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Reviews (3)
Jun 27, 2008
Beautiful Outboards (Peter Hunn, 2002)
'Beautiful Outboards' provides a nostalgic tour through the history of outboard motors, including both both Icons and lesser-known models. The photography is extremely nice, and the full-page views of each model are one of the best reasons to put a copy on your bookshelf or coffee table - especially if that shelf or table belongs in a fishing cabin or summer lodge.
Peter's book is not comprehensive, encyclopedic or a collector's guide; it is, however, tremendously evocative of summers past. Would I buy it again? Most certainly. Will I buy another copy? Yes, as a Christmas gift.

Jan 04, 2021
Great Quality, Early NOS 7-Segment Displays!
Dec 09, 2006
The Iroquois Trail (Dickon's Trek across New York)
If you enjoyed Mark Harrington's "The Indians of New Jersey: Dickon Among the Lenapes", then yes, you should also read "The Iroquois Trail". If you haven't yet picked up a copy of "Dickon Among the Lenape", find a copy and read this story first... as other reviews will tell you, "Iroquois Trail" does not live up to expectations - the earlier story's richly-woven telling is a tough act to follow - but in continuing Dickon's tale, this sequel does a fine job of introducing the reader to Iroquois culture, tribes and lifestyle of the late Woodland/early contact period.
"The Iroquois Trail" is M.R. Harrington's sequel to the "The Indians of New Jersey: Dickon Among the Lenapes". In both tales, Mark Harrington introduces the reader to eastern North American Indian cultures - the lore, beliefs, tools, techniques and way of life - of the New Jersey Lenape and New York Iroquois during the 1600s. Harrington's characters are well developed, the story line is engaging and most importantly, the tales provide an effective way to introduce the reader to similarities and differences between contemporary but geographically separate native American cultures. "Iroquois Trail" continues the fictionalized account of Dickon, a shipwrecked European boy who is adopted by the Lenape in the first saga, on a quest that introduces him to the tribes of the Iroquois in the second. "Iroquois Trail" relates North American Indian culture and lifestyle through the same pair of eyes, yet this account does not weave the same richness of detail and depth of information from a day-to-day, season-to-season account of life - the tools, techniques, beliefs, lore and society - that was folded into the earlier tale. When considered on its own merit, however, "Iroquois Trail" again provides both an enjoyable story and approachable introduction to a native American culture of this period.