South Carolina Books
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nice book!Review Date: 2007-01-09
Tales from the Duke Blue Devils HardwoodReview Date: 2005-11-12
Hardwood". It's a great read and nearly impossible to put down. The Book Chronicles Duke Basketball history beginning with Wilbur "Cap " Card a Trinity College graduate from 1902 who returned to introduce basketball at Trinity in 1906 and culminates with the Blue Devils 15th ACC title in 2005.
The majority of the book was taken from interviews from the likes of Mark Alarie,Tate Armstrong, Gene Banks, Joe Belmont,Vic Bubas, Tom Butters, Johnny Dawkins,Randy Denton,Danny Ferry, Mike Gminski,Bernie Janicki,Jack Marin,Dan Meagher,Gary Melchionni, Jim Spanarkel and Robby West to name a few.

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Remembering South CarolinaReview Date: 2002-05-04
Makes us remember all the hot, steamy nights watching those Gamecocks play football...
Tales from the Gamecock's RoostReview Date: 2002-01-05
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I felt a connectionReview Date: 2007-09-08
Great book About Edisto Island!Review Date: 2000-03-26

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The Old South's Literary ProteusReview Date: 2002-02-08
Despite such prodigious achievements, Simms has largely been overlooked by critics and chroniclers of 19th century American literature, this despite a very generous assessment of his work by such contemporaries as Edgar Allan Poe, who in essence called Simms the best living writer of his day. This neglect has much to do with the fact that Simms was an unapologetic supporter of the Confederate cause in the War Between the States, a definite no-no in our age of hypersensitivity and political correctness. In recent years, however, efforts have been made to rectify this ignorance of Simms's work. John Guilds has done a splendid job of resurrecting much of Simms's more important fiction in an ongoing series of beautiful hardcovers published by The University of Arkansas. And in 1995, Dr. Mary Ann Wimsatt of the University of South Carolina edited this superb collection of some of Simms's best short stories.
Simms was much fascinated with Indian lore and incorporates it in several present tales, including most notably "The Arm Chair of the Tustenuggee", in which a harridan of a wife gets her just desserts with the aid of a haunted tree. Other tales touch on supernatural themes as well, "Grayling" and "The Plank" among them. But it is Simms's penchant for humor and the tall tale which finds the most memorable realization here in two comic masterpieces: "Sharp Snaffles: How He Got His Capital and His Wife" and its sequel (in a sense) "Bald Head Bill Baldy", two outrageous, outlandish, hilarious stories of ordinary men thrust into extraordinary circumstances and using their wit and ingenuity to emerge triumphant.
Aside from the stories themselves, the book offers an additional treasure in Wimsatt's lengthy, perceptive introduction which places the tales in context.
This is a handsome paperback and an important addition to what I hope is a long term revival of Simms's work.
The Washington Irving of South CarolinaReview Date: 2002-05-30

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Great Teaching MaterialReview Date: 2006-04-24
Groundbreaking work in the discipline of slaveryReview Date: 2006-04-24

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'Tom's War' a Revealing Look at WWIIReview Date: 2007-08-11
The project began as a tribute to Hammond's father, Tom, who left his farm in South Carolina as a young man to learn how to fly bombers after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. But the book soon became the compelling story of the men who flew with him.
Inspired by his father's stories and letters to his mother, Hammond, a journalist, researched his father's military past, turning up fascinating stories about Tom Hammond's compatriots throughout the war. Hammond interweaves the romance of a shy, young man wooing his sweetheart back home with the hard reality of life during the war.
A Son's Tribute to His Bomber Pilot Father--Compelling ReadingReview Date: 2007-08-26
Shortly before he leaves for duty, Tom meets a young neighbor named Callie and the two maintain a correspondance throughout the war. The letters begin as friendly pen-letters and turn into love letters over time. One of the things that makes the book so poignant is Hammond's reliance on these letters back and forth between Tom and Callie. In addition to chronicling Tom's war and Callie's difficult job at a shirt factory, where she buttons Army shirts all day long, the letters allow the reader to witness a young couple falling in love with each other.
When author Hammond delves into the personal lives and feelings of his characters, this book really soars. It bogs down a bit in the mission-by-mission details, especially if, like me, you have read hundreds of accounts of the air war. However, for a layman, who knows little of the planning and execution of missions over Europe, this would probably provide valuable insight.
Tom was a co-pilot who flew with the same crew for all thirty-five missions, give or take a couple of make-up missions. By this time in the war, crews were required to fly 35 rather than 25 missions, in part to speed the end of the war and in part because of the decreased risk of the depleted German Luftwaffe. By mid-1944, the main threat was the highly accurate German flak.
James Hammond tells the story of Tom's joyful return, his long recovery at a hospital in the Miami Beach area after nose surgery, and his reunion with the woman he loves.
Tom Hammond's next war will be waged against dementia, lung, and heart ailments that eventually claim him in his early eighties. Son James' story here is powerful and compelling in its universality. The titans who saved the world at age 20 are now leaving us as old age accomplishes what fighter and flak failed to do. By the time Tom Hammond passes away, one feels a bond with the scrappy farm kid who grew up in the South during the Depression, and one feels a real sense of sadness that is mitigated only by the selfless care given to him by the love of his life, his wife Callie.
Hammond ends the book by tracking down his father's crewmen. It's interesting to see how time has treated each man. Some have become successful, others have never really got the gears turning.
This is a fine tribute to a member of the Greatest Generation. I recommend it to anybody who has an interest in World War Two bomber stories.
Rob Morris, Author
Untold Valor: Forgotten Stories of American Bomber Crews Over Europe in World War Two (Potomac, 2006)

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WARM SOUP ON A COLD NIGHTReview Date: 2005-03-07
special cozy Review Date: 2005-02-27
At almost the same time that Florence is murdered wealthy matron Calpernia Hemphill is found dead; the police think she fell from her room when the masonry crumpled. She was going to build a theatre workshop on her land. Rumors spread that the director Calponia hired is a suspect in her death and Ellis is a suspect in her cousin's death. Guardian angel Augusta Goodnight comes to stay with Lucy because she senses there is something evil going on in Stone's Throw and she wants to protect her charge. As Lucy tries to clear Ellis of suspicion, she finds herself being stalked by a killer who will not hesitate to kill again if Lucy gets close to the truth.
An Augusta Goodnight mystery is always a treat and TOO LATE FOR ANGELS is a very special cozy as readers get a taste for small town living. Augusta immediately endears herself to Lucy who welcomes her into her house. Augusta turns Lucy's house into a warm home with her caring and helps in subtle ways in the investigation. Readers will be totally charmed by this beguiling mystery.
Harriet Klausner

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A Comprehensive ViewReview Date: 1999-12-05
Not history - it's happening nowReview Date: 2000-09-20
Note that this book deals with events of 1880 - 1920 -- so why is it important today? Because what was done to Central Appalachia in that period is being done to the rest of us today under the guise of "economic globalization." For example, the people of McDowell County, WV, are powerless in the face of Norfolk Southern (railroad company) because NS owns 85 percent of the land in the county. Just exactly what do you think will happen when "global" corporations own the factories, the minerals, and the workers? The experience of Appalachia with industrial and political exploitation is the same experience that awaits all of us under "economic globalization."

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Free John! Free John!Review Date: 2008-01-31
The only weakness in this book displays Rubillo's knowledge of the legal profession by getting a bit heavy into the legal explanations which occasionally holds up the story. That aside, it's an excellent book for fans of underground history.
Someone send Denzel a copy.
Trial and ErrorReview Date: 2006-05-22

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Wonderful, wonderful, pictorial documentary of the SouthReview Date: 2004-08-10
A True Likeness: The Black South of Richard S. RobertsReview Date: 2001-03-04
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