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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best picassian review of all times.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Picasso: His Life and Work, Third edition (Paperback)
Not only because they were good friends but because they shared an astonishing good life in the Còte d'azur in the best of moments for Picasso's creative activity. And he contacted all of his best friends. For he was a surrealistic painter as well and he knew about all the art intrigues at the time. You can get every detail on Picasso's life and his way of living, all of his tips, even the cars he had, his life with his relatives who came to visit him.
A very personal and human aspect of a great genius is what this book gives you...
3.0 out of 5 stars
Adequate,
By M.L. Harding "MLH" (Nor Cal) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Picasso: His Life and Work, Third edition (Paperback)
This was a book covering much of his life and work, but there was nothing in it that was not in every other book I have read on him. I was hoping for more.
0 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must For Researchers,
As Continental forces and Virginia militia units were engaged in winning independence, American quartermasters and provisioners struggled to provide these units with all the necessities of life, from meals and guns to meat, fodder for horses, the horses themselves, firewood, and every other type of material. Much of this was requisitioned from the civilian population and certificates were issued payable in either continental or state funds, depending on the units supplied, upon presentation to court authorities. Thousands of these certificates issued to Virginians were duly entered by the courts, and they provide a fascinating insight into the period of the Revolution. These "Publick" Claims booklets contain interesting and useful information about the contributions of ordinary people to the Revolutionary War. They provide some details of people's service in the militia or as guards for prisoners of war; they indicate where some bodies of troops were at particular times; and they identify providers of horses, wagons, cattle, grain, or other supplies. Much of the information in these booklets cannot be found anywhere else, which makes the surviving records particularly valuable. Also remarkable is the fact that records survived from virtually every county in the state at that time with the exception of the newly formed Kentucky counties. This makes the collection even more valuable in covering areas which heretofore in this time period have suffered from a lack of personal data. The "Virginia Publick Claims" are published by counties. In addition to a faithful transcription by Janice Luck Abercrombie and the late Richard Slatten, a complete index is provided for each county booklet. This series is an extremely important genealogical tool for searchers in Revolutionary-era materials.
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