Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Great Plains

Great Plains
Great Plains
Author: Ian Frazier
The Market's bargain prices are even better for Paperbackswap club members!
Retail Price: $18.00
Buy New (Paperback): $13.79 (save 23%) or
Become a PBS member and pay $9.89+1 PBS book credit Help icon(save 45%)
ISBN-13: 9780312278502
ISBN-10: 0312278500
Publication Date: 5/4/2001
Pages: 320
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 14

3.8 stars, based on 14 ratings
Publisher: Picador
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

6 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Great Plains on
Who would have known a bunch of flat land could be so interesting. Just the right mix of history and travelogue.
buzzby avatar reviewed Great Plains on + 6062 more book reviews
"This is a brilliant, funny and altogether perfect book, soaked in research and then aired out on the open plains to evaporate the excess, leaving this modern masterpiece. It makes me want to get in a truck and drive straight out to North Dakota and look at the prarie." GARRRISON KEILLOR
reviewed Great Plains on + 337 more book reviews
Written by someone with an obvious love for and facination with the geography, history and lore of the Great Plans, Frazier made me want to spend a year exploring its vastness.
reviewed Great Plains on + 674 more book reviews
Fascinating, written in a unique style, where facts pile up side by side like sod bricks and occasionally blow around like the dust that choked the whole country from the plains during the Dust Bowl years.

A lot about geography, history and ecology, both in the past and today (or when the book was written).

But it's all from a masculine point of view! I was reading in another book about Willa Cather's literary perspective on living in the plains and realized that she wasn't even in the book (I checked the index), nor was the perspective of other women who did a lot of the hard work of settling the plains states, because their men had dreams to live there and they did not. Laura Ingalls Wilder, the immensely popular author of Little House on the Prairie, was not mentioned either.

There are hardly any women at all mentioned in the book.
reviewed Great Plains on + 377 more book reviews
A good history of the middle part of the Country, the Great Plains. Lots of Indian history and of the early settlers. Mostly its been a rural farming and ranching area, and still is. Under populated, arid and isolated.
reviewed Great Plains on + 84 more book reviews
Enjoy his writing, and especially the chapters on the historic plains. Could have done without his politically correct meanderings.