Louisiana Books


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Related Subjects: Louisiana State University Grambling State University Centenary College of Louisiana Tulane University University of New Orleans Louisiana Tech University Louisiana College McNeese State University Northwestern State University Southeastern Louisiana University University of Louisiana Southern University System Dillard University Southwest University Loyola University New Orleans New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary Xavier University Nicholls State University Saint John's University Two-Year Colleges
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Louisiana Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Louisiana
Banyan: Poems
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (2001-11)
Author: Virgil Suarez
List price: $26.95
New price: $0.85
Used price: $0.89

Average review score:

Relating like a Hispanic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-20
Reading many of the poem collections in Banyan makes me feel like I belong to them. Poems like Aguacero, Blisters, or Chickens remind me of the blue collar work that my father has done his whole life to support his family. In all three of these poems, the first lines are "my father", which triggers in me a feeling of family that I will always relate to.
Blisters has is specially graphic, and I relate to the way minor injuries were dealt with at home. These poems scream humanity into a Cuban Culture that has been denied the right to vocalize it.

Re: Letter to Cuba
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-19
If you've ever lost someone special to you or in specific your father, this book of poetry goes beyond catharsis. I recently lost my father and I myself am Cuban-American, so I guess that's why I connected so well with this book, especially Letter to Cuba. This book is one of the reasons I even started to think of writing about my own father and what eventually led me to getting back into my own poetry. So if you enjoy poetry about love, loss, happiness, and grief this is the book for you.

Louisiana
The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition,
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State Univ Pr (1970-06)
Author: Willmoore Kendall
List price: $14.95
Used price: $5.57

Average review score:

Letter from Independence Mall, Phil. PA
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-09
"It's probably the best thing George Carey ever worked on." "It's one of the most important books I ever read." "It changed the way I think about America." Willmoore Kendall's classic work, The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition, provides an understanding which can only be described as refreshing of the political and cultural tradition out of which the Philadelphia Constitution was forged, and The United States of America was founded. Basic Symbols seeks to determine what propositions and ideals America was founded upon, and is thus committed to, and whether these are the ideals currently accepted as true, and often presented as neatly summed up in the Bill of Rights and in that well worn understanding of that passage of the Declaration of Independence: "all men are created equal... ." Basic Symbols warns that the true tradition may seem anathema to some modern historians and Americans alike who wished it weren't so, but Basic Symbols sets out to present the truth anyway. This single volume of political science and historical inquiry handily challenges the traditional orthodoxy, or the ignorance, that surrounds the founding in a novel manner: by a close inspection of the facts, and more importantly, the application of the analytical method-the hermeneutic-of Erik Voegelin, to the facts. Kendall's book is almost worth the read just to see the theories and teachings of Erik Voegelin briefly explicated and then put into fruitful action, and if nothing else, Basic Symbols can serve as a spring board for further study not into debates about America's founding, but into the works of this important yet often overlooked historian. Kendall starts with the Mayflower Compact of (1620), and then examines the General Orders of Connecticut(1638), the Body of Liberties of Massachusetts Bay(1641), the Virginia Declaration of Rights(1776), our own Declaration of Independence(1776), the Constitution(1787-1789) and finally the Bill of Rights(1789). Kendall slowly teases out a common thread that runs its course, unfolds, and develops over this stretch of time and through these early experiences and experiments in self-government on this side of the Atlantic. Basic Symbols also tackles in this time span, and in the history of America since, a problem common to all political traditions: derailment. Basic Symbols identifies the Gettysburg address as a watershed in the political tradition of America, made possible by a partial derailment in the years preceding the Civil War. Today, the two incompatible traditions are still with us and their friction is at the root of much of our present day political discord; so much so that to ask and seek the answer to the question, "What is the tradition amongst us?" is the very reason why Basic Symbols was written. Rather than the rights-speak and emphasis upon rights that has grown out of the elevation of the Bill of Rights, and the tortured understanding of 'equality' that has sprung from the Declaration, Basic Symbols instead proffers a formidable, and well supported, alternative; the true tradition amongst us holds (or held) the supremacy of the general political will of the community; the legislature through which this is expressed in a very slow, careful, and deliberative fashion; a virtuous people from which these governing bodies are elected, and the concomitant conviction of a virtuous people in a higher law than that of any secular government. Basic Symbols notes that any mention of rights, any ethos of equality, etc., are nowhere to be found in our tradition as founding symbols; they were understood as only the possible concerns for the deliberations of a political community after the establishment of its aims and purposes. Thus, they are not the starting points from which the uniquely American order and tradition is defined. This explains why all forms of variants on "the common good," "better ordering and preservation," were the starting points for, and of paramount importance to, the drafters of everything from the Mayflower Compact to our own Constitution. And this is just to name a few of the most important points. Kendall does well to document and explain the meaning, significance, and importance of all the symbols he identifies as having a place in the American political tradition. The loss of many of the qualities the framers and the Federalist Papers thought necessary for the preservation of the republic and our liberty can leave some readers of Basic Symbols feeling as though the framers were not as wise as they are often made out to be; perhaps their underlying premises were wrong or have since been perverted, and the American experiment has proven to be a failure. Maybe you'll disagree with the tradition Kendall portrays, or deem it no longer relevant, but if you do read it, one thing is certain; you will come away from this book as Gary Wills describes how the crowd walked off from the Gettysburg Address: "...under a changed sky, into a different America."

Letter from Independence Mall, Phil., PA
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-16

"It's probably the best thing George Carey ever worked on." "It's one of the most important books I ever read." "It changed the way I think about America."

Willmoore Kendall's classic work, The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition, provides an understanding which can only be described as refreshing of the political and cultural tradition out of which the Philadelphia Constitution was forged, and The United States of America was founded. Basic Symbols seeks to determine what propositions and ideals America was founded upon, and is thus committed to, and whether these are the ideals currently accepted as true, and often presented as neatly summed up in the Bill of Rights and in that well worn understanding of that passage of the Declaration of Independence: "...all men are created equal... ." Basic Symbols warns that the true tradition may seem anathema to some modern historians and Americans alike who wished it weren't so, but Basic Symbols sets out to present the truth anyway.

This single volume of political science and historical inquiry handily challenges the traditional orthodoxy, or the ignorance, that surrounds the founding in a novel manner: by a close inspection of the facts, and more importantly, the application of the analytical method-the hermeneutic-of Erik Voegelin, to the facts. Kendall's book is almost worth the read just to see the theories and teachings of Erik Voegelin briefly explicated and then put into fruitful action, and if nothing else, Basic Symbols can serve as a spring board for further study not into debates about America's founding, but into the works of this important yet often overlooked historian.

Kendall starts with the Mayflower Compact of (1620), and then examines the General Orders of Connecticut(1638), the Body of Liberties of Massachusetts Bay(1641), the Virginia Declaration of Rights(1776), our own Declaration of Independence(1776), the Constitution(1787-1789) and finally the Bill of Rights(1789). Kendall slowly teases out a common thread--our tradition--that runs its course, unfolds, and develops over this stretch of time and through these early experiences and experiments in self-government on this side of the Atlantic. Basic Symbols also tackles in this time span, and in the history of America since, a problem common to all political traditions: derailment.

Basic Symbols identifies the Gettysburg address as a watershed in the political tradition of America, made possible by a partial derailment in the years preceding the Civil War. Today, the two incompatible traditions are still with us and their friction is at the root of much of our present day political discord; so much so that to ask and seek the answer to the question, "What is the tradition amongst us?" is the very reason why Basic Symbols was written.

Rather than the rights-speak and emphasis upon rights that has grown out of the elevation of the Bill of Rights, and the tortured understanding of 'equality' that has sprung from the Declaration, Basic Symbols instead proffers a formidable, and well supported, alternative; the true tradition amongst us holds (or held) the supremacy of the general political will of the community; the legislature through which this is expressed in a very slow, careful, and deliberative fashion; a virtuous people from which these governing bodies are elected, and the concomitant conviction of a virtuous people in a higher law than that of any secular government.

Basic Symbols notes that any mention of rights, any ethos of equality, etc., are nowhere to be found in our tradition as founding symbols; they were understood as only the possible concerns for the deliberations of a political community after the establishment of its aims and purposes. Thus, they are not the starting points from which the uniquely American order and tradition is defined. This explains why all forms of variants on "the common good," "better ordering...and preservation," were the starting points for, and of paramount importance to, the drafters of everything from the Mayflower Compact to our own Constitution. Kendall does well to further point out why the Bill of Rights was opposed to a man by the framers of the Constitution, lending only more support to his thesis. His analysis of the Declaration and the true meaning of "...all men are created equal..." places the Declaration and the Founding in a whole new light: the light of the American political tradition he identifies which provides a better explication and understanding of these documents, much like a better fitting solution to a puzzle. And this is just to name a few of the most important points. Kendall does well to document and explain the meaning, significance, and importance of all the symbols he identifies as having a place in the American political tradition.

The loss of many of the qualities the framers and the Federalist Papers thought necessary for the preservation of the republic and our liberty can leave some readers of Basic Symbols feeling as though the framers were not as wise as they are often made out to be; perhaps their underlying premises were wrong or have since been perverted, and the American experiment has proven to be a failure.

Maybe you'll disagree with the tradition Kendall portrays, or deem it no longer relevant, but if you do read it, one thing is certain; you will come away from this book as Gary Wills describes how the crowd walked off from the Gettysburg Address: "...under a changed sky, into a different America."

Louisiana
Bayou Brides: Capucine, Home to My Heart/Joie de Vivre/Language of Love/Dreams of Home (Heartsong Novella Collection)
Published in Paperback by Barbour Publishing, Inc (2006-09-01)
Authors: Janet Spaeth, Lynette Sowell, Janet Lee Barton, and Kathleen Miller Y'Barbo
List price: $6.97
New price: $1.39
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

four good historical romances
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-13
Capucine: Home To My Heart, Janet Spaeth
Capucine Louet and her sister Aliette were taken from their mother and their home in Acadia. Their father was killed by the British and the sisters were shipped to a convent in New York. They haven't seen their mother since. Capucine keeps a journal of what has happened.
Now the sisters are back home in New Oreleans,determined to find their mother if she is still alive. Michael LeBlanc is also Acadian. He's attracted to Capucine, but he's a Christian, and Capucine's heart is so full of hatred for the British there's no room for love.

Joie DeVivre by Lynette Sowell
Fifty years have passed and it's Jos'ee Brossard's eighteenth birthday. the LeBlanc family has raised her and she loves them all, except Edouard, the oldest son. Wounded in the war, he has a limp, a scarred face, and lives a quiet life in his secluded bayou cabin. She's half afraid of him.
Then Papa Leblanc makes an unexpected announcement, the betrothal of Jos'ee to Euodard. In two weeks the priest will marry them and there's nothing they can do about it. Jos'ee finds comfort in Capucine's journal.

Language of Love by Janet Lee Barton
Nicholas LeBlanc has just returned from the war. It's December, 1918 and he's happy to be back with his family at Bayou Teche. his father has died, his mother hasn't recovered from the loss, and his brother-in-law's little sister, Suzette, has moved into his house, living with his mother, sleeping in his room. He moves to the cabin. To his dismay his beloved Cajun language is being banned by the government and Suzette, the local schoolteacher, is teaching the children English. Nicholas doesn't like the changes in his life. Then he finds Capucine's journal.

Dreams of Home by Kathleen Miller
Justin LeBlanc has raised four sisters and just married off the last of the brood. He's ready to hit the road on his motorcycle, with his laptop, sleep in cheese motels, and eat bologona sandwiches for breakfast. After all the years of being responsible for his sisters, he's free. His biggest problem at the moment is the bossy lady photographer taking wedding pictures.
Lucy Webber, photographer and owner of Lucy's Lens, the new photography shop in town, grew up as a military brat, traveling all over the world. All she wants now is to settle down, and she likes Bayou Teche. Amanda, Justin's sister, tries to play matchmaker, but there is no way the professor who wants to rome and the lady photographer who wants to put down roots can agree on anything.
Time to check out Capucine's journal.

Bayou Brides spans four generations of couples, with four very different stories by four talented writers. If you like romance, you'll like this one.

Good Christian Romance
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-24
Reviewed by Debra Gaynor for Reader Views (10/06)

"Bayou Brides" tells the story of four generations of one family, living on the banks of the Bayou Teche in the heart of Cajun Country. The stories of their life, love and redemption are told in this inspirational romance.

"Capucine: Home to My Heart" by Janet Spaeth
Capucine knows she must be strong when the British tear her and her sister Aliette from their mother's arms. Her heart is hardened and she vows to find her mother and "make the British pay for what they have done, I will never forget."

Capucine remembers her mother quoting her scripture. "Where your treasure is there will be your heart also," but she doesn't truly understand the meaning behind the words. When Capucine and Michel LeBlanc paths cross he comes to love her but she is not sure she knows how to love. Writing a journal assists Capucine in sorting out her thoughts and in talking to the Lord. Through love, patience and God's will, Michel teaches Capucine how to love and how to forgive.

This is a beautifully written love story. The characters are strong and well developed. The plot flows smoothly. The print is large and easy to read. The love story of Capucine and Michel is beautiful; it contains a purity that few stories contain today. But this goes beyond love story; this is a story of forgiveness.

"Joie de Vivre" by Lynette Sowell
The LeBlanc family has raised Jos'ee Broussard. She and Jacques always assumed they would marry, but when his oldest brother Edouard returns from the war scared both inside and out things change. Jos'ee has always expected she would marry Jacques and both she and Edouard are shocked when father announces the betrothal of Jos'ee and Edouard the eldest son. Edouard thinks he wants nothing more than to be left alone but finds that he's beginning to care for Jos'ee. The journal Jos'ee finds written by Capucine helps her find strength to love Edouard even when he doesn't want to be loved. It is only when he thinks he has lost her that he is willing to admit his love for her.

This is a beautifully written story and caught my interest from page one; I could hardly wait to turn the page to see if Jos'ee and Edouard could truly come to love each other. As the couple struggled to find love for each other I felt their pain. This is a wonderful story and my favorite of this anthology. The characters jump off the page and demand that you come to know them. This book teaches lessons of commitment and love.

"Language of Love" by Janet Lee Barton
"Language of Love" is a beautiful story written about a man that does not like change. Nicholas LeBlanc has seen terrible things at war. He returns to a changed family, his papa has died, his sister in law is expecting and Suzette the new schoolteacher is living with his family. Suzette is teaching the children to speak English instead of Cajun. It seems like too many changes too fast. Nicholas knows Suzette has been a blessing to his family and when she asks him to help her interpret Cajun he knows she will be a blessing to him.

This story is beautifully written and the plot is well developed and flows smoothly. The characters are well defined. From the moment Nicholas arrives home you feel his discomfort and frustration, knowing he fought for his country and knowing that now his country is expecting his people to adapt their language. Maman is a strong woman suffering from the loss of a husband but finding strength for the Lord and those around her to go on. This is a story of change and learning to allow the Lord to lead our lives. I enjoyed this story tremendously.

"Dreams of Home" by Kathleen Miller
From the moment Lucy Webber and Justin LeBlanc meet they find each other of interest Lucy is a photographer and Justin is a professor. While photographing the old family cabin Lucy finds the journal from the seventeen hundreds, written by one of Justin's ancestors. Capucine has written, "Life is full." Both Lucy and Justin long to say those words. She has longed for family roots. "Justin has never used his heart for fearing losing it." When Justin is offered the opportunity to write a book on the family's Acadian cabin he asks Lucy to be the photographer. Together they discover that it is only with each other and the Lord that they will find that "life is full."

The strong attraction between these two opposites is obvious from the beginning. The plot is good but it took me a little longer to get involved in this story. It is well written and the characters are well developed. Each character thinks they are longing for something different but in the end what they are longing for is each other.

The connecting threads woven in these stories are the cabin and the family connection. This is a beautiful anthology by four authors and four different stories each well written, each dealing with a different generation. "Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations. Psalm 92:1." This is a family of generations built on faith in the Lord. I have truly enjoyed reading "Bayouo Brides." It is with great joy that I highly recommend this book to those that enjoy good Christian romance.

Louisiana
Birds of the Gulf Coast
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (2001-10)
Author: William R. Fontenot
List price: $39.95
New price: $27.76
Used price: $21.65

Average review score:

Most astounding Bird Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-10
This is book contains the best bird photographs I have seen. The photographer has some of the most unusual shots of birds. The pictures capture the birds in there normal activities. The text was well written especially keeping the order by seasons. Great job I hope to see more books by these authors.

Birds of the Gulf Coast
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-20
A remarkable clear and concise description of Southern coastal birds by seasons of the year. This unique classification will allow even the novice to identify and enjoy migratory birds. Fontenot and Miller's work will enable the entire community of bird watchers to share appreciation of this National treasure. Two species that come to mind are the common blue bird and the rare sand hill crane which we enjoy in the Northern Summer.

The photography is a tour de Force in the Audubon tradition and the bird and habitat description could have only been done by a seasoned birder with years of on site experience. As a bonus Birds of the Gulf Coast is a coffee table quality book. epa

Louisiana
Bite Every Sorrow
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (1998-04-01)
Author: Barbara Ras
List price: $16.95
New price: $6.96
Used price: $0.97
Collectible price: $50.00

Average review score:

"I used to dream souls, puffed up and sighing"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-24
BITE EVERY SORROW is a multihued book full of both a strange sadness and the glowing wonder of laughter. "If there are oceans to saddle/ if you could get there, catch the horse/ if you are holy, long enough/ the suger will be taken from your right hand." Ras writes. She provides the saddle, and if you are holy enough, it will certainly give you an exhilarating ride through the lush scenery of her soul.

wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-09
Ras discribes everyday life as if it were all genuine feelings. Wonderful discriptive language that paints many bright colored pictures.

Louisiana
Blood and Thunder: 4 (The Memoirs of Nathan Heller)
Published in Hardcover by Dutton Adult (1995-08-01)
Author: Max Allan Collins
List price: $21.95
New price: $2.24
Used price: $0.54
Collectible price: $21.95

Average review score:

Wonderfully entertaining historical fiction
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-19
Most of the Nate Heller books are good. This one is very good. I enjoy the characters and the ties to history. Basically, a Forrest Gump/Spencer type of read.

Nate Heller tries to stop Huey Long from being killed.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-17
It was an excellent book. A little bit too much language. It got crazy on pg. 140 (read that page). It had a whole bunch of explosive sex. And a whole lot of bloodshed.

Louisiana
A Blue Dog Christmas
Published in Hardcover by Stewart, Tabori and Chang (2000-09-15)
Author: George Rodrigue
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.01
Used price: $0.47
Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

A very merry Blue Dog Christmas
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-10
Mr. Rodrigue has done it again. "A Blue Dog Christmas" is not only filled with wonderful pictures of his newest Blue Dogs, but it is also a heartwarming story that brought back some of my own childhood holiday memories. It is a fantastic book for adults as well as children, good for bedtime reading.

A very merry Blue Dog Christmas
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-10
Mr. Rodrigue has done it again. "A Blue Dog Christmas" is not only filled with wonderful pictures of his newest Blue Dogs, but it is also a heartwarming story that brought back some of my own childhood holiday memories. It is a fantastic book for adults as well as children, good for bedtime reading.

Louisiana
The British at the Gates: The New Orleans Campaign in the War of 1812
Published in Paperback by Spellmount Publishers Ltd (2002-07-22)
Author: Robin Reilly
List price:
Used price: $88.48

Average review score:

Good Analysis of War of 1812 AND Battle of New Orleans
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-16
To win the battle, but lose the war is an apt cliche for the Americans regarding the Battle of New Orleans and the War of 1812. Despite the title, this book is about more than the Battle of New Orleans and spends significant time discussing the causes of the War of 1812, the major battles of the war and the peace negotiations. (In fact, Reilly doesn't begin to address the Battle of New Orleans until page 171 in a book of 371 pages of text.) The book does several things well. It assesses dispassionately the role of military and political leadership in crucial events and battles of the War. The essential role of generalship and statesmanship in these affairs is one of the sub-themes of the work. Reilly demonstrates well the crucial relationship between the events and strategies of the War of 1812 and the Napoleonic Wars of Europe. Unlike many military histories, this book demonstrates why particular tactics were or were not sensible. Finally, it debunks legends and sometimes conventional wisdom about the war and battle with the use of the contemporary papers, diaries and court-martial records.

Outstanding
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-28
This is indeed the superior history of the Battle of New Orleans and is especially valuable for the analysis of the
political stakes. In short, the British had every intention of adding this city to their collection of overseas naval bases (which
eventually included Gibraltar, Capetown, Hong Kong and a failed
attempt at Toulon) and had worded the peace treaty to permit this, had they succeeded in its capture. The modern claim that the battle was meaningless because it took place in the month after the signing of the treaty, is not correct.

Louisiana
Cajun Alphabet
Published in Hardcover by Pelican Publishing Company (1991-03)
Author: James Rice
List price: $17.95
New price: $12.49
Used price: $2.70
Collectible price: $17.95

Average review score:

Fabulous!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-02
Having been raised in Southern Louisiana, and having to raise my own child in Oklahoma, I love reading this book to my 2 year old son. It brings back memories of home, of my grandparents sitting around the kitchen table, sipping chickory coffee and trading gossip in the old language. Wonderful peek into the old language of Louisiana, which is quickly being lost.

Interesting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-26
A fascinating and easy introduction to the patois of L'arcady French of Louisiana. It is interesting, informative of some culture - and should be read out loud for full enjoyment!

Louisiana
Cajun Mardi Gras Masks (Folk Art and Artists Series)
Published in Paperback by Univ Pr of Mississippi (Txt) (1997-06)
Authors: Carl Lindahl and Carolyn Ware
List price:

Average review score:

I just wish it were longer . . .
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
I guess if your only complaint about a book is that it's too short, that's not so bad.

I love this book. The pictures are terrific. I even used it to make a doll-sized Mardi Gras outfit. Definitely recommended.

FROM A PERSON WHO LIVES IN THE AREA DEPICTED IN THE BOOK
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-20
I PERSONALLY KNOW JUST ABOUT EVERYONE MENTIONED IN THIS BOOK. CAROLYN DID A WONDERFUL JOB IN RELAYING OUR CULTURE INTO A BOOK. I REMEMBER WHEN SHE WAS INTERVIEWING SUSAN LAUNEY FOR THIS BOOK I ABSOLUTELY FELL IN LOVE WITH CAROLYN'S WORK. I JUST RESENTLY SEEN CAROLYN WARE AT A FESTIVAL IN MONROE, LA AND SHE IS STILL WORKING HARDER THAN EVER TO PROMOTE CAJUN HISTORY. IF YOU KNOW ANYONE WHO IS INTERESTED IN OUR MARDI GRAS PLEASE RECOMEND THIS PARTICULAR BOOK. IT DESCRIBES OUR TRADITION (WHICH HAPPENS TO BE THE FIRST AND ORIGINAL MARDI GRAS) TO THE TEE. I APPLAUDE YOU CAROLYN WARE FOR YOUR MAGNIFISENT JOB ON THIS AND ALL OF YOUR WORK. I DO HAVE TO SAY THAT THIS IS MY FAVORITE BOOK ON CAJUN CULTURE BECAUSE I HAD TAKEN PART IN THIS ACTUAL BOOK. I LEARNED FROM MY FRIEND SUSAN LAUNEY HOW TO MAKE THE MASK IN THIS BOOK AND IT IS A REALLY NEAT AND INTERESTING ACTIVITY FOR ADULTS AND KIDS TO TAKE PART IN. THANK YOU CAROLYN FOR YOUR HARD WORK AND INTEREST IN OUR CULTURE. SEE YOU AT JAZZ FEST 2000 SINCERELY, RYAN FONTENOT


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Education-->Colleges and Universities-->North America-->United States-->Louisiana-->31
Related Subjects: Louisiana State University Grambling State University Centenary College of Louisiana Tulane University University of New Orleans Louisiana Tech University Louisiana College McNeese State University Northwestern State University Southeastern Louisiana University University of Louisiana Southern University System Dillard University Southwest University Loyola University New Orleans New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary Xavier University Nicholls State University Saint John's University Two-Year Colleges
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