Tennessee Books
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The remarkable personality of President Lincoln shines .Review Date: 1998-10-06
Insightful Collection of StoriesReview Date: 2004-08-26

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Delightful, entertaining and layered with meaningReview Date: 2004-12-18
Deborah Does it againReview Date: 2000-12-30
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Fantastic!!!Review Date: 1998-12-07
A powerful, moving piece of literature.Review Date: 1998-11-10

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Great, well-written mystery. Review Date: 2005-09-05
Detective Novel in the Memphis Genre Review Date: 2004-11-16

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A Civil War Soldier's TaleReview Date: 2003-12-10
Letters of a Union soldier during the American Civil WarReview Date: 2003-11-28
He not only tells of his personal war experiences but also of how he felt about being away from his family and how other young men from his home town found ways to avoid serving in the Union cause.
Do keep your fingers located at the footnote explanations for each chapter, for the footnotes are almost a book in themselves. They add tremendously to the information in each letter and give the reader a complete picture of what was going on in the context of the letter.
Other Civil War books discuss strategies, tactics, weaponry, etc., but this book is about how one Union soldier gets through each day and what he is thinking about.
This is a must-read for anyone who is looking for the personal side of the Civil War. I suggest that you read this book slowly as you would read a personal letter out loud to members of your family. You won't be able to put it down.

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Staying Within Limits.Review Date: 2006-09-11
Reviewer: Betty Burks (Knoxville, TN) - See all my reviews
In 1998, The U. S. Congress passed a resolution which declared Bristol, Tennessee, as making a "significant contribution to the development and commercial acceptance of country music." Actually, I had to learn from a fiction book written by Lee Smith that country music actually began in Bristol. It was a
revelation to me, even though Bristol is just north of my hometown, which is all bluegrass music. In my short amateur career as a singer here in my teens, I tried country only once, "Your Cheating Heart" on the Cas Walker t.v. show and was
not a hit. I did not look or sound like Dolly Parton. When I sang it at school dressed as a cowgirl holding my dad's guitar, the younger kids deemed me a star. I stayed with pop music on the local talent radio and t.v. shows and at teen time Saturday mornings at the Tennessee Theater, also broadcast over WROL.
Well, I did hear Tennessee Ernie Ford back in the Fifties and Dinah Shore, but this book informed me that he had been a deejay while a teenager at a Bristol radio station. Most gifted deejays start out on the air at an early age if they are blessed with a mature voice, and he was.
It was the 1927 Bristol sessions which started the world of country music. Now, how was I supposed to know that when I
wasn't alive back then? They were recording Appalachian ballads like the one about Frankie Silver. My favorite writer based most of her novels on these ballads, and I learned of the "Knoxville Girl" in her book, "If I Ever Return Again, Pretty Peggy-O." She also wrote one about Frankie Silver. My favorite ballad was She
Walks These Hills "In A Long Black Veil."
Jimmie Rodgers who sang about trains and railroads, not the Jimmie Rogers of pop music fame started in Bristol. As did many of the cross-over singers like Don Gibson (who was rude to me at the Fair where I fell hard for Lash LaRue), the Everly Brothers, Archie Campbell (Hee Haw fame) who hosted his own t.v. show in Knoxville, and the Carter family. Now, Dolly is the only star
we have left in this area. Blind Alfred Reed was a composer as well as fiddler, called the devil's instrument, and he performed at a clan meeting in Princeton for pay; he said, "they were better people then." You had to go to Bristol to record
hillbilly songs like Hank Williams' sad, sad tunes. Here in Knoxville, the black music of the 20s and 30s was recorded for a short time at one of the hotels. I did not know anything about that until a local historian mentioned it in passing in one of his weekly columns. East Tennessee is not a very progressive
place. We have no documented history until now. What I have learned about my hometown is from Jack Neely's books. This is
a well-documented account of an important contribution to society by a group of hillbilly performers from East Tennessee and Virginia.
Legends are hard to pin down!Review Date: 2005-07-27
Anyone who has read Charles K. Wolfe's books or the books he has edited knows the high quality of scholarship found. This book is no exception. Highly recommended.

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A Decent Account of the Western RedlegsReview Date: 2005-12-05
The Army of Tennessee's artillerymen were faced with shortages of pretty much everything during the war. Almost all of the pre-war artillery militia units were sent to the Army of Northern Virginia when they reached battery strength. The Army of Tennessee had to make do with brand new units whose men had little or no artillery experience. If the Army of the Tennessee was bereft of experienced men, the types and numbers of guns was even worse. Early in the war, the western men had to make do with obsolete and nearly useless smoothbore 6-pounders, and rifled artillery was almost unheard of. Lastly, the western theater was often hilly and full of forest, poor terrain for the proper use of artillery. Daniel says these were factors which the men and leaders of the Army of Tennessee could not control. However, he also points out that the Confederate government and military also mostly failed when dealing with factors they could control. Artillery doctrine was rapidly changing in the Civil War, and men such as Bragg (ironically an old Army artillerist) did not or would not recognize this fact. For far longer than other comparable armies on both sides, the Army of Tennessee continued to use the obsolete method of grouping one battery with one infantry brigade. This made it difficult for higher level commanders to quickly gather a large number of guns in the few effective spots for artillery on western battlefields. To add insult to injury, the western battery commanders rarely saw promotions throughout the war. Time and time again, men from the east were brought in over their heads to command them. This did not do much for the already poor morale of the army. Daniel believes that the only real breakthroughs came during Joe Johnston's tenure as army commander. He attempted to group the batteries in battalions assigned to each Corps, and kept an Army reserve as well. In addition, he tried to increase morale with constant drilling. Daniel says Bragg didn't understand the role of artillery and Hood simply didn't care.
I really wanted to give this book high marks, but it simply falls short of that, in my opinion. The Army of the Tennessee's artillery deserved a more in-depth study than this. The Army of Northern Virginia received a two-volume history from Jennings Cropper Wise which totaled over 1,000 pages. Daniel, on the other hand, gives us a total of 234. To make matters worse, there are no maps which could have shown the positions of various batteries in the major battles of the army. To his credit, Daniel does have some tables showing types and numbers of guns for each artillery battalion in the army, but he could have gone further and done this for each battery where known. Likewise, he gives an artillery OOB for each major battle in an appendix at the back of the book, but he doesn't include numbers of men, or numbers and types of guns. The entire book is full of partial information like this. The chapters on major battles seem to focus on a few individual batteries and then Daniel calls it a day. Dennis Kelly (of Blue & Gray magazine) is quoted as saying "For Civil War enthusiasts who prefer the Western campaigns, for Southern partisans, academics, wargamers, or today's military personnel, this book should be must reading." This is definitely not a book that is going to help wargamers much. Those are my thoughts at least as a person who has played every Civil War computer game over the last fifteen years, and who has also dabbled in board games and miniatures.
In addition to the above problems, the book (I am reviewing the gray-covered paperback, there is a newer revised paperback out as of May, 2005) is plagued by annoying, repeated typos. Stephen Hurlbut is referred to every time as "Hulbert". This continues to happen throughout the book. Other examples include Arnold Elzey being referred to as "Elzy", Kenner Garrard as "Garrand", and in the most annoying typo of all, the town of Resaca, Georgia is referred to as "Reseca" at least 10 times (and probably more, I quit counting after awhile).
To be fair, the book does an excellent job pointing out the struggles of the western long arm throughout the war. The fact that not a single battery remained to surrender with Johnston in North Carolina is a microcosm of their story as a whole. I consider the book to be a decent addition to my collection, but I really think Daniel (or someone else) could have done a much more thorough job with this subject.
Abundant in courage, lacking in equipment...Review Date: 2004-12-15


Good Book!Review Date: 2007-10-27
Lauderdale Co., AL & Wayne Co., TN in the Civil WarReview Date: 2007-10-02


The newest and best secret weapon for catching TN. fish!Review Date: 1999-07-01
These guys know their stuff! Read it, take the day off, and bring an extra stringer!
Title should be "The Compleat Tennessee Lake Angler"Review Date: 2003-07-06

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A journey into what makes up a communityReview Date: 2008-08-19
On the first night back, Sonny's elderly mother Faye begins talking about her dead husband. The husband she says is still alive. When Randall later hears a scream (during a storm) and goes to check on Faye, he first finds her assistant Opal Hicks dead, and then he stumbles upon Faye hanging from the bridge over Damnation Falls.
When Sonny's dead father shows up alive, another person is murdered and the long-dead body of a young woman who is connected to Randall is discovered, it is evident that there are long-buried secrets to be brought to light. Randall is determined to find out how the present has been impacted by the past.
I've never read anything by Edward Wright before. That situation is corrected and I'm excited to begin reading his earlier books.
Damnation Falls is a page-turner. It is a fast-paced, well-plotted, complex journey into the heart of a community and those that live in that community. Randall is required to use his investigative skills to solve the murders and while doing so, is called upon to separate fact from the convenient memories we all concoct about life. The characters are real, fallible human beings with secrets they fight to protect.
Armchair Interviews says: A must read.
"There aren't any heroes in this story, Sonny." Review Date: 2008-01-09
Randall Wilkes, whose career as a Chicago newspaperman has gone up in flames, has come back to his small home town of Pilgrim's Rest, Tennessee. He has agreed to ghost write the autobiography of his boyhood friend and former state governor, Sonny McMahan. On his first night back, he is visited by his friend's elderly and confused mother, Faye, who rambles about her dead husband, Sonny's father, being alive. Later, he is awakened by a scream, goes to check on Faye and finds her helper dead and Faye hanged from the nearly by bridge over Damnation Falls. Soon, another body is found and Randall is out to discover who is behind the killings.
There is a line of dialogue, in the book, which represents one of the aspects I most liked: "There aren't any heroes in this story, Sonny." Wright creates characters who are all very fallible and human. The protagonist is one of the most appealing I've read in awhile. The setting of the story is wonderful and there's a very moving story within the story. The story is very well plotted with a nice little twist at the end and a good build of suspense, but the focus is on the characters and what drives them. I have been a fan of Wright's John Horn series, and this book stands up well against those. If you've not read Edward Wright, I highly recommend giving him a try.
strong regional investigative tale Review Date: 2008-08-09
However, only a few hours after Randall reaches his hometown, Sonny's elderly mom is found dead hanging from a bridge; her youthful care-provider is also brutally murdered. Shockingly at about the same time, Sonny's no-good late father reappears from the dead. When the remains of Randall's first lover are found after years of burial, the journalist decides to use his investigating skills and dig into murders cold and hot.
This is a strong regional investigative tale as the hero must separate what he recalls nostalgically from what he knows as fact. The story line is driven by the determined Randall who after two decades in the big city must re-adapt to small-town rural sensitivities. Readers will appreciate his efforts as friendships, family, and his reminiscing interfere with his inquiry.
Harriet Klausner
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