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South Carolina Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

South Carolina
Freedom road (Armed Services edition)
Published in Unknown Binding by Editions for the Armed Services (1945)
Author: Howard Fast
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Every history student from highschool and up should read Freedom Road!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-17
Howard Fast does an extraordinary job of using one former slave, Gideon Jackson, to illustrate the hopes, struggles and triumphs of African Americans after the Civil War. The concept of using a ficional novel to teach actual historical events should be done far more often. The reader is brought in to post war South Carolina to get a glimpse of life for both African Americans and pro and anti slavery whites. Fast is a very good writer and this book should, without doubt, be used in classrooms around the country. It offers a refreshing break from wordy textbooks and students appreciate that!

Reconstruction's Freedom Road
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
Even though this fictional book was assigned for a class in Civil War history, it turned out to be an enjoyable assignment. It is a very readable account of Reconstruction from 1865 to 1877. The book describes how well Reconstruction was working for recently emancipated slaves in South Carolina, and how bad it was going for the elite southern whites there. It does an amazing job of portraying the positive struggles of African Americans, and some working class whites, and how they were succeeding, until the final withdrawal of Union troops from the South.

This book is fun to read in the beginning, but the sad consequences of Reconstruction bring it to the inevitable conclusion. This does not detract from the book's accurate portrayal of what really caused Reconstruction to fail.

This is an excellent book that you will have no trouble reading in one sitting. If you read this book, you will understand what really happened during Reconstruction, and the real facts that they failed to tell most of us in high school. This book was published in 1944, long before most US historians recognized how southern historians had distorted the country's view of Reconstruction. Thanks to recent historians, we now have a much more accurate picture of this era.

Freedom Won and Lost - will we repeat this history in Iraq?
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-24
I listened to this book on tape and it was moving and relevent to what is happening today in Iraq. A captive people were freed and fought for their freedom only to have the insurrectionists, the Klu Klux Klan in this book, return to power and harrass and oppress them. Black and white stood together opposing the KKK but are left unprotected as the US military pulled out of the south. One feels guiltly and angry for this action by our government.If one transfers those feeling to the plith of people in Iraq it leaves one calling for this history to not be repeated. Read this book and you will call for us to stay the course of freedom for all humanity.
A very moving story about a real historical event.

EXCELLENT BOOK
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-13
To not feel emotion while reading this book is impossible. The reader falls in love with the main character, Gideon Jackson. His enemies become the reader's enemies. His struggles break the reader's heart, because they've grown so close to Gideon. The reader becomes angry, sad, and just upset at how the people and the America that so many people fought for, can just turn its back on these poor black slaves. The hatred and the evilness portrayed by the Klu Klux Klan is unbearable and the reader realizes how unfortunate these times were for the black American. So if you want a very dramatic, but historically true novel this is the number ONE choice!

WAIT a MINute!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-21
The Works of Howard Fast are incendiary,no doubt...Whether he rises into the sunlight of great literature, as does Steinbeck in works of a similar genre, or remains in the depths of vituperation, remains to be seen...The important thing to remember is, all of his characters and situations are strictly FICTIONAL and have nothing whatever to do with history, even those put forward as being historical! In "Spartacus", for example, his Spartacus is a man totally made up according to the Marxist scheme of things. With all the real sorrows to get excited about, why are we spending time on fictional ones? However, if you want the best of Fast, you need to read "The Hessian."

South Carolina
Freefall (Thorndike Press Large Print Core Series)
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Press (2008-05-02)
Author: JoAnn Ross
List price: $31.95
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Freefall
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
Sabrina Swann has always been a driven woman, but after surviving a terrorist attack, she decides to go back to the only place she has considered home to re-group and decide what she wants to do with her life. However, as soon as Sabrina gets to Swann Island, she comes across her teenage crush, Zach Tremayne, who is one of the last people she wanted to see. After all, who wants to relive their most embarrassing moment - which for Sabrina was throwing herself at Zach and being turned down. But, as it comes to light that Sabrina is not as "recovered" from her awful experience, she finds that she has more in common with Zach than teenage memories.

Zach Tremayne is home after his tour with the Navy SEALs ended after a disastrous mission that ended many lives and forever changed Zach's. So after spending some time living inside a bottle, Zach is working for his father and trying to pull his life together and into normalcy. When he finds Sabrina back in town, there is no reason not to pursue his attraction to her - now that she is legal, that is. But what starts as a fling evolves into friendship and then to something much more intense as Zach and Sabrina face a serial killer that is prowling Swann Island.

Freefall is a romantic suspense that will keep you on the edge of your seat waiting to see who will win the race against time - the killer or Sabrina and Zach. JoAnn Ross wrote another spellbinding novel that takes disturbing glimpses into the mind of a killer while delivering a lava hot romance between Zach and Sabrina and is sure to leave readers eagerly waiting for the next installment in this new series. Zach is as much an Alpha male as you could wish for - as he is a man tempered by his terrible experiences in the battlefield which have made him realize how fleeting life is and how precious love can be. Sabrina is a strong woman with a steely core who never forgets to be smart in the face of patronizing males. When Zach and Sabrina come together, they set the pages on fire and leave you envying Sabrina her luck! One of the most appealing things about Freefall is the strong elements of admiration and appreciation for the service and sacrifice of the men and women in uniform woven into the plot. Get yourself Freefall for a truly entrancing read that will keep you turning the pages well into the night!

Sabella
reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed

Review: Freefall by JoAnn Ross
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
There's a killer loose on Swann Island. It has always been a small-town sort of place where everybody knew everybody else. Until all of the new development started. Now property values have skyrocketed and there are masses of tourists in town, plus at least one serial killer.

Sabrina Swann spent every summer of her young life here with her grandmother, Lucie, who was loved by everyone on the island. Lucie Swann had been alone since her no-good, two-timing husband up & left town in the middle of the night years ago, but still, everyone was surprised when she passed away suddenly.

Sabrina was among those shocked by her grandmother's death. She thought they still had many years together. Her grandmother had been so understanding that she couldn't make it home for a visit this year because she was busy climbing her way to the top of the company in a major hotel chain.

When the hotel is literally blown up around her, she decides to go home to Swann Island to recuperate. She arrives a week earlier than planned and gets a surprise the first morning, waking up to find local bad boy and former SEAL, Zach Tremayne looking in her window. He gets an eye full, but so does she. Seems both have gown up a lot since the last time that met.

When Sabrina's best friend disappears, everyone is helping look for her, but Sabrina gets too close to the action and ends up in cage, alongside her friend. It is up to Zach and his friends to get them out before it is too late.

This is the first in Ms Ross' "High Risk" series. The highest risk is that you'll get hooked from the beginning and not be able to do anything else until you finish this book (the way I did).

It's a great story and there is enough background on all of the characters that you understand how their lives fit together, but getting the info into the story doesn't drag it down, the way it sometimes can.

Overpopulated 3.5 star romantic suspense
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-22
Terrorism has a profound and lasting effect on Sabrina Swann and Zach Tremayne who return to the small southern island they call home. Sabrina fled Italy after surviving a terrorist bombing at the hotel she managed; Zach is a SEAL involved in a disastrous and deadly mission that left many of his teammates dead. Working construction for his father, Zach and Sabrina run into each other when he is working on her family's tea plantation that she recently inherited. Sabrina has always had a crush on Zach and hopes he doesn't remember the night she threw herself at him before he went of to join the service. Also on their tiny island community lurks a serial killer who is upping his body count, and Sabrina is suddenly on his radar.

I love pretty much everything Ross writes, but this one was just not the knock out I was hoping for. It is so overpopulated. There are so many characters introduced in the first couple chapters that I kept backtracking trying to tell them apart. The chemistry between the lead characters is off the charts - no surprise there - but the ending was so anti-climatic. It was as if Ross was charged with writing a 382 page novel and got to 375 and decided she needed to end it already. What should have been a spine-tingling, edge-of-your-seat ending was instead a haiku, Scooby Doo ending where the killer would have gotten away had it not been for that meddlesome SEAL. Just way too abrupt. I also could not understand why Zach was the responsible one in the mission gone awry - it was never really explained. But that won't stop me from checking out her next novel, because even a mediocre Ross novel is pretty well written!

She's better than this.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
I was very disappointed in this book. The romance is nice and believable, but is secondary. The gross details of torture she subjects us too were completely unnecessary. Neither did I believe the ending. There were way too many holes in the plot for her choice of villains to make any sense.

I have enjoyed many of her books in the past, but this was a complete let down.

So much going on!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-25
Sabrina Swann had just been made general manager of an upscale hotel in Florence, Italy, when the hotel was blown up from under her. Seeking refuge as she recovers, Sabrina returns to her home turf, Swann Island, South Carolina. The local population of the sleep Southern Island has always been small, not including the tourists, so everyone knows everything about everyone. Before Sabrina had fully moved into the Swannsea estate, everyone knew she had returned and what had happened in Italy. The last person she expected to encounter on Swann Island is Zachariah "Zach" Tremayne. Zach had stole Sabrina's heart when she was a teen, gently declined her invitation to give him her most precious gift, and eventually left to become a Navy S.E.A.L. Sabrina had no idea Zach had left the military, but she recognized the pain in his eyes which was so similar to her own. Zach was home to heal as well. Though the former S.E.A.L. still had "warrior" written all over him, he was currently helping his father with the family construction business.

Zach cannot forget the horror he saw in his last battle in the Afghan mountains. Slowly he has been recovering. Flashbacks occur rarely now and Zach is beginning to believe he may live after all. Seeing Sabrina "New York" is a pleasure. He always knew she would go far. He also knew she would bloom, but she now outshines all his expectations. If Sabrina were to offer herself again, he would gratefully accept, as long as there were no permanent strings.

Word spreads quickly about the bodies found. Murder has not happened on Swann Island in about sixteen years, and that one was an accident due to too much drinking. Sheriff Nathaniel "Nate" Spencer has his hands full trying to find what is looking to be the beginning of a serial killer. Even though Nate is a former Marine, with a Silver Star, he still feels that he is under a microscope. Everyone on the island is watching to see if he would be half as good at the job as his father had been. Danger is hunting local prey and with each death Nate finds it more difficult not to crack. All his people, his friends, and his (hopefully someday soon) family could be in the cross hairs of a murderer's rifle scope.

***** As you can tell by the synopsis I wrote, there is A LOT going on here. Sabrina and Zach are the main characters/couple. But Nate and Titania (Sabrina's best friend) have their own moments. This is a stand alone story; however, it looks as though this may be the first in a series upon the island. I hope so, because this story not only sizzles with romance, but explodes with action and intrigue. Be warned there is a scene of a lady "being forced". I know some readers cannot read such, so consider yourself forewarned. Nothing too graphic though, in my opinion. All-in-all, I found this to be a phenomenal read that will keep you engrossed until way past your bed time. *****

Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.

South Carolina
The Jewish Confederates (NS)
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (2000-10)
Author: Robert N. Rosen
List price: $39.95
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Average review score:

And you never knew.......
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-30
....that The Confederacy had Jews. Surprise...A true story: in my exam room, there is always a book on my side table. One day, this was the book; a young girl [I take care of Army Privates] went over and picked it up as if she were touching pork. She informed me that the book was a lie, because there could not possibly have been any Jews in The Confederacy. I pointed to Judah Benjamin's picture among the other Confederate heroes on my wall and told her his story, including the slave owning. She was appalled. She soon knew that the CSA had around 2000 Jews, from Private to Colonel. Then, she asked me the question for which I still have no answer: "How is it that I, a Jew, living in America, don't know that significant a part of my own history?" Sadly, she's a very bright girl, who just didn't know. Much more sadly, BOTH of her parents are history professors. The encounter happened right before Christmas break, and she informed me that she was going to ask her mother about the matter. I gave her several references, and wished her Happy Chanukkah. After the break, she said that her Mom told her that, yes, this is something they knew, but just don't talk about. Look, all of us who deal with history can tell stories of astonishing ignorance. But I've never forgotten that girl; whenever I see ignorance, she reminds me of the obligation that all us who know have to impart [gently] unto those who don't.

Bob Rosen, has, indeed, imparted, and done it superbly. He gives us the story of all the major, and many of the minor, Jews who saluted the Stars and Bars. The two most prominant Jewish Confederates, Judah P. Benjamin, and Phoebe Yates Pember, were civilians, but many wore the gray uniform; Abraham Myers was the Quartermaster General, David DeLeon was the first Surgeon General [Rosen gives the bad with the good; Dr. DeLeon was a drunk, who was soon cashiered]. Major Adolph Proskauer led a charge at Gettysburg, and lived to tell it for many years. Ironically, the two highest ranking Jews killed in the war both fell at Vicksburg, and have monuments near each other. They were Colonels Leon Dawson Marks [Confederate] and Marcus H. Spiegel[Yankee]. Dr. Simon Baruch was a highly respected surgeon during, and after, the war; his son, Bernard, gained fame as a financier. Sgt. Moses Ezekiel was a VMI Cadet who fought at New Market, then was one of the finest sculptors on earth for many years. Many gave much in support; Mrs. Pember's sister, Eugenia Phillips, was a Spy who went to jail twice, and won the hearts of all Southerners by slapping Beast Butler. Rabbis Max Michaelbacher and George Jacobs were central figures in the Richmond religious community. There's even humor here; witness the "damn yankee Jew" asking a child in Norfolk for a piece of matzoah during The Feast of Unleavened Bread.

Interestingly, while the Yankees had around 10,000 Jews in uniform, and the South 2,000, it was the supposedly "racist" South that had Benjamin and Mrs. Pember. Only The Confederacy put Jews in leadership positions. Robert E. Lee and Jeff Davis strongly, and openly, supported the Jewish community, while Grant and Sherman were stark-raving anti-Semites.

This is not just a great book, it's an artistic masterpiece. Great illustrations, well presented. The maps of Richmond, Charleston, and New Orleans even show the modern Interstates as reference points; nice touch. Bob Rosen deserves all our thanks, even those of a goyim like me. Do not fail to read this book.

The Jewish Confederates
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-15
The world is full of people who just don't get it, thanks to the ultra-leftist American media. They consider South "the land of bigotry" and portray the War Between the States, as some sort of referendum on slavery and bigotry. In their minds, the thought a Jew in a Confederate uniform is an oxymoron.

Of course, the historical record is as clear as a bell-the so-called "Civil War" was a result of high tariffs and the average Southerner's fear of a new political party that sought even more "tax and spend" polices.

During the antebellum times, Jews were an integral part of the South. A substantial amount of their contribution to the region is still part of the Southern landscape.

When a Jewish friend of mine from the north side of Chicago recently had an opportunity to travel in the South, he was amazed to learn that the South was not the land of anti-Semitism, as the media-dominated northern urban culture had led him to believe. He was also surprised to discover how much evidence of early Jewish influence in the South still remains.

Of course, I recommended that he read The Jewish Confederates to help him put it all into perspective. It really shows that many Jewish men and women were proud citizens of the Confederacy.

Some of the details presented make it clear that many of these brave soldiers of the Confederacy were very serious about their faith and culture. A portion of the book that detail the way the Jewish soldiers were allowed the opportunity to celebrate their holidays was especially enlightening.

It took a lot of courage on the part of Robert N. Rosen to write such a book. In a day and age when many people arrogantly display their ignorance by equating the Confederate flag with racism, Rosen should be considered national hero for having the guts to bring the world the truth.

If it were up to me, Rosen's The Jewish Confederates would be required reading for any program on "multiculturalism." It would also be required reading for every liberal history professor who teaches the era of the War Between the States.

Seven Score and Three Years Ago
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-16
First, I commend Robert Rosen for his dedication to this subject and for publishing this work. I am sure that it ought to be as controversial as recent books (and film) showing dedication of Blacks to the Southern Cause for Independence. I recall as a child watching the march on Montgomery, the seat of the first Confederate Capitol, before it was moved to Richmond. And had it remained in Montgomery, what then?

Mr. Rosen, an attorney, is clear with his research. Anyone who might wonder why Jews would fight for the Confederacy, or Blacks for that matter, will find this fascinating. Jews from South Carolina, from Louisiana, many of German or Spanish (Sephardic) heritage, were there. I hope that more books, and personal accounts, will follow, from groups whose support for the rights of the States to determine their destinies will be forthcoming. We must learn from history.

Anyone who would hope to understand what it means to be an American should have this book on the shelf, and read it. To paraphrase Shelby Foote, before this war, the United States could only be conceived of as a plurality, after, a singularity. Yet today, we are no doubt in danger of falling into an abyss of pluralism that threatens any kind of national identity. Yet Irishmen fought one another--at Fredericksburg, and elsewhere--as did Jews, and Blacks, and Hispanics--across stone walls at point-blank range, leaving a legacy of maiming of soul and flesh. We have only to look back 3 score years to the bloodbath of Europe to see we are not yet free.

Jews fought for home and hearth, "Pro Aris et Pro Focis"--a common Latin phrase embroidered on flags North and South. In the American South, many Jews found that was worth fighting for against an invasion from afar. That experience unites them with us, today.

Most highly recommended for scholarship and readability!

A Gorgeous . . . Info Dump
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-31
This is truly a beautiful book. It occupies a prominent place on my library shelf. The subject matter is fascinating, and important. Considering how Jews came to be treated in the South after the Civil War, the story of how Jews other than Judah Benjamin loyally served the Confederacy most certainly should be told.

For telling this story, Robert Rosen deserves credit. But the writing in The Jewish Confederates is pedestrian at best. Most chapters consist of paragraph after paragraph of short recaps of the military service of people with nothing in common other than being Jewish. Rosen diligently did his research, then regurgitated what he found.

In short, I do recommend this book for those interested in either the history of Jews in America or the Civil War, but do not expect to be captivated -- not an unreasonable expectation given the beautiful cover artwork. You will learn, but it will be a chore. Kind of like school, but there are certainly worse ways to spend some time.

An Interesting account of Jewish life in the South before and during the Civil War.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-23
I've had Jewish friends in Memphis and New Orleans whom I was surprised to learn had Ancestors in the Army of Northern Virgina and the Army of Tennessee. Rosen's book shows that the Civil War truly was a War of Brother against Brother no matter the ties by social status, national origin, or religion.

Rosen has done quite a bit of research and presents his narrative with the recollections, diaries, and letters of the participants and their families and friends. This kind of history by correspondance has always appealed to me more than the memoir type that is carefully thought out later to put the event or individual in the best light.

Rosen presents us with Jews living a normal life in the antebellum South similar to that enjoyed by their White Christian neighbors. The same predjudices and toleration for the "peculiar institution" exist for them as it does for their neighbors but I sense there is more of a toleration amongst this community for the Abolitionists Movement among Antebellum Jews than other groups in the South.

When War comes young men enlist and fight for the same cause as their Christian neighbors and with the same Gallantry. First hand accounts of the struggles and hardships of the War come from the letters soldiers write home to their families.

Rosen presents Jewish Life from the viewpoints of many players from well known Lousiana politician Judah P. Benjamin who held many positions in Jefferson Davis' Cabinet to less well known immigrants from Spain and Germany who started stores in rural Mississippi and Arkansas.

One story that I could not find was that of Sergeant Mordecai Solomon or Solomon Mordecai of Jackson, Mississippi who won the Confederate Medal of Honor at Spotsylvania Court House in 1864 and whose Synagogue was bombed by the KKK 100 years later

The book is a must for Civil War enthusiasts and may be helpful in Geneology research.

South Carolina
Lowcountry Boil
Published in Hardcover by River City Publishing (2003-09)
Author: Carl T. Smith
List price: $27.95
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Average review score:

A must read in the world of southern fiction!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-07
The outstanding setting of the south carolina coastal region, a.k.a. the lowcountry, is surpassed by the well developed characters and politics that form the basis for this story. Carl Smith weaves a credible tale of corruption interspersing human vices and virutes ... greed, lust, infidelity, conceit, bigotry, humility, bravery, and honesty. Although the author brings the story to a satisfying conclusion, he leaves a several hooks for other Sam Larkin adventures. I highly recommend this book to readers who enjoy great southern fiction.

Delicious
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-22
Wow! What a read! Lowcountry Boil has it all--action, suspense, romance, sense of place, and sympathetic characters--a great book for either gender. It's complex enough to challenge and satisfy, yet not so convoluted the reader gets lost. An experienced writer or editor could point out flaws, yet its imperfection somehow adds to its charm. Carl T. Smith is an amazing storyteller. He held me spellbound.

EXCELLENT READING
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-03
CHARACTERS AND STORY..A RARE COMBINATION IN THIS DAY AND AGE. THERE ARE TWO LITTLE BOYS YOU'LL NEVER FORGET. I WAS EVEN BREATHLESS WHEN ALL WAS CONCLUDED..YOU'LL HAVE TO FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF

Good book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-31
I enjoyed this book. It wasn't too predictable and Smith has a sequel coming out Sept. 1.

Worth a Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-29
This was not a book I remember as getting much press or shooting up the best sellers list, but it is an entertaining book and worth a read, especially if you are from the Low Country or have spent any time there. Smith does a great job with character development and going into detail with his story line.

South Carolina
Puma
Published in Paperback by BookSurge Publishing (2006-03-21)
Author: Ted L. Gragg
List price: $18.95
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Average review score:

TECHNICAL EXPERTISE 10, DRAMA/ATMOSPHERE ZERO
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-13
The author absolutely cannot be faulted on his expertise and technical knowledge of places, government agencies and policies and, to a lesser extent and leaving aside some major flights of fancy, cougars. This certainly gives the story realism and body. Where the prose style fails is in the creation of suspense and atmosphere. There isn't any. While there are many grisly bits, to be sure, there was never anything that lent a little tingle or made the hairs on the back of my neck stir. It seemed as though the author was so concerned about injecting all the information he could that he had no room left for emotion or characterization and that left the book feeling very flat to me.

Be aware also that the author does have an ax to grind concerning the policy of re-introducing predators to areas where they have been exterminated (such as wolves to the western national parks). I'm on the fence myself - I embrace the theory but would not like to embrace an actual mountain lion in my driveway. The author is definitely not on the fence.

Also, the passages giving us the mindset of the cougar are interesting; they show understanding of the animal but too often drift off into anthropomorphism/fantasy - as when the cougar turns over in her mind the fact that motherhood is no fun and so she's not going to get pregnant ever again. He also demonizes the puma to the point that it becomes a sort of furry "Jaws," leaping on everyone it sees and plotting revenge. It contrasts oddly with the determinedly factual nature of the rest of the book and seems more suited to a sort of gruesome Disney-esque
"creatures of the forest" adventure gone bad.

That being said, I found the information interesting and the story itself readable, though never compelling. If you're interested in cougars, hunting, environmental "experiments" or people vs. animal encounters, I think you'll enjoy the book. And for a non-fiction account of people vs. mountain lions, I highly recommend "The Beast in the Garden." It's informative, factual and, unhappily, true, and it will make you look over your shoulder whenever you take the garbage out after dark - especially if you live in the western United States.

"Puma" launches the career of novelist Ted Gragg
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-03
Ted Gragg has exhibited his mastery as a wordsmith in this spellbinding and thoroughly captivating novel. Anyone who has gotten to know Ted, listened to his delightful and amusing recounting of his own adventurous childhood and adult experiences, or read "On Target," his monthly column in "Waccamaw Outdoors" knows he can spin a yarn with the ease, ability, tongue-in-cheek humor and down-home common sense of the likes of Will Rogers. "Puma" launches Ted's legendary story-telling reputation into a whole new realm.
Ted calls upon his vast depth of experience with and knowledge of the geography, wildlife, law enforcement agencies and human culture native to South Carolina in general and the Horry County area in particular, as well as firearms and their properties and usages in fleshing out the various facets of this gem of a novel. He paints layer upon layer of insightful and varicolored scenarios as the gripping suspense, constantly shifting between human and animal drama, and never far from the surface, transports the reader from opening sentence to epilogue with no perceptible break in the action and precious little letup. It's not hard to see the horror/drama/suspense/thriller movie playing out on the big screen as Ted's words come alive off the page. I hope it won't be long in the making!
Ted avoids the common error of anthropomorphism when putting us in the mindset of the various animals portrayed, particularly the villain of the story, the man-killer cougar. I'm sure he got help in this area from long talks with Thomas, the guardian of the gate, right Ted?
A "can't put down" white-knuckle thriller that leaves you hungry for the next offering from this very talented author.

Gripping Novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-11
An action packed thriller I couldn't put down until the end. Ted Gragg's writing style brings the Puma to life in all it's wild glory. His exceptional style of writing captures the reader with dramatic force and power. You will forget you are reading the words as the story comes alive. The Puma and the characters are so real you can see and hear them from the pages. This is great novel by one of America's newest and most exciting authors on the literary scene today. I expect this novel will make it to the big screen once a screenplay worthy of this great novel is complete.

A Brilliant American Adventure!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-21
Puma is imaginative and captivating!

Gragg has written a contemporary adventure novel set in the "Wild" of South Carolina. Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Officer, Mike Carson, finds himself to be the unlikely hero in the hunt for a man eating Cougar! Mike's hunt for a storm ravaged cougar takes on dramatic twists as he fights for more than just his life. With unexpected threats around every corner, it will take more than former military skills and endurance to survive tracking this American Cougar across the Wilds of South Carolina.

Louis L'amour fans, keep your eyes on this writer!!!

LT Range USNR

Fast paced, graphic, gory, intensely entertaining, and possibly prophetic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
I don`t read much for pleasure, but the pace of Ted`s novel captured me. It was the focus of my entertainment until the last chilling word.

His style is a blend of Mark Twain`s indiginous vernacular and James Dickey`s "Deliverance"; death stalking in the last remaining wilderness.

When I was a young hunter in south Georgia, there really were a few isolated pockets of wilderness, places where there was no evidence of

human intrusion except for the few ancient mammoth cypress stumps, footprints of past logging expeditions. These retreats have forever disappeared in

the deep south. Now every attempt to relive that anxious, fearful, aloneness, to experience real isolation is thwarted, when I wander into yet another old

campsite; hear vehicle noise only yards from my seemingly isolated deer stand- Oh yes, and sometimes even some idiot`s reggae cell phone`s ring tone.

In Horry county, South Carolina where the tale is set, animal habitat is swiftly shrinking due to the marshalling tourist industry and soaring

property values. Man relentlessly encroaches upon beasts until at some point he is forced to acknowledge the real conflict between the ideal,

"ethical treatment" of animals, and the increasing threat to his personal safety, and even the lives of his family. In Charleston, SC, racoons caring rabies

and intestinal parasites that may kill or infect causing neurologic disease, forage in back yards, eating from pets dishes, and strewing

garbage. Their lives are protected by law. In Myrtle Beach, deer graze the roadsides, golf courses, and back yard schrubbery. Deer predators will

soon follow. If not man, then cyotes, bobcats, and if they are here, even LIONS! Cyotes seem to be steadily moving into this area. In other parts

of the country where more numerous, they prey not only on livestock, but also on household pets. Why not the lion, who has been documented to take

easy human prey?

Ted`s novel came alive for me when I realize I had hunted the same general area where the the central character, the great cat enjoyed the sport and satiety provided

by human prey. I never saw panther sign in Deep Woods club, but then I am not the woodsman Ted is, nor have I spent a fraction of the time he has in that

mosquito plagued, snake and gator pit. Also, I have known Ted to exaggerate but never to prevaricate. Novel and entertainment aside, big cats may already

inhabit this area.

I live in semi-suburban wilderness as well. Once you turn off the black top into my wife`s wanna be horse ranch, you see a house and some white

fence, but behind is a slope of dense undergrowth and myrtle descending to a swamp and small stream. I built a boardwalk across the swamp which ends on a small

deck. I sit out there for hours, meditating, and nature watching. I see owls, ducks, all varieties of song birds, beaver, otter, racoons, and on occasion, deer.

Soon after the cat walk was built, my son Josh was sitting quietly, watching and listening to the whistle of teal swimming by when he saw a

"really big black cat". "Dad he was bigger than a bobcat, much bigger!" Our distant neighbor, roughly one quarter mile from here, is one of Josh`s high

school teachers, and I believe a reliable witness. He and his son have seen the "big black cat" on several occasions.

The book is a fast paced, graphic, and an occasionally gorey tale, intensely entertaining, and as you see, possibly prophetic.

I enthusiastically recommend it.




















South Carolina
The Dark Sun Rises (Roots of Faith/Denise Williamson, 1)
Published in Paperback by Bethany House Publishers (1999-01)
Author: Denise Williamson
List price: $12.99
New price: $2.58
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $14.95

Average review score:

Not what I expected
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-16
This book was not what I expected it to be. I borrowed this book from the library believing it to be an inspirational book, but I found it to be more depressing than inspirational. It seems that the author decided to allow almost every possible thing that could happen to a slave happen to Joseph.
The book was a little too wordy and at times gave out unneeded information. Even though the book was supposed to be about slaves overcoming the struggles of slavery while keeping faith in God, it was more about seeing just how evil, mean, cruel, and unchristian white slave owners as well as none slave owners could be. The Christians (slaves)constantly go from belief to unbelief in God depending on the problem at the time.
The Christian characters in this book are weak even though they are suppose to have such great faith. "Faith without works is dead". The unchristian ones are evil and almost always have the upper hand and are the stronger.
It even touches on how blacks go against blacks (or shall I say brown) because of the color of their skin.
A lot of the story may be based on true facts, but I thought it was told in a very depressing manner. I have read many books on slavery, but this book was by far the least inspired of all in my opinion.
I most certainly did not finish reading the book with the feeling that I was inspired!! By the time I reached the end I was tired of the cruelty, the word nigger, and the fact of Joseph getting abused in almost every chapter.
I was quite disappointed and would not read from this author again.

Powerfully, thought provoking book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-19
This is a wonderful book that explores the complexities of how to live an honorable, Christian life in a society that approves of discrimination. In a world where laws and social prejudice dictate that some humans are less worthy than others, how is a Christian to act if he or she is a member of the oppressing class, or a member of the oppressed class? What can or should one do? The parallels for today are powerful for those who look.

My only criticism of this gripping tale is that the evil characters donÕt even pretend to be Christians, and the Christian characters always are good, even if they are weak. In my experience, sometimes Christians deliberately do evil things, and many non-Christians are wonderfully moral and loving people.

Nevertheless, this is a book well worth reading and discussing with your friends. It is told in a manner that involves the reader on all levels. Marvellously written - powerful message.

Powerful, thought-provoking
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-20
Ê This is a wonderful book that explores the complexities of how to live an honorable, Christian life in a society that approves of discrimination. In a world where laws and social prejudice dictate that some humans are less worthy than others, how is a Christian to act if he or she is a member of the oppressing group, or a member of the oppressed group? What can or should one do? The parallels for today are powerful for those who look.

My only criticism of this gripping tale is that the evil characters donÕt even pretend to be Christians, and the Christian characters always are good, even if they are weak. In my experience, sometimes Christians deliberately do evil things, and many non-Christians are wonderfully moral and loving people.

Nevertheless, this is a book well worth reading and discussing with your friends. It is told in a manner that involves the reader on all levels. Marvellously written, with a powerful message.

The Dark Sun Rises
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-28
As an avid reader, it is an extreme compliment that I give this book my A#1 best book ever vote! It was hard to turn the pages without my tears falling on the words! Wonderful story, beautifully written!

Great Historical Novel of Faith
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-23
The author has done a wonderful job depicting a terrible time in our nation's history from the perspective of those who had to live through it.

The slaves had to endure and put their hope in the afterlife, the Christian slave owners had to consider that their slaves might be better off being under their protection that to be free in the South. Their dilemna also included the fact that their plantations depended on slave labor. The white slave driver had to decide whether it was better for him to remain there and keep the slaves from enduring an abusive driver, or to seek out cheap land for himself and his family in the west.

Hate still abounded among nonChristians and those who called themselves Christians. The main character Joseph endures so much pain (physical and emotional) that you cry for him throughout his struggle. Some parts of the book were a bit wordy, but many other parts were painted vividly with such gripping descriptions that you feel you were there.

I finished the book with a new understanding of the struggles everyone in those times faced in the disgrace of slavery.

South Carolina
The Foxfire Book of Appalachian Cookery
Published in Paperback by The University of North Carolina Press (1992-10-31)
Author:
List price: $21.95
New price: $10.95
Used price: $9.75

Average review score:

Great history and cultural information in a Cook Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-28
This book is fun to read. It contains so many good recipes and cultural stories. If the Appalchian Mountains are as special to you as they are to me, you will love this book.

Excellent book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-13
If a person has read the "Foxfire" series of books, they will enjoy this compilation of all the recipes from each of the books. The book is very well put together with lots of pictures and intersting facts from the people who gave the recipes. Enjoy!

LOVED IT
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
THIS BOOK HAD LOTS OF GREAT OLD FASHIONED COOKING SEGMENTS. I WAS WELL PLEASED WITH IT.

A DELICIOUS READ - FOOD AND HISTORY AND CULTURE, WHAT MORE COULD YOU WANT?
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-23
This is a great addition to the Foxfire book family. On a personal note, I was raised on many of the recipes noted here. The food of the Missouri/Arkansas Ozarks is quite similar to the Appalachians. This book gives a great representation of the "way it was," and the delightful writing and personal stories and interviews just add to the fun and usefulness of this work. One needs to note though, that this is not a "cookie cutter" cook book. If you are looking for a recipe book with standard, boring directions, then you need to probably look elsewhere. There are dozens and dozens of that type of book out there and they are not all that difficult to find. No one book can do it all...that fact is pretty much a no brainer. This is a history book, a book about a vanished or vanishing culture, even more than it is a cook book. This is quite important to remember.

That being said, this work is an absolute delight to read. From the preparation of the animal being cooked all the way to the making of sauerkraut, the book is filled with wonderful facts and insights to a time long past. One of the things that I found most interesting was the ingenious methods used to be sure that everything, and I mean everything, was used. These folks of past generations did not leave much to waste.

The reading is easy, but do be warned, that you must get use to the dialect used here. It may throw some off, but once you get use to it, it adds so much to the story being told. The book has plenty of black and white photographs, gives around 300 recipes and absolutely hundreds of bits of trivia. This is one of those works you will probably want to add to your library because it is one that deserves rereads. Highly recommend this one along with the entire series.

Sad Disappointment
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-04
I am a serious cook with a large cookbook library. I am a Southerner who made my first biscuits and gravy at age 5. This book is a not-so-well done re-hash of other Foxfires and sorely disappointing. It is difficult to use as a cookbook-more poignant than useful. Also a tad light on recipes. A much better book from North Georgia (Southern Appalachia, like the Foxfire series) is Smokehouse Ham, Spoon Bread & Scuppernong Wine: The Folklore and Art of Southern Appalachian Cooking. I use this one a lot, enjoy reading the stories, and frequently give it as gift to visiting Yankees. Plus it has the wit, charm, and authenticity so sadly missing from the Foxfire Cookbook.

South Carolina
The New Low-Country Cooking: 125 Recipes for Coastal Southern Cooking with Innovative Style
Published in Hardcover by William Morrow Cookbooks (2000-07-01)
Author: Marvin Woods
List price: $27.50
New price: $8.28
Used price: $3.80
Collectible price: $27.50

Average review score:

everyday comfort food with perfect flavor!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-16
an excellent cookbook on a regional cuisine. excellent and accurate choice of recipes (although i wish there were more chicken dinner ones). these recipes are perfect for flavorful basic meals. this is without question the book i use most, especially for sunday dinner. i have passed along the mac/cheese recipe to dozens of folks. the smothered chicken recipe is a staple in our house. try the butternut squash succotash or the spiced apple pie or the stewed chicken. they're can't miss and delicious

the food in this collection isn't fancy or fussy, but it is very very good. this book is best suited for everday folks who have cooking and eating as an integral part of daily home life.

Nice but ....uninspired.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-17
I was eaagerly awaiting the delivery of this book and was disappointed. The recipies were little more than re-hashing some basic carolina cooking. Nothing innovative or even interesting.

I was hoping for more.

Southern cooking with a real flair
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-20
This is one of my favorite cookbooks, especially after spending a summer in Charleston last year. I was raised on very traditional southern cooking, and I was looking for something that added a bit of gourmet flair to traditional recipes (and made them a bit healthier). This cookbook does it beautifully, and has a lot of nice background on low country cooking, food traditions, and history. The collard greens and gumbo recipes are just spectacular. I like too that there are basic recipes for things like hoppin john and plain old rice. No pretty pictures, but the volume of recipes more than makes up for it.

If you are looking for something reminiscent of your grandma's cooking in the fifties, with lots of fatback and crisco, you won't find it here. But I think this is a much tastier, healthier turn on my favorite little bit of southern food.

Artful simplicity at it's best
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-22
This is a wonderful cookbook, with all the southern cookbooks out there this has to be the simplest one I've used that delivers southern food with a gourmet touch BUT without the complications that gourmet recipes sometimes present to the home cook. DELICIOUS, DELICIOUS

Not Authentic Soul Food
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-08
I really disliked this coobook because it did not capture the real way people of the south cook. I am born and raised in the south and this is nothing like the food you get from big momma's house. There is absolutly nothing "gourmet" about true soul food. You use what you have to make a great meal. It is not about splurging on items that you would not normally have on hand. You use what you have to make a meal. Thanks for the effort though...

South Carolina
Out in the Garden: Growing a Beautiful Life
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (2002-03-01)
Author: Dean Riddle
List price: $24.95
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Average review score:

Truly inspiring and beautiful!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
I first picked up this book on a whim in Dean's friend's shop in Phoenicia and assumed it would be just another gardening how-to book. Boy was I ever wrong! I have never had a gardening book inspire me in such a way! I wanted to go out straight away and work in the garden and smell the rich earth and let the sun warm my back. Unfortunately, I made the mistake of reading this book during the long Catskill winter! Now, I read Dean's book each and every spring to give me the inspiration to spend hours digging and planting, and I frequently browse for articles and/or other books written by Dean, or similar in style. (I haven't found any that compare!) Not only do I wish Dean was my neighbor, but I wish he would write another book! This book is one of the few that I am actually wistful when I finish the last page....I want it to go on and on.

I also had the great fortune of touring Dean's garden during a garden tour 2 years ago...what a treat that was! I went home and wanted to rip everything out and start over, or at least have Dean come and advise me. His garden is every bit as beautiful and inspiring as his book.
A "must read" for EVERY gardener!

Gomer Goes Gardening
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-12
That is probably too mean a title for a very, very personal book, yet it seems appropriate. Mr. Riddle is a sincerely down-to-earth person, it seems, and when he says something is "purdy" I suppose he means it. His A-shucks persona gets in the way of some very good advice, however.

But this is not to say that Mr. Riddle is a poor writer -- far from it, or that he does not know his subject -- he is a classically trained horticulturist and writes a well-received garden column for Elle Décor magazine. He knows what he is doing.

There is not much in this book to learn, or that you cannot learn elsewhere -- but as the travel industry says, half the fun is the journey. The process Mr. Riddle uses to refine his design ideas is the real essence of the gardening parts of the book. His humanity and the depth of his friendships provides the soul of the memoir part of the book.

My advice if you buy this book is to read through it twice to pick up the bits you miss when you are rolling your eyes at his hokey expressions-- it is worth it.

Never too late
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-17
The librarian at Skene Library in Fleishmanns, NY foisted this book upon me as I had missed Dean Riddle's personal appearance and reading. I politely took it home. I started to skim read and three hours later had finished the book and made a list of pages to return to for information. This book is a jewel of a read and a must for any Catskill gardener. I have had a "failed garden" for ten years in the Felishmanns area. I used to be a good gardener. Not in the Catskills! Mr Riddle provides a virtual how to manual for my next year's garden. But beyond the practical, it is a delightful, fast paced, funny read.

Best Book to Read in the Garden with a Cup of Coffee Award
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-19
Out of all the gardening books I've purchased for our public library in the last four years, I would recommend Dean Riddle's book first and foremost to our readers as a balm to the soul, an inspiration to gardeners everywhere, and a plain old good read. The focus of the book is informative yet personal: it is the story of one man's coming of age in the garden, his connection with the strange and often-ignored vibrancy of the horticultural world, and his joyous appreciation of people, plants, dirt, sticks, old glassware, fried eggs, and just about everything else.

For four months a year I read virtually nothing but gardening books of all types as our orders come in to the library. Very few of the writers are able to touch and inform readers at the same time, and it is this gift that Dean Riddle brings to his writing. The book is organized in such a way that Riddle is able to incorporate stories into his highly readable and clear descriptions of his own garden plans. Within the space of a few paragraphs, the reader finds himself in Dean's world. The fully-colored images and sensations of Dean's garden stay brilliantly painted in one's mind long after the book is closed.

Passionate About Gardening
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-05
I am really enjoying this book. I am not done yet, but I have already started looking at my garden differenly. I am thinking about getting some more garden books to help me improve my garden. This book is whimsical and delightful. The author writes with a wonderful style. I hope that he is allowed to stay at his rented bungalow forever. My only complaint is the books that Amazon suggests you should get if you enjoyed this book. They all seem to be about being Gay. This book is so much more than a book about a man coming out of the closet. I think anyone would like this book straight or gay. Have to go and stroll in my garden. Enjoy the book!

South Carolina
Raising the Hunley: The Remarkable History and Recovery of the Lost Confederate Submarine
Published in Audio CD by Highbridge Audio (2002-04-01)
Authors: Brian Hicks and Schuyler Kropf
List price: $34.95
New price: $11.51
Used price: $11.03

Average review score:

Great Book !!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-19
What an exciting and informative book! Part history, part research, part archealogy, but all joined and very readable. The incredible dedication and bravery of the crews who parished aboard the "fish-boat" deserve the highest honor. These men of the past never gave up, just as the modern day team who had to move natural and govermental mountains to raise her from her watery grave. Since the research is on going and the mysteries haven't been all solved this book does not have the definative answers, I try to log unto the hunley.org site periodically to check for new developments. It's well worth reading by anyone interested in Civil War history, early submarine warfare or archealogy.

Praise for Raising the Hunley
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-03
An absolutely fascinating book. In depth and accurate historical research
gives this book its feeling that the authors where there as it happened. A
work of non-fiction that can be as exciting as a work of fiction, but it is all true !!

Professional Skeptic
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-14
If your interests run to one of the most ingenious achievements in naval history, the gritty determination of desperate men, or simply a good, old-fashioned mystery, this book should captivate you as much as it did me. The authors have sifted through rarified documents and firsthand accounts to present a very intriguing story as only investigative writers in Charleston might. The real merit of this book is its careful, reader friendly presentation of what could otherwise have been an abstruse topic. Here are basic charts, drawings, photos, expert insights, interviews, and personal backgrounds all introduced in historical context. Throughout the book appropriate facts are cleverly recalled and embroidered in the story of the evolving discoveries. When you finally put this book down, you will wish it could have been twice as long and had provided answers to the Hunley's remaining mysteries.

Civil War Delight.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-22
To a Civil War buff, the story of the Hunley is irresistable. The book begins with the conception and execution of the "fish boat" in Mobile and continues with its introduction into service in Charleston. The book then interweaves the distant past with the very recent past, telling the tale of the boat's crews (3 crews, none who answered to 'Lucky') and the tale of the multiple personalities involved in raising her some 135 years later. The writing is only adequate; the story of the boat and her design is more interesting reading than that of her crew and her salvagers. Nonetheless, this is an enjoyable book that can easily be read in one (pleasant) day.

Readible book on the sub and on underwater archaeology
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-25
I first ran across the story of the Hunley in a popular journal on archaeology and was fascinated by the tale of courage, desperation, and originality. Subsequently I saw parts of a film on the subject, and I was hooked. I found the book by Brian Hicks, Schuyler Kropf in Amazon.com's menu and decided to pursue more information on the subject.

The authors are journalists rather than professional historians or archaeologists, but they do have a talent for writing and a sense of the character of the South and Civil War history that gives the book a more readable quality. They also seem to have researched their topic well. The final pages of the book recount their efforts to follow the "fish boat's" story from first inception to final successful strike against the USS Housatonic, a Union ship participating in the blockade of the Charleston harbor. Considering that the Hunley was a secret weapon and a stealth weapon at that, its paper trail would be expected to be a difficult one to follow. The authors made a remarkable success of it, giving life to their subject.

Interesting too was the narrative of the Hunley's resurrection and restoration. The serendipitous survival of the boat in a nearly intact condition is itself an amazing story. The great care with which it was removed from the water and painstakingly preserved is a credit to underwater archaeology. Certainly it could easily have been a disaster. What the preserved remains had to say about the vessel itself: its construction, its advanced styling, the likelihood of it's having continued to be water free for long enough to allow small stalactites to form, etc. made it an even more entertaining study. It's definitely on par with the Titanic for human interest.


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