“Born in Yosemite” by Peter T. Hoss

BornInYosemite“Born In Yosemite”

a MEMOIR by Peter T. Hoss


Peter Hoss relates his story from the perspective of someone whose parents, when he was born, were already intimately involved in the life of Yosemite National Park. Herman and Della Hoss were friends with Ansel and Virginia Adams, and his children became Peter’s best friends. Peter’s love of Yosemite, its lore, its beauty, its fascination, and his sense of fun and spirit of adventure were pre-destined. Personalities and individuals who have worked in Yosemite, in the High Country, or Yosemite Valley, seasonally, or for longer periods, are all influenced by their unique experiences – colorfully described by their friend, Peter Hoss.

7×9.9 • 331 pages • $29.95

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ISBN 978-1935530220

Peter T. Hoss was born in Yosemite Valley in 1934. He graduated from Stanford Law School in 1958 and practiced law in Monterey County, California, 1962-1999. He has been an employee in the Park and a legal adviser to Park entities. Currently he is a board member of the Ansel Adams Gallery, a member of the John Muir Heritage Society, The Yosemite Conservancy, and a trustee of A Christian Ministry in the National Parks. Peter visits Yosemite regularly to enjoy its scenic beauty and to visit friends. He maintains interest in current political controversies and other developments. After traveling extensively, statewide and worldwide, he has never found anything comparable to Yosemite.

Peter Hoss Bracebridge Dinner
Peter Hoss, Visiting Squire at Yosemite’s Bracebridge Dinner, Ahwahnee Hotel, with his friend, Carol Robles. 2014.

Customer Reviews

  • Fascinating insights into Yosemite National Park. “Born in Yosemite” is a wonderful book, offering far more than the title indicates. The author is one of very few people born in Yosemite. He grew up surrounded by people whose names are known the world over, such as Ansel Adams and his family. Hoss describes a time in this beloved place that no one will ever experience again. But he then goes on to deliver much more: inside information on years of disputes over how Yosemite should be “managed,” disputes among well-intentioned people who disagree passionately about how many people should visit the park, how they should be controlled, what amenities should be provided, who should “run” the park and more. Anyone who loves Yosemite will be absorbed by this behind-the-scenes view of battles that raged for years. And there is even more: short biographical studies of people who are “icons” associated with Yosemite. Altogether. this book is a real treasure, provided by an author with a unique understanding of his subject. (By Barbara Mountrey on March 24, 2012)
  • Wonderful book about Yosemite in the 20th and ideas for 21st Peter Hoss reveals a special artisan lifestyle at the wonderful Yosemite National Park. His mother started writing a book filled with art about the trees in Yosemite of which I hope to see a second edition. Also his ties to the Ansel Adams family. Peter Hoss wrote this beautiful book with his ideas about how to look at national parks in general and Yosemite specially, my relatives and I love the inside information that is extremely accurate and about full love for the Yosemite park. The information is filled with details unknown to many people. Actually after reading the book the author invited me to come over from the Kingdom of the Netherlands to visit Yosemite and its wonderful history. All that has been written in the book appeared to be 100% true. We also visited Wawona with its famous grand piano player Tom Bopp whom also had written a chapter in the fabulous book. We loved Half Dome, Bridalveil Falls (the highest in US) its trees its fall colors, the historic sequoias and historic not indiginous Vermont maple. Also we loved Mono Lake, a wonderful remarkable feature unique in the whole world. We loved the book for its accurate inside information about the Yosemite park and love to visit this beautiful park over and over again. (By “pmflip” on November 4, 2011)
  • Great book on recent history of Yosemite. This book is full of great inside information on the people and the legacy that is Yosemite. It is truly enjoyable. (By “GEP” on March 26, 2013)
  • A must read for lovers of Yosemite. Fantastic book. Peter grew up in Yosemite. His best friend was the son Ansel Adams. Lots of great photos. (By Eugene Burkett on July 12, 2014)

“Twice in a Lifetime” by Gerald Marchi

TWICE IN A LIFETIME COVER“Twice in a Lifetime: My Two Bouts with the Grim Reaper”

a MEMOIR by Gerald Marchi


My otherwise normal life has been punctuated by two shocking bouts with near-fatal illnesses. For years, I have wanted to tell the story of those events and to chronicle the impact that they had on me and upon the course of my life. I also wanted to give credit to the amazing medical personnel who helped bring me successfully through those dark days. Moreover, I wished to acknowledge the family members and friends who stood faithfully by my side and who went with me through those deep waters. I especially wanted to share with others my experiences that, in both cases, included extraordinary events, remarkable coincidences, and heart-warming expressions of love and support.

5×8 • 74 pages • $10.40

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ISBN 9781500627638

 Gerald Machi was born, raised, and has spent his entire professional life working in the family farming business. For the past dozen years, he has been working on our Marchi Ranch in Pescadero, California. They are truck farmers, raising and marketing various vegetable crops, including leeks, fava beans, and particularly Brussels sprouts. The Pacific Ocean, which is across the road from the family farm, provides them with a ceaseless acoustical background of booming surf.

“Allegro” by Helene Honda

ALLEGRO BOOK COVER“Allegro”

Fictionalized MEMOIR by Helene Honda


Marissa Ohara and Charles Lyons are freelance musicians working in the casino orchestras in Las Vegas in the 1970s. They are among a handful of classically trained string players in the bands that backed the popular singers of the day: Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Bob Goulet, Shirley MacLaine, etc. The bands were basically Big Band, and the added strings produced rich symphonic sounds to enhance these idols’ spectacular shows. Marissa and Charlie form a close friendship that eventually leads to marriage. The reader is taken behind the scenes of the workplace—backstage and the band rooms—to see the interaction between the players and the stars who were idols in the then-flourishing music business. In 1970 Las Vegas was just a budding desert town. It had a small branch of the University of Nevada where Charlie enrolled as candidate for a doctorate in Nevada history. He supported himself while in college by continuing to play in the Strip orchestras. Marissa lived with him and worked full time in the casino bands for the big stars who appeared nonstop for two decades. Marissa Ohara is not Irish, as her last name might suggest. Rather she is full-blooded Japanese, but thoroughly American by birth and upbringing. Marissa’s father, George Shigeo Ohara, a second-generation American, was in his senior year at the University of California at Berkeley when Pearl Harbor was attacked. Through Charlie’s knowledge of history Marissa becomes aware of her parent’s wartime subjugation. She also learns about the life of the Japanese immigrant in California in the early 1900s: how people of her parents’ and grandparents’ generations came to America, and how they were denied social and economic advancement available to their white fellow citizens. This book also tells of the 120,000 innocent Japanese-American men, women, and children uprooted from their homes during the war, with details about the evacuation and the three years they were forced to live in barbed wire camps. These stories are drawn from the writer’s own experience as one of those internees.

5.5×8.5 • 212 pages • $9.00

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ISBN 978-1935530732

Helene Honda (nee Eiko Yoshizato) was born in San Francisco, California, and grew up among artistic people whose comings and goings gave her home a colorful Bohemian atmosphere: news reporters, European and Oriental poets and artists, violinists, opera singers and Hollywood actors. Helene began violin lessons at age seven. During World War II, when Japanese-Americans were forbidden to live on the West Coast, she studied at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City under Toscanini’s concertmaster, Mischa Mischakoff. After graduating, she traveled the country with the Metropolitan Opera Touring Company and the American Ballet Theatre orchestras. Since circa 1970, when Las Vegas became known as “The Entertainment Capital of the World,” Helene played for 25 years in the showrooms of every major Las Vegas hotel – for superstars such as: Elvis Presley, Tom Jones, Smokey Robinson, Cher, Michael Jackson, Janet Jackson, Dean Martin, Tony Bennett and Frank Sinatra.

Customer Reviews

  • Interment and the Rack Pack: Growing up in the 50’s I, knew lots about Frank Sinatra (a Jersey Boy). I lived in Atlantic City. He played there often and opened the great show in Las Vegas, which my parents longed to see. Even though Sinatra reverberated throughout my house, there was not a word about a Japanese interment ever happening in the 40’s. My Dad had been in a prison camp in Germany but I had no idea there were prison camps in the US–through my parents, or my history classes through the end of college. This book not only reveals the shame of Roosevelt and Earl Warren’s locking up US citizen in horse stalls, taking their property, pride and freedom but does something more. It shows the dignity and drive of the Japanese citizens to survive and thrive by propelling the protagonist out of her bleak high desert camp to Julliard, and ultimately Las Vegas playing with the very Sinatra, who filled my living room with sorrow with “Only the Lonely”. The heroine is not isolated but achieves triumph over national prejudice and fear.A great book and very timely as Allegiance, with Star Wars George Takei, about the same Japanese American indignity, is coming to Broadway. (by Cathy Jo Cress on February 20, 2013)
  • I loved this book because I lived through the period for I and my family were incarcerated in one of America’s concentration “camps.” I couldn’t tell where fiction started or ended. Jobs were difficult to obtain, but I am delighted that someone managed in Las Vegas based on talent and not on ancestry. It is an important understanding of what happened to one of 120,000 innocent persons of Japanese ancestry during and after WW II. There is a comforting conclusion. Thank you! (by Masaru Hashimoto on April 11, 2014)
  • This book is a “must read.” It tells about the world of musicians who played in the orchestras at the big casinos for the big singers like Sinatra. In those days, singers didn’t have their own bands, as they do today. Then the story moves to the memoirs of Japanese Americans being yanked from their homes and businesses to being sent to internment camps–in the USA! I’ve been to the camp mentioned–Topaz. It’s out in the middle of nowhere in central Utah. There aren’t any buildings any more, but there are wells, foundations, and markers for the buildings. The nearby town of Delta is creating a museum. They may even reconstruct some of the living quarters. What a sad, secret part of our history. (by “cat traveler” on March 24, 2013)
  • History, Music and So Much More. Read this book. You’ll love it as I did. We know so little about World War II from this angle. I wish I had read it 50 years ago, but I cannot make up for that. You can. Read it now, hand it off to your friends. Keep it for your children. This is a story everyone should know plus it’s fun. Read it. (by Patricia W. Ihrig on March 6, 2013)
  • Japanese internment of 19402 revealed. First-hand account of effects on Japanese who lived on the West Coast of the United States (both citizens and non-citizens) before and during World War II and some of their contributions in the U.S. Army is well written from personal perspective and covers a generous middle half of the novel. Emphasis is on young people’s experiences. History buffs will find new information here. I enjoyed reading insights about the internment camps of 1940’s and also one internee’s later backstage life as a Las Vegas professional musician during the Rat Pack era. (by “blueandpewter” on Jan. 31, 2013.

“What I Miss” by Harold E. Grice

"WHAT I MISS"
“WHAT I MISS”

“What I Miss”

a POEM by Harold E. Grice


California Country Boy Harold E. Grice entertains you with his oft-requested poem, “What I Miss,” with six new, expanded stanzas and period drawings to illustrate the country.

7.8×5.1 • 24 pages • $5.50

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ISBN 978-1935530909

 

California Country Boy Harold E. Grice grew up along the central coast of California during the Great Depression. He currently resides in Salinas, California and writes of times gone by.

Customer Reviews

 

“California Country Boy, Book 1” by Harold E. Grice

CaliforniaCountryBoyBOOK1“California Country Boy, Book 1: Born Young”

a MEMOIR by Harold E. Grice


Dear Polly, Have you read Harold’s Country Boy book? It’s a humdinger! Sure brings back the memories—the farm, the boys, Helen and Roy and those kids. Talk about mischief, swiping the carrots and then taking the tie-down rope for a swing. Never saw Oscar so mad as when the load came off. Course he couldn’t wallop ‘im with Helen right there. Then that thing with the dog, blood all over, near scared us to death. And that old sow gonna eat him. Never been so frightened as when the burglar took off with him. I thought he’d do something terrible to the boy. I tell you, Polly, the little scamp kept me up nights wondering what he was a gonna get into next. Made me feel right at home again. Bye for now, GRAN’MA

Be sure to read Harold’s “California Country Boy” You hear me?

6×9 • 188 pages • $13.46

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ISBN 978-1935530435

 

I was born and raised in California. My early years were spent on a farm, then small towns or country, and then on a ranch. Family association was mostly country as I am sixth generation Californian, and before the war I was related to nearly everyone in the central coastal area. My early life was pretty exciting.

“The Traveling Soup Pot” by Mary Chamberlin

THE TRAVELING SOUP POT COVER

“The Traveling Soup Pot”

a COOKBOOK by Mary Chamberlin


Soup, the original comfort food, is a thousand-year-old fare with universal appeal. Now Mary Chamberlin brings you the authentic tastes of regional soups in easy-to-follow recipes that will fill your kitchen with the flavors, aromas and sensuous colors of distant lands . . . from the Caribbean, Italy, Greece, France, Sweden, China . . . and beyond. From sumptuous to spicy to spectacular, Mary’s recipes have been gathered from cozy cafés, busy bistros, 3-star restaurants – and even the home kitchens of renowned chefs. The Traveling Soup Pot brings adventure, romance and the touch of a passionate gourmand to your everyday meals.

Mary has created what she calls her “Happy Recipes” for your delight, in the same way she serves her wonderful soups – with love.

 166 pages • $35.00

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Customer Reviews

  • I will never forget having dinner at renowned chef Mary Chamberlin’s house in Carmel in 2009. A friend had invited me to see Julie & Julia, the comedy-drama movie about Julie Child, and then to a Julia Child-themed dinner in Chamberlin’s spacious abode. Not only did Chamberlin make the best French onion soup I have ever eaten, but she prepared enough for around 100 people. Her “dream kitchen,” as she calls it, was featured in Better Homes and Gardens magazine, so guests who didn’t fit into the dining room and elsewhere were very happy to eat in the place where she prepares her culinary wonders. The cookbook is a journey through many lands—with soup recipes from close to 20 countries. A foreword by Michel Escoffier, great-grandson to perhaps the world’s most innovative chef, Auguste Escoffier, highly recommends Chamberlin’s book—and that says plenty right there. (By Storrs Winery in the Santa Cruz Good Times Weekly on June 26, 2013
  • The Traveling Soup Pot is a master’s collection of delectable international soup recipes inspired and influenced by Chef Mary Chamberlin, along with her husband, Captain Roy Chamberlin and the legendary Michel Escoffier, descendant of Auguste Escoffier, also known as “the King of Chefs and the Chef of Kings.” Here are over 100 imaginative soup recipes from global sources, arranged by area of origin. We have Mock Bird’s nest Soup from China, Alan Wong’s Red & Yellow Tomato Soup from Hawaii, Chicken Mulligatawny Soup from India, Portuguese Fish Stew, Swedish Soup with Dumplings, Lobster Bisque and Crabmeat & Brie Soup from France, Chilled Vichyssoise from England, Irish Stew, Leek & Potato Soup from Wales, chilled soups, Island soups, Mexicali Tortilla Soup, and finally Clam Chowder New California style, and many more from the American continent and others of hybrid or mixed origins. Recipes are divided into chapters based on origin, or type, such as chilled soups. An interesting 10th chapter offers “From Hobo to Must Go Soups,” a combination of upscale versions of Hobo Stew, Mulligan Stew, and leftover miracle worker soup. Standard measurements and clear, step by step instructions make these fabulous soups accessible to all. A bit of culinary history is woven into each recipe, fascinating details that make the experience of offering of The Traveling Soup Pot all the more savory. Here indeed are fabulous gourmet and comfort food classic soups for every taste and budget. This edition is also spectacularly presented, with a special illustration of a Ford Tri-Motor airplane from the Roaring 20’s on the cover, carrying a wandering, giant covered soup pot! Colored photos also decorate the chapters and further inspire the gourmet soup chef, amateur or not. (By the Wisconsin Bookwatch, May 2013)

“Anybody’s Daughter” by Barbara Manning

BAM-Postcards 8-7-2014.inddAnybody’s Daughter

a MEMOIR by
Barbara Ann Manning
When Barbara advocates for the needs of foster children, she speaks from personal experience. She lived for 18 years in an orphanage and five foster homes—and knows how it feels to grow up without her parents. Barbara credits her survival and ultimate triumph over “the system” to her mentors at crucial times of her life. she says: “Let’s embrace the child within ourselves as well as the concept that we are our brother’s keeper.”
6×9 • 304 pages • $14.95
ISBN 9781500627638
Barbara Ann Manning spent her childhood years in the foster care system—age 6 through high school graduation at age 18. With the help of key mentors during these years of neglect and abuse, she learned to value herself and her life. Barbara broke the cycle of abuse within her family and raised four children—all college graduates. This is her story.