Holiday savings! Exclusive discounts on books, free shipping and more. Click here!

cart Cart 0 items
An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917-1963." by Robert Dallek - Textbook - First Edition, Ex-Library - 2003 - from Bizarre Books & Music and Biblio.com
Note: Cover may not represent actual copy or condition available





An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917-1963 ."

by Robert Dallek

First Edition, Ex-Library

Price: $9.95


Payment methods


Book desription: Little Brown & Co, 2003. First Edition, Ex-Library. Hardcover. Very good. Great book! Light shelf wear on dj, library stamps, no marks in text. From Publishers Weekly\nGlancy (Pushing the Bear) has fashioned an imaginative, second-person "diary" by the legendary Shoshone guide who aided Lewis and Clark on their expedition from Missouri to California. Sacajawea is a pregnant teenager in the late fall of 1804, having been abducted from her Shoshone tribe by the rival Hidatsas and then bought by Frenchman Toussaint Charbonneau. Charbonneau, characterized here as a brutish opportunist, serves as Lewis and Clark's interpreter, and from among his many wives he chooses Sacajawea to accompany them because she can help the explorers barter for horses from the Shoshone. In short paragraphs of staccato prose-poetry, Sacajawea offers her perspective on the arduous government-sponsored journey by foot, horseback and canoe in search of a water route to the Pacific. Her account is filled with her wide-eyed wonder at the strange ways of the white man-a party of 30 dragging their extravagant luggage over the mountains, writhing to the exotic tune of a fiddle and endlessly writing in diaries ("You watch the men write in their journals. What do they say with the gnarl of their letters? How can they say what the land is like with their marks?"). Throughout the book, excerpts from the actual diaries of Lewis and Clark serve as a counterpoint to Sacajawea's more intimate observations and mystical interpretations of their adventures. Though Glancy writes gracefully, Sacajawea's responses to the white men are predictable, and she never quite becomes a memorable character. Still, Glancy's sharply observed details and lyrical stylings make for a lively, thought-provoking read.\nCopyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.\n\nFrom Booklist\nGlancy, a prizewinning novelist and poet, has lyrically breathed new life into a seemingly exhausted legend. Sacajawea, the Shoshone native who accompanied Lewis and Clark on their famed expedition, narrates this fictional version of the magnificent, yet harrowing, journey. As told through the heart of a woman and through the spirit of a Native American, the Lewis and Clark expedition takes on entirely new contours. Though Lewis and Clark see with their eyes and record their observations diligently--excerpts from their personal diaries are inserted on every page--Sacajawea is blessed with an inner vision that puts an earthy and vibrant spin on each individual experience and encounter. Though Sacajawea's story has been recounted time and again, Glancy's intimate portrait of this remarkable woman's physical and spiritual odyssey operates on a more mystical plane and is well worth investigating. Margaret Flanagan\nCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved ISBN: 0316172383.

  • Bookseller: Bizarre Books & Music US (US)
  • Bookseller Inventory #: 08168
  • Format/binding: Hardcover
  • Book condition: Very good
  • Edition: First Edition, Ex-Library
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • ISBN 10: 0316172383
  • ISBN 13: 9780316172387
  • Publisher: Little Brown & Co
  • Date published: 2003
  • Size: 16x24 cm
  • LCCN: E842.D28 2003
  • Dewey: 973.922/092 B

Bookseller Terms of Sale

All books are 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Books ship within 24 hours of payment.



Sign up to receive offers and updates: