Georgia Books


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

Georgia
Budgeting: Formulation and Execution
Published in Paperback by University of Georgia, Carl Vinson Institute (1995-10)
Author:
List price: $35.00
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Average review score:

Budgeting : formulation and execution
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-04
Exceptionally useful manual for all who deals with local government budget management. This collection of discussions can be used as a basic source on the formulation and execution of the annual budget. This book equally addresses the needs of public administration students, instructors and practicing public financial managers. This easy-to-use guide is presented in two parts: part 1 focuses on budget development, opening with readings designed to place the process of budgeting in the context of political economy, offering a review of budget setting, revenues and expenditures ; in the second part the authors discuss budget execution, cash and bebt management, controls (i.e. established accounting procedures), reporting practices, and acountability devices (auditing). Both parts introduce the reader to the variety of skills, perspectives, and concepts critical to budget management. Very reliable source of information about traditional practices and latest developments in the field of budgeting at affordable price.

Georgia
Business and Project Management for Contractors (Georgia Edition)
Published in Spiral-bound by NASCLA Publications, Inc. (2004)
Author:
List price:

Average review score:

Business and Project Management for Contractors
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-15
Business and Project Management for Contractors (Georgia Edition)

Georgia
But for the grace of God: Milldgeville : [the inside story of the world's largest insane asylum]
Published in Unknown Binding by Georgia Consumer Council (1998)
Author: Peter Gordon Cranford
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Average review score:

'Milledgeville! But for the Grace of God' is a Moving Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-15
This book entered my life during my 2nd year of college, and it opened my eyes in so many profound ways. Dr. Peter Cranford details keen aspects of life in the World's Largest Insane Asylum (in central Georgia), and offers you a tantalizing glimpse into a disturbing world not often discussed in mainstream forums. You'll hear amongst his fascinating diary, tales of mad experiments and desperate crimes, top secret asylum procedures, twisted statistics, and MANY shocking tidbits of hysteria. If you're interested in asylum histories and data, or human psychosis then this is the book for you. You'll certainly have a hard time putting it down! :D

Georgia
Butterflies of Georgia
Published in Paperback by Univ of Oklahoma Pr (1975-10)
Author: L. Harris
List price: $9.95

Average review score:

a comprehensive field guide for Georgia butterflies
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1997-04-18
This volume is a comprehensive field guide for the butterfly collector interested in the species of Georgia. All species known to occur in the state are listed, as well as all known strays. Resident species are all shown in accompanying photographs, and distribution charts advise the reader as to the location and time of year to search for each species. Includes butterflies and skippers. Review by Bill Cummings

Georgia
Carolina Cavalier
Published in Hardcover by University of Georgia Press (1990-07-31)
Author: Clyde N. Wilson
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Average review score:

Ashley Wilkes for Real
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-10
For those who know it, the Huguenot-derived name "Pettigrew" immediately evokes the associated word, "Gettysburg." Brig. Gen. Johnston Pettigrew was prominent on the first day of that battle, as the commander of Pettigrew's Brigade, and on the third day, as the commander of Heth's Division, which included his brigade. Pickett's Charge might as well have been called Pettigrew's Charge, or, as Clyde Wilson suggests, "Longstreet's Assault." But as it is, there is still no Gettysburg without Pettigrew. Not long after that Fourth of July that coincided with the fall of Vicksburg and Pettigrew's own birthday, the Army of Northern Virginia was without Pettigrew. He was killed in the chaos of a rear-guard action at Falling Waters, and his loss was much lamented, for it seems that everyone knew his quality.

Pettigrew's Civil War career was not consonant with his ability, and that was almost certainly a matter of luck. He was active in organizing the defense of Charleston before the Fort Sumter crisis but played no great role in the thing itself. He was wounded and captured at Seven Pines or Fair Oaks Station, the beginning of the Seven Days. Exchanged, he served under D.H. Hill in the abortive action at New Bern and at the affair at Blount's Creek. Clyde Wilson has not written for us the story of a Confederate brigadier, however, but an account of a mind and sensibility that could not be completely expressed in the Civil War.

Johnston Pettigrew grew up as the scion of a distinguished and landed family in North Carolina. He excelled at school and at the university at Chapel Hill. He was soon surveying stars for Matthew Fontaine Maury at the National Observatory. But what was Pettigrew to do as his lifetime calling? Though Pettigrew eventually did much legal work in Charleston, Wilson has shown how his energy and sensitivity were focused by his travels in Europe. Unusually mature for his age and exceptionally responsive to the various environments, Pettigrew's two trips to Europe were the high points of his life. His mind and imagination were excited to a remarkable degree by his encounters with others, and, as always with him, there was a gap between his emotional and intellectual responses. Pettigrew was later to declare that he wished as his lifework to write a history of the Moors in Spain. He did not live to do it, but his serious intent speaks volumes about his imagination, his historical sense, and his ability to think past the provinciality that is often the lot even of intelligent people.

Pettigrew did not write of medieval Spain, but he did write a book, in the spring of 1861, about Spain, his travels there, and his reflections. He had the ability to see past the surface into the depths of culture and character. Though a man of his age and place, he could and did respond to Spain as a 19th-century romantic with a pronounced streak of intellect. He loved the Spanish dignity and passion, the hierarchical sense, the manners of the don and the do-a. And he was quite explicit about the political affinities he sensed between the American and European Souths. As he wrote on entering Spain for the second time,

Adieu to a civilization which reduces men to machines, which sacrifices half that is stalwart and individual in humanity to the false glitter of centralization, and to the luxurious enjoyments of a manufacturing, money age!

On his first trip to Europe, Pettigrew had learned that he could not enjoy the values of the English and the northern Germans. He instinctively was pulled to the south, where he became as besotted by Italy as many another has been. But then there was Spain, for which he felt a high degree of knowing identification. For a man of his background and cultural assumptions, his ease in relating to another world was remarkable, and so was his mastery of languages. Pettigrew was not unique in that regard, however, for the story of American attraction to the repudiated continent is old and varied. Even so, his degree of self-consciousness, his sense of himself as a Southerner, and his sense of himself and his heritage in historical perspective are notable achievements by a man of many talents. Pettigrew's sensibility is oddly modern in its development. He seems to have arrived at something like Henry Adams' position 40 years before that South-despising ironist did. And therefore, Wilson's life of Pettigrew is much more than a military tale. Rather, it is a valuable contribution to American intellectual history.

As Professor Wilson has said of Pettigrew's work at the very beginning of the Civil War,

Still, strangely, the zeal with which Pettigrew immersed himself in his pressing tasks did not at all preclude his customary ironic detachment, the hallmark of a good mind able to rise above its immediate circumstances.

Just so. The fact that this particular cavalier, lawyer, scholar, and scientist wore gray and was glad to do so says much about his own age, but also something about ours. Clyde Wilson's elegant performance is addressed not only to the shade of Johnston Pettigrew and the world that died not long after he did but to the consequence of that collapse and the continuing cultural calamity. Carolina Cavalier is an antidote for, or a rebuttal to, the contemporary propaganda that suffuses the airwaves and clots the presses. It is the best historical work I have seen in a long time and an invaluable statement about the Civil War, its meaning and character, its causes and issues, and its abiding significance. I missed this book upon the occasion of its first publication but can now only feel that I was lucky in that mischance. I have had the serendipitous pleasure of a delayed first reading, and, in that glow, I think I will be far from alone.

J.O. Tate is a professor of English at Dowling College on Long Island.

This review originally appeared in the December 2002 issue of Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture

Georgia
Celine: Remembering Louisiana, 1850-1871
Published in Paperback by Univ of Georgia Pr (1991-06)
Author: Celine Fremaux Garcia
List price: $15.95
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Average review score:

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-10
This book is written through the eyes of a middle-class, ten year old girl during the Civil war. This book is wonderful and has many extroidinary ocurrances. This young girl is truly amazing and this story has given m a better view of what life was like for someone just like me during the Civil War. I would definantly recommend this book to anyone and everyone!

Georgia
Cemeteries of Oglethorpe County, Georgia
Published in Hardcover by Wolfe Publishing (SC) (1996-01)
Author:
List price: $35.00

Average review score:

The most concise Cemetery Index Book I have ever read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1997-07-08
Historic Oglethorpe County Inc. did a very commendable job compiling their Cemeteries of Oglethorpe County Book. The county is divided into sections and the cemeteries for each section are listed into a corresponding section of the book. It is alphbetically indexed in the back, and each cemetery is shown with its latitude and longitude co-ordinates. They even interviewed families to get names for people that are buried in various plots that do not have headstones. For the genealogist researching Oglethorpe County, it doesn't get any better than this. Barbar

Georgia
Chained to the Rock of Adversity: To Be Free, Black & Female in the Old South (Southern Voices from the Past)
Published in Hardcover by University of Georgia Press (1998-08)
Author:
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Average review score:

BLACK WOMEN'S VOICES
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-07
THIS TERRIFIC BOOK RECAPTURES BLACK WOMEN'S EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS OF THE UNIQUE LIVES THEY LED. WE KNOW SO LITTLE ABOUT FREE BLACK WOMEN IN THE SOUTH AND THESE LETTERS AND DIARIES BRING TO LIFE A NEGLECTED CHAPTER OF OUR HISTORY AND THEIR EXPERIENCE.....PLUS THE DIARY OF THIS YOUNG BLACK WOMAN DURING THE CIVIL WAR IS A COMPELLING HISTORICAL VOICE. THE EDITOR HAS DONE A TERRIFIC JOB SETTING THESE VOICES IN CONTEXT SO WE CAN ONCE AGAIN HEAR THEIR STORIES AND READ THE WORDS OF LOST BLACK WOMEN FROM THE PAST.

Georgia
The Cherokee Cases: The Confrontation of Law and Politics
Published in Paperback by Mcgraw-Hill College (1995-08-14)
Author: Jill Norgren
List price: $24.15
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Georgia
Cherokee Cases: Two Landmark Federal Decisions in the Fight for Sovereignty
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (2004-04)
Author: Jill Norgren
List price: $24.95
New price: $24.89
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Average review score:

Engaging and engrossing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-17
Norgren's Cherokee Cases is an excellent legal history, engaging and accessible, about two landmark cases in federal Indian law. She combines history, politics and the law into a readable whole, providing abundant details without overwhelming the reader. If you thought you knew the story of the Cherokee cases, think again -- and pick up this book.


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