
Black Elk Speaks
Raymond J. DeMallie, John G. Neihardt, Philip J. Deloria and Vine Deloria
Book
Black Elk Speaks, the story of the Oglala Lakota visionary and healer Nicholas Black Elk (1863-1950)...

The New York Times 36 Hours: USA & Canada. Midwest & Great Lakes
Book
Weekends on the road. This is the best of the American Midwest & Great Lakes. The "New York Times"...

Deep Down Dead
Book
Lori Anderson is as tough as they come, managing to keep her career as a fearless Florida bounty...

Crows and Angels
Book
Based on true events, Crows and Angels, is a real story of good versus evil. Follow Hannah Nelson, a...

Julianne Moore recommended Little House in the Big Woods in Books (curated)

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2322 KP) rated Open for Murder in Books
Nov 27, 2020
Zo owns a souvenir shop, and between that and the setting, I had to give this series a try. I loved the setting. The book took a couple of chapters before it introduced us to the victim and suspects, but it picked up from there. I did find some of the motives weak early on, but they got stronger the further into the book we got. Likewise, it takes a bit for the characters to be developed. There is still room for the main characters to grow as the series progresses. We get a recipe for a delicious sounding S’more brownie at the end of the book. If you are open to a new series, this is one to check out.

Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century
Book
From the beet fields of North Dakota to the National Forest campgrounds of California to Amazon’s...
Memoir social issues

Walk The Wire
Book
Remember his name: FBI Agent Amos Decker is back in a brand new thrilling memory man investigation...

Days That I'll Remeber: Spending Time with John Lennon and Yoko Ono
Book
Offering new insight into Lennon and Ono as individuals, artists and lovers, Days That I’ll...

HLD (99 KP) rated The Alienist - Season 1 in TV
Aug 22, 2018 (Updated Aug 22, 2018)
This is in interesting idea for a show. Before Psychology was a respected field of medicine, you have alienists. Essentially doing the same job, but categorised differently.
Every character appears to have demons of their own. By the end of the season, they confront those demons simply by talking about them aloud to another person.
Also, was paedophilia as accepted 118 years ago as this show portrays? Is it merely an exaggeration of some historical accounts? Who knows, but it definitely created an unhealthy dynamic within society.
Everyone cares so much about the murders of these young men, but nobody cares about the children living on the streets. Or the people having sex with them.
The filming of the show does out-perform some of the acting, but the scenery added to the storylines that occur are sure to keep you entertained until episode ten.