Posts Tagged ‘ Osage Indians ’

Review: Killers Of The Flower Moon

August 21, 2023
Review: Killers Of The Flower Moon

Soon to be a major motion picture, this story has some real promise. Promise to help solve age-old crimes, promise to resolve inhuman atrocities, promise to help make things right. This is the promise of “Killers Of The Flower Moon – The Osage Murders And The Birth Of The FBI”, by David Grann. Sadly, it […]

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RSS Northwest Research & Covert Book Report

  • One Nation Under Blackmail, Vol. 1 by Whitney Webb
    One Nation Under Blackmail, Vol. 1 by Whitney Webb I have done my darnedest to be accurate to Whitney and the publisher on this. In “One Nation Under Blackmail”, the subtitle is “The sordid union between Intelligence and Organized Crime that gave rise to Jeffrey Epstein”. In this volume, Epstein in seldom mentioned, but his […]
  • Movie / Book Comparison “Soylent Green” VS. “Make Room! Make Room!”
    It’s been a while since I read “Make Room! Make Room!”, and I just found “Soylent Green” on YouTube, so my comparison may be off a bit. I definitely liked the movie, starring Charlton Heston and Edward G. Robinson, better. The book that inspired the movie was good, but I thought the movie surpassed it. […]
  • Compilation Of Ancient America Books
    The Indigenous Paleolithic Of The Western Hemisphere Well, this book kicks off my reading of ancient/revision history. I gotta say, I learned quite a bit, but it wasn’t what I expected to learn. First of all, let me say this book, published by The University of Nebraska Press, was very expensive as books go. I […]
  • Review: “America B.C.”, By Barry Fell
    To begin with, I realize this series of books I am reading makes paid scientists like archaeologists and historians crazy. It just doesn’t fit in their books. But, as I have said, like politics realizing the power of podcasts and amateurs, novice people are picking up the pieces. This is the era of the citizen-journalist. […]
  • Review: Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, by Dee Brown
    I know I am coming to this book late, but felt it necessary to read this (and others) from the native standpoint since I am also reading many books that seem to be about colonization. I, myself have perhaps been somewhat selfishly in sorrow for how our little seaside community is now turning into “Disneyland”, […]