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ENGLAND BOOKS

Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

West Country and South Wales (AA Road Map Britain) Written by AA Publishing. By Automobile Association. There are some available for $4.87.
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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

Marlborough   (MA)  (Images  of  America) Written by Susan Alatalo. By Arcadia Publishing. The regular list price is $19.99. Sells new for $16.19. There are some available for $11.99.
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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

Nature Walks In Connecticut: Explore Mountains, Forests, Caves, and Coastlines throughout the State Written by Charles W. G. Smith and Rene Laubach. By Appalachian Mountain Club Books. The regular list price is $14.95. Sells new for $12.00. There are some available for $0.96.
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2 comments about Nature Walks In Connecticut: Explore Mountains, Forests, Caves, and Coastlines throughout the State.
  1. Q: What are we going to do today?

    A: Let's go for a Hike

    Q: Where?

    A: Pull out "Nature Walks In Connecticut" so we can decide.

    That's a common Saturday morning conversation at our home. This book has provided us with numerous outdoor plans to fill those Saturdays. Whether you're an experienced hiker or enthusiastic novice, "Nature Walks In Connecticut" will be a valued addition to your outdoors library. The suggested hikes are organized by region; western, middle and eastern Connecticut. Additionally, each hike is evaluated based on length, difficulty and little gems of nature you can expect to see (waterfalls, mountain vistas, shoreline views, etc.).

    The authors have managed quite well to make this read like a guidebook rather than a geology text/roadmap. The trail descriptions include discourse on wildlife, flora, fauna and local history. Most of the suggested hikes are intentionally laid out as loop trails, so that you won't spend valuable time retracing your steps. I've found the maps, evaluations and descriptions to be fairly accurate, considering the changing face of nature. The maps are small, but useful for general purpose routefinding. I'd recommend backing them up with USGS topographic maps of the areas where you're planning to visit.

    All in all, if you want to get outside in Connecticut but don't know where to go, "Nature Walks In Connecticut" will get you pointed in the right direction.



  2. This book is out of date and has inadequate directions. The walk to Dudleytown is not open to the public, but the book does not mention anything about it. Upon arriving to Dudleytown, (one of the recommended walks) we were harassed by a local resident who came after us to ensure our car would be towed if we dared. Upon trying to find other nearby walks, we learned the driving directions were incorrect. More importantly, the walks we did find were wonderful and not even mentioned. This book is not much more useful than a map.


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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

Karen Brown's England, Wales & Scotland, 2007: Exceptional Places to Stay & Itineraries Written by Karen Brown. By Karen Brown's Guides. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $7.12. There are some available for $7.12.
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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

Urban Hikes in and Around Baltimore Written by Mike Strzelecki. By Camino Books. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $13.01. There are some available for $16.95.
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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

Metro Boston Eastern Massachusetts (Metro Boston Eastern Massachusetts Street Atlas) By Arrow Map. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $18.96.
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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

Literary Trail of Greater Boston: A Tour of Sites in Boston, Cambridge and Concord Written by Susan Wilson. By Houghton Mifflin. The regular list price is $12.00. Sells new for $3.94. There are some available for $1.62.
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1 comments about Literary Trail of Greater Boston: A Tour of Sites in Boston, Cambridge and Concord.
  1. Susan Wilson has done a wonderful job writing essentially a "travel" book in an approachable and compelling style. Her instructions and "trails" are clear and logical and take you into some of the prettiest areas in Boston and the surrounding towns. Yet while she is directing you in and among the alleyways, Wilson manages to weave a compelling history of characters and places that has you heading for your local library to check out long-forgotten authors. I've drawn up a whole "Boston" reading list to reacquaint myself with some old friends and maybe make some new ones.


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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

Memoirs of Hector Berlioz : From 1803 to 1865, Comprising His Travels in Germany, Italy, Russia, and England Written by Hector Berlioz. By Dover Publications. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $4.20. There are some available for $1.34.
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5 comments about Memoirs of Hector Berlioz : From 1803 to 1865, Comprising His Travels in Germany, Italy, Russia, and England.
  1. Is this guy for real?! Hector Berlioz seems too amazing to be true: I knew he was a superb music composer but I applaud him even more as an enchanting story teller. I should have guessed that the man who came up with the Symphonie Fantastique (a symphony with a story plot) could recount the extraordinary events of his life with such vivacity and good timing. And he did have some extraordinary events in his life. Exuberant, tortured, starving, successful, in love, angered, whatever the state of Berlioz's life, he lived it fully. At times soap opera-esque (I almost fell over reading about how he plotted to dress up as a maid and kill his faithless fiance), this book was a true joy to read. Thanks, Berlioz!


  2. The other reviews pretty much sum up the qualities of Berlioz's writing. Like others, I find is prose more inviting than his music. Immensely candid, entertaining and wonderfully written, it would be a great shame if only musicians were to read it - it's enjoyable on so many levels. The only reason I decided to write this was to urge anyone thinking of buying it to get hold of David Cairns' more modern translation. It reads far more fluently and somehow seems to get inside Berlioz's character in a way that the older translation doesn't. It also has among the appendices a valuable dissection of the contentious points and parts where Berlioz was economical with the truth.


  3. Anyone familiar with the works of Oscar Wilde will of course know where the "take-off" above comes from. And how trenchantly - even scathingly - funny that particular work is, even to the point where some folks have fun citing extended passages at will, out loud, just for the "yuks" it contains. Well, add "The Memoirs of Hector Berlioz" to that short list.

    I am now barely 100 pages into this screamer, after having recently concluded reading the magisterial and sympathetic two-volume biography of Berlioz by David Cairns (who also provides the perfect translation of these Memoirs). Frankly, I wasn't sure that I could handle "yet more Berlioz" so soon after finishing the Cairns volumes (although Cairns provided plenty of justification, in terms of his ability to pinpoint Berlioz's scathing wit).

    I shouldn't have worried.

    Berlioz is certainly famous among music lovers, and musicians and composers, for a long list of "firsts": The first to take the proto-Romantic beginnings started so auspiciously by Beethoven to new heights, the first to expand the size (and instruments) of the classical orchestra to something closely resembling today's symphony orchestra, the first to write a detailed study on the uses of the instruments in the orchestra, including the effects of venue acoustics on the orchestra's sound... It's a long list, and this is just a part of it.

    But Berlioz was also a brilliant writer. Inter alia, his "feuilletons" (music & arts criticism for the cultural journals of his time) and his "Evenings in the Orchestra" (including several of his better feuilletons) showed both his brilliance as a writer on the arts and his scathing wit. And that wit comes across as well in his Memoirs, as can be evidenced by this example on his very first page:

    "Needless to say, I was brought up in the Catholic and Apostolic Church of Rome. This charming religion (so attractive since it gave up burning people) was for seven whole years the joy of my life, and although we have long since fallen out I have always kept most tender memories of it. Indeed, such is its appeal for me that had I the misfortune to be born into the bosom of one of those schisms ponderously hatched by Luther or Calvin I should undoubtedly abjured it the moment I was able..."

    It gets even better later on, and the Memoirs are very well served by Cairns's idiomatic translation that so perfectly captures the trenchantly ascerbic writing qualities of which Berlioz was so capable. (Apparently, earlier translations, whether due to "bowdlerization" or simple lack of supporting documents, did not succeed to the same degree in capturing all of these qualities.)

    Berlioz started these Memoirs while in his mid-40's and while in London for performances of his works and finding himself with some spare time. From then until the end of his life two decades later, he would add to them, with the express requirement that they be published posthumously. There is no need to "wonder why" at this requirement: He had something to say about nearly everything and everybody in the world of music and culture of his time, and wasn't afraid to "name names." And good for him!

    I hope to have more (but not too much more) to say about these alternately hilarious and moving Memoirs once I've finished them. In the meantime, I hope that these brief comments serve to whet your appetite for one of the best books ever written about music by a musician. And a suitably famous one at that. This hardcover version is inexpensive and beautifully bound; a worthwhile addition to every music lover's library.

    Bob Zeidler


  4. The inimitable Hector Berlioz was a prolific writer (perhaps he missed his true calling). His memoirs are an irresistible and captivating read, giving us an all too brief window into his life-long struggles, both personally and professionally. Cairns did a bang-up job at translation (no real complaints here) and the Everyman's edition is splendidly printed.


  5. This is a rare, surprisingly lucid, firsthand account of the life of one of the most influential and innovative composers in history. Descriptions of contemporaries, the artist's balance of art/business, and the intimate history of specific works (Fantastique, Harold, Faust, Les Troyens, etc) are valuable to those interested in classical music and period history.


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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

New England Lighthouses Postcards By Browntrout Publishers. The regular list price is $7.95. Sells new for $3.50. There are some available for $0.75.
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Posted in England (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)

Night Haunts: A Journey Through the London Night Written by Sukhdev Sandhu. By Verso. The regular list price is $18.95. Sells new for $9.47. There are some available for $8.95.
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1 comments about Night Haunts: A Journey Through the London Night.
  1. This is a short book - a series of vignettes which can be savored individually or read in one sitting - about contemporary London at night. It isn't a blockbuster, but that doesn't mean it's not worth the money. Each essay is perfectly written, spare, not a single note wrong. Like a still life, Night Haunts is masterful not for the drama of its content, but because it so perfectly captures the sense of an experience.


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West Country and South Wales (AA Road Map Britain)
Marlborough (MA) (Images of America)
Nature Walks In Connecticut: Explore Mountains, Forests, Caves, and Coastlines throughout the State
Karen Brown's England, Wales & Scotland, 2007: Exceptional Places to Stay & Itineraries
Urban Hikes in and Around Baltimore
Metro Boston Eastern Massachusetts (Metro Boston Eastern Massachusetts Street Atlas)
Literary Trail of Greater Boston: A Tour of Sites in Boston, Cambridge and Concord
Memoirs of Hector Berlioz : From 1803 to 1865, Comprising His Travels in Germany, Italy, Russia, and England
New England Lighthouses Postcards
Night Haunts: A Journey Through the London Night

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Last updated: Wed Jul 9 01:04:36 EDT 2008