1. Book Reviews
  2. Books Published March 15, 1999

March 15, 1999

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that were published March 15, 1999. You can also view all of the books we've reviewed that were published anytime in March 1999.

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Book Review

Little Sibu

by Julie Santilli

A story of the struggle of growing up orangutan style, is how Little Sibu comes to life on the pages of Grindley’s picture book. Little Sibu grows from a young orangutan, close and dependent on his mother to an independent creature of... Read More

Book Review

Jon's Moon

by Janis Ansell

A powerful storm shatters the happiness that Jon and his father share in their little cottage by the sea. The father’s boat is capsized by a huge wave and, while he survives physically, his spirit sinks into the depths of the sea. The... Read More

Book Review

The Acoustic Guitar

by Peter Terry

The Acoustic Guitar is an ambitious coffee-table book. It charts the evolution of the acoustic guitar from origins in the sixteenth century to the present time. There is a wealth of information here for the novice, containing at least a... Read More

Book Review

Emerson's Ethics

by Wesley T. Mott

A central question posed by Ralph Waldo Emerson throughout his life was “How shall I live?” So argues Gustaaf Van Cromphout, Professor of English at Northern Illinois University, who points out in this important study that,... Read More

Book Review

Green Mountains, Dark Tales

by Karen Wyckoff

Mary Mable Rogers?… Even her name is unmemorable, more readily evoking a prim spinster than a nubile femme fatale. But at the turn of the century… Mary was the last woman to be hanged in the state of Vermont. And weirder still—she... Read More

Book Review

Sinatraland

by Rich Wertz

“I guess even bad television can be a force for good in the world,” Finkie Finklestein muses at the end of Kashner’s fine first novel about a man who idolizes Frank Sinatra. It is the kind of quirky idea that makes the book fun to... Read More

Book Review

Northern Refuge

by Leigh Forrest

In his recent bestseller, Shadows in the Sun, ethnobiologist Wade Davis includes an unsettling theory from Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson. Wilson asserts that this past century will be remembered not for its wars or technological... Read More

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