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Our suggestions for our place

Review by Central Staff

Books – December 2002 – Colorado Central Magazine

We’ve read most of the books mentioned in the Tattered Cover list. But here are some that we’d suggest for Central Colorado (along with a few outsiders).

For clear, interesting local history, we recommend:

Leadville, a Miner’s Epic, by Stephen M. Voynick.

Climax, by Stephen M. Voynick.

Across the Northern Frontier: Spanish Exploratons in Colorado, by Phil Carson.

Rebel of the Rockies: The Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad, by Robert Athern.

History of Leadville and Lake County, Colorado, by Don and Jean Griswold.

The San Luis Valley: Land of the Six-Armed Cross, by Virginia McConnell Simmons.

Bayou Salado, the Story of South Park, by Virginia McConnell Simmons.

Upper Arkansas, A Mountain River Valley, by Virginia McConnell Simmons.

The Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico, by Virginia McConnell Simmons.

Massacre: Tragedy at White River, by Marshall Sprague.

100 Years in the Heart of the Rockies, by Cynthia Pasquale and others.

For a little cultural diversity, we recommend:

Nature’s Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West, by William Cronon.

The Great Plains, by Walter Prescott Webb.

For local humor and color:

More Damn Tourists, by Steve Frazee.

For local depictions spiced with adventure, drama and personal experience:

Tomboy Bride: A Women’s Personal Account of Life in Mining Camps of the West by Harriet Fish Backus.

The Life of an Ordinary Woman by Anne Ellis.

Plain Anne Ellis: More About the Life of an Ordinary Woman by Anne Ellis.

The Last Ranch by Sam Bingham.

Leaning Into the Wind: Women Write From the Heart of the West, edited by Hasselstrom, Collier and Curtis.

And to take along for fun:

Ghost Towns, Colorado Style, by Kenneth Jessen (especially the Central and Southern portions of the trilogy).

A Field Guide to Animal Tracks by Olaus J Murie.

Rocky Mountain Tree Finder by Tom Watts.

–Martha & Ed Quillen