South Carolina Books
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Excellent Short HistoryReview Date: 2007-10-24
The standard of Confederate Naval history of the Civil WarReview Date: 2001-01-03
A must for every Civil War student!
Great narrative of confederate armorclad naval historyReview Date: 2007-09-18
Dr. Still provides a fine review of the military and political settings that led to the strategic naval programs of both sides. He then proceeds with a mostly sequential retelling of the ironclad history in each theater/region.
The author seems fair in his treatment of the principals and of both efforts. One can't help but recognize the demoralizing loss of the early ironclads after a promising start. The early program included ironclads that were intended to be seaworthy. But after the loss of all the early ironclads, the domestic strategy transitioned to construction of harbor/river defense vessels rather than oceangoing vessels.
The book reveals a chaotic naval building program operating under great adversity. Distributed construction programs, lack of time, labor, iron and plate were key recurring problems, but so were poor design and horrendous mechanical issues. Most ironclads were never completed due to lack of time and resources. Of those that were, few could achieve reasonable speeds or had other insurmountable problems. Several, such as the CSS Georgia, Tuscaloosa, and Huntsville, ended up serving as floating batteries. The propulsion was so weak or poorly designed that these-like the CSS Louisiana-could not even hold their ground in moderate current. The CSS Mississippi would have almost definitely suffered the same fate had it been completed.
With inevitable, foreseeable battle damage (such as riddled or missing stack) even the best were nearly crippled. Engine or steering failure contributed to the loss of some of the most storied boats including the CSS Tennessee and CSS Arkansas.
Dr. Still reviews how costly engineering errors prevented a few vessels from ever rendering effective service. The CSS Jackson (Muscogee) drew too deep a draft as a paddle wheeler and had to be rebuilt with a screw. The CSS Columbia was so structurally deficient that she failed after striking a snag, breaking her back. The CSS Louisiana's two in-line paddlewheels and screws were so inefficient that they made her both unsteerable and unable to resist the current under her own power. Another problem was green lumber and unsheathed hulls: the CSS North Carolina sank at her moorings due to a worm-eaten bottom.
To be fair, the US Navy's ironclad program had its share of engineering fiascoes, but it could afford far more mistakes than the resource strapped Confederacy. Despite many painful failures, losses, and waste, the CSN ironclads created great problems for the US Navy, and at times for the US Army.
The Confederate casemate ironclads did have some advantages compared to monitors. The angled shields could deflect a harder blow than vertical surfaces such as the center of a monitor turret. The CS Navy's Brooke rifles with wrought iron projectiles had more potential for piercing armor than the cast iron shot from the heavy smoothbores of the monitors. The larger casemate rams tended to be able to bring several times more guns to bear and maintain a higher rate of fire, and monitor turrets were susceptible to jamming due to battle damage. However, the key selling point of the casemate was that the CSA possessed the means of building them, while at the time more mechanically complex designs were infeasible for the CSA from a manufacturing and maintenance standpoint.
Unlike William Still's "Confederate Ship Building" which was too brief, this narrative's text is 231 pages, including seven maps and eighteen other illustrations. Following the text are a helpful bibliographic essay, bibliography, and an index.
This is a great reference and interesting read for those trying to understand the role and history of the CS ironclads. (Note that this does not include foreign built armored vessels such as the Laird rams or the CSS Stonewall.)
CONFEDERATE NAVAL HISTORY AT ITS BEST Review Date: 2007-10-04
THIS BOOK SATISFIES THE NAVAL CONSTRUCTION ENTHUSIAST, THE READER INTERESTED IN THE PERSONALITIES INVOLVED, AND THE HISTORIAN OF THE CONFEDERACY. A GREAT READ FOR EVERY HISTORIAN AND ADVENTURIST.

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Good 'ol Sunflower CountyReview Date: 2006-03-15
New Southern HistoryReview Date: 2005-11-25
A MasterpieceReview Date: 2004-11-18
An excellent readReview Date: 2005-02-25

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Lighthouses of the Carolinas: A Short History and GuideReview Date: 2007-06-08
Informative and helpfulReview Date: 2003-05-30
Great book for travelers or history buffs!Review Date: 1999-02-16
It is very informative, and has MANY great photos.Review Date: 1998-12-18

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Mary Black's Family Quilts: Memory and Meaning in Everyday LifeReview Date: 2007-01-11
Don't expect a quilter's handbook here: this is local history at its bestReview Date: 2006-03-07
excellent materialReview Date: 2007-05-12
A Landmark BookReview Date: 2006-12-12
It is not a "picture book," although it is richly and thoughtfully illustrated. Over 100 sharp images, 32 of them in well-rendered color, depict the quilts and complement the text.
Nor is it a conventional "quilt book," focusing only on quilt documentation.
It transcends categories and is at once an analysis of sixteen quilts made and preserved by one family over six generations, a superb local history, and a study of a family whose values helped shape a community.
But its focus is the sixteen family quilts preserved by Mary Black and donated to a South Carolina museum. In seeking to discover their meanings as textiles and as personal and cultural documents, the author creates a world both immediate and immensely interesting.
This is highly readable book. After the first chapter, in which she identifies and illustrates the analytical procedure she used to study the Black family's quilts, Horton avoids the jargon of scholarship and critical theory. This choice and her crisp prose style are seductive: her book reads more like a story of discover than a scholarly analysis. The truth is, it is both.
The epigram, from James Deetz' "In Small Things Forgotten," suggests the writer's mission and method. Deetz writes, "In the seemingly little and insignificant things that accumulate to create a lifetime, the essence of our existence is captured. We must remember these bits and pieces, and we must use them in new and imaginative ways so that a different appreciation for what life is today, and was in the past, can be achieved."
In Laurel Horton's experienced hands, this approach yields bounty. Horton is uniquely equipped for her task. She has studied the same terrain for 25 years. She knows it from personal experience, from her study of the Scots-Irish who formed its backbone, from her study of the quilts of America and the British Isles. Her understanding of the deeply narrative South Carolina upland culture attunes her to stories and signs that point beyond the concrete object and reveal meaning. In fact, the metaphor running throughout this book is that of the scholar as one who "listens" to the voices in the material remains she studies.
Yet it would be mistaken to conclude Horton regards the scholar only as a medium through which the quilts speak. She knows the textiles exist with a series of contexts that can help free their voices and permit the listener to construct valid meaning.
In a culture where women left relatively few documents, however, the quilts remain the writer's primary sources. Horton says she began her research "with a close examination of the quilts themselves, attempting to set aside what I thought I already knew and trying to be receptive to what they could tell me....I have attempted to attend to the quilts and to `listen' to their stories objectively, without rushing to supply answers to my emerging questions."
The result is a fresh and exceptionally well-articulated understanding of a coherent group of quilts. In her effort to identify their meanings, the author opens a world to the reader and in the end, the quilts also become memorable objects in the reader's experience.
Mary Black's Family Quilts is valuable both to the cultural and political historian. It is important to anyone studying the lives of women in America. Certainly it will become part of any complete bibliography of the history and culture of the American South. It is being read in student coffee houses in Spartanburg and readers interested primarily in local or state history have created long waiting lists for it in Carolina public libraries. In short, it is a book for many readers.
One of its more obvious audiences is that of quilt historians, for whom it provides a model and for whom it is also cautionary. Quilts from the inland South have been subject to many unfounded generalizations. A student of textiles and quiltmaking who is keenly attuned to the differences in the cultures and quilts of adjacent counties in Pennsylvania, for instance, often sees the quilts made south of the Mason-Dixon line as a unit.
Studies like Horton's show the danger of such generalization. They remind us of the variety present even in a generally coherent community. The Spartanburg, South Carolina area and the members of the Snoddy and Black families are not offered as microcosms or even representatives of larger groups. Mary Black's Family Quilts focuses on the particular-quilts made by the women in one family in one place and time. Considering the general lack of scholarly attention so far accorded the quilts of the Deep South and the southern hinterlands, one hopes Horton's work generates the discovery and equally thoughtful study of other groups of quilts in the region.
"Mary Black's Family Quilts" reminds us of the tremendous importance of the concrete detail in the study and communication of meanings in history, the sound or fragrance or scrap of fabric from which explodes a world of meaning. It also reminds us this detail is part of a larger whole. Both in its method and subject, it breaks new ground and will, one hopes, encourage other books that do the same.
For anyone interested in the study of American quilts, women's history, or in the culture and history of the American South, this book is a must-read.

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Mercy OakReview Date: 2008-07-24
My last K.Wall bookReview Date: 2008-07-08
Bay Tanner rocksReview Date: 2008-05-18
A MOST enjoyable read!Review Date: 2008-05-21
In Kathryn Wall's most recent novel in the BayTanner Mystery series, Bay, (a.k.a. Lydia Simpson), a private investigator at Simpson & Tanner, Inquiry Agents, on the Island of Hilton Head, South Carolina, takes on a potential case of murder. Bay is haunted by the ghosts of her past--she has lost her mother, Emmaline, her husband Rob (murdered three years before The Mercy Oak begins), and her former partner, Ben Wyler. But Bay is slowly building a new relationship with her brother-in-law, Red Tanner, the sergeant at the Beaufort County Sheriff's office. Red's commitment to law enforcement is often at odds with Bay's work. The friction between them heats up when Bay agrees to take on a new investigation.
The plot of The Mercy Oak involves two crimes. Less than two weeks before Christmas, a young girl is killed in a hit-and-run accident. Initially believed to be Serena Montalvo, her death is at first ruled accidental, but when Bobby Santiago, the son of Bay's Guatemalan housekeeper Delores, calls to ask Bay for help, she soon learns that the dead girl is actually Serena's sister, Theresa.
At the same time, a series of bank robberies have distracted the police from pursuing an investigation into Theresa's death. When Bobby and his mother Delores disappear, the investigation takes on a more personal aspect. Bay learns that Theresa's death may be connected to a local campaign to support the rights of illegal immigrants, and the FBI is involved. Threatening phone calls, vandalism, and the involvement of a family friend in the hold-ups, all lead Bay to believe the two crimes are related and that she is the common thread.
The Mercy Oak is a fast-paced, romantic mystery, recommended reading for a day lounging on the beach, or a crisp autumn evening nestled by the fire.
Armchair Interviews says: Unique background story for this mystery.
fabulous Bay Tanner mystery Review Date: 2008-05-17
Serena has been a vocal advocate of the rights of illegals; Bobby thinks the Coyotes who transport them to the States for exorbitant fees and blackmails them afterward, killed her. However, instead the victim is Serena's sixteen years old sister, Theresa. Bobby and Serena vanish while his parents out of fear for their other two offspring as well themselves remain mute on what they know. When Dolores vanishes, Bay drops everything to find her housekeeper even as FBI Special Agent Harry Reynolds warns Bay to stay out of his inquiries into some bank robberies he is investigating and Homeland Security agents threaten to lock her up under the Patriot Act if she does not back off. Obstinate as ever; Bay digs deeper as she distrusts the Feds to protect the Santiago's, Montalvo's, or any illegals.
This is a fabulous Bay Tanner mystery that showcases the other side of the illegal immigration issue from the perspective of those entering the country illegally. Ironically, the recent clamor led by Congressman Tancredo to kick people out has abetted the Coyote crowd, who has found a lucrative second economic source. The story line is fast-paced as Bay gets involved in a case in which everyone tells her to stay out or else. Kathryn R. Wall is at her best with this exciting thought provoking thriller focusing on the consequences of who keeps winning the illegal immigration debate.
Harriet Klausner
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Motor Cycle Adventures, Book 1Review Date: 2008-07-10
Excellent guideReview Date: 2002-06-18
Smart layout enables you to xerox the two facing pages to have a complete map and guide for each ride.
The reference section at the end of the book gives you phone number and other info for hotels, restaurants, dealerships, chamber of commerce, etc.; very convenient.
Highly recommended.
Motorcycle Adventures in the Southern AppalachainsReview Date: 2001-07-10
Great book for planning trips on a motorcycle or carReview Date: 2005-09-26

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Excellent read...Review Date: 2006-04-26
Mount MitchellReview Date: 2004-11-22
The battle between the Mountain's namesake, the Rev. Elisha Mitchell and his former student, future Confederate general Thomas Clingman about who measured the mountain first, is fleshed out completely, and is probably the definitive account of this famous row.
The end chapters deal with mankind's interventions on the mountain, and the consequences of these acts. This is followed up with concise information about the acid rain/woolly adelgid issues affecting the Fir and Red Spruce trees on the mountain tops, along with some discussion about the growth cycles about the above mentioned trees, which in my opinion, clears up some of the misinformation out there. For years, the problem was blamed on woolly adelgids, then on acid rain. I personally feel like these two scourges work together hand in hand to decimate the once proud Fraser Firs.
This is truly a groundbreaking book. I'd like to see more works that follow this vein. Nicely illustrated.
The Black Mountains and Nature's Inherent ComplexityReview Date: 2004-07-31
The work is titled as an environmental history, and it is supported by a wealth of factual information, but the whole presentation is a wonderful flowing story of these peaks in western North Carolina, and their history as they were shaped by nature and by man.
Of special interest is the account of the feud between Elisha Mitchell and Thomas Clingman. The story encompasses misunderstandings, fragile egos, and desperate politics. When Mitchell fell to his death in 1857, the public mind established Mitchell as a hero and martyr who died to establish these peaks as the state's best known landmark. His body was later moved to the higest peak, which is forever known as Mount Mitchell.
We are also able to see the history of man's interaction with nature. In the case of the Blacks, it is often with tragic results, and even when the intentions are good, the outcome is often marginal.
Dr. Silver leaves us with a compelling book that provides much information and asks many questions that we should consider not only for this mountain range, but for our environment as well.
I highly recommend this book. The author has done us a great favor.
Nature meets CultureReview Date: 2003-03-01
Like many environmental historians, Silver sees in the reciprocal interaction between nature and culture a larger story of a region. And he brings us this compelling story from a variety of intriguing angles. He offers his own assessments, ones generated on his extensive hiking and fishing trips in the Black Mountains of western North Carolina. He provides insight into the steamy 19th century historical controversy between rivals each seeking to determine which was the highest peak in the region--and to see who could do it first and most authoritatively. (And as a New Englander, I found the tale inviting even if our White Mountains fall short in elevation to North Carolina's peaks!) Professor Silver also examines logging practices and regional boosterism, the antecedent of eco-tourism.
The book has something that will be compelling for a wide audience of readers interested in the natural world and local history--and the style is accessible and enjoyable. Whether you've hiked a lot, love North Carolina, want to investigate stormy political and personal feuds, or wish to know more about regional environmental history, "Mount Mitchell" is a fine read. I commend it to you!

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Great Gift for the Outdoorsmen.Review Date: 2007-03-03
Southerns do have a lovely way of using language. Maybe there is a drop more compassion in the cool creek waters.
A Delightful, Entertaining ClassicReview Date: 2004-10-01
The first time I read this book, and most of the subsequent times as well, I laughed until tears rolled down my face. Babcock eloquently paints word pictures of hunting and fishing experiences in the deep South of the early 20th century.
The reader will notice a much higher quality of writing than is commonly found in outdoor magazines today. Today, few college professors admit to such politically incorrect pastimes as hunting and fishing. The modern reader does need to remember the time frame in which these stories take place. Babcock was a product of his environment, and while he speaks fondly of Uncle Sessions and others eligible for membership in the NAACP, he doesn't use the politically correct terminology of today.
I have cherished and retold -- with attribution -- several stories contained in this book, and just remembering them can take 10 points off my blood pressure.
If you like to hunt and fish, or like someone who does, this book is an excellent choice.
Vintage stories of bird hunting and fishing in the South/.Review Date: 1997-07-04
My Health Is Better In NovemberReview Date: 2006-07-20
35 of his stories are a treasure of tales by a man who is genuine in his approach to hunting and fishing.
No matter how many times I reread his stories, he makes me feel I am there in the field beside him.

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A dish born in South Carolina and elevated to new heightsReview Date: 2006-07-04
Great cooking recipesReview Date: 2006-09-03
Real South Carolina low country cooking Review Date: 2006-08-10

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My favoriteReview Date: 2007-08-13
Wonderful book!Review Date: 1999-06-19
A Book for All AgesReview Date: 2002-12-13
never in a hurry to reviewReview Date: 2000-11-28
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