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27+ Works 885 Members 11 Reviews

About the Author

James Conaway is a former Wallace Stegner fellow at Stanford University, and the author of thirteen books. His work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, Harper's, The New Republic, Gourmet, Smithsonian, and National Geographic Traveler. He divides his time between Washington, show more DC, and California. show less

Includes the name: Vanessa Valcour

Disambiguation Notice:

According to the U.S. Copyright Public Catalog, database, 15 June 2009: Valcour, Vanessa is a pseud. of James Conaway. Used on the book: Play it by heart (1983).

Works by James Conaway

Napa: The Story of an American Eden (1990) 225 copies, 1 review
The Kingdom in the Country (1987) 34 copies
Nose: A Novel (2013) 15 copies, 1 review
The Texans (1976) 15 copies
The Big Easy (1971) 9 copies
World's end (1978) 5 copies

Associated Works

Canada's Wilderness Lands (1982) 156 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Valcour, Vanessa (pseudonym)
Birthdate
1941-04-15
Gender
male
Occupations
editor
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Disambiguation notice
According to the U.S. Copyright Public Catalog, database, 15 June 2009: Valcour, Vanessa is a pseud. of James Conaway. Used on the book: Play it by heart (1983).
Associated Place (for map)
Louisiana, USA

Members

Discussions

The Smithsonian, James Conaway in World Reading Circle (January 2014)

Reviews

12 reviews
There are some museums that you want to visit again and again, either because of their spectacular displays or because of the vast knowledge they contain. The Smithsonian museums are among that list because of those things and more. They are some of the most visited, most internationally known buildings, but so many people go through the doors without knowing the amazing story behind how those doors came to open for them. I was among those numbers until I read this book.

James Conaway opened show more my eyes to more than just the contents of the collections that I had seen as a child. This book takes you back in time to when the idea of the Smithsonian began with a simple donation from James Smithson and continues into the present day. Through this book we can relive what the United States did with the money that funded "the increase and diffusion of knowledge", which is simply spectacular. We could have created just another simple building with just another collection of specimens or pile of stones, but instead, we have the Smithsonian Institution.

Like a perfectly designed display, this book combines text and stunning photography to guide readers through history and draw them in as if they were living it. Don't be afraid to share this history with your children. Even the youngest will enjoy living through the images they see, even if they can't read the full text of the book. If you can't tour the museums, this is the next best thing, and if you can go, read this book before you enter. It will enhance your experience one hundred percent. For my part, I can say that it made me plan another trip to Washington for the single purpose of seeing every building under the name Smithsonian.
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I enjoyed the mystery that this book presented. It kept me interested and engaged with the story. The characters had lots of texture, although I didn't always agree with them and their points of view.

The book also had a nice balance if romance, wit, environmental concerns and mystery. For the wine lover, there is plenty of information and knowledge to enjoy throughout.

Overall nice pacing and a good story for wine lovers!

Reader received a complimentary copy from the publisher through the show more Good Reads First Reads Program. show less
The "incomparable galaxy of museums" known as the Smithsonian
Institution is the legacy of an illigitimate son, to an America he never
saw. James Smithson bequeathed 100,000 pounds to the United States
government to found "an Establishment for the increase and diffiusion
of knowledge". It is now a lamp to the world, with 24 million visitors
annually, and 140 million objects. (1995!)

The author, a writer-scholar, seems to emphasize the colorful
"off-beat" characters whose endeavors have made the show more collection what it
is today.
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James Conaway writes well, and he's certainly traveled around a lot.

But I only made it about a third of the way through this collection of location-based essays and reflections. It's so, so similar to a dozen -- nay, a hundred -- other books and essays and articles and podcasts and sermons and speeches and conversations over fair-trade coffee or undistinguished but hey, still totally drinkable locally-sourced wine: the real America is vanishing because big bad businesses and greedy show more Americans are using it all up, and if only we would just listen to some gentle yet prophetic wisdom from someone who really sees what is going on . . . .

Not recommended.
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Awards

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Statistics

Works
27
Also by
1
Members
885
Popularity
#28,943
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
11
ISBNs
35

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