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Tennessee Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Tennessee
The Wilde Women: A Novel
Published in Kindle Edition by Atria Books (2007-04-11)
Author: Paula Wall
List price: $17.99
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Unforgettable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-26
When I read the first chapter in the book store, I knew I'd buy the book. But, I didn't know if the author could keep up her salacious, witty pace. I'm happy to say that she did - and it got so, much, better. This is one talented woman - just google her interviews. She knows sexy women, the South, and storytelling. A must have, especially for saucy Southern women.

Funny and Sexy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
Who would of thunk you could have a story that's both sexy and funny? The Wilde girls...and their mom...are a wild ride with equal amounts of comedy and drama. A good time guaranteed.

Funny and Sexy!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-07
What a great suprise! I picked this up on a whim the other day at the library. I opened it while waiting in line and was immediatley hooked from the first page! Don't miss this one!

I can almost see this book as a movie or mini series. The characters are so funny and so likeable. I laughed out loud too many times to count. Pick up this book if you want a quick, quirky read full of unforgettable characters.

Receives veteran Susan Ericksen's smooth voice
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-07
Paula Wall's THE WILDE WOMEN receives veteran Susan Ericksen's smooth voice and stage and screen background as it tells of sisters who have a taste for mischief and bad men. When one sister cheats with another's man, trouble begins which will lead to changes and danger.

ONE OF THE BEST I HAVE READ THIS YEAR. AMAZING BIT OF WRITING!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-08
When Paula Wall published her first novel, The Rock Garden, I read it and loved it and felt it was by far one of the best novels of that year. I was quite fearful that Ms. Wall was one of those one novel wonders and thought "what a shame." Fortunately my fears were for naught! With this second offering I truly feel the author out did even her first work, which I have said, is one of the best. This is good stuff here folks!

At first glance, the author could quite well be classified as a regional author as her novels take place in a specific geographical area. But, like Ferrol Sams (Run with the Horsemen, the first of his wonderful trilogy), Ms. Wall transcends geography and produces a work that most people, if not all people, can relate to. She is simply an excellent, gifted writer and a true master story teller. If, after reading the first five pages, your sides are not hurting from laughter, then something has to be wrong with your sense of humor. This lady is funny. Her one liners are beyond a doubt some of the best I've read in years.

This is a novel of the depression south. It is not a "romance" novel, a "bodice ripper" nor is it a "historical romance." It is the story of a small town in the south during the depression years. Yes, there is an element of romance woven into the story, fear not, but this simply in not what this work is about. The author hangs her story on two sisters, which are great characters, but are only a small part of the novel as a whole. We meet page after page of vivid characters. The author has a skill which allows her to, in one paragraph, convince the reader that they have known a character all of their life. The twists and turns of this story are absolutely amazing and complicated, yet not so complicated that it does not all make perfect sense as you read on. Even though the story and plot are wonderful, they are almost over shadowed by the author's keen sense of character development. In this work we have probably at least a dozen story lines going and they are all wonderfully interlinked as are the quirky characters sprinkled here and there. The ending of this work...well, you just have to read that yourself, but trust me, it is great. Like another reviewer here, I recommend you go ahead and buy this one as you will no doubt want to give it a reread. I cannot wait for her next work to come out!

Recommend this one highly.

Tennessee
Artificial Imagination (Special Edition): A humorous Photostory of a journey through Washington, California and Tennessee
Published in Paperback by Center of Artificial Imagination, Inc. (2008-01-28)
Author: Kalpanik S.
List price: $7.99
New price: $4.99
Used price: $4.79

Average review score:

ABC interviews Kalpanik S about his book Artificial Imagination and the meaning of life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-07
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R3CF7E74NYTQX9 This is an excerpt from the ABC live interview for the book Artificial Imagination. Kalpanik talks about his immigrant experience, meaning of life, and important of including a sense of humor in your life style and philosophy.

ARTIFICIAL IMAGINATION blends art, craft, and wit into an interesting narrative
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
The word artificial originally meant "artful, crafty." That's an apt description of ARTIFICIAL IMAGINATION, which blends art, craft, and wit into a narrative that teaches us life lessons that we did not knew we knew.
-- Richard Lederer, author of Anguished English

Excellent Read, Nice splash of humor
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-26
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R2JQ1EBHV3YOR6 Great book, nice splash of humor--high quality photos! I specially like the love story at the end.

Here are some links to photo posters and calendars from the book and promotional T-shirts:
Scenic City and Boat Photo Poster
University of Washington Photo Poster
Seattle Secenic Sunset Photograph
Seattle Secenic Photograph
Thonging At the Beach
San Francisco Scenic Union Square Photo Poster
Pike Place Market Photo Print
Beach Hotties Poster

Down to earth, funny, witty and smart
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-28
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R1CJDZRIOJJIFN Kalpanik's writing is down to earth, funny, witty and smart. He chronicles his journey of self-discovery with an amazing detail and humor. His coverage of the various places he has been to--UC Davis, San Francisco, San Diego, Seattle and Nashville-- was informative and enjoyable, and so were his jokes around them. I recommend this book to anyone looking for light reading, specially busy professionals who do not have time to read a whole book in one straight session but want to read one entertaining a chapter at a time.

Entertaining and engaging
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R3T5IX83S8N7DX Light reading, but very engaging! Entertaining and excellent for busy professionals since you can read it chapter at a time and still enjoy it!

Tennessee
A Dangerous Road (Smokey Dalton Novels)
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Minotaur (2000-07-11)
Author: Kris Nelscott
List price: $24.95
New price: $12.96
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

One of the finest, well-crafted mysteries I have ever read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-06
Smokey Dalton leaps off the pages as a smart, moral, and meticulous black detective, who's as real as you and me. The depth of character and plot here is astonishing. And to set the mystery against the backdrop of the 1968 Sanitation workers strike in Memphis is just fascinating. I have never read a more authentically feeling historical mystery. All the characters are well developed, and dialogue is fresh, and the mystery unravels quite naturally. Smokey Dalton takes on an unusual client--Laura Hathaway--a white woman who is curious about her dead parents' past. In addition, her mother's will leaves Smokey $10,000. Intrigued, Smokey, years ago, accepted the same amount from an anonymous source. The book really works because Smokey has a personal stake in this case. What he finds out about Laura's parents will also lead him to uncover his own troubled past. Simply brilliant!

It's Smokey In Memphis
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-04
This mystery introduces us to Smokey Dalton, a black private investigator living in troubled Memphis in 1968. Due to the colour of Smokey's skin and the period this is set, the racial issues dealt with are bordering on explosive. This is a remarkable work of fiction that integrates a factual event, that being the days leading up to the assassination of Martin Luther King, jr. It captures the tensions of the day with remarkable clarity and gives us an insight into how the black community of Memphis may have been affected.

The actual mystery part of the story involves a white woman, Laura Hathaway, who walks into Smokey's office one day, demanding to know why her mother would leave Smokey a bequest of $10,000 in her will. Although Smokey doesn't know her or her mother, he has always wondered about a mysterious benefactor who anonymously donated the same amount of money to him ten years ago. Laura decides to hire Smokey to find out about her family background, what secrets they were hiding and how he is involved in it. The results are shocking for the two of them.

This is a private investigator story with a difference; thanks to the time it is set and the fact that the protagonist is black. These two unique factors presents hurdles not faced by the majority of private investigators we read about these days. It's a powerful debut novel that has introduced us to a particularly likable, ethical character. Nelscott told us a great deal about the background of Smokey Dalton, making us sympathetic to his feelings and reactions, yet when I finished the book, I felt as though I wanted to learn more.

A Dangerous Road, An Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-06
This book is one of the best novels I have read this year and has the well-deserved distinction of having been nominated for the Edgar Award for best mystery. The Bottoms by Joe R. Lansdale is good but I consider Ms. Nelscott's novel to be better.

Her main character is Smokey Dalton, a jack-of-all-trades who also finds work as a private investigator in Memphis, Tennessee. We learn that he was a former school classmate with Martin Luther King, Jr. and he is as happy as he can be living his life. Unfortunately, his world is about to be turned upside-down when he meets Laura Hathaway, who flew all the way from Chicago to look for him. It seems her mother left Smokey an inheritance for $10,000 and she wants to know why her mother willed him that money. He later discovers that Laura has a lot of questions regarding her mother and she hires Dalton to investigate. What Dalton discovers is a sinister connection with Ms. Hathaway that will change their lives forever.

The story takes place during the late sixties when Martin Luther King was active with the sanitation strikes occurring in the South. Dalton experiences prejudice, hatred, violence and turmoil throughout the entire book which in the end will only make him stronger.

Ms. Nelscott does an excellent job in developing this character that keeps the reader entranced to the plot. There is also a story of a little boy whose mother abandoned him and his brother is contributing to his possible delinquency by involving him as a drug courier and making him cut school. Dalton does his best to try to save this boy.

There is so much I would like to say about this book, but it is better if you read it and make up your own minds. You will be glad you did. I am also looking forward to reading Smokey Dalton's next book SMOKE-FILLED ROOMS which is now available.

NELSCOTT'S WINNER STARRING SMOKEY DALTON
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-13
As a mystery author with my debut novel in its initial release, I was fascinated by A DANGEROUS ROAD. Kris Nelscott has set her novel in Memphis in the days surrounding the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. She takes this factual historical mystery and superimposes her own fictional historical mystery on top of it. A intriguing technique in itself, but she doesn't stop there. She introduces a strong potential series lead in Smokey Dalton. In this book, a wealthy woman named Laura Hathaway wants to learn why her mother left Dalton some cash in her will. Dalton realizes this gift is the second significant contribution to him from the Hathaway family. Previously, an attorney delivered him a check from the Hathaways but refused to tell him why. Soon, Mr. Dalton and Ms. Hathaway join forces and launch their joint investigation against the backdrop of a city divided along racial grounds in one of the most chaotic eras of recent American history. Excellent book.

Ditto
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-11
(...)I just want to urge you to find "A Dangerous Road" and read it. You'll be convinced that Kris Nelscott has debuted with a winner. More than "just" a detective/mystery novel, Nelscott has given us real literature about a tragic and heroic figure. If you are tired of waiting for the next, long-overdue installment in Walter Mosley's Easy Rawlins series, this is the book that will distract you from your misery.

I'm lucky. I learned of Kris Nelscott and this book only recently, so when I finished I was ecstatic to learn that the second installment, "Smoke Filled Rooms" was out in hardback.

Let me give you a clue as to how much I enjoyed this book: After reading "A Dangerous Road" in paperback, I immediately ordered the hardback edition for my library and then ordered "Smoke Filled Rooms" in hardback, too. Most of you devoted readers will understand that such a gesture is high praise indeed. Now I have Smoky Dalton's continuing adventures in my bag, just waiting for the moment I open it and read that first sentence.

All I need now is a visit by Nelscott to a local book store so that I can have my already treasured copies of the product of her art autographed and given a place of honor next to Mr. Mosley's novels (in hardback).

Tennessee
Gay Street: Stories of Knoxville, Tennessee
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2000-09-18)
Author: Jack Mauro
List price: $11.95
New price: $7.45
Used price: $7.28

Average review score:

Gay Street - thoroughly entertaining
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-01
I stopped at Gay St on my way home from vacation. It was like a vacant movie set. Stepping onto the street, I instantly imagined all of the characters in "Gay Street." Jack Mauro's close attention to the fine detail of a character conjurs up instant images of the peculiar and ordinary characters in this book. The stories are funny, as well as dramatic and ordinary. An entertaining book.

A pleasure
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-08
Jack Mauro's writing style is always a pleasure. It's smooth and consistent, his stories are engaging, and his characters are a delight. I highly recommend this one and, after reading "Gay Street", I'm now looking forward to sinking into "Spite Hall".

Get this Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-01
As a fellow northerner who has made the south home, I was curious to read about Knoxville and it's inhabitants. The 14 stories of Gay Street are a masterful introduction to the town and its characters. Mr.Mauro has keen eyes and ears: from architectural detail to roommate's banter, each tale delights with lives and loves sharply observed. This book includes my new favorite Christmas story, "Holiday on High." It had me laughing and reading passages to friends.

Gay Street by Jack Mauro
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-18
The reader is offered the opportunity to put his eye behind Mr. Mauro's creative lens in order to examine the author's "catalog of possibilities." The insights into the human predicament are mesmerizing.

His characters are caringly wrapped in poetic prose which carries them from street corner to street corner, back and forth across Gay Street.

I would not attempt to select a favorite story because each thrives in the buzzing cluster to which it attaches.

Finding the old in new tales of a special town
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-24
I spent the first 30 years of my life in Knoxville, so when Mauro mentions buying something on Market Street I remember the old Market House with its smells of fresh blood at the butcher's, sawdust and lilacs by the flower stalls. In my mind I see the row of farmer's dilapidated trucks parked alongside with their wooden boxes of fruits and vegetables fresh from the mountain truck farms -- bright green spinach and crisp green beans, sunny yellow squash and crimson strawberries.

He mentions Cherokee Hills and I remember Cherokee Boulevard in Sequoyah Hills, where I grew up. At his reference to the S&W Cafeteria I think of Lois Harris playing the organ there on Thursday nights, and the Disney cartoons they showed for the children after dinner.

So this book is really two books for me. Mauro speaks of Knoxville of the 1980s and 1990s and makes me remember the Knoxville from 1940s to 1970s. So how could I not like the book?

Krutch Park didn't exist when I lived there, but I was born on Clinch Avenue at Fort Sanders Hospital. He mentions Highland Avenue and I remember that James Agee lived there even before my time and in the 1960s Hollywood came to town to make a movie of his book, DEATH IN THE FAMILY, starring Robert Preston.

I think this is the first time I've ever seen a book I could barely read for the memories it prompts. I'm amused by the story of a young couple haunted by questions about a past they could never know -- 1952. It was that year and near that place when my date and I were returning to the parking lot from a movie at the Tennessee Theater one warm summer night and heard a woman scream. Could it have been...???

The World's Fair, the YMCA, the Bijou Theater, Gay and State Streets -- places in these stories that revive more memories from the Knoxville I knew.

Needless to say, reading this delightful look at contemporary Knoxville was not only a joy from the average reader's point of view, it was a trip into nostalgia. Mauro captures the new city and yet is able, at the same time, to retrieve the old for those who knew it.

Like Jack Mauro, my husband was born in New Jersey and fell in love with Knoxville when he came there as a young graduate student at UT. There is something magic about that place, and Mauro has done a fine job of putting some of that magic on the page.

Ruth Fulton Tiedemann

Tennessee
I Met a Greek Goddess in Nashville: Full Color Interior Version
Published in Paperback by CreateSpace (2008-05-12)
Author: Kalpanik S
List price: $7.95
New price: $6.95

Average review score:

Nashville in a nutshell - Entertaining and thoughtful
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-03
What a story, Entertaining and thoughtful. Gives a snapshot of Nashville as seen by a West coast person. Great splashes of humor, Wonderful photography.

Superb!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-03
Wonderful! Reading this book was an adventurous experience by itself, very real. Nashville seems like a very romantic, historic place. I feel like visiting it right away. Very nice photographs!! Loved it!!

Funny Nashville travelogue!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-03
This reads very easy -- like a rather funny travelogue / description of Nashville sent to you by one of your literary friends. Complete with pictures and personal experiences from the point of view of an Asian Indian immigrant.

Beautiful! Could not stop reading it once I started!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-03
This is an excellent book to learn about Nashville from the eyes of a new comer. good photography, excellent choice of words. absolutely loved it!!

Very Nice! I loved the Symbolism in snowflakes
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-03
I loved the symbolism in snow flakes! Very moving! The book is full of humor, and yet is very literary. As others have said, the author uses photography to accentuate his writing, very impressive!

Tennessee
Mama Flora's Family
Published in Paperback by Delta (1999-11-01)
Authors: Alex Haley and David Stevens
List price: $23.00
New price: $13.72
Used price: $6.50
Collectible price: $27.50

Average review score:

An inspirational story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-04
This novel is one of the best I have read. Alex Haley and Stevens express a kind of compassion from a grandmother/mother that no one could do better. It's a very emotional book, and touches everyone that has ever experienced a good book. Once you start it, you can't put it down!

A Great Story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-27
This book made you feel apart of it. I loved it! I loved the history, the story, the emotions and how it wove a story of a loving family working their way through life. This is a must read.

Great book-one of Haley's best
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-30
Pretend that there is a really good review here. I loved reading this novel. It is one that is vary hard to put down because you can't help wondering what is going to happen next.

A Very Moving, Poignant Multigenerational Epic!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-05
At the center of Mama Flora's Family is the indomitable spirit of Mama Flora, the matriarch of an extraordinary family of destitute Tennessee sharecroppers. The characters are so real and believable it made this reader feel that I was right there with them experiencing all their trials and tribulations, as well as the joys. This book is much more than a poignant, hard-to-put-down story of a Mama Flora and her descendants from 1920 to the late 1990s. It, for the most part, effectively weaves into the plot much of what has transpired in American/African-American history during this time period (e.g., life for African-Americans in the South, the rise of the Civil Rights movement, the Black Panthers, the Nation of Islam, the Viet Nam war, political repression under Idi Amin, etc). Mama Flora's Family is a rich, resonant family novel that cuts across the barriers that divide us to touch the hearts of people of all races and backgrounds. I highly recommend this excellent, emotionally-packed posthumous novel written by David Stevens based on Alex Haley's notes and research.

Like a warm blanket!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-23
Reading this book is like cozying up with a warm blanket. The authors provide so much detail that you feel like YOUR grandmother is sitting in front of you, recounting the tales. The book spans the decades, from the early 1900s to the late 1970s and throws in a bit of history/current events to place the family's hostory in context. Great book!

Tennessee
Ninety-Eight Days: A Geographer's View of the Vicksburg Campaign
Published in Hardcover by University of Tennessee Press (2000-11)
Author: Warren E. Grabau
List price: $48.00
New price: $45.99
Used price: $34.82
Collectible price: $55.00

Average review score:

Excellent background, short on personal stories.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-05
In the genre of popular Civil War books, the emphasis is often on the people in the story - who did what and when, what was said between protagonists, and the telling of the many interesting ancedotes that liven up the prose. The good books give a clear background to the decision and actions, but are often difficult to follow as they are unclear about many of the non-human aspects of a campaign, such geographic, ecological and engineering details that affected the course of events. Grabau has produced a magnificent work that addresses in depth many of the fascinating background issues that affected the outcome of the Vicksburg campaign. We learn much about the geology of the Mississippi river, and how the landcape along the river determined the course of events. We learn much about logistical realities that the armies had to contend with, such as the pounds per square inch by which a cassion wheel contacts the earth. Because it so high (about 20 times that of a modern battle tank), wagons will sink in with any rain, greatly limiting the mobility of an army. Grabau provides fascinating details concerning transportion by equine (horses and mules), and how they controlled Civil war tactics. An army had to carry fodder in most cases, with greatly diminishing returns as the distance increases. If, for example, an army had to travel over 70 miles, all it could carry was horse fodder, rather than the army. One of the best aspects of the book are the detailed maps of the region, the battles, and the siege works around Visckburg. These maps provide great clarity to the narritive and understanding of the events. I was at Vicksburg the week before I read the book, and am able to state that the maps are accurate and match the landscape well. They would be vital to those who travel to Vicksburg, as they bring clarity to a heterogenous and often confusing landscape. With the maps, one can now find many of the locations of the campaign that are currently unmarked, aan in doing so, better appreciate the role important role of geography as a controller of events. The writing style is clear and moves right along, alternating between federal and Confederate views of the same series of events. In many ways, I found this to be the best Civil War book I have read, because of the smooth delivery and depth of information. Why only 4 stars? The description of key events, such as the battles, the siege, the surrender and aftermath are generally pretty brief. There is not much detail provided regarding the human actions in the campaign. We learn, for example, which units assaulted the Stockade Redan, that they attacked, did not have much success, and eventually retreated. The human interest stories that often provide for a rich narrative are sparse and often economically delivered. In this manner, Grabau's style has to be contrasted with that of Shelby Foote, but that to be expected, as Foote brings a novelist's perspective while Grabau has a background in geography and the sciences. Both perspectives work. To fully appreciate the Vicksburg campaign, I would recommend 98 Days be read before Foote's The Beleagured City and other more recent texts. In this way, the reader would bring a background understanding to the narratives by Foote and others that are somewhat sparse on the details but tell a great story of the people involved.

Great Regimental Maps: Another 5 Star review
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-11
Read this book in preparation to touring the campaign per the recommendation of the guide we employed. Was not disappointed.
Ed Bearss three volume work is often referred to as the definitive work, but can be a dry read. So, this is a good alternative but should probably be read in conjuction with another work such as Winchels (park historian?) "Triumph and Defeat". Grabau has great regimental movement maps and emphasizes the geological and landscape character of the terrain upon which this campaign was conducted. Read it.

Wonderful Account of the Vicksburg Campaign
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-07
There should be more books like this on other battles of the Civil War. Warren Grabau has blended the common, often read knowledge of Vicksburg with his own geographic/weather insights that make this a slightly different insight into the soldier's experience. The book reads quite well and in no time the reader is finished...disapointed there is no next chapter. The maps are quite good, allowing the reader insight as to the ongoings on the battlefield(s). This a must read for anyone interested in the civil war and a definite...no excuse not to.. read for those specifically involved with the western theater. Now I think I will go and re-read the book to enjoy the second time!

Tour de Force
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-22
Grabau, a lifelong student of the Vicksburg campaign and a collaborator of Ed Bearss, has laid down a marker for other military historians with this new study which should remain the best single-volume treatment of the campaign for some days to come. I have never seen a more comprehensive blending of all the factors which influence the outcome of war. Grabau succinctly ties together communications, intelligence, and logistics along with astute observations on military operations and command personalities. His expertise in geography and geology allows him to describe, in layman's terms, the impact of Mississippi's weather, terrain and vegetation on day to day operations. His enlightening but commonsensical analysis of soil, climate, road surfaces and water sources adds another dimension to the reader's understanding of how and why the campaign was waged. Students of joint warfare should find this volume of great value as Grabau carefully delineates the cooperation between Grant's army and Porter's fleet - what a shining example for today's military! The backbone of this book consists of a set of 68 accessible maps which graphically illustrate actions and decisions of the participants. Accompanying line and block charts of orders of battle and associated command structures further assist the reader. A typical chapter begins with a geographical description of the area to be discussed followed with sections dealing with a particular battle or operation as seen, first by the Union participants, and then by the Confederates ---very effective. The author's style is snappy and crisp; he wields his facts comfortably and accompanied by a nice sense of humor. My only disappointment was the lack of an exhaustive bibliography, but given the extraordinary effort this work entailed, that's rather small potatoes. This volume is mandatory for any serious student of the Vicksburg campaign, of U.S. Grant, or of amphibious operations. Additionally, I can think of no other work that more clearly illustrates the genius and courage of U.S. Grant and David Porter.

My Favorite Civil War Book
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-16
Best analysis of the nuts and bolts of the Vicksburg Campaign. The maps alone will make you wish every civil war book could be just like 98 Days. I would change only one thing about the book: Grabau hints that some of the locals may have been aiding the Union and feeding disinformation to the Confederates. He uses Occam's Razor to arrive at this conclusion. However, some amount of information available in the O.R. and other primary source documents suggests the existence of a vast network of Unionists and deserters that actively resisted the Confederacy in Mississippi. Although the evidence is circumstantial with regard to Grant's intel operations in Mississippi, Grabau points out that there are simply too many fortunate coincidences on the march from Bruinsburg to Bovina (Confederate units wandering aimlessly after being told the wrong directions, "railroad workers" who just happen to know the exact number of cannon and regiments in Pemberton's offensive force, Grant's effortless movement through enemy territory, and the absence of intel flowing from the common folk to the Confederate command concerning Union movements). I would have enjoyed seeing him follow up on this thought. Anyone interested in researching this topic should read "The Free State of Jones: Mississippi's Longest Civil War" (a dry but very thoroughly researched read), "Tupelo" by Reverend John Aughey, and the O.R. entries concerning Choctaw County.

Tennessee
The Prayer Tree (The Prayer Tree Series #1)
Published in Paperback by Multnomah Books (1998-05-01)
Author: Annie Jones
List price: $11.99
New price: $4.74
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Don't judge a book by its cover...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-07
Despite its sweetsy, stereotypical "inspirational" cover, this book is a stand-out full of great wit and grit!

Apple Trees and Kudzu
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-10
This novel left such a warm feeling in my heart that I decided to read it again before sharing it with a friend. That doesn't happen very often! This is the story of four women who come together in a prayer group, a tradition that seems to be dying out in their little town in Tennessee. Each of these women bring their own agenda to the group and it's not necessarily humanitarian. Mary Lucille, for instance, wants to spy on her untrustworthy boyfriend who lives across the street from Rose who hosts the prayer meeting. Rose, who seems to be the voice of both maturity and graciousness in the group, is struggling to find her place in life after the death of her beloved husband. Gayle is aggravated by the presence of her long-ago friend Naomi who has returned to New Bethany to care for her elderly mother. Naomi is the only person who knows of a past that Gayle longs to forget and has tried to make up for with her 'superwoman' activities.

It all sounds a bit trite and mushy, but somehow it doesn't read that way. As expected, each woman gains more than she gives. These four form a bond that sees each of them through the difficult transitions they face. The most obvious "makeover" is that of frumpy, dumpy Mary Lucille who lets go of her loser boyfriend and gains a new respect for herself. There's a lot of humor in this novel and quite a bit of decadent chocolate consumption as well!

The Family Lives On
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-26
How refreshing to read about REAL Families and REAL People. Families with history and values.

The Prayer Tree
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-23
What a delight to find a book that focuses not only on women and their friendships, but on Christian women. This book is not preachy, but the characters interact in a way to gently lead the reader toward some basic truths about all people. I'm glad I got to know these women and wish I could join them at the next Prayer Tree.

The Prayer Tree
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-18
I am a Christian book store owner. I have many customers who are fans of Annie Jones's books. The Prayer Tree is one of their favorites. It is very well written. The characters are lovable and believable. My customers ask for more books with these characters. The book speaks to their hearts.

Tennessee
Alex Stewart: Portrait of a Pioneer
Published in Paperback by Schiffer Publishing (1997-03)
Author: John Rice Irwin
List price: $14.95
New price: $10.84
Used price: $4.96

Average review score:

Could not put it down!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-27
This was of special interest to me since I live near the location of this book. I simply could not put it down until I read it cover to cover.

A fascinating look at our early pioneer families, the hardships they endured, and the genius of their innovations.

A great read.

How your grandaddy used to do it
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
This is an amazing book about Alex Stewart, an Appalachian survivor. It is told from an interview style where Alex explains how he learned to make different utilitarian items that his family and community needed to survive. He also tells stories of how he learned what plants healed people from illnesses, learned the skills to survive the harsh locations of the Appalachian mountains and loved life with every ounce of his body.
My Appalachian born grandparents read it cover to cover over and over and then had to travel to the Museum of Appalachia in Norris, Tenn to see the common items they remembered with Alex throughout the book. John Rice Irwin, the founder of the Museum of Appalachia is a gifted historian and this shines through in any of his books, written to remember the people of Appalachia. He also seeks to capture this throughout his living Appalachian village, the Museum of Appalachia. A MUST visit and A MUST read for any Appalachian native.

ALEX STEWART
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-16
i recently read the book about alex stewart and i have to say that it was so good. i loved it. alex was so talented and as the book stated "he was a national treasure." i would liked to have met him. any craft the author asked him about, he responded that he could make it. what a unique human being. he was warm, endearing, and a very kind and gentle man. he told completely the life of the pioneer to john brice irwin and the book is so well written. it was a joy to read and told in detail of the hardships the people of that era had to indure. i felt by the end of the book the sadness of alex stewart's death and that i had gotten to know him well.

Very Helpful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-28
One reason I bought this book is because my Greatgrandmother was Alex's Aunt. I visited Alex as a child with my Parents and Grandmother. Alex was always sending my Grandmother items , such as walking canes. He made my mother a rolling pin, which she still has. Most of all the book gave me many names of my relatives that ive been searhing for.

fascinating read for the "modern" mind
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-24
I bought this book at the Museum of Appalachia (also founded by the author) on my first visit to Tennessee. The book is almost entirely a transcript of a dialogue/interview between the author and Alex Stewart. At first, I thought this would be a strange format, but as I read on, I discovered that this would be the only way to authentically capture the mind and spirit of Alex on paper.

If you're not from the South, you might find Alex's dialect charminging unusual. A few times I had to read a passage over and over again to fully understand what words Alex was saying. Here is an example where it took me a while to realize that Alex meant "Lord" when kept saying "Law":

"They didn't have no men folks, but they had several children. Making liquor was the only way they had of making a living. Law, they had it hard."

The author cleverly asks questions to get Alex to reveal his pioneer wisdom. More than that, though, the author's selections and chapter arrangements helped to organize the sprawling encyclopedia of Alex's mind.

By the time I reached the end, I was sad to have the "conversation" over. I felt I had known Alex a bit personally, and I mourned at his passing. It was joyous reading while it lasted and my heart ached to know more of Alex.

This is a fabulous book I can't recommend enough. 10 STARS.

Tennessee
Reaping the Whirlwind: A Trent Tyson Historical Mystery
Published in Paperback by Wine Press Publishing (2000-06)
Author: Rosey Dow
List price: $15.99
New price: $10.14
Used price: $2.40

Average review score:

A serial killer stalks Dayton during the Scopes "Monkey" Trial
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-24
I did my dissertation on the Scopes "Monkey" Trial, so I had no problems passing the quiz on the back of "Reaping the Whirlwind: A Trent Tyson Historical Mystery." I am overly familiar with the details of the trial and the various incidents that Rosey Dow works into her story, and have visited Dayton several times. Of course, my interest in reading "Reaping the Whirlwind" is because of my interest in the bizarre-yet-true trial of John Thomas Scopes, and my judgment of the book ends up being more from that perspective than from that of the mystery elements.

The story begins in Dayton, Tennessee on a rainy Monday evening in the spring of 1925 when the chess game between Deputy Sheriff Trent Tyson and Dr. Adam St. Clair is interrupted by a concerned neighbor calls to say that Mrs. Ida Johnson is not answering her door. An investigation discovers that the woman has died, apparently of a heart attack. But then the medical examiner finds that the woman was poisoned by tansy weed. Did she take some by accident or was the old woman murdered? When the next person shows up dead with the same symptoms, the answer seems obvious. But there is no obvious connection between the victims and the more Tyson investigates their lives the less sense it all makes. Meanwhile, the town is gearing up for the Scopes trial as William Jennings Bryan, Clarence Darrow, H.L. Mencken and a horde of others descend on Dayton. None of these famous people become part of Tyson's murder invesigation, so Dow is able to stick to what they actually said instead of having to make things up for them to fit into the main plotline.

Ironically when I started reading this book I kept wondering when we were going to get to the trial (the meeting in Robinson's Drugstore where they hatched up the idea for the trial does not take place until page 136) but once the trial was underway I kept thinking that Deputy Tyson was spending too much time at the trial given that there is a serial killer running loose in Dayton. The Scopes Trial is basically the backdrop for the last third of the book, but you know that there has to be some sort of connection, albeit indirect, between the idea of prohibiting the teaching of evolution and these murders. However, the link is not obvious, so I doubt you will see the ending coming.

Dow does a good job of picking highlights from the Scopes Trial, both in the courtroom and on the streets of Dayton, to include in her novel. She pays attention to the speech on admitting the scientific testimony by Dudley Field Malone, which I greatly admire and which Scopes called the dramatic highpoint of the trial (and not the celebrated cross-examination of Bryan by Darrow). Malone is usually largely ignored in accounts of the trial, so every little bit of giving him his due helps. Dow's perspective on the trial and the subject of evolution is made clear in the materials before and after the story, but those beliefs do not intrude on the story, especially since there are characters reflecting both sides of the argument being played out in the Rhea County Courthouse.

The Author's Note at the front of the book makes it clear that Trent Tyson and Dr. Adam St. Clair are fictional replacements for Dayton's constable and one of the town's doctors, and lists the people who were actually in Dayton in the summer of 1925. Of course the victims and Tyson's family and friends are completely fictitious. The back of the book includes three appendixes that provide an excerpt from Bryan's undelivered address, evolutionary proofs offered by trial experts with refutation, and Bryan's questions for Darrow and his replies that appear in the press after the trial. Most unusual for a work of fiction but appropriate in this case, Dow also provides a Bibliography of the books she used for details about the trial and an Index that allows me to look up all of the books references to Dudley Field Malone or whatever (or whoever). So if you picked up this novel because you like historical murder mysteries, do not be surprised if you feel the urge to find out more about the Scopes Trial when you are done.

Not a history or mystery buff? Not a problem
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-13
This book is so well written, so riveting, and so historically significant, it is truly one of the rare books for all seasons and all literary tastes.

Rosey has managed to bury the villian and expose the facts about the Scopes Trial-of-the-century so masterfully that the reader will surely misjudge the outcome and gain an invaluable history lesson without even being aware this could be a textbook. In fact, were I an American history teacher, it would most certainly be on my list of required reading.

It really should be on yours.

An Easy Way
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-01
Rosey Dow adeptly wove truth and fiction together in this extemely interesting and informative novel, Reaping the Whirlwind. While the mystery keeps the reader engrossed in the plot, he is learning historical truth as well as seeing the tragic consequences of embracing the lie of evolution. I would probably not have chosen to read an account of the Scopes trial, although this would be an important thing to do. Rosey made it `easy' for me to gather truth I needed to know while thoroughly enjoying a gripping plot I could not solve!

Super-charged suspense
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-20
Rosey Dow writes a compelling mystery set in Dayton, TN during the infamous Scopes "Monkey" trial. If you saw or read "Inherit the Wind" prepare to be shocked with the truth! There's a serial murderer on the loose, and the murderer subscribes to the natural outcomes of accepting Darwin's theory.

Believable characters, tense drama, unique plot twists, and a puzzling series of murders keep you reading page after page--long past the time you needed to go to sleep! Don't miss it!

And parents, get this for your high school students. They have to read novels for their English classes anyway, why not get them one that's fun to read, and challenges their critical thinking? This book fits the bill--they'll learn history painlessly. Great addition for school libraries--consider donating one to your child's school. Excellent resource for homeschooling parents--combines history with literature.

Highly recommended.

More than okay!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-14
This book kept me guessing until the end. In fact I smugly thought I had it figured out until the last chapter. Loved the intrigue, the sweet romance, and the painless history lesson!


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