South Carolina Books


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South Carolina
Let Us Meet in Heaven: The Civil War Letters of James Michael Barr, 5th South Carolina Cavalry
Published in Hardcover by McWhiney Foundation Press (2001-09)
Author: James Michael Barr
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A compelling, informative primary source
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-13
Let Us Meet In Heaven is a compendium of letters written by James Michael Barr of the 5th South Carolina Cavalry, during the American Civil War. Editorial notes explaining place names and the like help make the letters instantly and immediately understandable to any reader; extensive familiarity with the battles of the Civil War is not needed to read and understand Barr's testimony. Let Us Meet in Heaven also includes an index makes for quick and easy reference. Let Us Meet In Heaven is a compelling, informative primary source and an invaluable contribution to Civil War studies reading lists and historical reference collections.

South Carolina
The Letters of a Victorian Madwoman (Women's Diaries and Letters of the South)
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (1993-02)
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Plight of Southern women in the Victorian South
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1998-01-25
This book contrary to the note attached to the title notation that it is "womens" diarys and letters. It deals with one indiviual Andrew Sheffield daughter of (yes daughter) James L Sheffield Confererate Colonel,Senator and politican from Marshall County Alabama. Andrew was committed to Bryce Hospital the State Asylum at Tuscaloosa by her father and stepbrother who was the probate judge in Marshall Co at the time. It is doubtful that she was insane, however she had disgraced the family by having an affair and committing an attemped act of arson at the request of her lover Dr William May. James Sheffield shot Dr May for dishonoring his family, he was arrested but no billed. When it became apparent that Andrew was to be tried for attemped arson. She was commited to Bryce. This book is almost entirely composed of letters written by Andrew from the time of her commitment until her death in 1920. She wrote to her father and brother as long as her father lived begging to be released and allowed to stand trial for her "criminal act". She over the years wrote long intelligent and lucid letters to all the Govenors who served during her confinment. Several considered releasing her,however her family was well connected enough to keep her there. It is very painful and depressing reading these letters, however it very clearly reflects the total lack of control women had over their lives in this period. It is interesting to note that her father this pillar of the community had a second family only a few miles away by his long time mistress. A very interesting example of the double standards of the period.

South Carolina
The Life and Death of Carolina Maria de Jesus (Dialogos (Albuquerque, New Mexico).)
Published in Paperback by University of New Mexico Press (1995-09-01)
Authors: Robert M. Levine and José Carlos Sebe Bom Meihy
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Fascinating portrait of an African-Brazilian woman writer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-11
This is a marvelous study not only of a poignant African-Brazilian woman persecuted for daring to state her beliefs, but one that reveals the different ways that American (Levine) and Brazilian (Meihy) scholars perceive the problems of race in society. A must read for anyone interested in Latin American society or the history of women or of blacks in the hemisphere.

South Carolina
Light in a Burning-Glass: A Systematic Presentation of Austin FarrerÆs Theology
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (2007-02-28)
Author: Robert Boak Slocum
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Magnified Vision
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-06
This book by Robert Boak Slocum is a fine introduction to Austin Farrer, who is considered by many to have been the greatest Anglican theologian in the 20th century. Consisting of seven short chapters, each of which deals with a specific theme, Slocum's work is something like a theological encomium to Farrer. He clearly has a grasp on the material, delineating it in a systematic fashion, but also including a number of Farrer's own statements. The reader is given the sense that rather than being introduced by Farrer to Slocum (which is how these types of books can sometimes come across), the reader is introduced by Slocum to Farrer himself - which is exactly how it should be.

After a preface entitled "The Challenge and Promise of Farrer", in which Slocum encourages us to heed Farrer's statement that we need to go "beyond our powers and out of our depth" (xiii), the first chapter briefly looks at Farrer's personal background, the method of his theological work and his major theological perspectives. This chapter is well joined to the second chapter, which looks briefly at some of the major systematic trends in Farrer's thought. The third - seventh chapters ultimately get into the real meat of Farrer's theology; each chapter has a specific focus: the eschaton, theodicy, Farrer's notion of "transforming images", poetic and literary inspiration, and finally the relationship of God's action with free will.

The fifth and sixth chapters are worth the price of admission alone. In the fifth chapter is a discussion of Farrer's ideas about images - both verbal and artistic - as being central to human imagination and understanding. He grounds his view with the theological claim that "the rejection of idolatry meant not the destruction but the liberation of images" (52). One is given the sense that this facet of Farrer's thought is rich for the development of theological aesthetics - including but not limited to something such as iconography. Images, in Farrer's theology, are given through revelatory events, and seen through "inspired vision" (55) of the sort that the Apostles had.

In the sixth chapter, one is brought face-to-face with the fact that Farrer was well ahead of his time with his ideas about literary interpretations of the Bible. Farrer held that inspiration was the "midway point between poetry and metaphysics" (64) and that, because the Bible was an inspired text, rather than being read as a work of theology, a work such as The Gospel According to St. Mark should be read as "a play of images and allusions of the subtle and elusive kind which belongs to the imagination rather than to rational construction" (70). Slocum notes some of the criticisms made of Farrer in his day on precisely this point, as well as the way that he has been picked up and defended by literary critic Frank Kermode (in The Genesis of Secrecy). One is inclined to think that the Bible might be - at least in Farrer's hands - something like a truly divine text to be read critically and immanently, imaginatively and deeply.

Slocum is wonderfully transparent throughout the majority of this book, and is seen only at those times when connections are drawn between Farrer's work and other Anglican theologians. I confess, however, that although I appreciate his desire to draw links between Farrer and those that preceded him - such as American theologian William Porcher Dubose - and those that came after him - such as John MacQuarrie - his inclusion of the thematic similarities within the narrative sometimes subtracted from the narrative itself. It's interesting, for example, that Dubose and Farrer thought similarly about a number of things, but am I supposed to think that Dubose influenced Farrer? At no point does Slocum claim so; is the claim, then, implicit? I think that Slocum's desire here is to show that there are continuities of thought within the Anglican tradition, but rather than scattering these comparisons throughout the text, it would have been preferable to have read about these thematic connections in a concluding chapter - especially as the book itself does not have a conclusion, which is a bit of a disappointment.

For those seeking a clear introduction to Farrer's theology, as well as to some of the ways in which it connects with the theology of some other Anglican thinkers, Light in a Burning Glass is a fine place to begin. Along with the recent reader put out by Canterbury Press, The Truth Seeking Heart, inquiring and interested minds will have fine glimpse through the Burning-Glass to divine light.

South Carolina
Like a Sponge Thrown into Water: Francis Lieber's European Travel Journal of 1844-1845
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (2002-07)
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A remarkable eyewitness account
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-07
Edited with an introduction and commentary by Charles R. Mack and Ilona S. Mack, Like A Sponge Thrown Into Water: Francis Lieber's European Travel Journal Of 1844-1845 is a remarkable and personal look into European culture in the mid-nineteenth century, as written in the diary of the intellectual Francis Lieber (1798-1872). A highly recommended addition to European History academic reference collections and supplemental reading lists, this remarkable eyewitness account reflects the distinguished and cultured tastes of its notable author.

South Carolina
Like Unto Like (Southern Classics Series)
Published in Paperback by University of South Carolina Press (1997-06-01)
Author: Sherwood Bonner
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An over-looked novel of the Civil War that deserves readers!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-08
This is an amazing book by a writer who deserves much wider recognition! Bonner, unfortunately, continues to be neglected by literary critics and scholars. But this novel, published in 1878, while certainly of interest to the literary historican, will also appeal to lay readers interested in the South, American womanhood, and the Civil War and Reconstruction periods. What makes this novel of superior worth, however, is not only its historical value but also the high quality of the writing. Let me assure you, this is one very well-written book. Bonner combines a coming-of-age narrative with an early realism and generally avoids the sentimentalism of most popular fiction of the nineteenth century. Therefore, readers today will find it very accessible and a pleasant surprise! I taught this book in a college course and my students unanimously enjoyed it and wondered why they had never heard of Sherwood Bonner before.

Like Unto Like challenges many of our stereotpyes about Southern women as passive, dainty belles. Blythe, the heroine, is a very thoughtful, independent-minded young woman, so much so that she is eager to welcome the Northern soldiers stationed in her Southern small town (Yariba) after the Civil War. Much to the chagrin of all around her, she initiates a reconciliation between North and South, only to discover how complex a relationship she has to her family and region. In her love affair with a Northern officer, she confronts her feelings about love, politics, race, the legacy of the war, and, ultimately, her own independence.

The main interest of the book derives from its insider's view of what it felt like to live in the conquered South after the war. But its real charm derives from its heroine, who reminds me very much of Jo in Little Women. Bonner writes of her, using her characteristically ironic tone: "Perhaps if Blythe had been more popular among the young people she would have absorbed herself more happily in the usual interests of a girl in her father's home; but she had never been a favorite. She was called literary. This was an unfortunate adjective in Yariba, and set one rather apart from one's fellows, like an affliction in the family." This, of course, is what endears her to the narrator, and to us. Blythe is different and embraces her difference. But as she grows up and learns to reconcile herself with her community, she struggles to understand her place in a nation that was so recently torn apart and is trying to heal. That this book offers no easy solutions to the dilemmas of its heroine and a nation emerging from Reconstruction is a testament to its excellence.

South Carolina
Lilac Cigarette in a Wish Cathedral (The James Dickey Contemporary Poetry Series)
Published in Paperback by University of South Carolina Press (1998-08-01)
Author: Robin Magowan
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American surrealist poet on a distinctive path to ecstatics.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-10
To keep going as a writer over the years, at least in the minor and non-commercial genre of American poetry, you have to tell yourself some version of Mark Twain's trans-Atlantic cable: "The reports of my death [as a poet] have been greatly exaggerated." Robin Magowan is an American surrealist poet of genuine imagination and linguistic risks who has kept writing over the years with a consistency of tactic and concern that might be called obsessional, wish-drenched fantasy from one point of view and the signature of an authentic style from another.

A special listening is at the core of this poetics of the syllable and the transcendental image. For "God still moves in the sound of the long `o,' as Dylan Thomas once suggested; and although a half-century of deconstructive semiotics (and worse) have taught us to be much more cautious about such enthusiasms for the logos and the mystique of verbal and religious presence, such assumptions and risks of intuitive language and the inscape of imagery are at the core of Robin Magowan's poetry.

Magowan's Lilac Cigarette in a Wish Cathedral, as its wonderful title for this project suggests, registers a poetry of risk-fulfillment, tracking extremities and delicacies of sense and wish, mountain journeys, desert flights, movements into and out of the primacy of ecstatic fulfillment that haunts the Greco-Roman tradition as this comes down to the United States via a "whit manic" incarnation that haunts our little streets and huge continental hungers. He works this through the Emersonian sense of abandonment and solitary quest, which seeks "ravishment of the intellect by coming nearer to the fact" of self-loss and the desacralization that is the fate of commodity culture.

This is a singular collection, suggesting a life-long discipline in the poetic image and the path of heightened language, a highly wrought and prolonged "derangement of the senses" a la Rimbaud that has taken Magowan from Greece to Tibet and back it its quest.

The last poem in Lilac Cigarette in a Wish Cathedral (wherein, as Richard Howard aptly puts it in his trenchant introduction, "the hierophant smokes his lilac cigarette in a wish cathedral" that is each poem) is entitled "O," and moves from the crooning and screeching plea of a Whitmanic voice, "O my rooster's urge/ to spring voice loud" to the cranked-up ecstasy (bleeding sound into picture) of "dawn flushed/ crimson screaming o."

Pain and pleasure as elsewhere bleed into the mix, the poet lost into the rooster's urge to give rebirth to the whole mounting and morning landscape. In "Miniature," this transmutation of local scene into the mystique of poetic/ religious presence is effected not so much through the visual as through impactions of the aural, what Hopkins called the "inscape" of leaping vowels: "The pleasure of sounds innocently grasped/ A peacock in the eyes of the rain." This twisted and torqued little haiku of a poem depends on the "e" becoming "I" becoming "a" as much as upon the image transformation. The poem enacts, in "miniature," the mix of hearing and sounding that becomes the aesthetic medium of the "wish cathedral."

In a time still dominated by the locality of image (as in Williams) and the play of skeptical wit (Stevens, and his heirs like Ashbery), Magowan had always pursued something else, something closer to Breton or Michaux and the sources of magical incarnations in European surrealism as a kind of interior Orphic line. Magowan's book thus opens in Greece, and seeks the ecstasy of dance and music as tactic of self-loss. Later, "Orfeo" courts this lineage, where the poet (ancient to modern) descends to mount, "goes in a gorge/ Of pluming, spraying song." No gods or muse arises to help the sense of abandonment and self-loss amid the murmuring of deadly presence, "just a wingbeat to guide/ Murmurous wasp center, alone."

South Carolina
Literary Federalism in the Age of Jefferson: Joseph Dennie and the Port Folio, 1801-1812 (Literary Studies)
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (1999-01)
Author: William C. Dowling
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A brilliant reinterpretation of early American literature
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-08
This book has totally opened my eyes to a new relation between American literature and politics. I'm a grad student working on a dissertation on Emerson, and got hold of page proofs of this book because my advisor had them for review. This book argues that the whole notion of American lit as "a world elsewhere" -- as Richard Poirier called it: a world existing in language apart from politics and history -- lies in the relation between literature and politics during the years of Jefferson's presidency. The argument is immensely complex, but the bottom line is that there were two visions of America competing at around the time of 1800: the Federalist vision of America as an organic community based on civic virtue and mutual obligation, and the Jeffersonian vision based on radical French doctrines of equality, with a basis in radical individualism. Dowling's argument is that Jeffersonian radical individualism won, to the point that it has been our "national ideology" ever since. Not just the glorification of the "free" individual, but a market economy, consumerism, emphasis on consumption and "self-expression" through the market, and a mass democracy based on mass taste (TV, supermarkets, etc). The argument of the book is that Federalists, by the time Jefferson's second term had ended, knew that the vision of a "communitarian America" had vanished forever. So they moved the classical republic vision of the American republic into literature, where it became a mode of expression and moral witness. The process starts in Joseph Dennie's Port Folio magazine -- I never even knew it existed before I read this book -- but then continues through Irving, Thoreau, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Charles Eliot Norton, Henry James, and Henry Adams (to name just a few in the tradition of what Dowling calls "literary Federalism." So American literature becomes "America in exile" -- a vision of America vanished from the realm of politics and taking up a new home inside language and the literary imagination. This is a really exciting book. After reading 200 books about gender and identity politics and "the postcolonial other" and similar exercises in empty trendiness, it hit me like a revelation. I've thrown out the whole earlier draft of my Emerson dissertation and am starting all over again.

South Carolina
Live Your Own Life: The Family Papers of Mary Bayard Clarke, 1854-1886 (Women's Diaries and Letters of the South)
Published in Hardcover by University of South Carolina Press (2003-03)
Author: Mary Bayard Clarke
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A real life Gone With The Wind story
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-06
Amazing book. The real account of a Southern heroine from North Carolina, Mary Bayard Clarke. She travels early America, including Texas and Cuba (you can certainly see she lives up to her motto, the title "Life your own life"). The historical detail and meticulous research by the authors brings out her rich and wonderful writing and poetry. I recommend it as a great addition for any Civil War or North Carolina history buff.

South Carolina
The Logodaedalian's Dictionary of Interesting and Unusual Words
Published in Paperback by University of South Carolina Press (1989-09-01)
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Buy this book, you'll be glad you did and so will I
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-20
This is a great book for the throne-room browser. a verified collection of words used by hundreds of authors defined and used in context. a useful tool for obscurantist and obfuscators. i no longer get a cut from your purchase so buy with confidence that my opinion is objective
George Stone Saussy III
Pawley's Island, SC


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