Mississippi Books
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a different viewReview Date: 2007-08-23
An interesting perspective on war.........Review Date: 2007-08-17
A pleasure to readReview Date: 2005-08-28
I'm glad to have learned about the POW camps in the South during WWII. I hadn't known about these before, but setting this novel in them allows for a complex examination of race in America. It's also a novel about partriatism, bravery or cowardice, and about how people betray the best and worse in their natures when challenged to do so. But again, Yarbrough doesn't beat you over the head with anything. There are very few cardboard good and bad characters here.
I picked this up because I noticed it was a Pen/Faulkner Award nominee. This is one instance when I was pleasantly surprised. Honestly, I've read most of the other PW nominees for 2004, but this one may be my favorite from that list.
Prisoners of WarReview Date: 2004-07-30
Captors are "Prisoners of War" in sobering, cautionary novelReview Date: 2005-10-14
Yarbrough presents several provocative theses about human behavior in "Prisoners," the most interesting of which posits that people have long outlived the moment of their deaths. Many of Yarbrough's characters are examples of the "living dead," wounded souls going through the motions of life until a climactic moment extinguishes them forever. The belligerent racist, Frank Holder, exemplifies this quality. Angry, bewildered and resentful over his enlisted son's untimely death, Holder's need for vengeance against a nameless, unconquerable force, extinguishes whatever limited capabilities he had to function as a decent man.
Dan's father and uncle fall victim to the same disability, but present different symptoms. World War I devoured Jimmy Del Timms, Dan's father. Cynical, uncommunicative and numbed, Dan's father stumbles through post-traumatic stress and suffers a disintegrating family. Jimmy Del's brother, Alvin, has betrayed conscience and community with his actions; aware of his own decadence, Alvin shrugs his shoulders at his own stench and revels in his role as a war profiteer.
Yarbrough presents the debasement of personality in times of extreme stress as a corollary to his central thesis. Even the German POW's, whose presence as seemingly tractable field laborers mollifies the struggling cotton farmers of the area, display a corrosion of the spirit. They secretively and ineptly plan an escape and turn on one of their own when the plot is foiled. Dan's mother, Shirley, is a ruin as a consequence of her failed marriage and her own moral short-circuiting. His longstanding friend, Marty Stark, has returned from the front torn asunder by moral doubt and loss of ethical standards.
Despite the abundance of evil and indifference in "Prisoners of War," our capacities to endure and be good appear. L. C., Dan's African-American friend, suffers through a horrific beating, forgiving the perpetrator, understanding his "blues." But these illuminating moments of goodness are few and far between. Steve Yarbrough intent is to tear away the veneer of civilization that covers us and to show the true grain of our personality. His novel is a towering success, elegantly crafted, precisely detailed and psychologically valid.

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Thank Goodness!Review Date: 2003-12-21
Thank Goodness!Review Date: 2003-12-21
Must reading for any southerner.Review Date: 2006-05-16
Brilliantly researched and written!Review Date: 2001-05-02
New Miss?Review Date: 2004-12-23
I wasn't aware of all the details of forced integration at Ole Miss. This book takes you through the history of the school reporting on race relations. The discussion on the most part is from the aspect of so called civil rights. This is a necessary view to an understanding but it is mostly a one sided view in the book. I'm not advocating segregation so don't go off there.
It is wrong to eliminate the southern culture of Ole Miss. The song Dixie, the proud Confederate spirit flag, rebel and Colonel mascot are a some of the reasons people love Ole Miss. If it was all so bad then why did people strive to attend. It is the southern traditions and spirit of the South which has strengthened the university. If political correctness is left to fester at Ole Miss then change the name to New Miss. It will no longer be the same great school.
It made me sick to read that Southern University changed their mascot General Nat some years ago. The mascot was named for the great General Nathan Bedford Forrest. Talk about fighting spirit. He was invited to speak at the Independent order of Pole-Beares(predecessor to the NAACP) in 1875. The first white invited to speak about civil rights to the group.
I could go on. Read this book for an understanding of Ole Miss but be sure it isn't the only one as your fed mostly so called civil rights propaganda. Readers need fair and more balanced views.
A friend told me when Ole Miss played a football game at the Independence bowl in Shreveport, La a few years ago the university band played Dixie and it was a thrill he won't forget. God, I hope I get to hear the band play Dixie someday.
Too much south bashing from a yankee lady author for me to rate over two stars.

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Simply Fascinating!Review Date: 2008-07-31
informative to a faultReview Date: 2008-03-18
Not what I was looking for...Review Date: 2006-03-22
More Than FurnitureReview Date: 2001-01-22
This well-illustrated book shows birth chairs and stools from many cultures and times. They were low, about ten or thirteen inches, and they had a more or less straight back. They had the simple job of supporting the woman in a squat, a position that allowed her to brace her feet against the ground and that allowed gravity to help. They had a very narrow seat, or a seat that had a horseshoe-shaped cut out, to allow the midwife access to the birth canal and delivery. They came in many styles, because they were generally made or ordered by the midwives that owned them.
Because of the rise of the profession of medicine, and because obstetrics was a source of professional endeavor and income, chairs changed. The seats became higher, allowing the doctor an easier view and more room for manipulation. The attitude seemed to be that midwives could put up with back strain, but doctors wouldn't; it didn't matter that the position of squatting was eliminated, so that the woman could do less to brace herself during contractions. The chairs also became more gadget-ridden, with adjustable backs, seats, arms, and stirrups. The doctor would probably adjust these to his convenience. The innovations of gadgets on what were formerly simple stools started to include chair backs that could descend to the horizontal, making the lithotomy position an option. Increasingly, birth chairs became more like operating tables, and the role of the woman centrally involved became less important than the duties of those conducting the delivery. Birth chairs came into fashion again with the rise of the women's rights movement, but doctors only grudgingly accepted them.
This is a lot of medical history for the lowly birth chair to bear, but Banks has written a thought-provoking summary of just how societies have regarded birth chairs and midwives, and how we got to the current era of continued medical intervention in labor and delivery. To her credit, she has written a history rather than a polemic, but the history cannot help but question whether abandoning birth chairs has been good for mothers or their babies.
informative & interesting read!Review Date: 2003-06-27

Excellent Series!!Review Date: 2008-08-17
READ IT IN ONE DAYReview Date: 2007-12-23
Less Sarah Booth More Lawrence AmbroseReview Date: 2008-04-05
The storyline is an interesting one and the book possesses literary merit; however, I would have liked more on Mr. Ambrose's character (and his life) and a little less on Sarah Booth's daily thoughts and meanderings--I mean how fascinated can one character be with the color of people's eyes (and they're all blue)? How many times and ways can the reader be told that S.B. is a fallen-from-grace, once wealthy daddy's girl/deb who is now having to make her own way? And that ubiquitous Jitty "character", who does nothing to advance the storyline, definitely needs a rest. She exists solely, I guess, to serve as comic relief and foil to Saran Booth.
The other townspeople in this small Mississippi enclave are, for the most part, fairly interesting and we get to know several of them pretty well. This is the second book in the series I have read and despite my mumblings and grumblings above, I will read another. Ms. Haines is a gifted writer--of that there is no doubt. However, it is difficult not to get the impression she--how can I put this--"dumbs down" her talent to appeal to a wider based audience.
Better than the first in the seriesReview Date: 2007-09-01
This author creates a great sense of life in the Miss. DeltaReview Date: 2004-05-07
The plot involves a once-famous all-around artist-celebrity who is writing a tell-all book. Needless to say, he quickly ends up dead. Who killed him, and why? The motive is obvious -- he was about to reveal something that someone wanted to remain hidden -- but there are a lot of secrets about a lot of people likely to come out if this book is published, so the list of suspects is rather long, and the motive seems to lie in something that happened in 1940. Sarah Booth Delaney, former Southern upper class girl with a long pedigree and now impoverished orphan turned private investigator (of financial necessity), sets about trying to find out who the killer is -- and it may be someone she knows well and trusts.
This is the third book by Haines that I'm reading -- she makes me want to go visit the Mississippi Delta (where this series is set). I almost except to find Sarah Booth Delaney, the ghost Jitty, and the old plantation Dahlia House waiting for me -- not to mention a hound dog on the porch.

No color...baaaad.Review Date: 2007-04-05
Why all the black and white?Review Date: 2004-04-10
Fun Read filled with MemoriesReview Date: 2003-01-30
Next Stuckeys 15,000 miles!Review Date: 2003-09-24
Pre Disney, pre interstate, pre most things, some of the attractions are cute, some look awful and other just downright bizarre. I wholeheartedly recommed this book for adult readers of any age.
Nostalgia without ironyReview Date: 2003-03-14
This book is also a celebration of Southern culture, especially that part of Southern culture that developed in order to separate visiting Yankees from their money. For, as Hollis notes, it was the arrival in the South of northern vacationers seeking warmer weather that prompted the birth and growth of the attractions listed here. It also promoted a number of important, and lasting, businesses. Among the companies born in the South to capitalize on the tourist trade, KFC (of course), Popeye's Chicken, Long John Silver, Red Lobster, Burger King, Hardee's, and Holiday Inn are just some of the more recognizable names.
From water parks to Wild West shows, Cypress Gardens to Stone Mountain, Dogpatch USA and the Grand Ole Opry to Stuckey's and countless attractions now nearly forgotten, this book is a great nostalgia ride through a largely vanished time. If you were fortunate enough to have seen that time, this book may bring back some happy memories. And if this is your first time through you may find yourself wondering what you're missing as you cruise in air-conditioned comfort on the soulless interstate.

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This is a must-read book!Review Date: 2003-08-07
I Didn't KnowReview Date: 2000-08-24
Rick
Must read!Review Date: 2000-08-23
A Must ReadReview Date: 2000-07-07
Like Being ThereReview Date: 2000-06-09

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A well developed plotReview Date: 2003-03-01
When Jack's longtime friend, the Croatian shrimper Casper Perinovich, dies in an explosion and fire at his home, Jack is drawn into the investigation and stirs up things people would prefer to keep buried. The story has considerable action, and Jack sustains some damage to his person and his pickup (messing with a southern boy's pickup can be as bad as messing with his woman). Along the way, Jack rekindles an old flame.
This is a good novel for commuters as the 272 pages are divided into 41 chapters.
RisingReview Date: 2002-03-20
A Key to the SeriesReview Date: 2003-06-09
Good Mississppi Gulf Coast MysteryReview Date: 2002-02-25
Mr. Hegwood does a fine job of depicting Mississippi Gulf Coast life and culture. Even his physical descriptions of the water routes are accurate. Only a native would be able to describe this in such detail. An earlier review said the book had a Big Easy ambiance, however, this book is Biloxi through and through. Harriet Klausner (#1 reviewer) obviously has never set foot on the Gulf Coast (probably not New Orleans either) or she would have never compared it to Atlantic City. The very idea is inane.
Only a native can tellReview Date: 2003-01-02

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Great for homeschoolers!Review Date: 2008-09-11
TerrificReview Date: 2005-02-21
Horrors of war but also heartening themes of perseverance and survivalReview Date: 2005-09-02
Fast paced and smartReview Date: 2004-06-10
I hope McMullan will write more from different time periods we can use in schools to teach students.
How I Found the Strong (A Civil War Story)Review Date: 2004-10-17
I really like this book. Its realistic story would lend itself well to a Social Studies Theme focused on the Civil War. I think this story is best for grades 4-6 and offers an opportunity for children to relate to the thoughts, feelings, and experiences of a young boy similar in age as he lives during the Civil War. (However, it's a good read for young adults and adults, as well. I (an adult) appreciate the insights about our American past gained from reading this story.)

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A must read!--Western Writers of AmericaReview Date: 1998-12-04
Excellently written and researched; I recommend itReview Date: 1999-11-04
"A welcome addition!"--Beth Rengstorf, Bison WorldReview Date: 1999-02-19
Full of useful information!Review Date: 1999-04-29
"Required Material! " John Curry, Smoke and Fire NewsReview Date: 1998-12-23

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Interesting topicReview Date: 2003-08-23
Old Dixie-Brazilian Style!Review Date: 2000-08-27
These settlers, known as the Confederados, resettled in the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo, and founded a town they named "Americana" where many of their descendants still reside. With Anglo-Saxon last names such as Stonewall, Jackson, and Butler, many of their present-day ancestors still reside in the Southern-inspired town and continue to live the way of life their ancestors once lived. Pecan pies, debutante balls, and Southern hymns are all still alive, although many of them have intermarried with Brazil's population and speak Portuguese as well as English (with a Brazilian-Southerner accent).
The author did great research when writing this book, and the photographs provide the reader with visuals that help us visualize Americana. An updated edition of this book was recently published by Texas A&M University press, provides new updated information on Americana and her inhabitants
I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the U.S. Civil War, Brazil, or Latin American culture/history. The story of the Confederados is a forgotten chapter in the history of the Civil War that should be rediscovered by all.
A real "gem" of a bookReview Date: 2001-05-18
Old Dixie-Brazilian Style!Review Date: 2000-08-27
These settlers, known as the Confederados, resettled in the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo, and founded a town they named "Americana" where many of their descendants still reside. With Anglo-Saxon last names such as Stonewall, Jackson, and Butler, many of their present-day ancestors still reside in the Southern-inspired town and continue to live the way of life their ancestors once lived. Pecan pies, debutante balls, and Southern hymns are all still alive, although many of them have intermarried with Brazil's population and speak Portuguese as well as English (with a Brazilian-Southerner accent).
The author did great research when writing this book, and the photographs provide the reader with visuals that help us visualize Americana. An updated edition of this book was recently published by Texas A&M University press, provides new updated information on Americana and her inhabitants
I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the U.S. Civil War, Brazil, or Latin American culture/history. The story of the Confederados is a forgotten chapter in the history of the Civil War that should be rediscovered by all.
Old Dixie-Brazilian Style!Review Date: 2000-08-27
These settlers, known as the Confederados, resettled in the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo, and founded a town they named "Americana" where many of their descendants still reside. With Anglo-Saxon last names such as Stonewall, Jackson, and Butler, many of their present-day ancestors still reside in the Southern-inspired town and continue to live the way of life their ancestors once lived. Pecan pies, debutante balls, and Southern hymns are all still alive, although many of them have intermarried with Brazil's population and speak Portuguese as well as English (with a Brazilian-Southerner accent).
The author did great research when writing this book, and the photographs provide the reader with visuals that help us visualize Americana. An updated edition of this book was recently published by Texas A&M University press, provides new updated information on Americana and her inhabitants
I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the U.S. Civil War, Brazil, or Latin American culture/history. The story of the Confederados is a forgotten chapter in the history of the Civil War that should be rediscovered by all.
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It takes place in Mississippi in 1943.
It cuts across racial, economic, and political lines.
This is not just about the German prisoners captured in north Africa who are brought in to pick cotton. It is about all the people in this small rural area who, in one way or another, have been deeply affected by the war. Both touching and horrifying, if you allow yourself some introspection, you'll absorb the loneliness, enormous grief, and genuine simplicity of expectation.