Louisiana Books


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

Louisiana
Complete Poems of Christina Rossetti
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (1979-03)
Author: Christina Georgina Rossetti
List price: $85.00
New price: $85.00
Used price: $21.00
Collectible price: $85.00

Average review score:

Luminous beauty
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-18
I have been so delighted to find Rossetti's poetry. It is rare and delicious, I would recommend that anyone who loves poetry read it!

Luminous beauty
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-18
I have been so delighted to find Rossetti's poetry. It is rare and delicious, I would recommend that anyone who loves poetry read it!

Louisiana
The Confederate Army 1861-65 (3): Louisiana & Texas (Men-at-Arms)
Published in Paperback by Osprey Publishing (2006-04-25)
Author: Ron Field
List price: $15.95
New price: $4.99
Used price: $5.95

Average review score:

The Confederate Army
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-10
This is a most worthy men-at-arms series; like the book's description says, it shows the much more colorful side to the uniforms of the Confederate Army. One man depicted in the color plates for Volume One that I found particularly interesting was a soldier in the Union Light Infantry, a SC unit based on the British Black Watch (42nd Royal Highlanders).
The plates are pretty much the highlight of this series, and show realistic looking soldiers surrounded by beautiful women and scenery, and baring all their various weapons. The text, nonetheless, reveals numerous interesting details. This is an excellent source on the uniforms and appearances of the soldiers of the Confederacy.

Another high quality effort from Osprey
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-05
Osprey Publishing has issued Volume 5 of their popular book, The Confederate Army 1861-65. A part of their sprawling Men-at-Arms series (this is book #441 in that series), this one covers the uniforms and arms of troops from Tennessee and North Carolina. Written by Ron Field and lavishly illustrated with Richard Hook's watercolors, this book is a worthy addition to the Osprey family. Retailing for $15.95 here in the USA ($21 in Canada), the book has 48 pages, nearly all of them with period photographs or full color drawings.

The new book focuses on each state's antebellum militia and the hastily organized volunteer regiments that were pressed into Confederate service in the initial stages of the war. Using contemporary newspaper accounts, letters, state and local records, and early photographs, Ron Field presents an extensive array of early war military units, their uniforms and accoutrements, drawing heavily upon primary descriptions. He also takes a cursory, but interesting look at how the transition occurred from locally supplied clothing and equipment (which often varied widely from company to company) to state-issued regulation Confederate uniforms, particularly in North Carolina, where, by the end of the war, the term "ragged Rebel" would be made obsolete from the vast stores of supplies held by the state.



Field starts with Tennessee, looking at the outfitting of the militia and early volunteers in 1861, and examines the role various ladies aid societies played in clothing the soldiers of the Volunteer State. He then discusses the role of the state's Military and Financial Board in taking over the administration and logistics of supplying the troops. Field then shifts his focus to North Carolina, again discussing and characterizing the antebellum militia and contrasting them to how the state later took charge and made its forces appear more uniform in appearance. He also briefly compares winter clothing to summer issue for troops from both states.



The book includes a select bibliography for readers wanting to dive a little deeper into the outfitting of Confederate troops from Tennessee and North Carolina. The index is comprehensive, as is the discussion that accompanies the Richard Hook's illustrations. All in all, The Confederate Army 1861-85 (5) Tennessee and North Carolina (ISBN: 9781846031878) maintains the tradition of excellence we have come to expect from Osprey, and is well worth the modest investment.

Louisiana
The Confederate Cherokees: John Drew's Regiment of Mounted Rifles
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (1989-12-01)
Author: W. Craig Gaines
List price: $20.95
New price: $20.95
Used price: $24.26

Average review score:

The other Confederate Cherokees
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-14
Stand Watie's confederate Cherokees are widely known and little importance is generally attached to the particular story of John Drew's 1st Cherokee Mounted Rifles. Thanks to Craig Gaines, the gap is filled. His book is precise, wonderfully detailed and his sources are remarkable. Henceforth, Craig Gaines' book is a must for all the buffs of the Civil War in Indian Territory.
Serge Noirsain, writer and historian, Brussels-Belgium.

Unraveling the Mystery: Cherokee Nation Politics
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-26
Being of Cherokee decent and having been raised in the heart of the Cherokee nation, I was immediately intrigued when I saw this title. The mystery of the internal conflicts and relations within the Cherokee Nation has been an interest of mine ever since I was a child hearing the oral stories. The stories were confusing then, and after reading Gaines' book, I now have a better grasp of the situation that was responsible for tearing apart the land I was reared-in and the people who were rearing me. Gaines does an excellent job of researching a subject that has very few sources available, and his writing style is smooth and concise. This is a very dense book; the information is packed in tightly. However, for a book on regimental history, I found it an easy read full of insight into a nation that to this day is still divided on issues that plagued them before the Civil War.

Louisiana
Creole Feast
Published in Hardcover by Random House (1978-10-12)
Author: Nathaniel Burton
List price: $21.95
Used price: $6.12

Average review score:

Doesn't get any better than this
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-01
I picked this book up years ago and of the some 50 cookbooks I own, this is the one I keep coming back to. If you've ever been to the Big Easy and indulged in New Orleans cuisine, you will find this book scrumptious. The recipes are typical Creole and Cajun French and simple. Corrinne's biscuits are a delight! You'll feast in culinary delights if you master these recipes of the Master Chefs of Nawlins, darlin'. If you buy this book, buy a scale. Good luck and Bon Appetite!

Delicious
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-04
After returning from New Orleans this past year, I found that this book allowed me to recreate some to the delicious temptations that I was able to indulge in during my stay. I found the recipes easy to understand, and utterly delicious!

Louisiana
Creole Gumbo and All That Jazz
Published in Paperback by Addison Wesley Publishing Company (1986-03)
Author: Howard Mitcham
List price: $12.95
New price: $131.80
Used price: $4.99

Average review score:

best book on gumbo; gumbo recipe below evolved from book
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-14
Creole Gumbo (makes 12 quarts = 48 servings, can be made in smaller batches)

Recipe below evolved and adapted for the beach from "Creole Gumbo and all that Jazz" by Howard Mitcham,who nails it far better than anyone in print. This book is highly recommended.

6 quarts chicken stock or water 6+ washed tomatoes 2+ lbs washed medium shrimp 12+ washed live crabs (essential, buy 18 before boarding ferry)

Bring stock to boil. All in same stock, boil tomatoes 1 minute, skin and seed. Boil shrimp 4 minutes, shell and fridge the meat. Boil live crabs 20 minutes. Eat some crab meat for lunch, return all crab parts, well crushed with shrimp shells, to same stock. Boil vigorously 15 minutes, no longer. Strain stock well e.g. through paper towels and colander.

stick butter flour bunch scallions 3+ onions 1+ heads of garlic 3+ red or green peppers 4+ sticks celery

Melt butter in heavy nonstick. Add flour bit by bit till thick slurry. Stir with spatula over med heat till deep tan or as dark as you dare, without burning. Add chopped veggies (chop garlic and onions at last minute) and saute till soft. Move to heavy gumbo pot if this wasn't it.

3 lbs okra, fresh or frozen 2+ lbs good ham 3 bay leaves bunch fresh thyme bunch parsley 2-3 tbsp Worcestershire sauce 1-3 tbsp tabasco sauce 1+ tbsp freshly ground black pepper 1/2 lb double smoked bacon 2+ lbs fresh Andouille sausage or similar hot sausage, or kielbasa

Add okra sliced into rounds, diced tomatoes, diced ham, thyme tied into bunch, minced parsley, bay, any meat you crave and have (chicken? beef browned in bacon fat?). Add enough stock to cover solids and keep sloppy. Add some Worcestershire, tabasco, pepper. Slice and cook bacon, crumble and add. Braise sausage in inch of water till ready to eat, poking with fork to release fat. Slice and save.

Simmer gumbo 2-4 hours, low enough and stirred often enough to never stick at bottom. Tasting over next few hours, remembering flavors will "cure" and salt gets added at end, gradually add more W,t,p to taste. Add sausage 30 minutes before serving, shrimp 10 minutes before serving, add any seafood you crave and have (oysters? lobster? crawfish tails?). Salt generously to taste, serve with ample cooked rice.

great book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-23
I have used this book fro over a decade and am about to order a fresh copy. It is a great read and a great, practical cookbook. I have used it constantly.

Louisiana
The Creoles of Louisiana
Published in Unknown Binding by Scribner's (1886)
Author: George Washington Cable
List price:
Used price: $49.99

Average review score:

Creoles of Louisiana
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-17
This was bought for a family member whose family had ties in Louisiana. She loved it. She already has several of Cable's books and was happy to get this one.

CREOLES
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-28
This is a fantastic book on Creoles, it is well researched and very enlightening. The word Creole means the original European natives of New Orleans, NOT light skinned African Americans, now I'm sure many light skinned blacks from New Orleans has Creole ancestry. The word has been eroneously used, when I tell people that my grandmother was of Creole and Austrian ancestry, they are like, wow, I did not know you were black..im like, uh, im not black, it's so annoying, and the media perpetuates the idea, that the word means any light skinned black person from Louisiana. Everyone in Louisiana should have to read this book in history class, then they could get educated on the word, and spread the information the the obtuse media. Highly recommended.

Louisiana
Democracy and the Ethical Life
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (1978-04)
Author: Claes G. Ryn
List price:
Used price: $14.00

Average review score:

Democracy and the Ethical Life
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-23
This is an excellent work of scholarship and is highly recommended to anyone interested in political philosophy. Professor Ryn draws on many sources, but most specifically ideas about the ethical life of the individual in relation to the community embodied in Aristotle's "Nichomachaen Ethics", Judeo-Christian morality, Edmund Burke's "Reflections on the French Revolution", the "Federalist Papers", and the moral, esthetic, and political philosophy found in the "New Humanism" of Irving Babbitt and Paul Elmer More. Ryn contrasts the egostical idealistic(i.e. unrealistic), and ethically distorted imagination of a Rousseau with the ethical and realistic imagination of a Burke, and shows how these differing worldviews lead to the contrasting and conflicting political visions of the utopian socialist(e.g.Robespierre, Lenin, et. al.) and the constitutional republican (e.g. Madison, Lincoln, et. al). To paraphase Madison, men are neither beasts nor angels. Beasts are incapable of government, and angels don't need government. Rousseau foolishly idealized a non-existent "natural man", while equally foolishly sanctioning bestial behavior by wrongly concluding that human evil was the result of social and economic oppression.

The individual who governs himself by attention to his "inner check" freely consents to constitutional government, with its checks and balances and concepts of ordered liberty, free market economy,federalism, and representative government as the best regime practicable for our diverse and pluralistic community.

To those who like this book I would also highly recommend Babbitt's "Rousseau and Romanticism", Thomas Sowell's "Conflict of Visions", Harry V. Jaffa's "Crisis of the House Divided", Pierre Manent's "City of Man", Nicholas Wolterstorff's "Thomas Reid and the Story of Epistemology" and Prof. Ralph Ketchum's excellent one volume biography of James Madison.

"Democracy: Word of Many Meanings "
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-23
This book exlores in depth two main contending views of democracy. The authour shows them to be radically different and ultimately incompatible. The book relates the two forms to different notions of man and society. It defends American constitutionalism as an example of constitutional democracy and rejects "plebiscitary" democracy as destructive of the civilized society. Agree or disagree with the author's conclusion, this is a penetrating work with broad philosophical relevance--really makes yoy think!

Louisiana
Desegregating Private Higher Education in the South: Duke, Emory, Rice, Tulane, and Vanderbilt
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (2008-10-15)
Author: Melissa Kean
List price: $55.00
New price: $50.85

Average review score:

How the South caught up
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-24
This book is exactly what the title says it is, told from the perspective of the wealthy and influential white men who ultimately gave in. While it's a truly exceptional chronicling of how these universities dealt with their respective trustees during the period, there's actually rather little about the African-Americans who form the locus of the story. This book is really about how conservative white men gave into the financial pressures and ultimatums of northern philanthropists, court orders, and the threat of further loss of academic prestige than about some great moral transformation that took place at the universities in question. Understanding the thesis, you'll love this book. If you're looking for a moral statement about civil rights, this book will disappoint you.

Defeat of the bitter-enders
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-20
"Harvard is the Emory of the North," said Atlanta boosters in the period following World War II. But it wasn't true, and Harvard was not the Duke of the North, either. The presidents and faculties of five elite southern schools - Duke, Emory, Tulane, Rice and Vanderbilt - knew their institutions were inferior, by orders of magnitude, to the Ivies, Stanford and the University of Chicago. Morally and pragmatically, segregation stood in the way of advancing their schools. To become a research university and to mount competitive graduate programs required outside funding, principally from large national philanthropic foundations and from the federal government. But such funding sources as the Ford, Carnegie and Rockefeller organizations began to attach a string to their largesse - abandonment of Jim Crow restrictions on race. And beginning with Truman, each succeeding federal administration increasingly pressured the private schools to end segregation voluntarily or risk losing grants and other major sources of funds.

University trustees manned the barricades, barring transformation of the institutions. Uniformly well-fed, white, and backward-facing, these worthies dedicated their tenure to the maintenance of racism in their beloved schools. Melissa Kean avoids an "inside baseball" study of the five universities. Instead, she offers a well-written, fast-paced account of the faceted conflicts between the academicians and their well-intentioned superiors. University presidents, sometimes aided by a conservative but practical trustee, became whitewater guides, steering through political rocks and hazards. Readers know the outcome of the struggles, and Kean gives us a thoughtful and absorbing account of how it happened.

Louisiana
The Diary of Miss Emma Holmes, 1861-1866 (Library of Southern Civilization)
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (1994-08-01)
Author: Emma Holmes
List price: $26.95
New price: $5.50
Used price: $3.38
Collectible price: $26.95

Average review score:

Effects of the Civil War seen thru a Southern teenage life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-17
The diary of a single, young Southern Belle who gives us glimpses of her life from before the Civil War, to when the fighting comes close to home and when they have to flee to the West. You experience her emotions and innermost thoughts.

Excellent social history
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-02
Often overlooked, diaries are the primary source of women's history during the Civil War. Here this elite South Carolina woman documents her life, not for prosperity, but as the custom of her day, via her private diary. Poignant and enjoyable to read, Emma carries through this time of war with the true dignity of Southern womanhood. Excellent social history of the daily life of a Southern woman. Thank you for bringing this wonderful diary to light. Joy Melcher, Civil War Lady Magazine

Louisiana
The Dirty Side of the Storm: Poems
Published in Hardcover by W. W. Norton (2006-11-06)
Author: Martha Serpas
List price: $23.95
New price: $4.89
Used price: $4.89

Average review score:

Finally, a poet for the 21st century!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-22
Martha Serpas has compiled a elegy to Louisiana, New Orleans, and the people of the region that will stand as perhaps the most elegant and eloquent testimony to our Southern wounds. Serpas's poetry is remarkably readable with a lyricism and depth that echo long after you close the book. Bravo! for the Dirty Side of the Storm.

Breathtaking
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-26
Martha Serpas' poetry is always gritty, lush and evocative. This new volume is absolutely stunning.


Books-Under-Review-->Health-->Addictions-->Substance Abuse-->Support Groups-->Narcotics Anonymous-->United States-->Louisiana-->33
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