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Southern bound : a Gulf coast journalist on books, writers, and literary pilgrimages of the heart /

This book represents a running conversation on books, writers, and literary travel written for the Mobile Press-Register Books page from 1995 to 2011. The collection includes more than 100 of the best pieces culled from John S. Sledge's total output of approximately 700 columns. Numerous classi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Sledge, John S. (John Sturdivant), 1957-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Columbia : University of South Carolina Press, [2013]
Colección:UPCC book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Introduction: For the Love of Books
  • Essence of the South Remains Hard to Define
  • Slaves in the Family
  • Ball's Book Strikes Personal Chord with Historian
  • Rivers of History
  • Bumper Crop of Poems Celebrates Life on the Land
  • Faulkner's "Blood and Thunder" Novel Endures
  • Oprah Makes Brave, Bold Choice with Faulkner
  • Liuzzo Biographer Brings a Sense of Justice to Topic
  • South Carolina's Charms Preserved in Encyclopedia
  • Young Woman's Diaries Basis of Wonderful Book
  • Painter Mary Whyte Shows Keen Eye for Laborers in Working South
  • Slaves' Memories Offer Harrowing Accounts of War
  • LSU Press Revives Story of Army of Tennessee
  • Lee's True Legacy beyond Latest Biographer
  • Pelham's Valor Shines in Maxwell's Perfect Lion
  • Eye of the Storm: Union Soldier's Illustrated Memoir Confirms Civil War Was Tragedy for All
  • Co. Aytch a Direct Link to Army in Gray
  • Chance Discovery Reveals Details of Mobile Campaign
  • Chaffin Cuts Through to Clear View of Hunley
  • Poetry Collection from out of the Blue and Gray
  • Rosen Invigorates Civil War Setting
  • Year in Greece Yields Book for Native Mobilian
  • Our Voice of Reason
  • Author Finds Inspiration in Writer Eugene Walter
  • Store Specializes in Antique Volumes
  • Hollon's The God File Deserves National Attention
  • Black Belt Chronicles Richly Deserve Recognition
  • Mobile Native Knight a Fast-Rising Literary Star
  • Breech a Violent, Dark Tale from Franklin
  • Scully's In the Hope of Rising Again a Gem
  • Chicken Dreaming Corn: Family Tales Spur Captivating Novel of Mobile
  • Emotional Exploration of a Deplorable Event
  • Groom Takes Big Step with Vicksburg
  • How Did Our Gardens Grow? Famously, It Seems
  • Mississippi's Victorian Treasures Get Their Due
  • Alabama's Architecture Gets Some Overdue Respect
  • William Faulkner and the Tangible Past: The Architecture of Yoknapatawpha
  • Matrana Shows Pride and Ruin of Plantations
  • Historian Upends Ideas on American Architecture
  • Scholar-Town Houses Have Many Tales to Tell
  • Legacy Presents a Detailed Look at Rayfield's Work
  • Fallingwater Study Cuts Myths, Affirms Merits
  • The Architect of America
  • New Orleans Takes Shape in an Architect's Memoir
  • Stumbling on a Fossil of a Southern Dinosaur
  • McMurtry's Hometown a Paradise for Collectors
  • Drama of Story Comes Alive in Monroeville
  • A Night in the Library
  • Finding Cahaba: New Book Rekindles Fascination with Alabama's First Capital
  • Looking Past Midnight
  • A Literary Ramble through Old New Orleans
  • Oxford, Mississippi: A Literary Profile
  • A Small City of Literary Giants: Greenville, Mississippi
  • Visit to Library Is a Return to Childhood
  • Images from the Literary Side of Paris, with a Personal Touch
  • Walter-Inspired Dream an Affirmation of Creativity
  • A Tale Worthy of the Centuries: Looking into Chapman's Iliad
  • Plato's Ancient Words Inspire the Modern Mind
  • Old Story, New Life: Heaney Makes Epic Worth the Wait
  • Decline and Fall Stands Test of Time
  • Last of the Mohicans Was First of Its Kind
  • Omoo a Showcase for Melville's Lighter Side
  • Slowly, Beautifully: That's How the Cookie Crumbles
  • Revisiting a Classic at the Water's Edge
  • Joseph Conrad's Typhoon Shows Power of Storm
  • One Man's Trash Is Another Man's Pleasure
  • Pride and Prejudice Run Deep in Memoir
  • Old Soldier Sahib a Rare Chronicle of Bygone Empire
  • Cather's Look Westward Broke New Literary Ground
  • Shane Stands as Classic of Western Genre
  • Book behind Classic Wayne Film Still Holds Up
  • Pacific Battleground Is More Than a Memory
  • A Shadowed Friendship: Book Looks Back on Broken Bond between Two Powerful Writers
  • Quirky Italian Novel Shines in Recent Reissue
  • "Just an adventurer": An Aid Worker's Strange Path
  • Cuba in Mind Brings Island Near Enough to Touch
  • Events Make Brick Lane a Timely Volume
  • Long Way Gone a Tribute to Human Spirit
  • My Forbidden Face Drives Home Sufferings of Women under Taliban
  • Márquez Classic Still Rewards Reader's Effort
  • Istanbul, Not Constantinople, Gets the Works from a Nobel-Winning Native Son
  • Iconic AK47 Assault Rifle Subject of Far-Ranging Biography
  • Plagiarism Charges Pull Prize-Winner from Shelves
  • Alexandria's Library Rises from the Ashes-but Fires Still Burn
  • George and Lennie Feeling the Squeeze
  • Proposed Book Ban Deserves Firm Rebuttal
  • America Flap Puts Mississippi in Spotlight
  • Writer Takes Clear-Eyed Look at Battle Flag's Past and Present
  • Without Sanctuary Confronts an Ugly Past
  • Poe Folks Perturbed by Graveyard Guest
  • Breach of Faith Offers Incisive Critiques
  • An Open Letter to Louisiana's Governor
  • School's Switch Alarms Book Lovers
  • Old Writings Preserve Sense of Beaches' Beauty
  • My First Gun Became a Boy's Rite of Passage
  • The Reader: A Quieter Side of Michael Jackson
  • Politics Aside, Spanish Opens Rich Literary Terrain
  • In Changing Times, It's Hard to Turn the Page
  • Southern Writers Save the Style for the Page
  • Oscar Wilde: One Fine Figure of a Writer
  • Everybody Has a Story, but Who Wants to Read It?
  • Odd Fantasy Reveals Deep-Seated Desire
  • Coleridge Tome More Than Equal to Georges
  • Favorite Reading Spots Make Good Books Better
  • Mentor's Passing Time for Reflection
  • Mississippian's Deep Roots Yielded a Towering Legacy
  • In Memoriam: Eudora Welty
  • George Plimpton's Wit, Grace Will Be Missed
  • Foote Takes His Place among Heavenly Host
  • Norman Mailer Leaves Larger-Than-Life Legacy
  • A Chess Board Warrior's Influence Remembered
  • A Father's Reading List Holds Share of Treasures.