Louisiana Books
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Louisiana Books sorted by
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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)
List price: $59.95
New price: $20.65
Used price: $35.20
Used price: $35.20
Average review score: 

BLACK WOMEN'S VOICES
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-07
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.
Charles Sanders Pierce a Life
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (1993)
List price:
Average review score: 

a really special biography, more interesting than a novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-20
Review Date: 2008-07-20
Peirce's life as told by Brent is extremely interesting. I think that the book may be read also by people not interested in Peirce as a semiotician, because it's more captivating than a novel. The story itself is rather sad, and the last part of the book may be depressing. The reader feels helpless, and gets a very interesting picture of the academic world, in the U.S. but also in many other countries, alas.

Chickasaw, A Mississippi Scout for the Union: The Civil War Memoir of Levi H. Naron, As Recounted by R. W. Surby
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (2005-10)
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.62
Used price: $12.19
Used price: $12.19
Average review score: 

Excellent portrayal of the troubled times
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-22
Review Date: 2008-07-22
Chickasaw the Scout is a relative of my wife and the story is family legend. It describes in detail how a Southerner is conflicted about the WBTS and how important preservation of the Union was to Levi Naron. Chickasaw was Chief of Union Scouts (spies) for the Southern Campaign and served Sherman, Grant, and others in the TN, MS, AL, GA theaters of operation. Needless to say, he could not return to Chickasaw County, Mississippi after the war because of retaliation from his neighbors so he relocated to Kansas on government land grants where his family still resides.
Civil law property coursebook: Louisiana legislation, jurisprudence and doctrine
Published in Hardcover by Claitor's Publishing Division (2003)
List price:
Used price: $16.83
Average review score: 

Trahanian exploration of Civil Law Property, hosted by Yippi!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-11
Review Date: 2008-01-11
OMG, this book changed my life! Mostly it was for the worse, because I don't really like civil law.
This is a civil law property casebook for Louisiana Civil Law Property. It is very well organised and has very simple cases that are easy to read. You will learn about enthralling topics such as creation of the strip, who owns the strip, and how to steal property from your neighbors through the use of cows and other livestock (note, you should probably take note of trespass laws before you attempt this.) Mostly, this book is essential if you want to get a decent grade in Civil Law Property at LSU, TTTulane, Loyola, Southern, or another school crazy enough to offer coursework in louisiana civil law property. Enjoy One El year!
This is a civil law property casebook for Louisiana Civil Law Property. It is very well organised and has very simple cases that are easy to read. You will learn about enthralling topics such as creation of the strip, who owns the strip, and how to steal property from your neighbors through the use of cows and other livestock (note, you should probably take note of trespass laws before you attempt this.) Mostly, this book is essential if you want to get a decent grade in Civil Law Property at LSU, TTTulane, Loyola, Southern, or another school crazy enough to offer coursework in louisiana civil law property. Enjoy One El year!
Civil War in Louisiana
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (1979-12-19)
List price: $30.00
Used price: $19.95
Average review score: 

Well written and very thorough
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-12
Review Date: 2003-11-12
A must read for any Civil War buff, especially those from Louisiana. The importance of Louisiana as the gate-keeper of the Mississippi makes an understanding of the conflict there paramount.
Civil War in the making, 1815-1860 (The Walter Lynwood Fleming lectures in southern history)
Published in Unknown Binding by Louisiana State University Press (1959)
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Used price: $12.99
Average review score: 

A Well-done Southern Perspective on the Civil War
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-26
Review Date: 2007-10-26
Avery O. Craven in his slim collection of lectures in taking a more interpretive than narrative approach to the Civil War finds that the majority of people in the North and South were conservative and only reluctantly came to war. Unlike most historians, he believes that slavery was not the primary cause of the war. He admits in another of his books, "The Coming of the Civil War," that his approach is "revisionist" but he said that his "effort in this book was to balance the picture, not to present a Southern point of view or to defend slavery" (vii). He believes that he was more fairly presenting the issues involved leading up to the war rather than accepting traditional, northern-centric biases.
In his shorter book, he says that Lincoln's election precipitated secession because the South found that it must submit to Republican Party views or lose its way of life. He finds that the attitudes within that party justifiably gave rise to southern fears about its political domination and eventual abolition. Revolutionary changes in the North were based on its views of wealth and sin. He finds a cooperative management/labor paradigm shifting to an exploitative one in the new industrial North which led, in part, to condemning slavery as contributing to the problems of those exploited northern workers and farmers. Moral aspects in the North including religious revivalism combined with political reasons added to the party's antislavery stance which the South interpreted as primarily an abolition threat. Thus the disparate groups which finally made up the Republican Party gave southern interests valid reasons for worry over the future political power of the South and the concomitant threats to slavery.
In the South where radical change was anathema, any thoughts of becoming "modernized" along the northern paradigm were viewed with horror. Attitudes therefore hardened in the South as well as the North and finally all of the abstractions boiled down to a very simple, but profound difference as expressed by Lincoln in 1860: "You think slavery is right and ought to be extended; while we think it is wrong and ought to be restricted" (67). Alexander Stephen's position maintained the southern right to slavery because the Constitution protected that property right and therefore could not be restricted.
Craven emphasizes the anti-slavery debates in some southern states to make his point that before positions of the two sections hardened in the 1850's there was a substantial minority in the South which did not view chattel slavery as a positive good. But after the Compromise of 1850, the economic interests of the Northwest and Northeast united against southern interests paving the way for a clearer North-South conflict. Craven finds that the forces involved in creating the "Modern World" mainly after 1830 forced great changes and "these forces made long standing problems acute and clothed them with emotion" (85 footnote). The South could not accept a weakened colonial status and definitely not accept the impending social-economic revolution (86).
I found Craven's short book thought provoking because it challenged my orthodox, northern-centric biases of the causes of the war. Unfortunately, due to the book's brevity, he was unable to include footnotes, a bibliography, or an index. His studying the origins of the war from a scientific perspective is an excellent way to search for more complete explanations for the conflict. I appreciated his intentional use of a southern perspective to help counter the standard northern-oriented perspectives which predominate.
In his shorter book, he says that Lincoln's election precipitated secession because the South found that it must submit to Republican Party views or lose its way of life. He finds that the attitudes within that party justifiably gave rise to southern fears about its political domination and eventual abolition. Revolutionary changes in the North were based on its views of wealth and sin. He finds a cooperative management/labor paradigm shifting to an exploitative one in the new industrial North which led, in part, to condemning slavery as contributing to the problems of those exploited northern workers and farmers. Moral aspects in the North including religious revivalism combined with political reasons added to the party's antislavery stance which the South interpreted as primarily an abolition threat. Thus the disparate groups which finally made up the Republican Party gave southern interests valid reasons for worry over the future political power of the South and the concomitant threats to slavery.
In the South where radical change was anathema, any thoughts of becoming "modernized" along the northern paradigm were viewed with horror. Attitudes therefore hardened in the South as well as the North and finally all of the abstractions boiled down to a very simple, but profound difference as expressed by Lincoln in 1860: "You think slavery is right and ought to be extended; while we think it is wrong and ought to be restricted" (67). Alexander Stephen's position maintained the southern right to slavery because the Constitution protected that property right and therefore could not be restricted.
Craven emphasizes the anti-slavery debates in some southern states to make his point that before positions of the two sections hardened in the 1850's there was a substantial minority in the South which did not view chattel slavery as a positive good. But after the Compromise of 1850, the economic interests of the Northwest and Northeast united against southern interests paving the way for a clearer North-South conflict. Craven finds that the forces involved in creating the "Modern World" mainly after 1830 forced great changes and "these forces made long standing problems acute and clothed them with emotion" (85 footnote). The South could not accept a weakened colonial status and definitely not accept the impending social-economic revolution (86).
I found Craven's short book thought provoking because it challenged my orthodox, northern-centric biases of the causes of the war. Unfortunately, due to the book's brevity, he was unable to include footnotes, a bibliography, or an index. His studying the origins of the war from a scientific perspective is an excellent way to search for more complete explanations for the conflict. I appreciated his intentional use of a southern perspective to help counter the standard northern-oriented perspectives which predominate.
The Civil War Memoir of Philip Daingerfield Stephenson, D.D: Private, Company K, 13th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry and Loader, Piece No. 4, 5th Company, Washington Artillery, Army of Tennessee, Csa
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (1998-04)
List price: $26.95
New price: $12.50
Used price: $6.75
Used price: $6.75
Average review score: 

A moving and important memoir of the Army of Tennessee.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-01
Review Date: 1998-09-01
Anyone who has done research on the Civil War approaches veteran's memoirs with a degree of caution. Memoirs are always self serving to some extent and often take too much advantage of hindsight. This work is remarkably free of such justifications. Rather it is the honest work of a soldier coming to terms with his war experiences. Philip Stephenson was a mere boy from St. Louis, age 15, when he followed his brother, Hammett, to Memphis to join the Confederat army. Hammett enlisted in the 13th Ark. and the underage Philip tagged along. He served as something of a mascot to his brother's company until he enlisted in the 5th Co. Washington Artillery. Until then he seemed to be free to come and go. Stephenson was present at or near most of the actions of the Army of Tennessee. He relates what he observed in great detail particularly in the last year of the war. Through his memoirs we see what he saw on the march, on the field and in camp. His descriptions of various Arkansans from officers to enlisted men offer rare insights to the boys which can be found in no other place. His observations on the men of the 13th Ark. are somewhat condescending, but he says, "All of them made as fine fighting material as the world could produce." The first one-third of his text covers the years 61-63. The greatest part of his memoirs discuss affairs that took place from 64 to the end of the war. From the Atlanta campaign until the war ends, his writing seems much more personal, more expressive of his emotions at the time. This coincides with the period when he served in the 5th Co. of the Washington Artillery and marked the first period of the war that he was not under his older brother's wing. From the moment Sherman attacked the Rebs at Dalton in early May until the Battle of Jonesboro on Sept. 1st, the men were in constant danger. Stephenson notes the horrors of trench warfare and the stress that it put on the men. The pressure became too great for some and he describes some of those who cracked. One member of his battery horrified the other members by taking his bayonet and jabbing out the eys of a dead yankee. Another deliberately walked between the lines to relieve himself as everyone watched in disbelief and the man was killed by a sharpshooter. Clearly this campaign had pushed many of the men to the breaking point. Perhaps no other participant has been as effective and honest in telling this story. Stephenson's account of the Battle of Franklin is very moving. His unit had been guarding a bridge some 30 miles away from Franklin and by forced march had arrived on the field between 9 o'clock at night just as the battle was dying down. Stephenson's one thought was the welfare of his brother and friends in the 13th Ark and he went among the wounded crying out "Where's Govan's Brigade." He finds his 3 best friends badly wounded and there on the battlefield they break into tears to find each other still alive. If there had been any thought of winning the war, it ended there. After Franklin, surviving would replace winning as the ultimate goal. Stephenson's memoirs are very personal. Through them we see how one survivor deals with his memories of both the best times and the worst times of his life.

The Civil War Memoirs of Captain William J. Seymour: Reminiscences of a Louisiana Tiger
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (1997-03)
List price: $15.95
New price: $6.00
Used price: $4.97
Collectible price: $20.00
Used price: $4.97
Collectible price: $20.00
Average review score: 

Entertaining.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1997-05-10
Review Date: 1997-05-10
(The numerical rating above is a default setting
within Amazon's format. This reviewer does not
employ numerical ratings.)
Captain Seymour has left us a lively and lucid account of his Civil War experiences, from a rare account of the bombardment of Fort Jackson (New Orleans) in April 1862, to later service with the 1st Louisiana brigade with the Army of Northern Virginia.
Seymour, a New Orleans newspaperman, shows a fine disregard for accuracy which sheds no glory on his profession, but editor Jones gently footnotes the narrative with the necessary corrections.
Interesting read; worthwhile.

CliffsNotes Praxis II: Middle School Mathematics Test (0069) Test Prep (Cliffsnotes)
Published in Paperback by Cliffs Notes (2008-11-03)
List price: $23.99
New price: $14.37
Used price: $17.39
Used price: $17.39
Average review score: 

Great help
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-18
Review Date: 2008-11-18
I've been studying for the middle school Praxis for about 3 months now. I took it in Aug. and failed. Recently I have purchased the REA book, but I can see now that it's VERY outdated. The New Cliff's prep is extremely helpful. If you don't already own one, I would recommend purchasing a graphing calculator. This reivew is not too lenghty, and points out the important parts of the test. It also provides the key strokes for the calculator, so it saves time on the actual exam. There are 3 practice tests, and, unlike previous testing materials, I have yet to encounter a mistake. This CAN be your sole study material. I took the Praxis again a week ago, so I am await the results.
PS the only other advice I can give to the future Praxis examinees, is to practice, practice, practice. Get an old Geometry or Algebra book, and make your study meaningful. Remember what you've practiced for.
PS the only other advice I can give to the future Praxis examinees, is to practice, practice, practice. Get an old Geometry or Algebra book, and make your study meaningful. Remember what you've practiced for.

Clovis Crawfish and the Big Betail (Clovis Crawfish Series)
Published in Hardcover by Pelican Publishing Company (1989-03)
List price: $15.95
New price: $11.74
Used price: $7.05
Used price: $7.05
Average review score: 

Wonderful Book for pre-school Boy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
Review Date: 2007-01-10
I bought this book for my 3.5 year old grandson. He has fallen in love with it - sleeps with it and the Bidon Box Turtle. He corrects pronounciations of others who read it. He is also learning geography (Texas, South Lousiana, and Mississippi). The chacters are all loveable and the illustrations (mostly in color in the newwer versions) are wonderful. He is now having us work with him to create the different characters in play dough.
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