Georgia Southern Books


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Georgia Southern Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Georgia Southern
Georgia Cooking in an Oklahoma Kitchen: Recipes from My Family to Yours
Published in Hardcover by Clarkson Potter (2008-04-08)
Author: Trisha Yearwood
List price: $29.95
New price: $17.33
Used price: $17.35
Collectible price: $29.95

Average review score:

Beautiful Book!!Good Recipes!!Great Read!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-09
This is such a beautiful book! Wonderful homestyle recipes! This book is a great read! For the beginner cooks - it is so encouraging; and for the seasoned cooks - it is a reminder that cooking is a joy to be shared! This book would be a 'keeper' it you were not a Trisha Yearwood fan - if your are - it is a wonderful bonus!!

Big Fan!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-08
I was so excited to hear that she was coming out with a cookbook. I am a big fan so this was a must have for me. I've made the deviled eggs "her way" and they're great!! My kids couldn't get enough of them.

Wonderful book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-01
The recipes are tasty and so easy to follow. The personal stories are a nice touch. It is nice to get to see a positive side of a celebrity, instead of all the negative things you see in the media.

Good Old Recipes Like Mom Used to Make!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-19
This would be a great cookbook for the new bride or a daughter just starting to cook. The recipes are pretty basic and mimicked a lot I had in my recipe files, but that must mean they are GOOD recipes! The brownies were very good, but don't over bake or they dry out. I used the icing for the German chocholate cake on the brownies and it was to die for!

Love it, Love it, Love it!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
I ordered this book as a gift for a friend at work, who loves Trisha Yearwood, and he also loves to cook. Well .... decided to keep the book for myself, and now I'm just waiting for HIS book to arrive in the mail! Trisha's style of cooking is much like the cooking that I grew up on in Georgia, and alot of her recipes are nearly the same as mine -- but I am enjoying the variations, as well as the new recipes I have never tried before. The Pecan Pie Muffins are to die for!! Be sure to try those !!! And, yesterday, my husband and I picked blackberries and I tried the Blackberry Cobbler recipe - it was a bit different than my own recipe, and we truly enjoyed it! If you like Southern cooking, you can't go wrong with this cookbook. Trisha tells little stories about some of the recipes also, and the entire book is fun to read. HIGH recommendations!

Georgia Southern
Bon Appetit, Y'All: Recipes and Stories from Three Generations of Southern Cooking
Published in Hardcover by Ten Speed Press (2008-03-15)
Author: Virginia Willis
List price: $32.50
New price: $19.25
Used price: $18.95

Average review score:

Wonderful southern eclectic recipes!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-29
Down here in Georgia, we pronounce the title of this book "Bone Appiteete, Y'all". The recipes are wonderful and the stories a glimpse back in time to my own mother and grandmother's kitchens. I love the pictures on the inside cover of her old family recipes written on torn envelopes, church bulletins, scraps of notebook paper, etc. I have a few of the same in my cherished family recipe collection. Highly recommend this cookbook if you love dressed up or even down home simple southern cooking.

Advice for men or women who don't cook, who live with someone who does...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-28
If you don't cook, but live with someone who does, I highly recommend you buy this book and just leave it on the table. In less than 24 hours I was offered an incredible cobbler. All I had to do was provide vanilla ice cream.
It is a beautiful book which I am enjoying reading and looking through. Virginia's voice is strong and clear as I read and I thank her from the bottom of my heart for the crust of that cobbler. I look forward to already promised biscuits and hopefully many many other kitchen events. "Yes Honey, I will go get real butter." Can you believe it, delicious cobbler in less than 24 hours! Buy this book now and just put it on the table. If he or she loves you, you might get cobbler too.

Great Southern Recipes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-27
Virginia tells the south like it is.....Her recipes bring back what the true south and it only makes me proud to know and love all that she shares with the world in her writing and fabulous recipes.

The Go-To Cookbook when Hosting
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-26
As soon as I purchased this book I was excited to use it. I'm a Southerner first and a foodie second. The recipes in this book offer a great assortment of southern-charm mingled with the french countryside. I've made over 15 recipes ranging from 'Nibbles and Starters' to her delicious desserts and have not been disappointed. I use this book everytime I entertain, and I suggest everyone do the same. I've sent over 10 copies to friends and family from south Florida to Boston, Mass. It's a great 'thank you' and hostess gift for all those that love food and want to elevate their education in southern and french cuisine. It's a must addition for those that have 1 or 100 cookbooks!

Awesome, great dishes, easy to prepare
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-19
Absolutely love this cookbook. Virginia has done a great job picking her favorite family recipies. These dishes are easy to prepare and my family loves them.

Georgia Southern
The Grit Cookbook: World-Wise, Down-Home Recipes
Published in Paperback by Chicago Review Press (2006-11-01)
Authors: Jessica Greene and Ted Hafer
List price: $18.95
New price: $11.29
Used price: $11.06

Average review score:

good stuff
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-18
I love this book!! comfort food at it's finest...the grit gravy and the grit tofu are just amazing.

The Grit Cookbook: Who Knew...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-18
This cookbook is absolutely fantastic! I used to live in Athens, Ga and this cookbook gives the recipe for my old favorites at the real restaurant, The Grit! I could NOT be happier- as a beginning vegetarian, this book is priceless because it helps prove that as a vegetarian you do not have to miss out on great tastes, new great tastes are DEFINATELY out there!

This cookbook is one of the best!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-15
The publishers ought to be giving me a commission as I have turned so many people on to this cookbook! Seriously, it has fantastic recipes, including the best pancakes I have ever made....the nutritional yeast gravy and the golden bowl are to die for...the stews with Guinness beer rock....the cilantro and pesto quesadillas are always a hit....yum......

a happy mistake
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-17
My son bought me this book for Mother's Day. He told me to bookmark the book I wanted. I didn't, but had left the page up with the Grit Cookbook on it and left the room. I had wanted another cookbook, looking forward to receiving the other cookbook, and to my surprise, received this book instead. What a wonderful accident. I have enjoyed reading the book. It's so fun; it makes you want to visit the Grit. I have, also, enjoyed the recipes. So far, we have tried the salsa, famous vegan ranch dressing, tabouli, spinach and lentil soup, and my husband's two favorites: cream of tomato soup and mock cream of chicken soup. Everything has been excellent! Thank you son for such a wonderful surprise!!

Good Cookbook
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-04
I never been to the restaurant before but from this book I can imagine their food is great. Its full of interesting, tasting, and quality recipes. Also these recipes are made to feed large families which is good with me because I have one. My absoultey favorite recipe is the BBQ Tofu Sandwiches oh my goodness it is the best bbq sauce I have ever made and the ingredients are so simple(I must note this recipe calls for honey but I use agave and it is still good). I must add that this book is not 100% vegan some of the recipes call for cheese, butter and milk but that can be easily substituted with its vegan counterpart. All of the vegan recipes have a little V by them to make them recognizable on site. So if you are looking for good vegan food for a big family, then check this book out.

Georgia Southern
Going to Ground: Simple Life on a Georgia Pond
Published in Audio CD by Willacoochee Publishing (2007-08-30)
Author: Amy Blackmarr
List price: $19.95
New price: $19.95

Average review score:

beautiful essays, beautifully read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-09
The essays that comprise this collection put me in mind of river stones, each compact and perfectly polished, each dense with the weight of insight and experience. The essays are generally brief, yet rich with detail; comparisons to Thoreau or John Muir are more than appropriate. I generally prefer reading a book to listening to one, but this is an exception. Amy Blackmarr's voice is southern and evocative in that soft, slow sense that puts me in mind of warm nights on a front porch. You will quickly feel you are beside a small pond in the South Georgia pines.

I cried and laughed - in that order
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-01
You know she's a great writer when she spins her words so profoundly and beautifully that it makes you cry within seconds....then listen with all senses vigilent...then laugh out loud....then cry again in a final release of everything you had left in your emotional arsenal of defenses. Amy Blackmarr's work in this audio is nothing short of a spiritual awakening...without the obligatory regligious overtones. Wherever you come from, no matter what you're looking for, listen to this, and you will be healed in some way.

New Complete Audio Book is wonderful listening
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-31
I had the privilege of hearing an advance copy of the new complete Audio Book of Amy Blackmarr's classic, GOING TO GROUND:Simple Life on a Georgia Pond. Blackmarr's pleasing southern voice, combined with Chase Anderson's Indian flute and fiddle introductions, makes for wonderful listening that takes you right to the heart of the Georgia pond and simple cabin, which is the setting for the book. Humor is one of the book's strongest points, and it comes through funnier than ever in the author's excellent telling of the characters and the ubiquitous mice!

For me...the right book at the right time!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-30
A book about leaving the city, leaving your business behind and moving to Georgia. I wonder why it was that I became so enamored of this book and it's author. Becuase, I'm about to do the same thing. This is the kind of book that I could probably read again and again. It suanders. It meanders. It is relaxed. It's scope is wide, it's execution is simple and effortless. I found myself yearning to be the author's guest at her little cabin by the pond. I wanted to pet her dogs, drink a beer with her neighbors. I wanted to walk in her woods. Fantastic job at gentle memoir.

Nice place to sit back and relax
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-12
Young South Georgia woman gets off the fast train, returns to family's shack by the pond, then delivers us a way to enjoy her experiences and reflections. The sparce prose of Amy Blackmarr lets you sit back and relax awhile. You'll also enjoy the sequel, House of Steps, where she moves to a peculiar little house out in Kansas. Her outlook on life is quite refreshing. Both books are short, too, so they're great for summer trips to the beach, or weekends out in the backyard.

Georgia Southern
Knights of Spain, Warriors of the Sun: Hernando De Soto and the South's Ancient Chiefdoms
Published in Hardcover by University of Georgia Press (1997-07)
Author: Charles M. Hudson
List price: $40.00
New price: $22.00
Used price: $18.53

Average review score:

Excellent Telling of Desotos 4 Year Trek and the Early American Indian Culture He Encountered
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20
While reading Tony Horwitz's recent book, "A Voyage Long and Strange: Rediscovering the New World", about his travels through the Americas to rediscover the early explorers and colonists that preceded Jamestown and Plymouth, I became fascinated with those who came to America a full 100 years before Jamestown, particularly Hernando De Soto's 4 year plunge into the wilderness of America with his 600 man army in 1539. In spite of failures by previous Spanish explorers, including one army that lost all but 4 men, De Soto marches throughout the entire southeast from Florida, as far north as Tennessee and North Carolina to as far west as northeast Texas in a vain search for gold and other precious metals. De Soto's journey is fascinating in that he marches through the wilderness and unknown with an unusual measure of confidence while encountering an amazing society of Indian tribes totally unlike what American's perceive of the Indian culture based on their knowledge of American Indians post Jamestown. These tribes had concentrated villages with advanced agricultural development, a networked culture with a central chief, an upper class and they utilized great mounds for the base of the homes of their chiefs and to a lesser degree, their other important tribal members. Based on eye witness accounts left in chronicles and secondary sources, Hudson, tells the story of De Soto's travels and encounters with the Indians that is even more fascinating by Hudson's ability, aided by archeology, to trace a pretty accurate mapping of De Soto's travels. The cruelty inflicted by De Soto and his followers seems counter productive particularly as they are frequently at war with the various tribes they encounter as they in turn depend on the Indians supplies for survival. Thus 220 years before Sherman's march, De Soto also lived off the land creating even greater devastation in his wake. What is very interesting is the detail about the Indians encountered, the names of the towns, biographies on the various chiefs, the detail of their lifestyle and the intriguing explanations of the built up mounds that are still present throughout southeast America. The initial part of the book provides a good history of the early Spanish explorations before de Soto, the closing chapters explains what may have happened to these advanced Indian cultures that were in apparent decline before de Soto and virtually melted away before the tribes known today became prevalent like the Cherokees, the Creeks, Chickasaws etc. The final section covers the great debate and documentation of De Soto's route that was seemingly well documented through the Smithsonian but has more recently been proven to be less accurate by current scholars such as Hudson. If you are only interested in de Soto's travels, this is the meat of the book and whether you have interest in the final sections, this is still one of the best books on De Soto and those lost American tribes who seem related to the Aztecs without the stone necessary to similar stone structures, they in turned built mounds.

Warriors of the Sun is a welcome addition to public and college library world history shelves.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-03
Written by Charles Hudson (Franklin Professor of Anthropology, University of Georgia), Knights of Spain, Warriors of the Sun is an in-depth scrutiny of Hernando de Soto's history-making mission of exploration between 1539 and 1542. Taking pains to recreate as precise a geographic answer as possible to the question "Where did De Soto go?", Knights of Spain, Warriors of the Sun retraces De Soto's steps along a map, with supplementary black-and-white photographs and illustrations, recounting De Soto's adventures, perils, and encounters with Native Americans as accurately as possible. Accessible to lay readers and historians alike, Knights of Spain, Warriors of the Sun is a welcome addition to public and college library world history shelves.

Warrior's of the Sun, a great read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-03
I enjoyed this book immensely. As a guy who can take something as dry as "Darwin's Origin of Species" to the beach for the weekend, this is a real page turner. The author does a wonderful job of assembling journal entries along with well documented historical data, into an enjoyable read for the interested lay person. It reminds me somewhat of "Undaunted Courage" by Stephen Ambrose in both its well documented historical accuracy, and attention to readability by the consuming public. I bought this book mainly out of a life long interest in Southeastern Indian culture, and an interest in the terrain of the region before European settlement. The book delivered in spades on both accounts. I am surprised Hollywood has left this story alone. There is enough violence, death, greed, deceit and sex for 5 movies in Desoto's story.

K Cook

Epic
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-02
I probably first read or heard about de Soto in high school, but until recently he was just a name, one of dozens of Spanish Conquistadors. Then in 2002 while traveling through the Tampa, FL area I came across a National Park commemoration where he first landed on a 4,000 mile 3-year trek through North America. Being there in person my imagination was fired and I've been fascinated by de Soto's journey ever since. I can still smell the salt air, hear the surf and see the Spanish horsemen moving through the shadows of the red mangrove forest. In terms of discovery and epic adventure de Soto equals the story of Lewis and Clark.

This is the single best book available about de Soto, representing 20 years of research and incorporating the latest in archaeological evidence. The route is historically a subject of great controversy, each state has commemorative trails and sites that occasionally change with new scholarship.

The books is a masterpiece incorporating details from many layers to create a highly textured and easily imagined vision of the Spainards and Indians. Hudson is an anthropologist and takes a multi-disiplinary approach which creates a much richer work than a straight historical narrative. Hudson used a "braided narrative", inter-twining the chronological history of events with the latest anthropological evidence - the effect works well.

De Soto Revealed
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-13
I found this book to be an excellent read. I could almost hear the clanking of armor and smell the smoke of the Indian village cooking fires. I would recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in early Southeastern Indian culture as-well-as sixtenth century Spanish conquest.

Georgia Southern
The Front Porch Prophet
Published in Hardcover by Medallion Press (2008-07-01)
Author: Raymond L. Atkins
List price: $25.95
New price: $16.62
Used price: $18.01

Average review score:

Raymond Atkins is the Garrison Keillor of the South.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-29
I grew up listening to Garrison Keillor every Sunday morning on the radio, and I love his gentle, easygoing narratives of small-town life. Sequoyah, Georgia, Raymond L. Atkin's quirky town, is the Lake Wobegone of the South. The rural community is populated with a never-ending stream of strange characters. There's Hoghead, a cook who proudly makes the world's worst coffee and proudly posts the Daily Special in the front window every morning, as well as a cheerful Christian message. Unfortunately, he isn't too good at separating his thoughts, so you might see advertised "THE ROAD TO HELL IS PAVED WITH COUNTRY-FRIED STEAK" or "CHRIST DIED FOR THE BEST FRIED CHICKEN IN THE COUNTY." A.J.'s wife Maggie is pretty normal, except that all of her family members are named after famous authors, so her full name is Margaret Mitchell Callahan Longstreet, and her children are named Emily Charlotte (named for BOTH the Bronte sisters in a break with tradition), Harper Lee and James Joyce. Police officer Slim could be the twin brother of Hazzard County's Sheriff Roscoe. But everyone in the town basks in the glow of small-town friendliness, and the community happily takes its turn irritating and taking care of each other.


Part of the way Eugene amuses himself is by writing letters to all the people he knows to be sent after he dies. There's an excerpt from each one at the beginning of every chapter. Some of them are sweet, most of them are sarcastic (Being dead is not that bad. There are a lot of people here I know. In fact, most of them were your patients.) All of them hare hilarious.

The joy of this book comes from the variety of characters and their tangled relationships. It's really a fun read; page after page made me laugh like a hyena (I even snorted within hearing distance of some clients; that was embarrassing) but at the end I may have been sniffling a little bit. It's very authentic and comfortable; if The Front Porch Prophet were an article of clothing it would definitely be a soft, worn, slightly dirty brown leather jacket that's been heated in the sun so that it's snug and warm and has that perfect old-leathery smell to it.


Southern charm...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-21
Raymond Atrins
Medallion Press, 2008
ISBN: 9781933836386
5 Stars
Reviewed by Debra Gaynor for ReviewYourBook.com
You do not have to be a Southerner to enjoy a quirky Southern story. The setting for The Front Porch Prophet is Sequoyah, Georgia . Unique characters, southern charm, and a gripping story make this book an excellent read. Eugene is battling a fatal disease and must face his mortality. He seeks help from his estranged best friend, A.J. Together they look back on the past.
The Front Porch Prophet will make you laugh and will make you cry. Raymond Atrins is an extremely talented author. He developed a plot that peeks at southern life, approaching death, and friendships. The secondary characters make this book. Their quirkiness makes them appealing. The writing style is pleasant, fast-paced, and rewarding. I suspect this book will be a best seller.

Absolutely charming Southern fiction
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-16
A.J. Longstreet and Eugene Purdue share a colorful past. They grew up together in the mountains of Sequoyah, Georgia, and got into their share of trouble. The best friends had an alcohol-induced falling out three years ago and haven't spoken since. In the opening scenes of The Front Porch Prophet by Raymond L. Atkins, Eugene initiates contact with A.J. with some bad news. Eugene has terminal cancer and a matter of months to live. He needs A.J. to be present in the final phase of his life and good-hearted A.J. readily obliges.

Thus begins the reunion between what must surely be two of the most charming and entertaining characters in rural Georgia. As A.J. steps back into Eugene's life, the past comes flooding back. As events and characters unfold, Atkins presents A.J. and Eugene as boys, teenagers, and young men. He introduces their parents, grandparents, wives, children, neighbors and colleagues. It is a large and eclectic cast of characters, and they are what makes this story special.

If a terminally ill man suffering through his last days sounds like a depressing premise for a story, don't worry. This compelling tale is anything but. Atkins is a master story teller and his anecdotes, all told from A.J. Longstreet's point of view, draw the reader in while the tongue-in-cheek way he presents them will make you smile. The narrative tone is dry and humorous, but at the same time warm and tender. It lovingly embraces the quirkiness of the residents of Sequoyah and pokes gentle but loving fun at the culture of the Deep South.

Atkins' writing is impeccable and he is clearly in his element with this wonderful piece of Southern fiction.
One of the strong points of this novel is the way in which he builds a very strong sense of place, not only with descriptions of the physical setting but with his characters, through descriptions of their personalities, daily lives and interactions. Even the rough and tumble ones who drank entirely too much whiskey and carried on love affairs with their firearms, were so likeable. And in the end, they show us that no matter where you're from, family and friendship are ties that bind and endure despite our mistakes and inadequacies.

Laugh-out-loud hilarious, but deep with emotion
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-16
If you lived in a small town when you were growing up, or are just redneck enough, you'll know exactly what's going on in this story.

That's what makes The Front Porch Prophet so hilarious and relatable. Author Raymond L. Atkins' subtle implementations of dry humor and unlikely-but-possible situations are what drive this otherwise melancholy perspective on a man's slow battle with cancer while residing in the small town of Sequoyah, Georgia. The story's bulk are the family branches of the slowly succumbing Eugene Purdue, bringing in characters with rich personalities and wonderful side stories. Each character is described throughout the entirety of the book; this includes the local eatery's religious owner, Hoghead (who unintentionally renames the drive-in with a combination of Bible tidbits and dining specials); Estelle Chastain (whose mean little dog meets an unexpected demise by an aerial porch); real estate buyer Truth Hannassey (who finds a love match in Eugene's ex-wife); and deputy Slim (who would freak out if he ever found out about that stolen school bus).

The story is rich and lively, easing the emotional break of Eugene's gradual degradation (even with grenades to ease the boredom). But his familial friend A.J.'s reluctant role as caretaker and possible Grim Reaper shows a tenderness and emotion familiar to many who have lost a loved one. Between Estelle's reckless driving and A.J.'s battle of words with Eugene's dog Rufus lies a story of heartbreak, loss, and emotion. A fantastic read.

A new "Southern Icon"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-16
I read this book because I have a family member who is a friend of the author. i am not sure what I expected, but what ever it was , I received much more. The characters became like family members and friends that I have known all my life. I laughed out loud in resturants or where ever I was at the time. I cried some also. As I came closer to the conclusion, I was hoping the next book was to be a continuation. I am an avid reader. I love southern writers. Ray is one of the best.I consider him in the company of Ferrol Sams, Pat Conroy,and even Faulkner and Welty. I was blown away by his first novel.

Georgia Southern
Susan Mason's Silver Service
Published in Hardcover by Pelican Publishing Company (2006-06-30)
Authors: Susan Mason and Barrie Scardino
List price: $34.95
New price: $22.95
Used price: $24.73
Collectible price: $34.95

Average review score:

As good as it gets!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-08
This is one of the best cookbooks you'll purchase as far as simplicity equals elegance goes. I recently attended a wedding rehearsal and wedding catered by Ms. Mason and she is as impressive in person as her book is. Very personable, very approachable and it carries through in her book. Things as simple as the tomato sandwich that tastes like so much more is a perfect example. Just wonderful from beginning to end. Thank you!

Susan Mason's Silver Service
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
Not only was it interesting reading but, very informative. I would buy it again. Loved the book

Susan Mason's Silver Service
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-13
A first glance at the book might make you think it's all about complicated recipes that only a highly successful caterer like Susan would attempt. It's true that the food is beautiful and the presentation elegant, but the recipes are not difficult and they're delicious. Some of them come from Susan's family of good cooks and all have become favorites of her clients. My own favorites include a to-die-for tomato pie and a chilled, curried zucchini soup. The book is also fun to read, with a personal voice, great stories, and gorgeous photography.

Susan Mason's Silver Service
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-26
Not only is this a great cookbook with very doable "southern" recipes it is a worthy addition to any coffee table. Beautiful photography that gives the reader a glimpse of entertaining in style in Savannah.

Wonderful gift or addition to your own collection
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-02
Not only beautiful, the recipes are fabulous. I own close to 50 cookbooks but still am glad to have these recipes.

Georgia Southern
Who Left That Body in the Rain?: A Thoroughly Southern Mystery (Beeler Large Print Mystery Series)
Published in Hardcover by Thomas T. Beeler Publisher (2003-02)
Author: Patricia Houck Sprinkle
List price: $27.95
Used price: $71.92

Average review score:

Witty Mystery
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-26
I had not read Patricia Sprinkle before I read Who Left That Body In The Rain. It wasn't as easy to figure out "who done it" as you might think and I appreciated the challenge. An quick read.

An Excellent Southern Mystery - Delightful and Charming
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
This is the first Patricia Sprinkle book that I read, and ever sense I have some to love her writing style. This book is excellent not only for the vivid portrayal of life in the South and the customs that go with it, but also for the intrigue and suspense that keeps the reader guessing almost to the end as to who the killer really is. This list of suspects goes on, and on, and with one major suspect on the lam, its easy to finger that person right off the bat. I really enjoyed this book and the McLaren Yarbrough is a delightful heroin.

A Delightful Series
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-12
Except for the first two books, I have read all of Patricia Sprinkle's Thoroughly Southern Mystery series to date and have loved each one. The stories envelop the reader in the cozy comfort of visiting with old friends, without ever letting them overstay their welcome. Each book reveals something new about returning favorites and introduces enough new friends, family members, and villains to keep things fresh and interesting. The mysteries are clever, intriguing, complex. The setting is rich in the regional flavors, customs, and manners of the small-town South, but never at the expense of other cultures or groups of people. This series never disappoints.

I hope Signet will one day offer BUT WHY SHOOT THE MAGISTRATE? and WHEN DID WE LOSE HARRIET? in the same style as the rest of the series so my collection may be complete.

Good Mystery
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-21
I had a hard time deciding whether I should give it 5 stars or 4 stars, because it took me a long time to get into this book and get interested in the characters. I didn't really care for the setting. To me, it wasn't really cozy enough.

The writing was good. The clues/twists/surprises were clever. The more pages I read, the better it got. When I got to the last 100 pages, I couldn't put it down. It was so interesting, and it kept getting even more interesting by the page.

So while I was deciding whether this deserved a low 5 or a high 4, the last 100 pages convinced me to give it a 5. The last 100 pages were so good - those pages in themselves deserved a very high 5!

Sprinkle creates a vivid sense of location --
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-10
A small town in Georgia. Her "detective" "Mac" is a 60-something married woman (part-time magistrate and co-owner of the family nursery business). Mac is surrounded by friends, family, and neighbors, and the town she describes is so real you can picture it in your mind. This book almost begs to be made into a movie.

It is February in middle Georgia, and the heavy rain never stops. A friend of Mac and her husband is found lying in the rain, hit by a car -- his own, as it turns out, but the car is found parked in a church some distance away, so this was no accident. How could someone else get behind the wheel of his car and run him down?

The incompetent police chief decides it must be a Mexican new to town, and Mac ends up trying to find out who killed her friend -- she's convinced it wasn't the chief suspect, but she fears it may be a family member or someone else close to the victim.

It is only fair to warn readers that Mac is a Christian and the book is sprinkled with her religious views -- not oppressively so, but somewhat surprisingly so, for a book that I would not classify as a "Christian mystery."

This was my first book by this author but I've already ordered another. She is a delightful find.

Georgia Southern
The Witch's Grave: A Fever Devilin Mystery
Published in Hardcover by Wheeler Publishing (2004-07-20)
Author: Phillip DePoy
List price: $24.95
New price: $9.98
Used price: $1.25

Average review score:

Can't put it down
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-30
Outstanding book. Great mystery and plot. The cemetary is so detailed that it is like you are standing there. The same way with dinner, you can almost smell the home cooking. Fever is a interesting charactor. Depoy has a great since of humor in the aftermath of chaos. The ongoing changes in the story line keeps if from being a boring "who done it" book.
Would highly recommend to mystery readers.

Death Depart
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-06
For the fourth Fever Devilin mystery, THE WITCH'S GRAVE Phillip DePoy takes from the national news a true incident and weaves a complex tale of secrets, hidden passions and hatred of the different.
Fear rides the road as Fever and his friend Dr. Winston Andrews are asked by Sheriff Skid Needle to help unravel the clues and blind allies in Blue Mountain when a local mortician is murdered and the local witch Truevine Deveroe cannot be found. She and her friend, Abel are suspects until the real killer is discovered amid the ruins of a cemetery/sanctuary.
Nash Black, author of TRAVELERS and SINS OF THE FATHERS.

ENJOYABLE READ - WELL WRITTEN
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-19
This was a fun read and I admit to enjoying it cover to cover. I love folk lore, food and the region in which the story took place. The author's character developement was good, the story moved well and was not only entertaining, but informative. There was obviously much research that went into this one and it shows. The story did have some twists and turns but not the sort that were so unrealistic that it made the story bad (like so many books of this genre suffer from). Note to author: I have to say that the character of Andrews was one of the most annoying characters I have ever encountered in fiction. That being said, the character of Andrews did work as I suspect that is how and why you developed him. Had he, Andrews, be a guest at my house, he would have been packed on the first flight to Atlanta after the first evening. All in all, I enjoyed this one and do recommend it.

learning about folk lore and a mystery too!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-28
a mystery and learning about folk lore all in one book. so interesting. a must read for people who love old cemeteries and the stories they tell.

Welcome to Fever's world.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-12
Fever Devilin, a folklorist, has returned to his home deep in Appalachia Georgia. Truevine Deveroe, a local girl considered to be a witch, goes missing; the mortician Harding Pinhurst, one of Fever's least favorite people, turns up murdered and Truvine's fiancé, Able Carter, is the suspect. Fever, his friend, houseguest and Shakespeare scholar, Dr. Winton Andrews, and childhood friend Deputy Sheriff Skidmore Needle, need to find Truevine and Able, and Harding' killer.

It's hard to resist a protagonist who is in his 30's, is almost 7 feet tall, has snow-white hair and sees ghosts. Or a story that's filled with music, folklore, literary quotes, southern food, humor, unique characters, an excellent sense of place, suspense and twists along the way. My recommendation is, don't try. Sit back and enjoy the world of Fever Devlin. I certainly did.

Georgia Southern
Dragonflies And Damselflies of Georgia And the Southeast (A Wormsloe Foundation Nature Book) (A Wormsloe Foundation Nature Book) (A Wormsloe Foundation Nature Book) (A Wormsloe Foundation Nature Book)
Published in Paperback by University of Georgia Press (2007-03-15)
Author: Giff Beaton
List price: $24.95
New price: $15.53
Used price: $18.00

Average review score:

Love the book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03
Giff did a great job on his dragonfly book! It's easy to read and to use!
I never realized that there were so many different kind of dragonflies!!!

Awesome book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
Giff Beaton's book is comprehensive, understandable, and also beautiful. Buy this book if you are not interested in the subject, you will be when you read it.

Great field guide.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-07
This book sets new standards for odonate field guides. In addition to covering the Southeast this book is also useful for people living in the mid-atlantic states. Photographs are excellant.

Very impressed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-18
I have recently purchased this book and I am extremely happy with it. It contains a great deal of useful information and I actually found the quick key inside useful. I admit that am not very familiar with odonates, but this book has helped me i.d. a good portion of the dragonflies I have in my collection and has really encouraged me to pay more attention to them on my outdoor excursions.
Highly recommend this guide!

Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-20
Everything I wanted is in this book: beautiful photos, identification tips, larva information, possible locations, flight dates, and much more.

If you have even the slightest interest in odonates, you should buy this reference.


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