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Ghost Rider: Travels on the Healing Road
by Neil Peart
List Price: $19.95
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$12.97
On 7-21-2006
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Mike Fink, CNN Headline News
"Pearts story reminded me of Theodore Roosevelts travel West to overcome the sorrow of losing his wife and mother"
Book Description
In less than a year, Neil Peart lost both his 19-year-old daughter, Selena, and his wife, Jackie. Faced with overwhelming sadness and isolated from the world in his home on the lake, Peart was left without direction. This memoir tells of the sense of loss and directionlessness that led him on a 55,000-mile journey by motorcycle across much of North America, down through Mexico to Belize, and back again. He had needed to get away, but had not really needed a destination. His travel adventures chronicle his personal odyssey and include stories of reuniting with friends and family, grieving, thinking, and reminiscing as he rode until he encountered the miracle that allowed him to find peace.
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A Travel Guide to Basque America: Families, Feasts, And Festivals (Basque (Paperback))
by Nancy Zubiri
List Price: $24.95
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$16.47
On 7-21-2006
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High Country News
" a passionate and well-researched guide deft sketches of Basque communities and lively sidebars that feature interviews with memorable peoples."
Book Description
A travel guide to Basque Americathe first-ever guide to Americas Basque-American communities, their history, culture, and festivalshas been a best-seller since it first appeared in 1998. This new edition updates the original, listing dozens of new restaurants, Basque cultural clubs and cultural events, and hundreds of Basque-related Internet sites that have appeared since 1998, as well as adding new information about recent events in the Basque Country, their impact on Basque-Americans, and new cultural and community efforts to preserve Basque culture in America. This is the essential guide for Basque-Americans seeking links to their ancient culture and its homeland and their counterparts in the U.S., as well as for any traveler interested in exploring one of this countrys most vibrant and fascinating ethnic minorities.
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Foghorn Outdoors: Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming Camping: The Complete Guide to more than 1200 Campgrounds
by Judy L. Kinnaman
List Price: $19.95
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$13.96
On 7-21-2006
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Book Description
This camping bible covers tons of Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming's overnight options, from wilderness hideaways to bustling camper-friendly resorts with loads of amenities. Exhaustive listings, up-to-date information, helpful maps, and detailed tips on all aspects of camping make this the perfect resource for the avid tenter or the roving RVer. "thorough and easy to use" -- Travel & Leisure Family
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Mirror, Mirror: Self-Portraits by Women Artists
by Liz Rideal, Whitney Chadwick, and Frances Borzello
List Price: $24.95
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On 7-21-2006
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Book Description
The self-portrait is an artist's most intriguing vehicle for analysis and self-expression. Serving a dual role as both creator and subject, artists are offered unusual freedom; as a result, self-portraits offer special value and high interest for both artists and art lovers. Mirror Mirror explores the role of the self-portrait in the work of 40 women artists from the mid-17th century to today. Filled with gorgeous, full-color reproductions, this unique guide covers a wide range of media-from oil painting to photography, woodcut to ceramic sculpture. Readers will discover the rare work of major painters including Mary Beale, Gwen John, and Dame Barbara Hepworth, as well as portraits by women known primarily for their work in other media, such as photographer Lee Miller and ceramicist Susie Cooper. Each of these wonderful self-portraits appears chronologically and features fascinating biographical details of each artist, as well as inspiring essays from two leading art historians: Whitney Chadwick, who discusses style, technique, and how the artist explored her own identity; and Frances Borzello, who presents the historical background and artistic context of each portrait. Whether you're interested in history, art appreciation, or general women's issues, Mirror Mirror offers a rare look into the work, intrigue, and genius of some of the most creative women artists throughout the centuries.
About The Author
Liz Redeal is an artist who, as art Education Officer at the National Gallery in London, has curated exhibitions and run public programs for 20 years. She lives in London, England. Whitney Chadwick is Professor of art at San Francisco State University. She has lectured and published widely in the areas of surrealism, feminism, and contemporary art. She lives in San Francisco, California. Frances Borzello writes on the social history of art. Her recent books include A World of Our Own: Women as artists Since the Renaissance. She lives in London, England.
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Moon Handbooks: Oregon (Moon Handbooks : Oregon)
by Elizabeth Morris and Mark Morris
List Price: $19.95
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$12.97
On 7-21-2006
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Book Description
If you're seeking more than the standard itinerary, Moon Handbooks Oregon is the essential guide to the state's breathtaking mountains, scenic coastline, and active lifestyle. Complete with accommodation, dining, and transportation options from Tillamook County to the Columbia River Gorge, plus photographs and useful maps that make it simple to find each destination, this edition gives the most up-to-date details for first-time visitors and Pacific Northwest veterans alike. authors Elizabeth and Mark Morris, Oregon enthusiasts and residents, give thorough coverage of top sights, events, family destinations, and outdoor opportunities. From exploring the crystal waters of Crater Lake to the diverse neighborhoods of Portland, every worthwhile sight and activity in Oregon is covered in this book.
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The Perils of Paella
by Nancy Fairbanks
Available from Amazon
$6.99
On 7-21-2006
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Book Description
Food writer Carolyn gets to challenge her taste-testing skills once again-this time, in Barcelona. Her first feast is for the eyes-at a modern art museum where her friend Roberta is the resident scholar. There, she catches a performance art piece about death, planted a little too firmly in reality. One of the actors is not acting-she's deadas well as a dead-ringer for Roberta. And now, Carolyn is in the middle of a new investigation into a very unsavory crime.
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Travel Wise with Children : 101 Educational Travel Tips for Families
by Mary Rodgers Bundren
Available from Amazon
$12.95
On 7-21-2006
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Cheri Fuler, author of Unlocking Your Child's Learning Potential
"Many creative ideas that not only make great family memories but also enhance their children's learning."
Teresa Plowright, Mining Co. Guide to Travel with Kids, May 1998
Travel equals learning equals fun is the attitude in this new book--which applies to all kinds of family travel, from day trips to extended adventures.
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An Empire Wilderness: Travels into America's Future (Vintage Departures)
by Robert D. Kaplan
List Price: $15.00
Available from Amazon
$10.50
On 7-21-2006
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Product Review
Robert Kaplan has reported from locales as diverse and chaotic as shantytowns in the Ivory Coast, death camps in Cambodia, and the frontlines of the war-ravaged Balkans, but his most challenging assignment may have been covering his own country. In this ambitious and evocative study, Kaplan vividly chronicles his "travels into America's future," a journey that begins in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas--"the starting point for what would one day be called Manifest Destiny"--and continues across the West, where the population is growing faster than anywhere else in the country and multiple American identities reveal a nation in flux. He explores cities such as St. Louis and Omaha, Nebraska, that typify the increased urban fragmentation of the heartland; onward to Tucson, Arizona, and Santa Fe, New Mexico, where great wealth and poverty exist cheek by jowl; through the sprawl of multiethnic Southern California, where the landscape is perched somewhere between urban and suburban; and up through the Pacific Northwest into Canada. He also visits towns along the U.S.-Mexico border, dipping as far south as Mexico City, to investigate the conditions driving so many Mexicans north, despite feverish efforts by the U.S. to keep them out, and the new cultural hybrid being formed by this migration. Kaplan uncovers a nation polarized along ethnic, economic, and political lines, where the uneven distribution of rapid technological advances allows some groups to surge forward, cultivating a radically different world-view than their poorer, less educated neighbors. Much of his report is bleak, but despite his insistence on documenting the worst, plenty of examples of prosperity and hope appear in these pages. What comes across most clearly is that there is still plenty of room for speculation on exactly how and where the new boundaries will be drawn. In this respect, America's future still carries the promise of the Wild West: equal parts opportunity, possibility, and uncertainty. --Shawn Carkonen
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
Having spent more than two decades reporting on ethnic strife and political upheaval in far-flung regions of the world, Kaplan (Balkan Ghosts), turns to his own backyard, trekking across the American West, Mexico and western Canada to map out America's shifting socio-political landscape at the turn of the millennium. The nation, he argues, is losing its identity as one union and splintering, like the Balkanized areas of the globe that have long captivated Kaplan, into a mosaic of different regions with sometimes conflicting cultural identities. In crossing the American Plains and Rocky Mountains, Kaplan sees the growth of city-states and the growing income gap as leading to class-stratified, post-urban pods, in which government does little to improve the living conditions of the poor. The rising Hispanic population in the Southwest has fostered "binational" cities, he says, while the shared interests of America's Pacific Northwest and British Columbia is creating Cascadia, a self-contained region predicated on the eventual breakup of Canada. Kaplan's fluid, razor-sharp travelogue is peppered with references?to Gibbon, the Founding Fathers, ancient Greek and Civil War history?and powerful descriptions of the landscape (a Greyhound bus in New Mexico is "a prison van transporting people from one urban poverty zone to another"; the Arizona desert resembles "the glazed surface of a red earthen jar"; the Pacific Northwest "a magical frontier" of "brooding cathedral-dark forests" and place-names suggesting "an icy clean, mathematical perfection"). As dystopian as it is soberly prescient, Kaplan's vision of 21st-century America will command the attention of readers from all corners of our increasingly decentralized continent. Editor, Jason Epstein; agent, Brandt & Brandt. Copyright 1998 Reed business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Additional Pages: 1 2
© Adapt, Inc. 1998-2006
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