South Carolina Books
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Easy Reading - Historical Perspective Review Date: 2008-03-03
An Historically Significant BookReview Date: 2005-04-11
It is unbelievable how steadfast John Scott and others were in fighting simply to be able to vote. Equally unbelievable are all of the atrocities perpetuated against them. But they persevered, and the story is very well told.
At a recent book signing in Charleston, SC, Ms. Scott told me that she is writing another book. I look forward to it.
Compelling history lesson that reads like a novel...Review Date: 2004-11-06
A great startReview Date: 2003-10-01
Thank You Cleo...Review Date: 2005-09-12
My great uncle is Francis Joseph Atlas, Sr., the other man who testified with Reverend Scott as well as the one who endured financial hardship just because he wanted to vote. My family has been in East Carroll Parish for centuries, and through this book, I have learned a ton of information that I did not have available to me. It also helps me a lot with my genealogical project.
This book was written wonderfully; there were many times I couldn't put it down because I just had to know what was going to happen next! I also enjoyed the perspective from which the story was told, and the righteous spirit that Reverend Scott held onto, even when it was extremely hard to do so.
Every African American owes it to themselves to read this.

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Chronicles of human drama and African identityReview Date: 2008-07-17
However, it is neither monotonous nor depressing.
In fact, it was necessary to do so, because the book did clearly explain the political factors and social rules of an influential white society that has forged the irrevocable fate of slaves.
After reading the book, one might wonder what decisive role, did the Africans in Africa play in the slave trade?
The book also addresses the issue of the effects of religion on African slaves brought to the United States.
It is fascinating to read about how ethnic African traditions and deep rooted religious beliefs got mixed up with the teachings of a White Church in America.
We see here two divergent Christianities: A white Christianity and a black Christianity.
Equally fascinating is how African slaves tried to preserve their ethnic language, traditions and way of life, later to adopt a new form of linguistic expression stranger and incoherent to both the American white society and the oppressed black community.
The book is a chronicle of the human drama and social conflict; a conflict that one day will explode to create a new identity for African American in a capitalistic and threatening society.
Excellent and Highly Educational!Review Date: 2007-03-07
Early on the Africans were well aware of their ethnic identities, but over time, they were forgotten, and a new people emerged. Now this took generations. It was a slow and torturous process.
If you want to educate yourself about black folks in America and where they came from, and how they evolved, read this book.
Excellent!Review Date: 2006-03-08
Opening a new door to our history and our struggleReview Date: 2006-12-07
Contrary to many popular assumptions, Gomez shows that in colonial and early independent America slave holders and slaves were quite aware of the different African cultures and ethnicities represented among the enslaved. Trade patterns, affinities of slave buyers for certain types of ethnicities, beliefs that some peoples were good for some tasks, others for others, led to many concentrations of slaves from the same culture and language groups in colonial America. This ensured that Africans in American tended to preserve very much of their native cultures, religions, and outlooks.
Indeed, Gomez illustrates that in language and religion large sections of the African American people in becoming retained their African religion, and at first retained their African languages, and then began our own African American language (Black English) precisely because the context of the dominant culture and its language and religion were hostile to the human dignity of Africans in America and their descendants.
Gomez's solid research and clear evaluation of massive amounts of original sources upsets many ideas on African American history that were assumptions and not facts. One of the most important is the lateness and difficulty that Christianity had in gaining seizable conversions among Africans in America and their descendants. He suggests that only by the time of the Civil War were African Americans substantially Christian. Gomez demonstrates that except for an overly assimilationist minority among "freed" slaves, Christianity only caught on where African religeous practices were mixed into it. More importantly, Gomez explains the reason for the final victory of Christianity is that it could be manipulated to provide a rationale and hope of liberation from racism and oppression both metaphysical and physical, that the individual African religions could not provide. Gomez illustrates that what occured was the development of an African American religion, rather than the adoption of a European religion.
In the process, the reader will learn new and more accurate views of whence and when Africans were brought to America during the period of slavery. The reader will learn the general political and religious outlooks of the different major groups of Africans who came here. The reader will learn a survey of the historical, economic, and political upheavals in AFrica wrought by the slave trade.
This is a serious and important book, written at the highest level of scholarship. Thus, it is sometimes not easy reading and certainly is not written as a popular entertainment. Yet, even the casual reader who sticks with this book and turns to Gomez's notes and bibliographic material for more to read will be vastly rewarded.
A must readReview Date: 2000-10-29

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Good ReadReview Date: 2007-03-01
A book about Charter FishingReview Date: 2006-04-29
Well worth the time to read.
A warm first-person survey which at times reads with the quiet drama of fiction.Review Date: 2007-01-06
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Makes me want to moveReview Date: 2006-08-17
Hatteras Blues touches the heart of what it means to love the seaReview Date: 2006-08-09

Prelude to the Civil WarReview Date: 2008-08-06
Now, over 30 years later, I have taken the book from my shelf, dusted it off, and actually read it cover-to-cover.
I am happy to report that it is a wonderful study of the period that clarifies the motivations behind the complex series of actions and reactions of those who lived through it.
At the same time I am extremely sad to report that it would have been a great read when I was twenty ... better later than never certainly applies here!
Still the best work on NullificationReview Date: 2008-06-17
South Carolina Starts the WarReview Date: 2008-03-27
It seems that there was just not enough to keep these people from fighting. If it was not one thing it was another. This is the story of how South Carolina almost seceded from the Union alone in the 1830's. For some reason, that was not really clear to the participants, as well as me, why citizens of South Carolina got bothered by a tariff instituted by the federal government. There was some real problem with the slaves and the issue of freedom, and that got blown out of proportion by the fear of slave insurrection violence. There were some interesting sidelights to this story. It was a part of this argument in Congress that the famous Webster-Haynes slavery debate took place. It was also noted that slave owners understood Independence Day celebrations were not for everyone and they were troubled by trying to get the slaves to work (like it is any easier to get wage slaves to work either) and by the violence they sometimes used on them.
The problem that I saw through this book was the lack of adventure or other use of the energy the rich youth had: they were spoiling for a fight; as well as getting others to allow them (South Carolinians)to be themselves.
Early Stages of the Civil WarReview Date: 2007-06-02
Why is this book important? First, it is written by the foremost historian of 19th century America. Second, while giving credence to the economic issues that covered the real causes of war, Dr. Freehling decimates the theory that the war was mainly a struggle over two unique economies and the support of states' rights. He shows clearly the real issue at hand was the threatened squeeze on the future of slavery. Third and most important the book gives us much to rethink in our evaluations and conceptions, offered in scholarly but very readable prose for which the author has become famous.
Put simply, if anyone is interested in American history and knows the author this book is a must have. No one who reads William W. Freehling wastes time or energy reading his work.
Slow but excellent readReview Date: 2004-06-28
With Ronald Reagan's passing, discussions turned again to our "best" or "great" presidents. Andrew Jackson's name is frequently included among our Top Ten by most historians, yet very few of us could say why he deserves to be so highly regarded. In books like this, we can see why. He is not what I would consider to be a likable man and definitely comes across as somewhat tyrannical (not just in this book), but one has to admit after reading this book that he handled the Nullification Crisis and its aftermath very deftly with a clear vision and objective: that allegiance to the Union comes first and preservation of the Union is paramount. He laid the groundwork for Lincoln's management of the Civil War, some 25-30 years later.
The book is well-annotated and, though more than 35 years old is still relevant in its ideas and also in the sources it directs us to for further reading.

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Charlie is a classic story... and a classy horse!Review Date: 2006-09-16
I think I enjoy reading Five O'Clock Charlie as much as they enjoy hearing it read to them!
Best book I read when I was young!Review Date: 2006-02-11
Such a favorite it causes argumentsReview Date: 2005-10-11
My favorite childhood bookReview Date: 2003-11-20
Charlie finds he can do something important.Review Date: 1998-08-06

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Great biography.Review Date: 2008-10-12
Amazing reading material for anyoneReview Date: 2005-12-28
Excellent Reference Book but Choppy on Its Own as a StoryReview Date: 2005-12-18
The book opens with an interesting literary hook as we follow the last few hours in the life of Fitzgerald on December 21, 1940. He is an unemployed screen writer living in Hollywood at the apartment of his companion Sheilah Graham. On the previous day, he had symptoms of a heart problem. That morning on the 21st, he was working on "The Last Tycoon." He was sitting in a chair, stood up, grasped the mantlepiece, collapsed, and died at age 44.
That book is one of seemingly dozens of short stories on F. Scott, Zelda his wife, and others. The book is not a seamless story but is a chronoligcal collection of short - almost disconnected - stories about his life and works.
It is an excellent reference book to consult as you read the works of Fitzgerald. I found the book on its own too dry with too many facts and it gives no idea of what the writing was like. It was not until I read "This Side of Paradise" did I understand what all the fuss was about with F. Scott Fitzgerald, and it was at that point the present biography came to life. For example, I quote a passage from Chapter 2 of Book I, as Amory sits on the steps of his dorm at Princeton after his first day on campus:
"Now, far down the shadowy line of University Place a white-clad phalanx broke the gloom, and marching figures, white-shirted, white-trousered, swung rhythmically up the street, with linked arms and heads thrown back:
"Going back-going back,
Going-back-to-Nas-sau-Hall,
Going back-going back-
To the-Best-Old-Place-of-All.
Going back-going back,
From all-this-earth-ly-ball,
We'll-clear-the-track-as-we-go-back-
Going-back-to-Nas-sau-Hall!"
Amory closed his eyes as the ghostly procession drew near. The song soared so high that all dropped out except the tenors, who bore the melody triumphantly past the danger-point and relinquished it to the fantastic chorus. Then Amory opened his eyes, half afraid that sight would spoil the rich illusion of harmony."
One learns more about Fitgerald's writing from that passage than the entire biography.
Having said the above, this is a fact filled reference book that acts as a wondeful guide and supplement to the F. Scott's life and the background for the works. There are many photographs and other documents among the 61 short chapters. I especially liked the ledger notes that were kept by Fitzgerald that clearly outline the characters and plot details for the books. Bruccoli has included a huge notes section and appendix at the back of the book, about 100 illustrations, plus many more documents. I have read many interpretations of "Tender is the Night" but it is a lot clearer when you actually read the author's own notes as produced here in the present biography.
Highly recommend: excellent collection of short stories and documents.
Outstanding biographyReview Date: 2006-02-14
I would give it five stars except for an extremely irritating tendency Bruccoli has to be dismissive of almost all of Fitzgerald's short stories. Bruccoli is way too arrogant about pronouncing dozens of the stories F. Scott wrote as being "minor," or "disappointing," or even "embarrassing," while reserving his praise for a select few, such as "May Day" and "The Rich Boy." Personally, having read every one of FSF's currently collected short stories (well over 100 in all), I don't rate "May Day" or "The Rich Boy" very highly, but I love lots and lots of the "commercial" ones Bruccoli dismisses. I think he should leave the assessment of which stories are good up to the reader. Bruccoli's literary analysis -- of Fitzgerald's novels -- is outstanding, but the short stories should not be so dismissed (even if Scott himself at times dismissed them and hated having to write them to earn money).
Some Kind of WonderfulReview Date: 2006-07-12
Bruccoli covers every aspect of Fitzgerald's life and includes several bits of correspondence to really give readers a look inside Fitzgerald's thinking. --Perhaps my favorite thing about the book is that it does not sentimentalize the author (which I myself have a habit of doing). Fitzgerald is spelled out here in all his glory, yet, we also get to see his unflattering side...paranoia, arrogance, unharnessed alcoholism, and downright neurosis.
F Scott Fitzgerald was a brilliant man whose life became legend. It is my humble opinion that Bruccoli has written the most thorough and best possible biography. Simply put, the read is fascinating. It might be 600 pages, but you will fly through it. It is "never dry" (like Fitzgerald :)) and always entertaining. For Fitzgerald fanatics like myself, this book is a must, but I am convinced that anyone who takes to "human interest" stories would find themselves engulfed in its pages.
Also recommended: "The Romantic Egoists"...a scrapbook collection put together concerning the lives of the Fitzgeralds. It is packed with pictures and is a wonderful companion to the biography. It was also published by Bruccoli.

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Poignant, funny, and heartbreaking, all at the same time.Review Date: 2007-08-07
The book is written in the first person by someone other than the central character, and the storyteller was a very kind and gentle soul. He was basically a wonderful human being, and someone I would love to have known. I actually liked him much more than Jenny Dorset.
Just one thing: I don't understand why the book jacket shows a brunette of only average looks. Obviously the artist didn't read the book - it clearly mentions, and many times, that Jenny was uncommonly beautiful, and had golden-blonde hair...
Humor and Wit, just a DELIGHT to read!! Excellent!!Review Date: 2004-08-06
Funny novelReview Date: 2000-05-24
Humor and Wisdom of a by gone eraReview Date: 2001-08-10
History coupled with charming witReview Date: 2001-05-29
More notably is the method in which Williams characterizes each member of the families involved in the story's plot - from the dueling heads, Mr. Dorset and Mr. Smythe, to Old Bob in his amusing stages of senility, and the ostentatious Jenny Dorset herself.
The reader will undoubtedly find the rich story line is highly entertaining, and written in a very lively manner. The tale is penned from the perspective of Henry Hawthorne, the Dorset's discerning and subdued family man servant. Hawthorne patiently abides by the family's somewhat eccentric and unruly lifestyle, and writes about his experiences first-hand, in memoir-like style.
Indeed, this novel is a great story-tellers' delight! The True & Authentic History of Jenny Dorset manifests very engaging humour with every flip of a page - more than once have I been in the throws of violent chuckles over it's whimsical comments and situations. It has quickly grown to be one of my favorites. I highly recommend it.

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A Monumental BookReview Date: 2008-10-14
Cothren's research is exhaustive. He's studied seed catalogs, nursery lists, and ships' manifests. He has read the many accounts of travelers to the South in the early 19th century to provide an outsider's view of the distinctiveness of the region's gardens. The garden journals of people like Martha Turnbull of Louisiana, correspondences between gardeners and botanists and nurserymen and gardening friends, sketches and descriptions of gardens magnificent and humble---all have gone into the making of this book. The author's deep familiarity with the contexts within which gardens and gardeners grow and the way gardening is related to larger issues like trade, economics, and travel trends permits him to write in an effortless, easy style that makes reading a genuine pleasure.
The first chapter is a well written "Historical Overview" that includes matters of agriculture, architecture, gardens, planters and plantations, and the effects of the Civil War on gardens. It is followed by most interesting travelers' accounts of the gardens that arose in the Deep South. The chapter on "Forms and Features of Antebellum Gardens and Landscapes" left me dreaming of how I might incorporate parterres and allees in my garden---at that moment! Who knew the subject of fences or hedges could be so interesting? Or that privet, that bane of Southern gardeners, could look so good in outlining paths and borders? A whole chapter is given to "Garden Books, Agricultural Journals, and Nursery Catalogues" so we can see what our forebears were dreaming over and the stock from which they had to choose (a lot more than I had imagined, it turns out!). The gardener who wants to lay eyes on what the people who gardened 150 years ago were seeing, now has directions. Finally, there are the gardens and gardeners themselves. Whereas most garden histories of the ante-bellum South have focused on the landscape history of the great plantations, Cothren's examines gardening practices in both urban and rural areas. We are shown early gardens in New Orleans, Savannah, and towns like Madison, Georgia. Some are real surprises (e.g., the N.O.garden on page 96, which is literally filled with plants.) All are beautiful.
The last half of the book is titled "Historic Plants of the Antebellum South and Dates of Introduction"---and it is a joy. Finely chosen and rendered illustrations from botanic drawings, paintings, vintage photography, and life grace every page. Their general consistency in size and placement and their perfection enliven this intriguing section. I've spent a lifetime looking at catalogs and garden books. I've edited a garden magazine. And yet I cannot explain what it is about these photographs that captures the very essence of every plant. If you live in New Orleans or Mobile and don't want to find yourself ordering a kalmia latifolia (mountain laurel), then I'd suggest you skip page 212. For a second or so, I even thought I should stop whacking back the Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica)that would take over my garden if I let it. And who has captured so truly the characteristic beauty of Michelia figo (banana shrub), which perfumes Southern gardens in late spring? I won't even mention the camellias and roses. These photographs are works of art in themselves and add immeasurably to the book's value.
It is rare that detailed information, clear prose, and brilliant illustrations come together so seamlessly as they do in this most readable and interesting of books. Almost daily, I turn to it for pleasure, for information, for ideas.
It is sui generis.
Buy it and have it sent express!
Gardens and Historic plants of the antebellum southReview Date: 2008-04-08
The Lush LifeReview Date: 2007-02-07
IndispensableReview Date: 2008-02-29
Historic BeginningReview Date: 2006-02-19

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low country cookingReview Date: 2007-10-10
Purchased as a gift.Review Date: 2005-08-12
Wonderful Country CookingReview Date: 2007-03-11
easy and awesomeReview Date: 2006-06-19
Ms. Robinson ALWAYS washes her greens in WARM water,Review Date: 2006-09-17
Thank you, Ms. Robinson.

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Informative and Entertaining Guide to South CarolinaReview Date: 2000-01-20
I wasn't disappointed... extremely helpfulReview Date: 2006-10-16
Sigalas knows what we wantReview Date: 2006-02-13
Myrtle Beach
Historic plantations and houses
Small town getaways
Food
That's what you get here. It's very well done and irreverent, sometimes humorously so. There's enough sophistication to this guide to keep amateur historians and architects happy, but it is by no means a complete catalog of historic landmarks and locations. Rather, we're really talking about the highlights. The thing I like most about this guide is its attention to small towns off the beaten path which make for pleasant discoveries. It encourages you to find the time for places like York, Georgetown and Camden, for example. The thing I like least about it is its very summary coverage of the State's greatest place, Charleston. While Sigalas does a lovely spread of Columbia, he concentrates his attention on the far south-eastern tip of the peninsula in Charleston. Forgivable, I'd say, since there are many, many resources that cover Charleston more thoroughly.
Enjoying this Book!Review Date: 2000-05-05
Practical and Very FunnyReview Date: 2000-04-21
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