Louisiana Books
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The 9th Texas Cavalry, Sul Ross's BrigadeReview Date: 2000-02-10
The Civil War -- what it felt like, what it wroughtReview Date: 1999-11-22
We never knew what the war was like for him, the details of his life blurred by a sketchy oral tradition: Didn't know what he thought about the cause in which he was engaged; what he thought about his fellow soldiers; about the Union; about his family. We didn't know why he came back home to Arkansas, so we were told, in the middle of the war, only to die. Had he been wounded or taken ill? Had he deserted, or just walked away on a long odyssey home, as Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain soldier had?
These past few days, though, have offered a vivid and authentic picture of how life must have been for my forebear. Richard Lowe, Regents Professor of History at the University of North Texas, pulled all the strands of that world together in this book.
Captain, then Major, then Lieutenant Colonel Bates' letters and diary entries, along with Lowe's invaluable geographical markers and chronological waystations, give us a true picture of the trials -- physical, mental and emotional -- that must have weighed heavily on those young men in the maelstrom of war.
Bates' own psyche tilts at the eternal and epic questions of Everyman's life and death throughout the book. In some letters, the young Bates playfully teases his future wife Mootie. In others, the darker hand of war and combat color his mind. His lightheartedness with Mootie stands out against the grisly accounts of terrible battles and revenge. In one he reports that his men "set a good many" former slaves who had gone over to the Union side "to stretching hemp," a euphemism for hanging.
As Bates' letters and diaries continue throughout the war, his own accounts of rumors brought into his camp and his joy at optimistic accounts of victories reported leave us pitying his soul, for he knows not yet of the war's inexorable grinding on the Confederacy. Lowe's ample and informative historical notes and charts force us to twist privately in our seats as we read, unable from this vantage point to even vicariously enlighten or encourage Bates in his travels and battles through the Indian Territory, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Tennessee.
Bates would hear of nothing to dampen the spirits of the Confederate cause, evidenced by a letter to his sister, a scalding scolding, after she had written to him a particularly depressing letter. "Why all this gloom," he asks. "You permit your imagination to conjure up a thousand dangers & difficulties & causes for trouble that have no existence in reality." Then, after a tub-thumping sermon on reasons for bearing up under the strain: "Make an effort to appear cheerful at all times - and making the effort to appear so will soon really make you feel so."
Bates' optimism bears up even when he contemplates continuation of the war after the fall of Vicksburg and Atlanta.
Analyses of the deeper reasons for the conflict pepper Bates' writings, based many times on his reading of letters and papers captured from Union soldiers. Then, as if it is all a joke, he relates a story of how the belligerents, negotiating in 1861, came to terrible disagreement over which side would take Mississippi. Abraham Lincoln, who in this tale really didn't want anything to do with Mississippi, reluctantly offers to take half, then precipitating the war, since the South could not bear to have only half. Bates despised Mississippi. On his second trip there, he was obliged to admit that his Confederate troops were treated better than before, the locals having got a dose of the Yankee medicine since his last visit, a medicine which he felt had taught them to respect the presence of their own Confederate troops.
Bates' use of American slang still rings true in the ear today, with his talk of having the "blues" from time to time, but his prose is undeniably pristine and proper. His take on the ineptitude of Confederate leaders is poignant and his analysis of politics is deadly sharp.
Possibly while on a visit back home, he, like so many soldiers in other conflicts, left a code with his friend Mootie, which allowed him to pass along information to her which could have compromised the troops' mission have it been general knowledge. Lowe includes the two instances of the code in use, along with a facsimile of the actual key used in deciphering. How exciting and intimate it must have been to think of passing along privileged information along to his future partner.
Bates also follows the lead of many other soldiers, finding God, or "taking religion," after his brush with death and subsequent injury. He assures his mother that if he were to die, he would be reunited with her one day in the heavens.
The war for Bates ended with his inability to return home for a while. He spent time wandering Mississippi, in all likelihood working through events that changed him from a young innocent to a vengeful, physically shattered man.
Bates was lucky enough to have survived a miniƩ ball wound to the mouth, and lived a productive life for some time after the war, unlike my "Captain," who died before the war was over. Even so, I, and many others who may have wondered about their forebear in their own carefully passed-along photo, now have something to go on, something that reveals the real world of a Confederate soldier, the hopes, the joys, the wrenching twists of morals and psyche.

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Texas is a Hard Road to TravelReview Date: 2004-08-22
To understand the war in Louisana and the following Red River campaign of 1864 this book should be read. If this 1863 expedition would have been successful then the Red River Campaign would not have happened.
There is not overflowing information about this expedition available. This book provides a entertaining understanding.
Could Union General Nathaniel P. Banks be the McClellan of the West? No, McClellan was never that bad.
The Texas Overland Expedition of 1863Review Date: 2000-04-10
This story about Texas and a Civil War Campaign all started with a plan conceived in the minds of a group of New England businessmen some two decades before the Civil War and that didn't even take place in Texas. However, when these northerners realized that war was inevitable and that Texas was siding with the Confederate States, rather than give up their lucrative idea, they considered the war to be in their favor. If they could enlist the help of the president and War Department, they could move into Texas under the Union Flag and consequently have the Federal troops to protect their northern settlers. From this nucleus, the story evolved to its climax of the battle. It is good reading.

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Yummy in LouisianaReview Date: 2007-03-24
Eccelent book!!Review Date: 2007-04-01

Invaluable for anyone with ancestors from VacherieReview Date: 2006-04-05
A wonderful genealogical and historical reference!!Review Date: 1999-10-16
If this book interests you, other books you may enjoy are:
Falgoust : A History and Genealogy of the Falgoust and Falgout families of France and Louisiana, 1555-1988 by Barbara L. Allen
La Famille Gravois, les Trois Cents Annees Passees (in English) by Roland Anthony Gravois
German Coast Families by Al Robichaux, Jr., 1997

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"Waugh in Abyssinia" seems a forgotten jewelReview Date: 2004-11-06
The super justly famous Evelyn Waugh created, in this book, a tremendously educational outline and insight into a whole period, and parts of it are so witty that tears of laughter were running down my face several times.
Interestingly, to me at least, the original purchaser of the copy I got evidently did so in 1986, in Nairobi. I have a feeling it is not available at your local newsstand, but if I knew how good it is and didn't already have it.. I'd sure be looking for it.
Waugh was a great travel writer, but why buy this?Review Date: 2007-05-13

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There's nothing like it.Review Date: 2005-09-08
If you are curious about what people really think, read this book.
It's funny. For Real.
Secret Mental Environment of New Orleans Revealed!Review Date: 2003-08-26
While working as a fifth grade teacher, Abram discovers that his girlfriend is cheating on him. All day long in class, he's teaching grammer, but thinking of his crumbling love life. Soon, he realizes that everyone else is probably just as distracted about something while they are going about their lives all around him as he is about his girlfriend's infidelity.
He wishes that everyone's t-shirt said what they were thinking on it so we could all know what's really going on with each other.
So, he sets out across New Orleans asking everyone he meets to write their deepest, most secret thoughts on a t-shirt, and then he takes a picture of them wearing the shirt. The pictures give us a glimpse of the touching, scary, hilarious, sometimes idecipherable, and often deeply sad things on peoples' minds as they walk the streets, work their restaurant jobs, sit in class in high school, drink in bars, or play in front of their houses.
Every city should be blessed with a portrait this complex and caring. If only every writer could get 100 "people on the street" to open their heads and hearts the way Himelstein has done here.
Superb.

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The writing flows nicely. We learn about kings, spies, wars, and slave uprisings.Review Date: 2007-11-28
Although What's The Deal was written for the "school market," the writing style is never condescending, and there is plenty for any adult to learn.
SPAIN RULES OVER LOUISIANA TERRITORY. At the outset, we learn that the French kings, King Louis XIV and XV, as well as King Charles III failed to see any real value of the Louisiana Territory. We learn of the first three Spanish governors of the Louisiana Territory, Don de Ulloa, "Bloody" O'Reilly, and Don de Unzaga.
BAD BEHAVIOR OF FRENCH. We learn of Edmond Genet of France, sent as a minister to the U.S. He arrived in the U.S. in 1793, and commissioned some privately owned ships, and tried to capture Spanish ships and English ships. Genet's goal was to enlist U.S. citizens to liberate Louisiana from the Spain, for the benefit of France. Eventually, everybody (George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and French government) got disgusted with Genet, and the French gave up on its plot and recalled Genet.
MORE BAD BEHAVIOR OF FRENCH. But the French kept up their bad behavior, and seized American ships and raided American commerce. The French asked the U.S. for bribes, in order to bring the French raids to a halt (this was called the XYZ affair). This was in 1798. In November 9, 1799, Napoleon conducted his coup d'etat.
FRANCE GETS BACK THE LOUISIANA TERRITORY. In 1800, Spain transferred the Louisiana Territory to France. The exchange was supposed to be as follows. The agreement was for Napoleon to give the Kingdom of Etruria (part of northern Italy) to Spain, and Spain was to hand over the Louisiana Territory. But as it turned out, Napoleon kept hold of Etruria.
FRANCE HAS BAD LUCK WITH NEW WORLD TERRITORIES. At this time, Toussaint L'Overture, a former slave, led an uprising against the French in St.Domingue (Haiti) and drove out the French by way of a slave rebellion. At this time, St.Domingue was, for France, and extremely valuable source of sugar, cotton, and indigo. Napoleon's wife, Josephine, had been born on the nearby island of Martinique, and her family owned a plantation on St.Domingue. To view the big picture, what we see is a former slave defeating Napoleon, a man famed for taking command of Austria, Poland, and Italy.
FRANCE SELLS LOUISIANA TERRITORY TO U.S. In spring of 1803, Napoleon needed money to wage war against Egypt and the English. So he decided to sell the Louisiana Territory to the U.S. The price was 15 million dollars, and to get the money, Jefferson borrowed 15 million dollars from an English bank. The goal of the English was to ensure that the French would never own territory south of Canada, while the French goal was to get money to fight the English. The treaty of the Louisiana Purchase was signed in May 1803, and two months later, Jefferson sent Louis and Clark to explore the new territory.
An outstanding book that makes history come alive.Review Date: 1998-10-19


Schreckengost and Clancy: Close CallReview Date: 2008-03-08
Not published in this formReview Date: 2007-03-27

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Great Book! Review Date: 2008-01-26
Barry Raine has the gift of writing a detailed account of an incident that literally changed his life. His detail places you right next to him as a silent observer at the moment of fear and the trauma in his mind as he relives that night that started out innocently. Descriptions of his family interactions and those with others are so pure the reader will never forget them. I would like to hear more from this author. Soooo Good.
Buy this bookReview Date: 2002-04-30

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Leuchtenburg is a top-notch historianReview Date: 2006-02-23
Splendid ReadingReview Date: 2006-03-07
Through incisive biographies, the book establishes the relationship of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and Lyndon Johnson to the South of the early-to-mid-twentieth century. Leuchtenburg argues that politics, together with the influence of individual politicians, remains central to an understanding of the broader sweep of American history, and that place and section are central to an understanding of politics. Certain presidents take the helm of change, altering through governmental action the individual lives of millions. Judging from the remarkable popularity of presidential biography, most Americans seem to comprehend at least some of these points, but they have been unfashionable among professional historians for a long generation. The White House Looks South is, in effect, a timely invitation to the historical profession to return to once-established precepts. As if to nail down the point, the book takes as its central theme the three presidents' transformation of civil rights from the 1930s through the 1960s.
Like all of Leuchtenburg's books, The White House Looks South makes splendid reading. Its pages sparkle with anecdotes as well as pithy (and often astonishingly revealing) quotes. Both a master political analyst and a master storyteller, never has Leuchtenburg produced a work so richly combining both.
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