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OREGON BOOKS
Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Sonia Buist. By Lolits Press.
The regular list price is $11.95.
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1 comments about Around Mt Hood in Easy Stages.
- This is a useful little guidebook, rating segments of the Timberline Trail and showing an elevation profile for each segment. Nice for those of us who prefer to select our trail segments with more downs than ups when possible! Each segment has a concise summary of what you can expect to find in terms of scenery and river crossings (not to be taken lightly on Mt Hood; these aren't little babbling mountain brooks, they're raging torrents that can roll hundred pound boulders with ease). For those who are doing car shuttles, each trail is also described for clockwise and for counterclockwise hiking (relative to the entire circle of the mountain). This also creates the only disadvantage to the book, that is, it's twice as long as it needs to be due to repeating the same information in reverse sequence. Backpackers would do well to photocopy only the relevant portion and leave the book at home. The authors also suggest the preferred direction for each trail segment, which is useful. This book is worth the price.
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Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Mark Highberger. By Countryman.
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $11.90.
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No comments about Oregon: An Explorer's Guide, Second Edition (Explorer's Guide Oregon).
Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Joel Palmer. By Oregon Trail Coordinating Council.
There are some available for $39.00.
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No comments about Journal of travels on the Oregon Trail in 1845.
Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Jill Livingston. By Living Gold Press.
The regular list price is $15.99.
Sells new for $8.98.
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1 comments about That Ribbon of Highway III: Highway 99 Through the Pacific Northwest (That Ribbon of Highway).
- Route 66 has all the glamour -- songs, movies, web sites galore. It's an icon of American car culture. Its sister, U.S. Highway 99, on the other hand, doesn't get no respect. But as this volume shows, 99 is more than just 66 upside-down.
This book, the third in the "That Ribbon of Highway" series, follows Highway 99 from the Oregon-California border north to the Canada line (the first two books take it through California). In some places, 99 is a significant urban thoroughfare. In others, its track is almost forgotten. But along the way, Jill Livingston and Kathryn Golden Maloof reveal the often surprising wealth of history, engineering, culture, and nostalgia that line the route. An appendix knits old 99 together from one end to the other, with directions and local highlights for anyone adventurous enough to make the drive. They make the trip sound worthwhile. Living as I do a half-block from Highway 99, it was hard to think of the road as being as interesting as it apparently is. But now I even have a little affection for the old thing. This book is a great one to keep handy in the glove compartment. Who needs to head off down Route 66 when we have our own transportation and cultural milestone right here?
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Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Paul Gerald. By Menasha Ridge Press.
The regular list price is $13.95.
Sells new for $7.66.
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No comments about Day & Overnight Hikes: Oregon's Pacific Crest Trail (Day and Overnight Hikes).
Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Peter Lesica. By Oregon State University Press.
The regular list price is $34.95.
Sells new for $22.96.
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1 comments about A Flora of Glacier National Park, Montana.
- This is a good Flora, if you want to do some serious botanizing in Glacier Park and the surrounding area this is a must have. I highly reccomend it to botanists, botany students, those with a very deep interest in botany and especially to native plant gardeners in Montana. I have found a few errors in the three years I have used this book, but it is the best book to have if you are in Glacier. You might supplement with Flora of the Pacific Northwest.
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Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
By Westwinds Press.
The regular list price is $24.95.
Sells new for $16.47.
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No comments about Oregon: The Taste of Wine.
Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Grant McOmie. By Westwinds Press.
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $4.74.
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No comments about Grants Getaways II: More Outdoor Adventures with Oregon's Grant McOmie.
Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by John Kirk Townsend and George A. Jobanek. By Oregon State University Press.
The regular list price is $17.95.
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2 comments about Narrative of a Journey Across the Rocky Mountains to the Columbia River, and a Visit to the Sandwich Islands, Chili, &C.,With a Scientific Appendix (Northwest Reprints Series).
- hi everyone, please buy, read and cherish this book! you would not believe how much work went into this - I know because I'm the author's daughter. BUY BUY BUY! :) thanks
- This is a remarkable look at the untamed American West of 1834-1837 through the eyes of a young naturalist. Despite its age, this account is quite readable. The smaller segments describing Townsend's visits to Hawaii, Tahiti and Chile are also enjoyable.
Since this is a diary, it does have some flat spots (not every day can be an adventure), but mostly Townsend fills his descriptions with details and color that bring his encounters alive. You can sense Townsend maturing as the journey goes on. One suggestion to the editors: If a new edition is produced, it would be nice to include a map of Townsend's travels, because in some places it's hard to tell where he is. A tip to the reader: Skip the introduction, since it's mostly just a summary of what you'll be reading. It does, however, contain a description of what happened to Townsend after the book, so go back and read that once you finish.
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Posted in Oregon (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by David Lavender. By University of Nebraska Press.
The regular list price is $21.95.
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4 comments about Westward Vision: The Story of the Oregon Trail (Bison Book).
- This is an excellent account of the great quest for the Northwest, which eventually culminated in the vast migrations of Americans along the Oregon Trail. From the early exploration efforts of Jacques Cartier (1530's); Jean Nicolet (1630's); Marquette and Joliet (1670's); LaSalle (1680's); Bourgmont (early 1700's); the Verendryes (1730's to 1740's); Jonathan Carver (1760's) and others too numerous to mention, we see how the English, French, Spanish and Americans all had the goal to establish roots in Oregon. When the mountain men came into the picture searching for their beaver pelts in the early 1800's, it was this breed of men that finally opened the routes across the Rocky Mountains which lead the wagon trains through to the Northwest. Lavender then takes us up to the first overland migrations (1840's) of the missionaries and others in search of a better way of life, along with all their sacrifices and perils. This is a great book and very insightful of events leading up to the Oregon Trail.
- David Lavender's WESTWARD VISION spans the period from the mid-17th century to 1849 as he chronicles the search for a reliable overland route to, and the subsequent settlement of, what would become known as Oregon, principally that area which borders the Willamette River as it flows into the Columbia (at present-day Portland). As the subtitle of the book indicates, this is "the story of the Oregon Trail".
For the sake of summary, I arbitrarily divide this book into five parts: early exploration of the Upper Mississippi River by French-Canadians seeking a route to the "western sea", the Lewis and Clark Expedition and the subsequent unsuccessful efforts to establish an easy route to Oregon via the Missouri River and its headwaters, the influx of "mountain men" into the area and the discovery of a more southerly route (the Oregon Trail), the early settlement in Oregon of Christian missionary groups sent to proselytize the Indians, and the massive immigration of land-seekers in the 1840's which ultimately resulted in the establishment of a U.S. Oregon Territory. WESTWARD VISION is the result of extensive research on the part of the author. Its wealth of details is both its strong point and its undoing. Probably the most commendably concise chapters (5 and 6), considering the length of the event, deal with the amazing Lewis and Clark Expedition. Perhaps Lavender thought the history of the two-year trek adequately covered elsewhere. In any case, the following chapters on the exploits and travails of the fur-trapping mountain men and the missionaries are so full of minutiae that it would require the reader to take extensive notes in order to keep track of the various groups and individuals endeavoring to cross the Great Divide into Oregon in the 1820s and 30s. (Reading this book for pleasure, I wasn't prepared to expend that much effort.) Only in Chapter 19, which gives an account of the 1843 journey of the first large immigrant train - almost 1000 persons- over the Oregon Trail, does the narrative regain a concise clarity. A major failing of the the volume is the lack of adequate maps to locate the majority of the named and innumerable places and geographical features: rivers, river forks, buttes, mountains, rocks, forts, mountain passes, river fords, trapper rendezvous, and settlements. Perusing contemporary state highway maps didn't help much. And in a work this extensive, I would have expected a large section of illustrations. Except for several very crude drawings, there were none. What elevates WESTWARD VISION, and compels me to award four stars, is that the author makes his point magnificently, i.e. that it took many tough people with large reserves of true grit to expand the fledgling United States to the Pacific's shores. The crossing was hard: "At the rainswept crossing of the North Platte, blue with cold, cramped by dysentery and pregnancy pangs, Mary Walker (an 1838 pilgrim) sat down and 'cried to think how comfortable my father's hogs were' (back home). As for Sarah Smith, Mary sniffed, she wept practically the entire distance to Oregon." And even recreation had a sharp edge, as at the 1832 trappers' rendezvous: "... a few of the boys poured a kettle of alcohol over a friend and set him afire. Somehow he lived through it, and fun's fun." Finally, Lavender eloquently suggests the reason so many embarked on the Oregon Trail at all: "What matters is not whether fulfillment was attainable in reality (at the Trail's end), but rather that at long last in the world's sad, torn history an appreciable part of mankind thought it might be. That was both the torment and the freedom - to go and look."
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Noted historian David Lavender has penned probably the finest single volume on the Oregon Trail ever written. Starting in 1719, 130 years before the trail was formally established, Lavender slowly and concretely builds the story of the United States first claim to this territory by examining similar efforts by the Spanish, French, Russian and English which preceded the American claims.
Incorporating and firmly underscoring the efforts of the Native Americans, the Mountain Men, Hudson's Bay Company and the early missionary efforts, Lavender reveals that these four groups did more to claim the Northwest for the United States than any politician or political party in Washington. Always in the forefront of Western Expansion, the impact of the missionary effort was pivotal to the US claim to this Norwest portion of our nation.
This is a truly fine history and a remarkably excellent piece of writing.
- The appreciable detail within this book makes it difficult, at times, to follow; and that makes it difficult to construct an overview in our memory. The author uses a narrative style that gives no indication of where the narrative is heading. Unless you already know the history and are familiar with the principal characters, the text can seem overloaded with detail, the value of which may be unclear till further in the story. For example, in chapter 14 we are not told till the final paragraph that the two women we have been reading about, Eliza Spaulding and Narcissa Whitman, "were the first women to cross the North American continent." (286) This new information gives greater value to the details narrated in the chapter than they seemed to have on first reading. The book is written such that we (almost) never know where we're going, only where we are at the moment. It is the first book I've read encompassing the period, and it may not have been the best choice for an initial broad overview.
Using divisions within the bibliography helps us find the organization of the book:
Chapters 1 - 3
Early Explorations, general accounts
Specific Explorations - Charlevoix, La Salle, Verendrye, Carver and Rogers, Upper Missouri River and Mandan Indians
Chapter 4
The Northwest Coast, 1776 - 1800
Explorations Across Canada
Spanish Explorations on the Missouri River
Chapters 5 - 6
Lewis and Clark
Chapter 7
Trading and Trapping Methods
Early American Adventures on the Missouri
Letters, Reports about She-he-ke's Return
Trouble with Blackfeet
Thompson and Pinch-Perch
Chapter 8
The Astorian Adventure
Chapters 9 - 11
Proposals to Occupy Oregon
The Yellowstone Expedition
The Arikara Battle and Aftermath
Opening of Rocky Mountain Fur Trade
British-American Fur Trade Conflict
Chapters 12 - 13
Hall J. Kelley
Bonneville, Wyeth and Jason Lee
Chapters 14 - 16
The Missionaries
Chapters 17 - 18
Emigrations of 1839-40
Emigrations of 1840, 1841, 1842
Chapter 19
Emigration of 1843
Chapter 20
Emigrations of 1844
Emigrations of 1846
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Around Mt Hood in Easy Stages
Oregon: An Explorer's Guide, Second Edition (Explorer's Guide Oregon)
Journal of travels on the Oregon Trail in 1845
That Ribbon of Highway III: Highway 99 Through the Pacific Northwest (That Ribbon of Highway)
Day & Overnight Hikes: Oregon's Pacific Crest Trail (Day and Overnight Hikes)
A Flora of Glacier National Park, Montana
Oregon: The Taste of Wine
Grants Getaways II: More Outdoor Adventures with Oregon's Grant McOmie
Narrative of a Journey Across the Rocky Mountains to the Columbia River, and a Visit to the Sandwich Islands, Chili, &C.,With a Scientific Appendix (Northwest Reprints Series)
Westward Vision: The Story of the Oregon Trail (Bison Book)
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