Selected Product: | Hometown Revelations - How America's cities, towns, and states acquired their names Paperback Edition: 1st Author: Mark Usler Publisher: DM Enterprises Inc. Release Date: 2006-09-01 ISBN-10: 0978698703 ISBN-13: 9780978698706 List Price: $8.95 Average Customer Rating: | | How the States Got Their Shapes ISBN-10: 0061431389 ISBN-13: 9780061431388 List Price:$22.95 Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States (New York Review Books Classics) ISBN-10: 1590172736 ISBN-13: 9781590172735 List Price:$19.95 The Big Book of American Trivia ISBN-10: 0842383131 ISBN-13: 9780842383134 List Price:$12.99 Presidential Trivia ISBN-10: 1558534121 ISBN-13: 9781558534124 List Price:$7.99 Presidential Trivia ISBN-10: 1558534121 ISBN-13: 0031869004120 List Price:$7.99 From Altoids to Zima: The Surprising Stories Behind 125 Famous Brand Names ISBN-10: 0743257979 ISBN-13: 9780743257978 List Price:$12.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Hometown Revelations - How America's cities, towns, and states acquired their names by Mark Usler (ISBN-10: 0978698703, ISBN-13: 9780978698706). At this time we have not yet written a review for Hometown Revelations - How America's cities, towns, and states acquired their names by Mark Usler (ISBN-10: 0978698703, ISBN-13: 9780978698706). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com In Hometown Revelations, you will find out how America's cities, towns, and states acquired their names. Most of the major U.S. cities are included but you will find answers why they named their town Peculiar, Happy or even Monkeys Eyebrow! In addition, you will learn how the states aquired their names. Not everybody's hometown may be included but the clues and mysteries revealed of other communities may lead you to your own revelation! Interesting topic | Customer Rating: | | This is a pretty good book. Easy to read in one afternoon or while traveling down the road in the passenger seat. | disappointing | Customer Rating: | | So often I felt that there was more to the story. In fact, in a couple of instances I KNEW there was more to the story. And there are so many curiously named cities that were completely ignored. Learning that yet another town was named after a person got to be boring after awhile. I got the impression that very little actual research was done. | Light Hearted Read | Customer Rating: | | Every one journeys down a road past a town with a funny or unusal name and thinks in the back of their mind how a community came up with such a name. This is a great book for answering some of those questions and might spark an interest in doing a little research on your own. You might be surprised how many people don't know how there hometown got it's name. | Lightweight Fluffery | Customer Rating: | This publication reminds me of those publications you see at the counter of a Stuckey's checkout. I call it that because it's too slim to be an actual book. At 95 large-type pages its more like a thick pamphlet.
It reads like the author spent a few afternoons gleaming information from Wikipedia.com. There's no real scholarly research here and each entry is barely a paragraph long. Fine if you need something to read during a long car trip but otherwise totally unsatisfying.
I agree with the other review in that too much emphasis is placed on MO and KS. Way too much is left out. For example, how did the town of Ninety Six, S.C. get its name? Not in there. | Trivial and focused on Missouri and Kansas, but entertaining | Customer Rating: | | This is a pretty fun book to read while on road trips or looking at maps. My biggest complaint is that the book is probably 70% focused on Missouri and Kansas. I personally try to avoid driving across both of them, so the road trip value is minimal to me. The history is pretty interesting though, and the state section is great. Overall, this is a fun book for trivial knowledge- it would be of particular interest to someone who enjoys cartography and US History. |
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