Home :: Books :: Reference  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference

Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Napa: The Story of an American Eden

Napa: The Story of an American Eden

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fine Book -- One Caveat
Review: I ordered this book thinking that it was, as stated in one of the reviews, the sequel to Conaway's 1990 book "Napa." Actually, this edition IS the 1990 book, only published in 2002 by a different company, with a subtitle and without the photos that appeared in the earlier edition that I have. I enjoyed Conaway's book immensely when I read the earlier edition, but take care not to buy this edition thinking that it is the sequel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Eden Goes to Hell
Review: In the 1960s a tide of hippies, back-to-the-landers, wine buffs, corporate
burnouts and urban refugees flowed into California's Napa Valley and began
restoring its the vineyards. Some wanted the simple life; some saw profits.
Others sought to beat the French at their own vinous game, and a few

succeeded.

Napa wines won a famous 1976 tasting (the French were apoplectic), mightily
boosting reputations and profit potential. Soon, bottom-line worshippers
corporatios marginalized mere sweat-equity farmers in muddy boots and
pickup trucks, moving James Conaway to record the loss of innocence in his
best-seller "Napa" (1990). Now his fine sequel--told through heroes and
villains--finds America's Eden in crisis.

Tsunami tourism (5 million visitors a year) is bad, the new-wave investors
worse: dot-commers, lawyers, real-estate moguls and others skilled in
pulling fortunes from the air and convinced of their right to do as they
pleased, the law be damned. Vulgar McMansions profane lovely hillsides,
spoiling the grand views for everyone else. Arrivistes craving the cachet
of their names on top-dollar labels spend recklessly on vineyards dozered
and dynamited into ever-steepening slopes. These grow fine grapes, but
their runoff muddies Napa's river and threatens its watershed and wildlife.
The wines themselves are obscured between [price]"monster cabernets" and
"fruit bombs" and cheap stuff--often not even made from Napa grapes--meant
to strip-mine tourists. Pretentiousness thrives: Napa Valley now has an
"Office of Protocol."

Existing legal controls might have limited damage had county officials
bestirred themselves. They don't, and so zealots force the issue: Wine Guys
vs. Enviros. Reasonable people capable of compromise can't stop the slide
into unproductive rancor. Fulminative rhetoric draws neo-Prohibitionists
attacking "alcohol farms," ex-urbanites utterly ignorant of agriculture,
and radicals demanding an end to all local regulations, even seeking
exemption from state environmental laws. In the background real-estate
developers dry-wash their hands at the prospect of turning incredibly
valuable vineyards into astronomically valuable housing lots.

The result is one of those "mother of" lawsuits. It would be unfair to say
who wins because Conaway, a brisk and vivid writer, maintains suspense to
the end. But it is fair to say it accomplishes little and may mean ruin
later on.

Eden--it's not a pretty picture.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Napa, not Utopia
Review: This book is a crash course in modern Napa Valley politics that reads like a novel. Conaway profiles the main characters in the Valley's battle to balance growth with preservation with both historical accuracy and insight. For anyone interested in the American wine industry, Conaway's book is a primer on how the movers and shakers got to the top and how they intend to stay there.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: In Conaway, Veritas...
Review: This is a masterful narrative, of interest to enophiles, wine drinkers, travellers, and cultural historians, too. Compelling personal stories, enough details about the challenges and processes of the business, and a good sense of the times in which these pioneers found themselves add up to a wonderful page turner.

Read this before your first visit to Napa and your experience will be all the more wonderful...and you'll know why, for example, it's "Neibaum-Coppola" and not just "Coppola."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: In Conaway, Veritas...
Review: This is a masterful narrative, of interest to enophiles, wine drinkers, travellers, and cultural historians, too. Compelling personal stories, enough details about the challenges and processes of the business, and a good sense of the times in which these pioneers found themselves add up to a wonderful page turner.

Read this before your first visit to Napa and your experience will be all the more wonderful...and you'll know why, for example, it's "Neibaum-Coppola" and not just "Coppola."


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates