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SCIENTISTS BOOKS

Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Jeffe Kennedy. By University of New Mexico Press. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $5.00. There are some available for $1.95.
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5 comments about Wyoming Trucks, True Love, and the Weather Channel: A Woman's Adventure.
  1. I loved this book! What a delightful documentation of the transformation of a child into a mature woman! I particularly related to her story because she straddles two worlds--the sophisticated life in the city with art and culture, and the Wyoming West of men, trucks and being tough. My own family comes from both those worlds and I found Jeffe's book a validation of my own feelings.

    Note: I submitted another review on this book about three weeks ago, but have not seen it yet, so am submitting this.



  2. I could not put this book down; I literally read it in one sitting. The fresh new voice of Jeffe Kennedy will make readers laugh and cry. I especially enjoyed her descriptions of her family, lover, and tribulations of being a woman in a male-dominated profession. Jeffe is one to watch! This book of essays should only be the first in a line of fantastic books to come. My favorite chapters include "Appliances," "Girfriends," and "Home Ec."


  3. Wyoming Trucks, True Love, and the Weather Channel is one of those books that is difficult to categorize. It's memoir, essay, American West, magazine articles, all of that and yet not quite any of it. The title tells you how wide-ranging these pieces are, and it actually refers to only one of the essays in the collection. Even Amazon.com has had trouble pigeon-holing the book, since it appears here on a children's books page.

    The strongest essays are the ones about Kennedy's family. The first piece is about visiting the site of her father's death in a plane crash twenty-five years earlier. She visits with her mother and they recall a time that Kennedy doesn't quite remember, when she was only three years old. By the end of the essay, you have a good idea of who Kennedy is.

    Subsequent essays discuss her childhood, her friends, her relatives, and her long-time boyfriend. A chapter called Thanksgiving is one of the best essays, about her awkward relationships with the children of her boyfriend and with their mother, her boyfriend's ex-wife. The awkwardness comes to a head when one of the children is hospitalized and Kennedy realizes that although she has no formal or recognized relationship with the children, she feels responsibility and love for them.

    For such a slim volume of essays, there's a lot to think about here.



  4. Jeffe Kennedy has created a special window on the world. She appears to have the sharp mind of a scientist combined with the beautiful soul of a poet, and this allows her to take us by the hand and lead us to some simple truths about life and death and the world around us - truths which we might otherwise miss. Ms. Kennedy's book is an engaging and revealing journey, and I would recommend it highly.


  5. This book came into my life almost accidentally, and I took my time getting it to the top of the stack. But as soon as I finished it, I wrote Jeffe Kennedy to offer my congratulations for a job superbly done. I now plan to purchase at least three more copies: one for my newlywed nephew in Colorado, because the book has such an emotional impact from a uniquely western point of view; one for my sister and brother-in-law, North Carolinians who have fallen in love with the west; one for a sister who just likes to read, and who, like Kennedy, inherited her husband's children. I list these recipients to illustrate that this book is for everyone. Yes, it's a woman's book, but only in that it was written by a woman. There's a wry voice, full of wisdom from life's lessons learned, ripe with humor and the author's ability to laugh at herself, and perhaps most important, laced with valuable information about the ecology of the region. Webster's defines ecology: The totality or pattern of relations between organisms and their environment. That's exactly what Kennedy gives us in this book...she's the organism and the many settings in her book are the environment. Buy this book. Read it and pass it on as a gift to someone you love; you'll be giving a gift of hours of pleasurable reading.


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Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by JIM SHILLIDAY. By Canadian Plains Research Center. Sells new for $19.95. There are some available for $0.04.
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No comments about Canada's Wheat King: The Life and Times of Seager Wheeler (Trade Books based in Scholorship(TBS)).



Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

By MacMillan Reference Books. The regular list price is $95.00. Sells new for $39.90. There are some available for $0.99.
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No comments about Scientists and Inventors (Macmillan Profiles, 1).



Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

By Springer. The regular list price is $69.95. Sells new for $52.46. There are some available for $42.00.
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No comments about Nishina Memorial Lectures: Creators of Modern Physics (Lecture Notes in Physics).



Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by John Tyndall. By Joseph. Press. Sells new for $27.45. There are some available for $31.95.
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No comments about Faraday As A Discoverer.



Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Lisa Murphy-Lamb. By Altitude Publishing (Canada). The regular list price is $7.95. Sells new for $4.37. There are some available for $3.86.
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No comments about Dinosaur Hunters: Uncovering the Hidden Remains of Canada's Ancient Giants (Amazing Stories).



Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Eric Damer and Caroline Astell. By Ronsdale Press. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $19.94. There are some available for $3.59.
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No comments about No Ordinary Mike: Michael Smith, Nobel Laureate.



Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

By Continuum International Publishing Group. The regular list price is $395.00. Sells new for $248.85.
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No comments about Reception of Charles Darwin in Europe (Reception of British and Irish Authors in Europe).



Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Carol L. Howell and Omer C. Stewart. By University Press of Colorado. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $29.94. There are some available for $15.00.
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1 comments about Cannibalism Is an Acquired Taste: And Other Notes : From Conversations With Anthropologist Omer C. Stewart.
  1. Omer Call Stewart was a man with many missions. He was among the first to study the use of the hallucinogen peyote in the Native American Church, and he was a stalwart defender of Native American religious freedom in many influential court cases. Omer Stewart was a student of Alfred Kroeber and produced important ethnographies of various Ute, Paiute, and other American Indians in the western U.S. He began his religious life as a Mormon and ended his life as an atheist who sincerely supported and respected people's religious commitments. He was a longtime teacher and practitioner of anthropology who embodied what it means to be a social scientist. Cannibalism is an Acquired Taste is his life's story.

    Carol Howell's book on Stewart is a wonderful blend of family stories, good science, and the early history of American anthropology. Howell has compiled a series of interviews with Stewart and his family, pertinent letters from Margaret Mead, Ruth Bunzel, and other contemporaries of Stewart, and manuscripts that illustrate key points in an anthropologist's life. The book could have been a wild melange, but instead it wonderfully illustrates Stewart's many interests and wide range of involvement. This mix of views makes the book appropriate for a variety of audiences, ranging from people interested in anthropology to those simply interested in the life of one of the more interesting personalities of the twentieth century. Throughout, the blunt honesty and yet true humility of Stewart shines through.

    For an anthropologist, Stewart's life is an alluring case study of how a professional comes into being. The passion and mistakes of a young anthropologist are clear in Stewart's early work with Julian Stewart and Alfred Kroeber. His journey from being a committed Mormon disciple to being a practicing scientist devoted to understanding the wide-ranging aspects of human culture is fascinating for anyone who has seen their own life change. From the 1930s to the 1970s Stewart constantly found himself in the midst of the key controversies and central areas of anthropological research. His life traces the change from Indians being non-citizens to their being active participants in national politics and issues. As an anthropologist, I can't think of a better or more fully described life of a student of culture.

    For the curious lay-person, the honesty of this account of Omer Stewart's life is striking. He serves as a wonderful cursor tracing many of the changes of the twentieth century. From his travels as a Mormon missionary in the twenties to his discovery of anthropology in the thirties to his service to the Chief of Staff in the Pentagon in the forties, the first half of his life illustrates the radical shift in U.S. policy from isolation to world leader. The second half of his life cuts a course of social activism in racial integration, Indian religious freedom, and scientific debate. For Stewart, the practical consequences and rightness of an endeavor often weighed more heavily in his decisions than did anthropological theory or the opinions of his mentors. At times, we--the curious voyeurs--want to know more about issues such as Stewart's friendship with famous people such as Robert Redford--the Sundance resort is on the old Stewart ranch above Provo Canyon--but the focus on this biography is squarely on Stewart and the issues at hand, not on gossip.

    I recommend the book highly to anyone who is interested in the practice of anthropology or in the active pursuit of Native American rights. Stewart was an anthropologist who did not shy away from a fight for people's rights. In this time when we often do not know what many individuals think or believe, Omer Call Stewart is a bright light illustrating how to live a life that is true to one's convictions. Carol Howell's book is a fascinating synthesis of sources that paints a picture of Stewart that is strikingly on target for those who knew him. Omer Stewart's wit was an acquired taste, but unlike cannibalism, it ultimately worked for the good of humankind.



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Posted in Scientists (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Trevor H. Hall. By Prometheus Books. The regular list price is $39.00. Sells new for $21.67. There are some available for $5.67.
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No comments about The Medium and the Scientist: The Story of Florence Cook and William Crookes (Science & the Paranormal Series).



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Wyoming Trucks, True Love, and the Weather Channel: A Woman's Adventure
Canada's Wheat King: The Life and Times of Seager Wheeler (Trade Books based in Scholorship(TBS))
Scientists and Inventors (Macmillan Profiles, 1)
Nishina Memorial Lectures: Creators of Modern Physics (Lecture Notes in Physics)
Faraday As A Discoverer
Dinosaur Hunters: Uncovering the Hidden Remains of Canada's Ancient Giants (Amazing Stories)
No Ordinary Mike: Michael Smith, Nobel Laureate
Reception of Charles Darwin in Europe (Reception of British and Irish Authors in Europe)
Cannibalism Is an Acquired Taste: And Other Notes : From Conversations With Anthropologist Omer C. Stewart
The Medium and the Scientist: The Story of Florence Cook and William Crookes (Science & the Paranormal Series)

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Last updated: Sun Sep 7 03:56:20 EDT 2008