Showing posts with label berkeley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label berkeley. Show all posts

The Co-Conspirator's Tale Review

The Co-Conspirator's Tale
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This book is a highly entertaining read. The language is fast and to the point. The event line incredulous yet probable. The characters full of color.
The setup to, and unfolding of, the story are masterfully designed: After a news article outlines the facts of the case in the first 2 pages, the protagonist is called back to revisit the past. The past soon becomes the present as old battles with authority resurface. But so are old friendships rekindled, and new relationships grown. And along the way staying true to spirit and integrity becomes the ultimate matter of fact.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Co-Conspirator's Tale



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Co-Conspirator's Tale

Read More...

Earthquake Exodus, 1906 Review

Earthquake Exodus, 1906
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is no dry recitation served up by Richard Schwartz. By his thorough research of first-hand local sources, he walks us right up to the 1906 San Francisco quake survivors, introduces us like they are his best friends, and then lets them tell us their stories. The result is an engaging account of these century old San Francisco area events, filled with poignant photos and news clips. A history, well done!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Earthquake Exodus, 1906

Earthquake Exodus, 1906, Berkeley Responds to the San Francisco Refugees, by Richard Schwartz is a book that tells the story of the ten-week relief effort in the East Bay after the 1906 Earthquake and fire. Earthquake Exodus, 1906, celebrates a largely unknown chapter from the aftermath of the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906. Containing many breathtaking photos and illustrations never before published or unseen in nearly 100 years, this new visual history is breathtaking. Berkeley Voice columnist Martin Snapp writes, "even more compelling than the photos are the hundreds of stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things." In the story of the relief effort, instigated within hours of the earthquake, the ordinary and extraordinary people of Berkeley began to organize a committee, knowing that terrified masses of stricken refugees would be pouring into their town within hours. As author Schwartz says, "They didn't wait for government. They didn't wait for money. They didn't wait for instructions." DID YOU KNOW • that many people fled to the Berkeley hills the first night of the quake and a number of women died there giving birth? • that Asian refugees were segregated in their own camps and sections of town and that even the embassy of China inspected their plight and did not complain?• smallpox erupted in Berkeley during the relief effort?• industrial West Berkeley, filled with a working class immigrant population, actually caught fire after the earthquake?"Schwartz explains how Berkeleyans generously responded by setting up temporary camps, dispensing food, listing jobs, and even taking in the homeless. He details the measures taken to ensure public order and health as city and university officials struggled to deal with thousands of disoriented, impoverished, and sometimes dangerous strangers, many separated from their loved ones— everyday details long forgotten but worth study by those who wish to better prepare for the next great shake." Dr. Gray Brechin, author of Imperial San Francisco: Urban Power, Earthly Ruin. (Dr. Brechin wrote the forward to Schwartz's book).

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Earthquake Exodus, 1906

Read More...

Eight of Swords (Tarot Card Mystery 1) Review

Eight of Swords (Tarot Card Mystery 1)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
"Eight Of Swords" by David Skibbins - ISBN 0-312-33906-2

In the early `70s, he was an active member of the notorious Weathermen. Assumed dead for 30 years, Warren Ritter, latter-day, anarchist, makes a living reading Tarot cards on Telegraph Ave. in Berkley, California.
Now, fifty-five years old, he has a comfortable life: frequent forays into book stores for poetic sustenance, once a month to the shooting range with his favorite cop on the beat, cruising at 90 mph on an Aprilia RSV Mille motorcycle, and therapy sessions for manic depression on Wednesday's.
When out of no-where his older sister, Tara, discovers he is still alive, on the same day he gave an ominous reading to young, Heather Wellington, who has been kidnapped: it rocks his world.
Trying to still his fears, salvage his anonymity, life-style, and fend off an inevitable guilt trip, Warren tries to assuage Tara's outrage. But he's shocked to find out he has a daughter, and about to become a grandfather.
Panic escalates when Heather's mother also disappears. Then one of the victims is found murdered. Since both women were last seen in the company of Warren, he becomes a suspect.
Having the police and F.B.I. nosing around in his violent past just isn't cricket. Newly birthed with paternal feelings and pricked with guilt, Warren-anti-establishment-Ritter, the hunted, becomes the hunter.

David Skibbins' development of the characters and their interaction is well-crafted. But, the first-person musings of Warren Ritter are priceless. More than once I winced at his cheeky sarcasm.
Although some readers' recollection of the infamous Weathermen may be a little rusty, Warren's past affiliation with them was an integral part of his character profile. As more information about their activities is divulged, a better understanding of the depth of his fear of being caught and an appreciation of Warren's diverse capabilities is realized.
A fragile art that can't be forced, writing humor effectively is elusive to some scribes. In EIGHT OF SWORDS, subtle glimpses to brazen, in-your-face laughs stalk the pages. I can't remember the last tome I read that tickled my funny bone so well, so often. Yet, it did not clash with the killer / survival instincts Warren needed to "kick butt" and bring the murder mystery to an "anti-establishment" conclusion. You gotta' love him.
Get ready. Don your leathers. Grab your helmet. Straddle that chrome pony, (careful: hot pipes!) A new dude in town has just been jump-started. Name: Warren Ritter, he's over fifty, revved and long over-due.
It's about time.




Click Here to see more reviews about: Eight of Swords (Tarot Card Mystery 1)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Eight of Swords (Tarot Card Mystery 1)

Read More...

Love Haight '69: a novel of hippies, activism, and the San Francisco sixties music scene Review

Love Haight '69: a novel of hippies, activism, and the San Francisco sixties music scene
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Love Haight '69 is thoroughly enjoyable. It's well researched, with a variety of interesting characters. It takes place during one of the most fascinating periods in the history of American pop culture. And it's a great escape back to a time and place when the world was in transition, and people were exploring different lifestyles. It's a great book to get lost in. It's likely to send you back to your stereo time and again to revisit the rich and memorable music from that era as well. I found myself invested in the characters, and while I couldn't wait to see how the stories unfolded, I also hated for it to end. Highly recommended to anyone who misses the late 1960's and is looking for an escape from the world in which we live today.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Love Haight '69: a novel of hippies, activism, and the San Francisco sixties music scene

1969: San Francisco is the epicenter of all things hip . . . at least according to Tula, a young girl arriving fromCanada, obsessed with becoming a flower child, and searching for love in the Haight-Ashbury's fading counterculture. When an ad in a local underground newspaper inspires her to join a community effort to transform a UC Berkeley-owned lot into a "people's park," Tula gets her first taste of activism while falling for a charismatic, politically-savvy grad student. Caught between worlds, she tries to balance the hippies' laidback lifestyle with the protest movement's determination to save the planet. Another little piece of her heart is stolen by the sexy lead singer of a hot new British rock band that passes through town. Throw in a trip to Altamont to see the Rolling Stones, and you've got a year no teenager could easily forget. A rarified post-Summer of Love climate frames the dynamic backdrop for what is a poignant, and often funny, coming-of-age love story. It's Santana, Moby Grape, and the Grateful Dead - Bill Graham's Fillmore West in its heyday. It's Berkeley agitators, Haight-Ashbury freaks, and a Ronald Reagan-regulated mainstream, all struggling to coexist within the close confines of the San Francisco Bay Area. Love Haight '69 is Tanya Coad's first novel. This ode to the sixties paints an experience that is authentic, rich in detail, and delves beyond the usual clichés of what was one of the most exciting chapters in modern day American history.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Love Haight '69: a novel of hippies, activism, and the San Francisco sixties music scene

Read More...

Insight Pocket Guide San Francisco (Insight Guides) Review

Insight Pocket Guide San Francisco (Insight Guides)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
There are many books written in the travel literature genre pertaining to San Francisco, but few cover as much territory as Insight Guide San Francisco.
Just by glancing through the table of contents, you notice that what is important to the editors was not where to eat or stay, although this is briefly dealt with at the end of the guide, but rather, mixing history, culture, people, historic places, and neighborhoods that seduce visitors to this "City by the Bay," as many call it.

The focus of this guidebook is to enable visitors to partake in a total tourist experience. Commencing with the opening chapters, readers are presented with a chronology of the history of this great city beginning with pre-1500s and up to the twenty-first century. We learn about native tribes, the Gold Rush, the 1906 earthquake, Alcatraz Island, where some of the most notorious criminals were incarcerated, the servicemen who took up residence in the city after World War II, Asian immigration, the 1950s when the city was the birthplace of a new cultural renaissance or the "beatniks."
We are also reminded that to fully experience San Francisco, it is essential to appreciate the huge mosaic of cultural groups that make up its diverse population. Consequently, snippets are provided concerning its population that, according to the last census, is made up of 46 percent white, 29 percent Asian, 14 percent Hispanic, 11 percent African-American. Moreover,we learn about the immense contributions of African-Americans, Chinese and Chinatown that is the biggest Chinese community outside Asia itself, Japanese, Filipinos, Koreans, Vietnamese, Mexicans, Italians, and the Gay community, who all bring with them something unique.
When my wife and I first visited San Francisco many years ago, we were reminded that it is a walking city. The guide book definitely reconfirms this as it states, "it's the many and varied hills more than anything else that offer San Francisco's visitors such a variety of vistas." Although the city may only be a few miles wide and long, it is made up of at least a dozen unique neighborhoods. These are mapped out with their sights, activities and experiences, with the qualification that not all of what is available in San Francisco is covered, nonetheless what is presented reflects a combination of the city's popular and out of the way offerings.
You have an excellent grasp of Fisherman's Wharf, North Beach, Telegraph Hill, Coit Tower, Chinatown, Union Square, the Financial District, Civic Center, Soma, Nob Hill, Haight-Ashbury, Golden Gate Park, Golden Gate Bridge and some of the not-so-familiar venues.
As is the case with all of the Insight Guide books, the photo images are spectacular and breathtaking as they capture the pulse of this great city.
To repeat the old cliché, a picture is worth a thousand words, this just about sums up how effective are the many photos scattered throughout the book. This is particularly true of the photos of the different cultural groups that make San Francisco as to what it is- a most unique ambiance that will entrance you with its sights and sounds, and even its fog, that some consider romantic.
By the end of the book, you have an excellent grasp and well-rounded picture of what makes San Francisco tick.
Norm Goldman, Editor Bookpleasures


Click Here to see more reviews about: Insight Pocket Guide San Francisco (Insight Guides)



Buy NowGet 15% OFF

Click here for more information about Insight Pocket Guide San Francisco (Insight Guides)

Read More...