Louisiana Books
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Wow!Review Date: 2006-08-25

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Excellent Real Life Story. Review Date: 2007-05-07


Knowing New OrleansReview Date: 2000-11-29
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Al Rose offers a rare glimpse into jazz historyReview Date: 2000-04-18
This book should be required reading in every music program at the high school and college level. Some of the language is not appropriate for younger ages.
If an effort is not made to educate our young people about the history of jazz and its pioneers like Buddy Bolden, Louis Armstrong, Bix Beiderbecke, James P. Johnson, and the rest, this important part of our American history will be lost.
The book also includes many rare and fascinating photographs of the author with many of the musicians featured in his book.
Jazz is America's original artform and Al Rose has written a book that is required reading.

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Gibson's latest May Be Her BestReview Date: 2002-01-22
The voice of Gerard Manley Hopkins echoes from many of these pieces, giving them an urgency too often lacking in much of our lackadaisical contemporary poetry. This is a book of poetry one can't put down, as if it weaves a spell, a spell approaching chant and liturgy.

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Dead Man WritingReview Date: 2000-08-26
One of the peculiar effects of the death penalty is to make those scheduled to die surprisingly articulate. Dr Johnson correctly observed that contemplation of one's death "composes a man's mind wonderfully". Despite his limited intelligence and rudimentary education, Andrew's letters to Jane set out the hopes and fears of a condemned man in a very direct and moving way.
They make an inlikely pair of correspondents - a widowed English grade school teacher and a poorly educated black boy from the bayou. Andrew's naive and dreamy view of England is sharp counterpoint to the harsh day-to-day reality of life on death row in Angola Prison.
As the end approaches, the reader would have to have a heart of stone not to find some compassion for Andrew as his hopes alternately are buoyed up only to be crushed as appeals are rejected and fresh execution dates set. This is a moving book and well worth reading for its inside view of what it is like to be warehoused for death.

Poetry With A Sense of Humor and PathosReview Date: 2001-11-18

Through A Naturalist's EyeReview Date: 2006-01-24
Mullenix's eyes see a world of variety and wide scope -- a world of nature that is shrinking as development impinges. His spare words are deftly combined to convey a place, a character, a passion, a sadness.
He contemplates his world through his own and his primary character's eyes: Charlie the Harris' hawk. What he reveals is a falconry hunting season's worth of descriptions of the hunting itself, and the place that hunting holds in both his and Charlie's world, which is the Bayou Country of Baton Rouge.
While it is written by a falconer, there are aspects of his essays that hold immediate relevance to anyone interested in the wild world that surrounds us and the species that co-habitate that world with us. He simply and without editorializing describes the difficulties he's had explaining the concepts of hunting, eating, and dying to his three-year-old twin daughters; how his own passion for falconry impinges on his spouse and his boss; the internal debate where passion overshadows reason and we all do things we later regret; and the loss of habitat in his own environs -- habitat as important for his wild neighbors as for himself.
Mullenix, however, doesn't try to solve the problem of human expansion into wild areas; he doesn't even rail against the system. He looks at the fact with a raptor's eye, in crystal clarity, and one expects, with a tear.
Not all is gloom and doom, as the Naturalist's Eye surveys the cycle of life, of seasons, of hunting and not-hunting, of living and dying, of the ways our disparate lives intersect with one another. It combines the hunter writer into an entity sought by the naturalist in all of us, and confirms our suspicion that we've also been a character in the book all along.

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Beautiful Coffee Table BookReview Date: 2007-08-27

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the American ChekhovReview Date: 2008-06-07
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