South Carolina Books


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

South Carolina
Preserving Charleston's Past, Shaping Its Future: The Life and Times of Susan Pringle Frost
Published in Paperback by University of South Carolina Press (1999-05)
Author: Sidney R. Bland
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Triumph over extreme adversity
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-09
The life of Susan Pringle Frost, the Mother of Historic Preservation in Charleston, is explored with perception and sensitivity by Dr. Sidney R. Bland, whom I had the honor of assisting with a small portion of his research. Her father, Dr. Francis L. Frost, a brave Confederate surgeon, spent an angonizing and wholly fruitless decade after the end of the Civil War trying to re-start rice planting on his family's rice plantations on South Carolina's North Santee River. After his failure (and none of his neighbors fared any better), he turned to several other occupations, each of which proved equally fruitless. "Miss Sue," as she was called, along with her two sisters, rose above the limitations of her aristocratic breeding and lent a shoulder to the wheel, taking outside jobs to provide the failed family with an income. Southern gentlewomen that they were, they gave all their earnings to their father, in order that he might remain the titular head of the family. Miss Sue's rise from martyr to the Lost Cause to court stenographer to Charleston's leading Suffragette to the city's first real estate agent to its pioneer historic preservationist blazed the trail for many women both in Charleston and outside the Palmetto State. Sidney Bland's unblinking yet compassionate study of Miss Sue and her era is a precious insight into the rapidly-changing face of the South in the early twentieth century. -- Richard N. Cote', author of Mary's World: Love, War, and Family Ties in Nineteenth-century Charleston (Corinthian Books, 2001).

A Charleston Treasure
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-24
Preserving Charleston's Past, Shaping its Future: The Life and Times of Susan Pringle Frost is a small book that packs a big punch. Weighing in at 110 pages (171 counting index, sources, and notes), this book is a fascinating account of Susan Pringle Frost and her firm hand in the creation of the preservation movement in Charleston, South Carolina. To understand this story, one must know a little history of Charleston. Once one of the richest and most beautiful cities in the country, Charleston took a devastating downturn after the Civil War. So when ravaged by fire, hurricanes and even a destructive earthquake, Charlestonians did not have the money to raze and rebuild like many others cities (including Richmond and Atlanta). Instead, they had to restore. As a result, the turn of the century saw many of Charleston's historic buildings still intact but needing lots of work.

Enter Miss Susan Pringle Frost. Born in 1873 to a very old Charleston family that became impoverished after the Civil War, Pringle Frost was a woman way ahead of her time. She was able break away from the ties that bound traditional Victorian women and to move into a more modern age. Having never married, she first went to work as a court stenographer in 1901--a time when women weren't accepted into the workplace. She eventually went into real estate and became the first woman realtor in Charleston. She was a firm believer in civil rights when it was an unpopular stand in the south. She got involved in the suffrage movement, and hitched her star to Alice Paul. The skills that she learned during the suffrage battles, she used to great effect to get the preservation movement started. She badgered public officials, she recruited followers, she begged loans from bankers, and she was the key motivator in founding the Preservation Society of Charleston--still the premier preservation society in the city. Even before the PSC was founded, she single-handedly contributed to preservation efforts by purchasing run down homes in once properous neighborhoods and restoring them at her own expense. When the city wanted to tear down the homes that make up the now famous Rainbow Row and build something modern, Miss Susan purchased six of them and saved the entire block from the wrecking ball. Without Pringle Frost, Charleston would not be the charming city that attracts millions of tourists each year. Her contributions to the city of Charleston are so very impressive and author Sidney Bland does a fine job of bringing this story to life.

South Carolina
A Raising Up: Memories of a North Carolina Childhood
Published in Hardcover by Coastal Carolina Press (2000-05-01)
Author: R. C. Fowler
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The Good Ole Days
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-28
Mr. Fowler has done a fantastic job of telling of a simpler time in our country. A time when God and family were more important than material things.
The book is one of those books that you can't put down once you have started reading and once you have finished you have to read again. of all the caracters in this book Aunt Laney is my favorite. Her faith in God makes her stand out.
Many of the stories that are told in the book I can remember duplicating in the 50s when I was growing up in the same area of NC. Thanks for taking me back to a simpler time and reminding me how important family is.

A RAISING UP:MEMORIES OF A NORTH CAROLINA CHILDHOOD
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-16
A RAISING UP: BRINGS BACK SIGHTS, SMELLS AND GOOD MEMORIES OF THE TOBACCO SEASONS AND THE SPARTAN LIFE ON THE FARM IN NORTH CAROLINA IN THE 1940'S AND 1950'S. TOLD WITH SIMPLICITY AND DEAD-ON INSIGHT,I WHOLEHEARTEDLY RECCOMEND THE BOOK FOR ALL AGE GROUPS.

South Carolina
Raleigh, Durham & Chapel Hill: North Carolina (Raleigh, Durham & Chapel Hill North Carolina Map)
Published in Spiral-bound by ADC The Map People (2004-07-27)
Author: the Map People ADC
List price: $21.95

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Raleigh, Durham & Chapel Hill North Carolina Map
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-06
ADC doesn't offer individual county maps In North Carolina as they do in Maryland - where I use them - but this mapbook is excellent in the specific areas for which it is intended.

Easy to use and up to date
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-06
As new transplants to the Triangle area, we bought this map book to keep at home and the pocket edition to keep in the car. The level of detail is impressive, and our new street was even included (which I can't say for any of the online map services). This has proven to be a valuable resource for my family as we get acclimated to the area. Highly recommended.

South Carolina
Ramblings of a Lowcountry Game Warden: A Memoir
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (2008-02-07)
Author: Ben Mcc Moise
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A must read for all sportsmen, nature lovers and storytellers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-05
Often game violation cases make the news, with bloodthirsty tales of egregious over-hunting, poaching or selling of illegal species. But you almost never hear of the hours of stealth, soul-sucking mosquito swarms or frostbite that went into catching the criminal in the act.

Veteran South Carolina Game Warden, Ben Moise, the cigar chomping, ticket writing scourge of Lowcountry fish and game violators, has written his memoirs about his twenty-four years patrolling the coastal woods and waters of the Palmetto State. A bit Havillah Babcock meets Roscoe P. Coltrane, Ramblings of a Lowcountry Game Warden has a good many stories about how most of the time the poacher gets it, but how sometimes the outlaw sticks it to The Man.

From frequent bouts of pneumonia due to wintry pre-dawn stakeouts, to search and rescues in hurricane-force winds, the focus of the book is the author's steadfast and unrelenting desire to bring to justice those who ran roughshod over the fish and game laws. Moise takes the reader on a narrative journey from his beginning days, his formative experiences, court trials, surveillances, and embarrassments all the way to the very moment of his retirement at sunset on the last day of the 2002 duck season.

It covers conservation, environmental stewardship, hunting, fishing and general badassmanship. Moise caught drug runners, deer shiners, bootleggers, bad liars and those sportsmen who were either too lazy or too greedy to abide by the state's fish and game laws. From busting judges, representatives, sometimes his friends, and once, even a blind man, he got the reputation for being mean enough write his own mother a ticket.

This is a must read for any conservationist, hunter, sportsman, tree hugger, campfire talker or lover of a good yarn.

A Must Read for Adventurers
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-01
I got my first camera 4 decades ago.I've developed a love for capturing "the moment".My love of adventure combined with my curiosity have put me in some unbelievable places.In the early eighties I became involved with environmental issues.Over time I became the spokesman for all the Sierra Club Groups in my home state of South Carolina.My connections got me pointed down an ever increasing number of wilderness pathways.Traveling by plane,auto,sail,canoe,kayak and on foot I have learned to sneak up on scenes from Death Valley California to The Western Isles of Scotland.My camera is always with me.
The necessity of earning a living keeps me primarily in The Lowcountry of South Carolina.My photography puts me in many of the same places that this Author writes about.Scouting in the daytime ,I take for granted getting up in the dark,traveling in the dark and getting in position early. Having read the book I realize the Author is an hour ahead of me and in waiting.We have never met in the field.I'm staying away from Humans,he is observing and outsmarting them.What we share is an incredible amount of joy from the scenes that have unfolded in front of our eyes because we were out there.
In this book you will hear of incredible places that anyone can visit.I have not seen half the places mentioned here.Can you imagine my happiness to read about so many more adventures all around me,just waiting for me ?
This book is about much more than Law Enforcement.It is The memoir of A Quintessential Southern Gentleman.It is a guide to conservation,history,human psychology,personal responsibility and how you bring your personal values and leadership to the general public for the good of all.
The book is riveting.Not since James Dickie's "Deliverance" have I sped through such an enjoyable book. You will laugh,wonder and keep turning pages.If the account of the last hunt of The Santee Gun Club doesn't bring a tear ,you have ice water in your blood.The eloquence of his writing combined with the seldom described events he is recounting,will keep you spellbound.Your minds eye will be activated and you will have a new perspective on many things.
If you want to take a nice trip without leaving the house,read this book.If you want to plan a nice adventure,the ideas here are plentiful.If you like romance and dogs , this book is for you.Would someone Please make this into a movie?

South Carolina
The Reconstruction Ku Klux Klan in York County, South Carolina, 1865-1877
Published in Library Binding by McFarland & Company (2002-07)
Author: Jerry Lee West
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York County--The Apex of the KKK in the South
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-02
Some readers may well wonder, what was nationally significant about just one county in the South that it should warrant a book? Well, my native county of York was the place where Klan intimidation and violence reached its high water mark for the entire South, as so ably documented in Allen Trelease's classix and exhaustive study, WHITE TERROR. Such was its importance that Trelease devoted an entire chapter of his book (mostly given to a chapter by chapter recouting of the status of the Klan in each state) on York County. Jerry West's excellent book takes the search for the history of the Klan in that county far beyond what Trelease did. Using the Yorkville Enquirer, manuscript sources, and trial transcripts from the trial of Klansmen, Mr. West provdes a level of detail that makes this unfortunate period live again in all of its infamy.
For an organization whose members wore shrouds and attempted to hide their identity, their is a surprising level of detail available on who they were and the breadth of their activities. The author ably documents the tapestry of violence woven across the county, bringing normal life to standstill. The York County Klan became so large in terms of membership and thus powerful that even those Whites who were ready to speak and act against it could not do so for fear of losing their lives. An excellent work which should be on the bookshelf of all who are interested in the post-Civil War era.

The Reconstruction Ku Klux Klan in York County, South Caroli
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-14
Excellent work. Mr. West has written a well researched unbiased account of the problems in York County South Carolina during reconstruction. I highly recommend this book.

South Carolina
A Rising Star Of Promise: The Wartime Diary And Letter Of David Jackson Logan, 17th South Carolina Volunteers 1861-1864 (Battles & Campaigns of the Carolinas)
Published in Hardcover by Da Capo Press (1998-08-21)
Authors: Samuel N. Thomas Jr., Jason H. Silverman, and David Jackson Logan
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Outstanding coverage of life in the war!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-05-05
This book does an outstanding job of following David Jackson Logan's life during the Civil War, through letters to his wife and family, letters to the newspaper, and his diary. I am fortunate to have already known what an outstanding man David Jackson Logan was, as well as, his father, John Randolph Logan, and his siblings. Especially David's brother Ben F. Logan, my great-great grandfather. I hope everyone enjoys reading this incredible book.

Incredible journey through the Civil War
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-31
This compilation of David Jackson Logan's writings detailing his experiences during the Civil War is second to none! You won't be able to put this outstanding book down until you've finished it. The authors have melded all sources into an unforgettable book.

South Carolina
The River Home: A Return to the Carolina Low Country
Published in Paperback by Houghton Mifflin (1993-04-06)
Author: Franklin Burroughs
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One of the best books I've read this year!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-06
Burroughs's book is a wonderful tale of exploration into the dense, winding, wonderful Waccamaw River in SC, and into the mostly forgotten past of his native Horry County. His marvelous sense of detail, poetic sensibility, and grand sympathies with all things natural and human make this a memoroble book indeed. I know Prof. Burroughs might hoot at the comparison, but I enjoyed this book as much as anything I've read in Thoreau.

wonderful natural history of the Waccamaw River
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-22
A human life, I think, should be well rooted in some spot of native land, where it may get the love of tender kinship for the face of the earth, for the labors men go forth to, for the sounds and accents that haunt it, for whatever will give that early home a familiar, unmistakable difference amidst the future widening of knowledge: a spot where the definiteness of early memories may be inwrought with affection, and kindly acquaintance with all neighbors, even to dogs and donkeys, may spread not by sentimental effort and reflection, but as a sweet habit of the blood. -George Eliot (Daniel Deronda)

This sentiment and the chance discovery of Nathaniel Holmes Bishop's The Voyage of the Paper Canoe (1878), detailing a canoe trip down the East Coast which included a side trip on the Waccamaw River, were the twin impulses that lead Burroughs to return to his native Horry County, SC and make his own trip down the Waccamaw. Burroughs, a professor at Bowdoin, published a terrific collection of essays Billy Watson's Croker Sack in 1991 (it even made Mr. Doggett's Suggested Summer Reading List for Students) and this book is every bit as good.

Whether he's detailing the history of the county, the river and his own family or relating his encounters with the river's unique residents or describing the wildlife he encounters, Burroughs has a sharp eye, a sympathetic ear and a silver tongue. Here is his description of one bird he meets:

Yesterday a red-shouldered hawk had called the day to order, and got its business underway. Today it was a pileated woodpecker: a staccato drum-burst against a hollow tree, then the bird itself. It flew across in front of me, with its peculiar alternation of flap, swoop, and collapse, and its last swoop fetched it up against the trunk of a cypress. It clung there a moment, cocked and primed, a perfectly congruous mixture of Woody Woodpecker, frock-coated nineteenth-century deacon and pterodactyl. Then it gave the tree an abrupt, jackhammer strafing, rolled out its lordly call, and swooped away, leaving the day to its own devices.

If you've ever seen one, you know that a pileated woodpecker has never been described better and if you haven't you must almost feel that now you have.

This is a wonderful bucolic look at the history and nature of the Waccamaw, which will leave you wishing that you too had such a place coursing through your blood.

GRADE: A

South Carolina
Roundball culture: South Carolina basketball
Published in Unknown Binding by AM Press (1980)
Author: Dan Klores
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Klores Nails the McGuire Years
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-01

Dan Klores nailed the Frank McGuire years at the University of South Carolina. From the mid 1960's until the bitter end in 1980, the complete story of Gamecock basketballl is told. Klores holds nothing back in sharing as we see the good and bad sides of running a major college basketball program. Want to learn why the University of South Carolina left the Atlantic Coast Conference? Klores describes the action. Frank McGuire was a fascinating man and his story is told with great respect by Klores. All the great Gamecock hoop stars of the McGuire era are included: Alex English, John Roche, Kevin Joyce, Mike Dunleavy, Bobby Cremins, and Brian Winters. No other book tells the story of Frank McGuire at South Carolina better than Roundball Culture. Get ready to laugh if you can find a copy. It is worth the price.

Most innovative book on the sport in many years.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1997-08-30
The author wrote a breakthrough and humorous expose that showed all the contradictions and hyprocrisy which surrounded a big time college b-ball program.It featured insights into Frank McGuire,recruiting, racism and numerous All-Americans ranging from John Roche to Brian Winters to Alex English. The book was published in 1980. It got the author thrown out of the state of South Carolina

South Carolina
Rural Economy and Country Life in the Medieval West
Published in Paperback by Univ of South Carolina Pr (1990-04)
Author: Georges Duby
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great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-20
This book was shipped and delivered in a timely manner. The seller representation of the book was factual.

Duby digs deep
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-13
Duby once again has presented a thorough presentation of economic history of a really tough period for historians. Written records of this time tend to be skewed to the nobility and the clergy while the peasant and the work in the fields is cloaked in darkness. Duby gives us a flashlight to see them, albeit one with a bit of Marxist tone to it. He traverses a wide array of references and resources from very diverse fields of study to support his work. I highly recommend it.

South Carolina
Sanford and Lee County (NC) (Images of America)
Published in Paperback by Arcadia Publishing (2006-09-13)
Authors: Jimmy Haire and Jr. W. W. Seymour
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Having been born in Sanford
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-20
in 1964, it is a true joy to have this book. Some of the businesses and photographs feature my ancestors. The only flaw is that the authors get the order of descendants off a bit and a picture showing my great grandfather in the band only correctly identifies him if you read right to left instead of left to right. All in all, it brings back great memories. I now live about 45 minutes away in Raleigh, NC. I will always have fond memories of growing up in Sanford.

History of Small Town Americana and much more.....
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-30
Arcadia has really done an outstanding publishing job on this beautiful work by Mr. Haire and Mr. Seymour...the rare photographs and informative captians combine to give the reader a glimpse of North Carolina then and now...The pictoral artifacts take the reader to a far off yet so near place in time...and the colorful comments by Mr. Seymour add clarity and substance to the proceedings...Highly recommended to readers worldwide!!!


Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->Sports and Hobbies-->Sports-->Hockey-->Ice Hockey-->Leagues-->United States-->South Carolina-->30
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