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Werke von Ronald J. Pastore

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Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Jesse James' Secret is the story a quest. The story of the author searching not only for treasure but for the the truth of the circumstances of Jesse James' death.

The book lists two persons as the authors. The main one would appear to be Ron Pastore who appears to be a controversial figure to his one time allies, the James family. Beyond this you may search the internet and form your own opinion.

The book itself is fairly well written and reads as the adventure story it is suppose to be. It traces how
the main character, Mr. Pastore, quite literally stumbled across the object of so much research on his part. He details the process from which derived his conclusions along with a few of the pertinent documents along with details of his personal life and dealings with various individuals along the way.

He discusses, I believe there have been three, TV documentaries on Jesse. Let say here that I have seen none of them at this point, so I will have to go with what author says of them. The first was an investigation of the DNA evidence of the person buried in the traditional grave in Missouri which the author dismisses as proving nothing essentially. The second was instigated by Mr. Pastore in conjunction with Bill Kurtis of the History Channel. However despite the writer's best intentions he was very dissatisfied with the results, the direction which Mr. Kurtis took on the subject. I can comment very little on the third as he doesn't really provide much info on it.

I think that I can recommend this book, if for no other reason, in that it presents another view of the the life and death of one one the U.S.A. iconic characters know the world over.
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Suralon | 12 weitere Rezensionen | May 30, 2011 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Codes Cover-Ups and Hidden Treasures, that's the subtitle of Jesse James' Secret. Add to that mystery, murder and conspiracy and you have Jesse James' Secret. Lots of information, photographs and maps. If you like Jesse James this might be the book for you.
½
 
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CraigStepp | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 16, 2011 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
The notorious outlaw, Jesse James did not die in April of 1882 as we have been led to believe by history; or so author Ron Pastore would have us believe. He has done over a decade of research attempting to prove that history is either outright wrong or that we have been deliberately deceived. Ron tends to believe the latter, and in this book, puts forth what he has learned about the life and death of Jesse James. Greatly complicating matters, three distinctly different men of approximately the same age were using the name Jesse James. Genealogical research proves that the three men were cousins. There is much information contained in 15 appendices at the back of the book, some of which is helpful and some merely confusing.

While interesting and easy to read, Jesse James' Secret is not as detailed as I had hoped for and the glimpses of evidence provided by the authors are not very convincing - until you get to the photographs. With keen observational skills the photographs of Jesse James can be divided into three groups; each group of photos matches the description of a different one of the three cousins. If the photos can be believed at all, I'm pretty sure I know who died in 1882...

There are a few typographical errors in this book, though it is not riddled with such errors as are other books I've read, however, much of the content doesn't seem to belong in a book about Jesse James. There is some confusing information about the Knights of the Golden Circle and other information about codes written on cave walls and massive amounts of buried treasure - the ill-gotten proceeds of the many robberies committed by the James gang. Some of the information is loosely tied together, some just doesn't seem as if it belongs at all.

If you're interested in non-fiction books about the old west and want to read for entertainment, then you might like this book. If you're looking for a book that covers the topic in depth, or in a more scholarly fashion, then this isn't the book for you.

Above review is based on the trade paperback edition provided to me free by the publisher.
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1dragones | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 22, 2010 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Just a so-so book. This came across as a conspiracy type book in the same vein as Da Vinci Code as one other reviewer stated. I found too that this would have made a much better fiction novel than non-fiction if written in a different manner. But being non-fiction it was interesting but it seemed that it lacked the facts, sources and evidence to support a serious attempt at proving anything. Could have been a fun "novel", but as a work of non-fiction, not so much.
 
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harpua | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 28, 2010 |

Statistikseite

Werke
1
Mitglieder
27
Beliebtheit
#483,027
Bewertung
3.0
Rezensionen
13
ISBNs
2