Stowe MS 557 in the British Library, MS LR 2/121 in the Public Record Office, London, and MS V.b.72 in the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington DC
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • The recipient loved it
    • The best place to start for Elizabethan Costuming
    • Such An Amazing Resource!
    • Really great book but....there are a few issues
    • The Best source for the Wardrobe of Elizabeth 1st
    Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlock'd: The inventories of the Wardrobe of Robes prepared in July 1600, edited from Stowe MS 557 in the British Library, MS LR 2/121 in the Public Record Office, London, and MS V.b.72 in the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington DC
    Janet Arnold
    Manufacturer: W. S. Maney and Son Ltd.
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

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    SewingSewing | Crafts & Hobbies | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
    Textile ArtsTextile Arts | Crafts & Hobbies | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
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    ASIN: 0901286206

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars The recipient loved it.......2004-10-22

    I bought this as a gift for a friend who helped a great deal with my wedding, advising me of dress styles, hair styles, fashion from this era, dances, music, food, and everything in between, as well as arranging all the flowers for the wedding! She was a godsend! When I gave her the book, her jaw dropped and she was so excited to get it... she said she had been wanting it forever. As I consider her quite knowledgeable about the subject matter of this book, and as it came highly recommended by her, I would say that it's a great book to have if this is something you are interested in as a serious hobby or more.

    5 out of 5 stars The best place to start for Elizabethan Costuming.......2003-04-10

    This is one of the best books ever written on the subject of Elizabethan Costuming. It mainly contains all of the details of Queen Elizabeth I wardrobe but it has unique points in the society that surrounded the dresses. This book helps to explain the Gloriana image that became so popular and it helps us to understand all the little details that went into the dress of the period. Detailing costumes using portraits and explaining how the fashion progressed makes this book a must for anyone interested in Renaissance Faires and the nobility. The only drawback is that very very few of the portraits and pictures are in color. I think a total of about 7 are in color the rest is in black and white. The only way to make this book more appealing and usable would be to put all of the portraits and pictures in color, but that would make the book even more expensive. After this must have book the 2nd on the shelf should be a J. Hunniset book (the lady who did all the costuming for Elizabeth R and The Six Wives of Henry the VIII produced by BBC). Next, any Janet Arnold book. Last, would be the Norris book: Tudor Costuming and Fashion (although most of this book is very outdated it is nice to look at). All of these are must haves and will make a well rounded library. Dispite the high price of the book it is worth posessing. Enjoy.

    5 out of 5 stars Such An Amazing Resource!.......2002-02-12

    For the historical costumer focused on 16th century clothing, this is the "bible" hands down. Big, expensive, and filled with the usual detail that is the hallmark of Janet Arnold, this is one very worthwhile investment for the serious costumer. This book has one tiny drawback, in that it focuses entirely on women's fashion in the 16th century as viewed through the wardrobe accounts of Queen Elizabeth I and some of her contemporaries. Therefore, it has nothing to say on the topic of men's clothing, which is an unfortunately neglected aspect of 16th century research.

    Much of Janet Arnold's most important contributions to the costuming community are addressed in this book, making it extremely valuable. She presents each section with satisfying detail, raising very few questions that remain unanswered. The photographs accompanying the text are also invaluable, as many of them are not available in other books or to the general public for viewing. If only there were more color images...

    If you can afford the book, you won't regret buying it.

    4 out of 5 stars Really great book but....there are a few issues.......2001-08-06

    For years I heard how this was _the_ book to buy if you were into Elizabethan costuming and wanted authentic items that could be documented. The book is good for that, and I enjoyed the style that Ms.Arnold wrote it in.

    But I have two major gripes with the book-both regarding the quality of graphics and images in it.

    First off-in the whole book there are only about 5 pages in color. The rest of it-including hundreds of portraits, examples of extant clothing pieces and pieces of embroidery were all in black and white. I complain about that because, with so many of the portraits quoted as examples it would help if they could be seen clearly. (Many of them are too dark to have reproduced well, and a few are quite horrible.) And the photographs....

    If they could reprint this book and possibly include more color plates it would be a much much more valuable resource. As it stands now, it is a good source, but not all that I could have hoped for. Instead I have begun a search for color reproductions of the portraits cited in the book. A long tedious job but one that I think over all will make it a much more solid resource for my needs.

    5 out of 5 stars The Best source for the Wardrobe of Elizabeth 1st.......2000-05-13

    This book is amazing. Huge, and packed full of information. An essential refernce work if you are seriously considering doing anything with elizabethan fashion. The author has poured years of scholarship into this work and it shows. It's not really a coffee table picture book. Instead it is full of carefully culled facts for the serious student or anybody curious about 'real' English Tudor costume.
    The Maps of Gettysburg: The Gettysburg Campaign, June 3 - July 13, 1863
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • A must have book.
    • Maps of Gettysburg-A must have reference guide
    • a picture is worth a thousand words
    • No academic library can afford not to include
    • The only book you will need out on the battlefield
    The Maps of Gettysburg: The Gettysburg Campaign, June 3 - July 13, 1863
    Bradley Gottfried
    Manufacturer: Savas Beatie
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

    GeneralGeneral | 19th Century | United States | Americas | History | Subjects | Books
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    ASIN: 1932714308

    Book Description

    More academic and photographic accounts on the battle of Gettysburg exist than for all other battles of the Civil War combined-and for good reason. The three-days of maneuver, attack, and counterattack consisted of literally scores of encounters, from corps-size actions to small unit engagements. Despite all its coverage, Gettysburg remains one of the most complex and difficult to understand battles of the war. The Maps Gettysburg: The Gettysburg Campaign, June 3 - July 13, 1863, by Bradley Gottfried offers a unique approach to the study of this multifaceted engagement. The Maps of Gettysburg plows new ground in the study of the campaign by breaking down the entire campaign in 140 detailed original maps. These cartographic originals bore down to the regimental level, and offer Civil Warriors a unique and fascinating approach to studying the always climactic battle of the war. The Maps of Gettysburg offers thirty "action-sections" comprising the entire campaign. These include the march to and from the battlefield, and virtually every significant event in between. Gottfried's original maps (from two to as many as twenty) enrich each "action-section." Keyed to each piece of cartography is detailed text that includes hundreds of soldiers' quotes that make the Gettysburg story come alive. This presentation allows readers to easily and quickly find a map and text on virtually any portion of the campaign, from the cavalry drama at Brandy Station on June 9, to the last Confederate withdrawal of troops across the Potomac River on July 15, 1863. Serious students of the battle will appreciate the extensive and authoritative endnotes. They will also want to bring the book along on their trips to the battlefield. Perfect for the easy chair or for stomping the hallowed ground of Gettysburg, The Maps of Gettysburg promises to be a seminal work that belongs on the bookshelf of every serious and casual student of the battle. Bio: Bradley M. Gottfried holds a Ph.D. in Zoology from Miami University. He has worked in higher education for more than three decades as a faculty member and administrator. He is currently President of the College of Southern Maryland. An avid Civil War historian, Dr. Gottfried is the author of five books: The Battle of Gettysburg: A Guided Tour (1998); Stopping Pickett: The History of the Philadelphia Brigade (1999); Brigades of Gettysburg (2002); Roads to Gettysburg (2002); and Kearny's Own: The History of the First New Jersey Brigade (2005). He is currently working with Theodore P. Savas on a Gettysburg Campaign Encyclopedia.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars A must have book........2007-09-26

    I've been going to Gettysburg and reading about Gettysburg since the 1960s. I'm constantly learning new things. This book is without a doubt one of the better sources to learn and understand troop movements not just during the actual three day battle but actions over the entire Gettysburg campaign which started a month before and took up most of the month of July. Thank you Mr.Gottfried.

    5 out of 5 stars Maps of Gettysburg-A must have reference guide.......2007-09-12

    I have studied the battle of Gettysburg for years and have read most of the recommended autors such as Coddington, Phanz, Foote, Catton etc and I still had areas of the battle that were hard to comprehend the movements such as in the Wheatfield. When I bought and opened the Maps of Gettysburg I knew that this was the book that would clarify many murky areas. I have been to Gettysburg three times and plan to go again this Oct. 2007 and will have the book alongside of me in the car.
    John M. Ryan

    3 out of 5 stars a picture is worth a thousand words.......2007-08-30

    I really looked forward to this Atlas & read the reviews here on Amazon.com before buying it. I was disappointed when I got my hands on the book.

    In his introduction Professor Gottfried admits he was the creator of the maps found in the book. They were done using a computer draw program. He also tells us he fired two professional cartographers over "creative differences" before deciding to do the job himself. Did he do better than the professionals could have done?

    It is a comprehensive atlas of the Gettysburg battle done in larger scale. There are a lot of close up shots but no zoom button on the camera. There are also some maps of other battles & events of Lee's Pennsylvania campaign thrown in but these do not amount to a comprehensive treatment of the rest of the campaign by any stretch of the imagination. The maps are done all in black & white.

    The maps could be appreciated by a flatlander looking through a soda straw. By this I mean the large, zoomed-in scale maps, while offering snapshots of important phases of the battle, are not given any context by the inclusion of maps of a smaller, zoomed-out scale telling the uninformed just exactly where they are at the moment the snapshot was taken on the huge theater that was the Gettysburg battlefield.

    By this I also mean the maps offer little in the way of contour information. I realise too much contour information presented to readers not used to military maps giving such detailed information may confuse & obscure more than help but more contour information should have been included as part of an essential cartography.

    Also the maps give me as much information about how the farmers of the area planted their crops as they tell me about the tactical situation they depict.

    I found the notes accompanying the maps on the opposite pages to be dull & dry. They are pedantic & uninspiring. I would have liked something more pithy. I don't want to wade through a bog of words when trying to find out at a glance just what the picture is trying to show me. The notes are a distraction. If I want a description of the nitty-gritty details of the battle I have a number of well-written histories (oops, historiographies) close at hand that have done a much better job telling me what I want to know about the battle.

    I guess this one went over my head like a minie ball from one of Schimmelfennig's Dutchmen. "Aim low, boys." I would suggest this kind of work is too important to be left to the amateurs.

    Oh, by the way, I haven't been to Gettysburg yet (I'm just a hick from west of the Mississippi) but I am curious what a "worm" is.

    5 out of 5 stars No academic library can afford not to include.......2007-08-04

    "The Maps Of Gettysburg: The Gettysburg Campaign, June 3-July 13, 1863" by academician and civil war historian Bradley M. Gottfried is a unique approach to understanding what is perhaps the single most studied battle of the American Civil War. The intense series of lethal combats comprising the Gettysburg conflict that took place around the town of Gettysburg ranged from corps-sized actions to small-unit engagements began on June 3rd and included cavalry battles, cannonades, foot regiments, and was to prove the turning point of the war which beforehand had favored the Confederates under the leadership of General Robert E. Lee, but afterwards was to have General Lee on the defensive, finally culminating in his surrender at Appomattox. "The Maps Of Gettysburg" includes thirty map sets or 'action-sections' featuring 144 detailed full-page maps that together comprise the entire campaign from beginning to end. These are reproductions of cartographic originals down to the regimental and battery level. Of special note is the accompaniment of the maps are detailed descriptions of the units, personalities, movements, and combat associated with them. The narrative and deftly written text also includes eyewitnesses quotes. "The Maps Of Gettysburg" is a seminal contribution to the growing body of Civil War literature and highly recommended reading for civil war buffs. No academic library can afford not to include "The Maps Of Gettysburg" as part of their American Civil War Studies reference collections.

    5 out of 5 stars The only book you will need out on the battlefield.......2007-07-12

    I have been to Gettysburg many times and I wish that I would have had this book back then. There has been several books with good maps in the past but this book is incredible. The detail of the maps down to the regimental level will not leave any doubt as to where everyone was. Thanks for a great book.
    Playboy, July 2006 Issue
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Nalgas muy caliente
    Playboy, July 2006 Issue
    Editors of Playboy Magazine
    Manufacturer: Playboy
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Single Issue Magazine

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    ASIN: 1580607799

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Nalgas muy caliente.......2006-11-10

    Wow Vida....thats all i can say when i am looking at your naked body.....Wow.
    Stars in Their Courses : The Gettysburg Campaign, June-July 1863
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • As Good as it gets
    • "They will attack you in the morning and they will come booming--skirmishers three-deep. You will have to fight like the devil."
    • A wonderful read, and a sincere search for truth
    • The Tragedy of Gettysburg
    • Superb Account of the Gettysburg Campaign
    Stars in Their Courses : The Gettysburg Campaign, June-July 1863
    Shelby Foote
    Manufacturer: Modern Library
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

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    Accessories:
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    ASIN: 0679601120
    Release Date: 1994-06-28

    Amazon.com

    Shelby Foote, who cut such a courtly figure in Ken Burns's PBS series The Civil War, is an uncommonly graceful writer as well, and this careful study of the 1863 Gettysburg campaign assumes the contours of a classical tragedy. Foote positions readers on the field of battle itself, among swirling smoke and clattering grapeshot, and invites us to feel for ourselves its hellishness: "men on both sides were hollering as they milled about and fired, some cursing, others praying ... not a commingling of shouts and yells but rather like a vast mournful roar." Foote's fine book is history as literature, and a welcome addition to any Civil War buff's library.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars As Good as it gets.......2007-06-27

    I could write a long review about how good this book is but that would be a diservice to the author. We lost a great historian when Shelby Foote passed. He was a historian who prefered to be remembered as a novelist. As a proud Vermont Yankee, professional historian, and living historian of that period, I tend to get cranky about revisionist views or the whole Sourthern "lost cause" foolishness. However, Mr. Foote, a proud southerner, wrote about the most important event in our nation's history without the prejudice or regionalism, so many bring to the topic. He could write excellent history and tell the story with the readability of a novelist.



    We are poorer for his passing but the body of work he left behind on the Civil War will remain some of the must have items in any serious collection of books about that second birth of our nation.



    We'll miss you Shelby but thank you for what you left behind.

    5 out of 5 stars "They will attack you in the morning and they will come booming--skirmishers three-deep. You will have to fight like the devil.".......2006-07-04

    Heth upon hearing a rumour that Early's men had over looked a suppy of shoes (many of his men were barefooted) when they passed though Gettysburg the week Sent his lead brigade under Johnston Pettigrew to investigate. Johnston Pettigrew returned on thr 30th of June, mindeful of Lee's warning not to bring on a battle till the whole army was at hand, prudently withdrew when he encountered Federal troopers along a creekbank west of town.
    Heth still wanted those shoes so he took Pettigrew with him to repeat what he had seen to Hill. Hill responded "The only force at Gettysburg is calvalry, probably a detachment of oberservation. Mead's infantry are still down in Maryland and have not struck their tents." Heth was quick to reply "If there is no objection, I will take my division tommorrow and go to Gettysburg and get those shoes." "None in the world" said Hill.

    Thus what started out as a movement for shoes ended in prehaps the most important battle of the War!

    Sheby Foote is a master story teller who turns history in to classical literature. He includes many maps to help understand the grand movement of both armies.

    Standing in the way of Heth's men to'get those shoes' was John Buford, a tough, Kentucky-born regular with a fondness for hard fighting. Though Hill was correct that at the moment there were only cavalry in Gettysburg, these troops (two brigades) were armed with the new seven shot Spencer carbine. They belong to Reynold's Corps who's infantry were that night camped just six miles from Gettysburg.

    What would you do to 'get those shoes'?

    *The title is from John Buford addressing his troops on 30 June 1863. "....You will have to fight like the devil until supports arrive."

    5 out of 5 stars A wonderful read, and a sincere search for truth.......2006-03-28

    Imagine, if you can, a book written by a modern historian that actually seeks the truth. Imagine a book written by a modern historian that is not slanted to promote his/her politics. Imagine a 20th century historian that does not even mention the sexuality (alternative or otherwise), of any historical figures in an entire book.
    If you are looking for "the truth" at Gettysburg, "Stars In Their Courses" is for you. Shelby Foote is a fine author, and has written the book in a captivating manner that I highly esteem. Pick this book up and give it a try, one chapter should do the trick. You will have a good feeling afterward that you have learned something worthwhile about American History.

    5 out of 5 stars The Tragedy of Gettysburg.......2006-01-22

    "Stars in Their Courses" is a superb narrative account of the Battle of Gettysburg, excerpted from Foote's three volume history of the Civil War. Shelby Foote, a novelist and a son of the South before becoming an historian, approaches the Gettysburg Campaign as a tragic human drama, the high tide of Confederate arms for General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia and the turning point of redemption for General George Meade's Army of the Potomac.

    Foote's account of Gettysburg is absolutely gripping, full of the human details that make those events come alive for the student of the Civil War and the casual reader alike. Foote captures both the heroism of individuals and the sometimes blind blundering of large armies. Gettysburg is not Lee's finest hour; Foote's narrative may be fairly read to show that Lee's normally sure hand was absent over the three days of battle, allowing the Army of Northern Virginia to stumble into an unexpected battle. Lee's desire for a decisive victory and his underestimation of the long-suffering Army of the Potomac probably led him to persist in a clumsy and costly fight his army could not afford.

    On the Union side, General Meade seems more driven than a driver of events, but his willingness to fight it out made possible the victory that his various valiant subordinates delivered. Meade's failure to vigorously follow up in the days after the battle probably cost the Union a chance to do much more damage to Lee's Army.

    This book is highly recommended to the student of the Civil War and to the casual reader looking for a highly readable account of this critical battle.

    5 out of 5 stars Superb Account of the Gettysburg Campaign.......2005-02-06

    Shelby Foote's monumental, three volume history of the American Civil War is widely recognized as one of the great works of the twentieth century. However, its great length - roughly three thousand pages - is undoubtedly intimidating to many readers. Fortunately, this 1994 Modern Library edition, Stars in Their Courses, the Gettysburg Campaign, circumvents this difficulty.

    Stars in Their Courses is the middle chapter in the middle volume of Shelby Foote's remarkable history. This extract offers an easy way for a reader new to Shelby Foote to become acquainted with his masterpiece.

    The editors of the Modern Library series should be commended for selecting this particular chapter. It is hard to imagine a better introduction to the Gettysburg Campaign. Stars in Their Courses is not only great history, it is great literature. Shelby Foote is an outstanding writer, one that happens, fortunately for us, to write history. In reviewing Foote's acclaimed historical narrative, one critic said, "It seems to me unlikely that it ever will be superseded."

    Remarkably, Stars in Their Courses is entirely self-contained. A reader not familiar with Shelby Foote's writing would not realize that this Modern Library edition was actually a single chapter drawn from a much larger work. The reader has no need to reference any other sources.

    Stars in Their Courses would make an excellent gift for that friend or family member that enjoys good literature, but heretofore has not developed an enthusiasm for the Civil War. The Modern Library edition is attractively bound, and printed on acid-free paper.

    Michael Shaara's Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Killer Angels, would be a great companion gift to Stars in Their Courses. Shaara's focus is on specific participants in the three-day battle, especially Lee, Buford, Longstreet, Chamberlain, and Armistead. The Killer Angels was the basis for the epic movie, Gettysburg.
    The Diaries of John Gregory Bourke: November 20, 1872, to July 28, 1876 (Diaries of John Gregory Bourke)
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      The Diaries of John Gregory Bourke: November 20, 1872, to July 28, 1876 (Diaries of John Gregory Bourke)
      John Gregory Bourke
      Manufacturer: University of North Texas Press
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Hardcover

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      ASIN: 1574411616
      Storming Little Round Top: The 15th Alabama and Their Fight for the High Ground, July 2, 1863
      Average customer rating: 1.5 out of 5 stars
      • About as bad as a Civil War book can get
      • wasted words and no maps
      • Waste of money
      • Expecting Much More
      Storming Little Round Top: The 15th Alabama and Their Fight for the High Ground, July 2, 1863
      Phillip Thomas Tucker
      Manufacturer: Da Capo Press
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      1. Burnside's Bridge: The Climactic Struggle of the 2nd and 20th Georgia at Antietam Creek Burnside's Bridge: The Climactic Struggle of the 2nd and 20th Georgia at Antietam Creek
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      ASIN: 0306811464

      Book Description

      The gripping story of a well-known battle told from the perspective of the "other" side--the Confederates who just barely lost the fight for Little Round Top at the battle of Gettysburg.

      The fight for Little Round Top on July 2, 1863, is forever etched in the annals of America's Civil War. The heroic defense of the high ground by Joshua Chamberlain and the men of the 20th Maine is one of the most famous incidents in American history, made more famous by its powerful depiction in the film Gettysburg. There are numerous written accounts of the Union defenders on Little Round Top but considerably less has been written--up to now--about the Confederate attackers who charged up the hill and faced an even more desperate challenge than those who defended it.

      Unique and colorful, this new study brings to life the men and officers of the 15th Alabama who gathered that day to assault the Union flank. The lively narration of this dramatic engagement is both detailed and authoritative. Veteran Civil War author Phillip Tucker colorfully evokes the men and the times--from a description of the Alabamans' Chattahoochee River valley home to sketches of the lives and personalities of William C. Oates and other key members of the regiment.

      Customer Reviews:

      1 out of 5 stars About as bad as a Civil War book can get.......2004-01-16

      That a book purporting to be a detailed, comprehensive tactical study offers only one map pretty well reflects the carelessness, and lack of respect for the reader, with which this book apparently was produced. I've written thirteen books on the Civil War and Indian Wars myself, and I understand the importance of good maps. The prose also is sloppy, and the author repeats the same absurd premise - that a few more men in the ranks of one regiment might have changed the course of Gettysburg, and thus of the Civil War - so many times that one feels tempted to toss the book across the room. An absolute disgrace to the field of military history.

      2 out of 5 stars wasted words and no maps.......2003-02-21

      The author, who did a good job with Burnside's Bridge, repeats himself over and over ad naseoum and fails to include maps or drawings to illustrate what he is describing. His main premise is, that had the 15 th Alabama been fully complemented with men and had it been supported by another regiment, Gettysburg would have been a Confederate victory. That is prepostorous, considering the number of reinforcements the Union had. Oates and his men deserve a lot of credit for their valor but so do the Union troops who put up one hell of a battle from prepared defensive positions. The author is capable of writing a much better product and must have been in a hurry to churn another book out.

      1 out of 5 stars Waste of money.......2003-02-05

      I totally agree with [a negative reviewer]. I was very disappionted after waiting so long for the release. The authur constantly repeated things, trying to make the book longer. Plus Tucker seems to have a grudge against Joshua Chamberlain. In the last chapter he makes it sound like Chamberlain had nothing to do with the battle and lied about his contribution afterwards. He provdes no maps to prove his "research". He also states the 15th Alabama retired up Big Round Top after the battle. But wasn't Big Round Top in Union hands after the 2nd day? There's many things I didn't like about this book.

      2 out of 5 stars Expecting Much More.......2002-09-26

      I had originally placed this order almost a year ago with much anticipation. After the publishing was delayed for months I had forgotten I even had it on back order. Well, I finally got my copy and I must say that it is a big disappointment.

      To begin with, there are exactly two illustrations: one map and one seriously degraded photo of Col Oates. Unless you have the memory of an elephant it is very hard to get detail on timelines and troop movements/placements on text alone. This, to me, was perhaps the biggest disappointment.

      Another area of concern is the, at times, seemingly lack of real research. One example of this is the claim made by the author that the hill, thus the entire battle, could have been won if the 15th ALA had had support, etc. He failed to explain where these units were supposed to come from, neglected to mention that by the time the 15th ALA had run out of steam there wasn't enough daylight left to mount another assault, any supports would have to come from over a mile away under fire, and he doesn't offer any gameplan as to how the Confederates were supposed to hold the hill once it was taken (given the fact that there were 1000s of Union troops within double quick distance). I don't mean to nitpick on one aspect but the entire book is written this way.

      I was looking for a book that was going to finally explain the Confederate point of view in detail, with battle maps to accompany the text. But this reads more like a guy who is trying to defend his family's honor after someone hurled a staining insult at them. I agree that the Conf side of this legendary struggle has not been represented in enough detail and scope. I still feel that way.

      Bottom line-the premise is a great idea; don't waste your money.
      The Battle Between the Farm Lanes: Hancock Saves the Union Center: Gettysburg July 2, 1863 (Discovering Civil War America Series, V. 4)
      Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
      • Suffers From Lack of Maps
      • HANCOCK SAVES THE UNION CENTER
      • Pop-rate Microhistory of Part of the Gettysburg Battle
      • Walking Gettysburg's Battlefield: Hancock and the Union Center on July 2nd
      • Excellent addition to Gettysburg history
      The Battle Between the Farm Lanes: Hancock Saves the Union Center: Gettysburg July 2, 1863 (Discovering Civil War America Series, V. 4)

      Manufacturer: Ironclad
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      Binding: Paperback

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      4. Protecting the Flanks: The Battles for Brinkerhoff's Ridge and East Cavalry Field, Battle of Gettysburg, July 2-3, 1863 (Discovering Civil War America) Protecting the Flanks: The Battles for Brinkerhoff's Ridge and East Cavalry Field, Battle of Gettysburg, July 2-3, 1863 (Discovering Civil War America)
      5. Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862 Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862

      ASIN: 0967377072

      Book Description

      Gettysburg, late afternoon, Thursday, July 2, 1863.

      The Union left wing is a shambles. General Dan Sickles has been carried from the field with a gruesome wound and his Third Corps is in full retreat.

      Confederate troops cross the Emmitsburg Road and advance on the center of the Union position. There is no coherent Union line, just two-thirds of an over-extended Second Corps scattered the length of Cemetery Ridge. A desperate Winfield Scott Hancock organizes a defense, placing artillery batteries, hurling regiments forward, trading men for time. It is a masterful performance under extreme conditions.

      The Union and Confederate forces collide in Plum Run Ravine. More than at any other point in the three days of fighting, the issue hangs in the balance. This great battle is reduced to less than an acre of ground.

      This book pays close attention to the terrain, how it shaped the battle, how it dictated the movement of troops and how it guided Hancock's decisions. The thrilling narrative and the detailed driving and walking tour make it a must for both casual and serious students of the battle.

      Customer Reviews:

      3 out of 5 stars Suffers From Lack of Maps.......2007-09-29

      This book addresses an important part of the Battle of Gettysburg. Unfortunately, the maps are woefully deficient, which detracts from the book's effectiveness.

      5 out of 5 stars HANCOCK SAVES THE UNION CENTER.......2007-03-11

      The author does an excellent job of describing the activities of Hancock as they relate to the Union defenses on Day 2 at Gettysburg. He was willing to give credit to units other than the 1st Minnesota in the stopping of Barksdale's Brigade,e.g., the 111th New York. Most of the credit seems to go to the 1st Minnesota. They suffered the highest percentage of casualties but not the highest number. Had Hancock not been all over the battlefield the outcome could have been different or there could have been more Union casualties. I highly recommend the book for those interested in accounts of specific parts of the battlefield.

      5 out of 5 stars Pop-rate Microhistory of Part of the Gettysburg Battle.......2007-02-24

      Most books now published relative to the Battle of Gettysburg are "microhistories", focusing in on small segments of the whole, exploring those segments in great detail. "The Battle between the Farm Lanes" is such a microhistory, examining a crucial moment during the second day of fighting at Gettysburg. The Confederate successes at the Peach Orchard and the Wheatfield and their failure at Little Round Top during the grand assault on the Union left on July 2, 1863, are well-known and well-documented in many works. Less familiar is the story of how the Union Army of the Potomac brought the Confederate onslaught to a halt and preserved the integrity of their main position along Cemetary Ridge. "The Battle between the Farm Lanes" is the story of how the Army of the Potomac brought the Confederate advance to a halt and turned it back. The authors carefully examine the role of Winfield Scott Hancock (commander of the Federal Second Corps) in directing that Union effort, and they give him high marks for saving the Army of the Potomac from grievous defeat. But they do not neglect Hancock's subordinate commanders in how they carried out his orders and performed heroically on the battlefield. "The Battle between the Farm Lanes" is a volume that belongs on the shelves of anyone seriously interested in Gettysburg, and it provides a a vivid look at Civil War combat on the infantry regiment and artillery battery level.

      4 out of 5 stars Walking Gettysburg's Battlefield: Hancock and the Union Center on July 2nd.......2007-02-20

      The Battle Between the Farm Lanes: Hancock Saves the Union Center, Gettysburg July 2nd 1863, David Schultz and David Wieck, Forward by Jeffery Wert
      301 pages, paperbound, endnotes, bibliography, index, Ironclad Press, 2006.

      Paying close attention to the physical terrain of the battlefield, Schultz and Wieck offer an important re-visitation to familar material regarding the 'close run thing' of the Union center between 5:00 and 7:00pm on July 2nd 1863. A great amount of detail is offered and succesfully puts into context the charge of the 1st Minnesota, which in popular treatments of the battle, is second only to the 20th Maine's heroics on Little Round Top.

      The authors make clear that the glory the 1st Minnesota gained during the charge was with the aid of the 111th New York infantry, commanded by Colonel Clinton MacDougall and the 4th U.S. Artillery, Battery C, commanded by Lt. Evan Thomas. The flanks of the 1st Minnesota were aided by artillery on the right, and on the left by a infantry charge immediately before the Minnesotans effort. The 111th New York was one of the three regiments that was unfairly lableled as the 'Harper's Ferry Cowards' stemming from an unfortunate command decision during the Sharpsburg Campaign of 1862.

      The personality and presence of Winfield S. Hancock is a recurring theme in every chapter. He is the single most decisive element in the preservation of the Federal center along Cemetery Ridge. Lacking from the discussion is a description of Hancock's staff, which in this micro-history, would have been enlightening and enjoyable. This reader finished the the book thinking that Hancock was unaccompanied by couriers, advisors, and aides as he rode between the farmslanes during the afternoon of July 2nd.

      Yet, there are some difficulties with this book. The size of the type font must be 18 point or larger. Initially I thought the publisher had sent me the Large Print edition for the visually impaired. There was a period of adjustment for my eyes to accommodate such large text. Also, some printer/publisher proofreading needed to be done before setting this book between its covers. The pages listed for the maps in the table of contents does not match with the actual page locations of the maps in the book. Also, the maps do not have the farmsteads labled which is a curious thing for a book that has the word 'farmlanes' in its title. Only one map, Tour Stop # 5, has a farm building labled. The maps have on them only the modern park roads and not the 1863 farmlanes. Furthermore, it would have been convienent for the reader if the publisher put a few maps in the first section of the book that describes the 1863 fighting. All the maps are in the second section of the book that describes the modern driving and walking tour.

      In addition, the portaits of officers do not have their units in the captions. Lacking is a picture of Colonel William J. Colville (1st Minnesota) though it is located in the Library of Congress. At times the writing style doesn't carry the narrative consistenly forward. A favorite expression of the authors is 'by the time . . .' but there is very few statements of time in the book. Of course, given the fact that the book covers about two hours of fighting, the reader does not expect a minute by minute account, but an estimation of the range time, such as the phrase '. . .about 3:30pm . . .' or ' . . . probably sometime between 4:00pm and 4:30pm . . .' would have helped.

      From the bibliography is missing Richard Moe's highly regarded 'The Last Full Measure: The Life and Death of the First Minnesota Volunteers.' Missing from the book are appendices at the end of the book; especially helpful would have been an Union and Confederate order of battle of those units on the field at the Union center. There is an appendix which offers an essay on measuring the ground on which the fight occurred; the appendix is located in the middle of the book, between the narrative and the tour.

      Though mechanically the book has its flaws, overall the discussion it offers is enlightening and clearly presented.

      5 out of 5 stars Excellent addition to Gettysburg history.......2007-02-09

      Ironclad Publishing continues to bring affordable high quality Civil War histories to the public as part of The Discovering Civil War America Series. This is the fourth excellent book in the series the others are:
      Protecting the Flank: The Battles for Brinkerhoff's Ridge and East Cavalry Field
      A Little Short of Boats: The Fights at Ball's Bluff and Edwards Ferry
      "No Such Army since the Days of Julius Caesar" Sherman's Carolinas Campaign: from Fayetteville to Averasboro
      Each is a paperback book of 200 to 300 pages, with illustrations, maps, index, bibliography and notes. Each book is a very good introductory to intermediate account of the subject and is about the best buy available in Civil War history.
      July 2, 1863 at Gettysburg is my candidate for most written about event in the Civil War. The Pickett's Charge is the other event that could be considered for this status. Do we need/want another book about this well covered event? Considering the work of Coddington and Pfranz this is a very valid question. Some of you may not consider buying this book as you have the mentioned volumes in your library.
      While this is a valid consideration, I feel that you will lose a unique view of this action. Most accounts focus on the Confederate side of Longstreet's' attack. The Union response while not slighted has not gotten equal coverage. Unintentionally, this promotes the idea that Longstreet's attack ran out of gas as darkness ends this very long day.
      Shultz and Wieck focus on Hancock's responses on July 2nd. Starting with the arrival of his Corps and deployment thru the end of the day, with the attack broken and the Union line intact. Sickles unauthorized advance that weakens the Union left complicate Hancock's task. Sickles being out of position and trying to defend to long a line forces Hancock to reinforce to him. As the battle moves into Hancock's area, he no longer has a full Corps and must cover Sickles area too.
      This book is a detailed history of how Hancock held. Riding from crisis to crisis, meeting threat after threat, we come to understand the wrenching decisions he makes. The 19th Main, the 1st Minnesota, the Harpers Ferry Cowards and Turnbull's Battery march and fight across the pages. Each of these actions is detailed and placed within the larger action, allowing us to understand the unique dangers and contributions these units made.
      This is a well written easy to read account of the Union response. One of the nicer items is a detailed tour of the area. This allows the reader to visit and understand the why to much of the actions. This book is a valuable addition to your Gettysburg library and highly recommended.

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