Tuesday, June 15, 2010

** A People s History of American Empire American Empire Project



I have never been a big fan of books that over-simplify their topics and I really don't have much appreciation for those that use cartoons to do so, but this book is a great introduction for the curious. The artwork is great and the extremely simplified text is good if only to introduce the reader to information they previously had never known. I would hope that this book will do just that...introduce the reader to new information AND encourage them to look deeper and seek more detailed accounts.

If you are already well versed in our nations imperial past, present and possible future, this book will appear as if it was written for a 12 year old. If however you are just begining your journey into the topic of American Empire it will absolutely spark your interest and give you direction into many different areas of our history that deserve more in depth coverage and explanation.
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    Monday, June 14, 2010

    ** The Great Depression A Diary



    Benjamin Roth's first hand account of The Great Depression from 1931 to 1941 was a very fascinating and personal read that provided not only historical perspective on the events of the time, but also a friendly voice and opinion of the days events.



    What really set this book apart for me was the authors first hand account of events as they unfolded, versus most historical accounting of the period which are mostly a retrospects. Mr. Roth fills us in on current events as they unfolded in America during the time, his opinion on the situations (which leaned conservative) and his predictions. A fun bit of the book is that Mr. Roth would actually go back and review entries and add updates such as "These predictions turned out to be completely wrong.".



    I think this book also hit home for me due to the financial situation we're currently going through these days in America. You read about Mr. Roth's trepidations towards FDR and his "New Deal", constantly warning of out of control government spending and the impending inflation boom (which never came).



    My wife and I were talking and this book seems to beg the question of what would have come of the American economy if World War 2 hadn't started. Would we have continued on a downward spiral of inflation? It's not fun think about but I really feel that this book paints an accurate (if not a bit biased, but as to be expected with the nature of the account) of The Great Depression and how it impacted Main Street America. (show less)
    (10 customers reviews )
    Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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    • ISBN13: 9781586487997
    • Condition: NEW
    • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

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    !@ Mayflower A Story of Courage Community and War



    Like many Americans, I think, my knowledge of the early history of this country tends to jump from the Pilgrims landing on Plymouth Rock---which is, in itself, a joke!---to the American Revolution, but as Philbrick observes in his book _Mayflower_, there are about 150 years in between those two historic events, when people were living, working, struggling to survive, and dying. I was appalled to realize that first the Pilgrims, and later the Puritans with them, set out to establish colonies in the new world where they could live and worship as they pleased, free of restraint from or oppression by the king or anyone else, only to develop the same degree (or worse!) of religious and social intolerance that they supposedly fled Europe to get away from.... to the point where, after finally conquering the local Indians, they then sold said Indians into slavery!! Another illustration of history repeating itself over and over and over again. My only complaint about the book is the reader, George Guidall: I like the sound of his voice and he reads the book very well, BUT I shuddered everytime he pronounced the word "8th," as in July 8th, 1669, because he says "ay-th" with no T sound after the 8, which to me is as annoying as the sound of fingernails being drawn across a chalkboard.
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    Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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      #% Queen Sheba s Ring



      If you like Allan Quatermain books you should love this one. It's an exciting and myserious adventure that will take you deep into African and Egyptian history. Set against the exotic background of Africa's beautiful and savage wilderness this book is hard to put down.

      I also liked The Virgin of the Sun and Nada the Lily by the same writer.
      (1 customers reviews )
      Customers Rating=5.0 / 5.0

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        #% Supreme Power Franklin Roosevelt vs. the Supreme Court



        In Supreme Power: Franklin Roosevelt vs. the Supreme Court, Jeff Shesol manages to do something rare: combine excellent research and a gripping narrative. (For those familiar with Rick Perlstein's Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus, I think the writing style and amount of detail are similar). The book deals with Franklin D. Roosevelt's attempt to pack the Supreme Court with extra justices in 1937 - an attempt that ultimately failed and, unfortunately, few people remember today. Shesol brings this important episode in our history to life.



        First of all, Shesol resists the temptation of many historians to make the past prologue. He doesn't recite the whole history of the U.S. Supreme Court, nor does he stretch historical analogies to draw "lessons" or "comparisons" for today. Rather, Supreme Power stays focused like a laser on the subject of the book, beginning in 1932 with FDR's election. This allows Shesol to really delve into detail, spending almost all of the book's 530 pages on FDR and the court. (Incidentally, if you know absolutely nothing about the Supreme Court or its history, you might want to scan wikipedia quickly before reading this book).



        And the detail in the book is extraordinary. I studied FDR's court-packing scheme in law school and read the major cases discussed in the book, but I felt I learned much more reading Supreme Power than I did in 3 years of law school. For example, I had read the Schecter case, which invalidated important New Deal legislation, but I did not even know about the businessmen and activists who formed associations, such as the American Liberty League, to launch test cases like Schecter. It turns out the Schecter brothers even voted for FDR in the 1936 elections! Another fascinating trivia bit revealed early in the book is that the whole issue almost became moot because Justices Sutherland and Van Devanter almost retired in 1932 - but refused to do so when Congress lowered their pensions.



        Shesol also strives - and for the most part achieves - the ideal of historical objectivity (pay the reviewer who claims Shesol is sympathetic to FDR no heed). He is quite willing to point out the flaws of the New Deal and the fact that it wasn't universally popular (raising concerns similar to Amity Shales' The Forgotten Man). He also seeks to uncover the ulterior motivations of men like Senator Burton K. Wheeler (against court-packing) and Joe Robinson (for).



        However - and this I found remarkable - Shesol also tries to understand the logic and motivations behind the court-packing plan itself. All too often, historians deride the plan as a mistake or doomed to fail. Yet, Shesol shows that the plan did in fact have an organic history and genesis of its own. He discusses the longstanding concern that many observers, including former president and chief justice Taft, had regarding judges over the age of 70. In fact, FDR's chief foe on the Supreme Court, arch-conservative Justice McReynolds, proposed a similar plan during the Wilson administration. In short, Shesol shows readers the type of information bombarding the White House about elder judges, as well as how FDR and his advisors could convince themselves that adding additional judges for each over the age of 70 was a brilliant solution.



        My one complaint - and it is a small one - is that Shesol does not seem to make much use of the political science literature about courts and judicial review. This is a shame. I think political science offers many compelling explanations about why elites would oppose limits on judicial review. For example, Tom Ginsburg's Judicial Review in New Democracies: Constitutional Courts in Asian Cases advances the theory that elites view judicial review as important to protect themselves if they ever become relegated to minority status (for example, Republicans becoming the minority party in Congress). Some of these theories can be found in some form in Supreme Power, but Shesol, who is primarily a historian, primarily credits the political dynamics of the 1930s for defeating FDR's plan rather than larger political and institutional forces.



        Supreme Power will probably become the primary account of FDR's court-packing scheme for some time. Highly recommended for anybody interested in American history or the politics of courts.
        (11 customers reviews )
        Customers Rating=4.5 / 5.0

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          Saturday, June 12, 2010

          #% South Sea Tales



          To start with, this is NOT "South Sea Tales." The original collection of Jack London short stories bearing that title is a collection of 8 stories as far as I have been able to determine, and only some of those appear in this collection. Publishers have been misleading readers by putting out a wide variety of editions that contain SOME stories from South Sea Tales, and using the same original title without indicating that it is not the original. To give the present publisher credit, if you check inside to read the table of contents, it contains 10 stories, only four of which are from South Sea Tales, but the book cover can mislead a purchaser who is not careful (Amazon, at least, gives you the option of checking inside).



          Having said that, it represents some of the lesser writing by Jack London. It is not at the level of his writing about the Yukon. If you are a Jack London fan, you might want to read it. Otherwise save your money. I might have given it three stars if the publisher had used an honest title, but I am irked by publishers who mislead purchasers (another problem has been publishers who change a title on a book, so you think you are buying something new and end up with something you have already read).
          (5 customers reviews )
          Customers Rating=3.0 / 5.0

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