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  • - Defender of the Conservative Faith
    av Robert B. Highsaw
    467

    Elite, personable, and persuasive, Edward Douglass White served on the United States Supreme Court for twenty-seven years. During his tenure, he significantly influenced American public law. Robert Highsaw' s extensive judicial biography stresses White's constitutional thought and philosophy.

  • - Precedent, Patrimonialism, and Royal Parsimony
    av Paul E. Hoffman
    537

    Because of the legendary exploits of Sir Francis Drake, most people have heard of the sixteenth-century conflicts between the English and the Spanish in the New World. Paul Hoffman looks behind the legend to discover the reality of what the Spanish crown was doing to defend its empire against raiders such as Drake. Using quantitative as well as literary data on the costs, types, and locations of defenses and on the locations and types of corsair incidents, Hoffman documents the evolution of s system of defenses that he believes was adequate for confronting the violence of the French and English in the years before 1586. He suggests that the size of Drake's expedition of 1586 was a response to this system and in turn caused the Spanish to abandon the system in favor of one that concentrated on the defense of the major towns and trade routes. Besides telling the complex story of how the Spanish built forts, installed garrisons and artillery, and patrolled the Caribbean, Hoffman discusses the ways in which the political system of the empire shaped decisions on defenses. Contrary to what many have believed, Hoffman concludes, Spain exhibited neither military failure nor timidity in its defense of hits interest in the New World. Sharing the results of his meticulous research about the Spanish Caribbean, Paul Hoffman examines an important period that legend has obscured.

  • - Folklore and Fable in Yoknapatawpha
    av Daniel Hoffman
    467

    Daniel Hoffman's bold new readings reveal unsuspected dimensions in Faulkner's The Unvanquished, The Hamlet, and Go Down, Moses. He shows how these works, often regarded as disunified collections of short stories and novellas, are coherent and successful experiments in novelistic form.

  • - Leadership and the Politics of the Public Good
    av Erwin C. Hargrove & James Sterling Young
    467

    Examining his frequently overlooked successes, as well as his failures, Hargrove analyses both the content and the methods of Jimmy Carter's policy leadership. His style of leadership is studied in the light of his beliefs and values, and of his problem-solving skills and experience.

  • - Corn as a Way of Life in Pioneer America
    av Nicholas P. Hardeman
    467

    History is often measured by records of great leaders and events. Nicholas Hardeman convinces us that American history can be measured but the shaping force of a quiet monarch - corn. Hardeman enthusiastically demonstrates that in order to understand the settling and development of America we must know about corn and its influence.

  • - A Social History
    av Thomas C. Cox
    467

    Tracing the development of a black community in the trans-Mississippi West, Thomas Cox probes the political, social, and economic standing of blacks and the growth of black institutions in the Topeka area from early settlement during the territorial period through the rise of an urban Topeka in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

  • av Oscar G. Brockett
    467

    In this overview, a noted authority takes a perceptive look at the radical trends in modern drama and provides us with a new awareness of the forces and ideas behind the current theatrical battle.

  • - American Revolutionary Adventurer
    av John Richard Alden
    467

    Following the dizzying course of Stephen Sayre's career, this biography reveals a vast panorama of life, both high and low, in the era of the American Revolution.

  • - The Gallant Life of Roberdeau Wheat
    av Charles L. Dufour
    461

    Chatham Roberdeau Wheat has rightly been called the grandest of Civil War heroes. Born a Virginia gentleman, this handsome giant was by turns lawyer, politician, filibusterer, wit, bon vivant, and soldier of fortune. In this comprehensive biography, originally published in 1957, Charles Dufour details Wheat's life and loves.

  • - Poems
    av Jan Heller Levi
    261

    Alice Fulton, the judge for the 1998 Walt Whitman Award, calls Once I Gazed at You in Wonder "quite simply, the most endearing book I've read in some time." Readers of this audacious and, yes, endearing collection will agree.

  • - White Liberty and Black Slavery in Augusta's Hinterlands
    av J. William Harris
    557

    In this study of the communities on both sides of the Savannah River in Georgia and South Carolina, J. William Harris explores two great ironies of American history, the South's commitment to a liberty supported by slavery and its attempt to maintain the status quo with a war that undermined southern society.

  • - Poems
    av Barbara Ras
    331

    Barbara Ras, a poet exquisitely heedful of nuance both physical and visceral, cinches deserved renown with this prize-winning debut collection. Bite Every Sorrow invites the reader to embrace beauty, loss, outrage, and the world in all its particular heartbreaks and hilarities.

  • - The Great Hanging at Gainesville, Texas, 1862
    av Richard B. McCaslin
    477

    Until relatively recently, a legacy of silence restricted historical writing on the Great Hanging. In the first systematic treatment of this important event, Richard McCaslin also sheds much light on the tensions produced in southern society by the Civil War, the nature of disaffection in the Confederacy, and the American vigilante tradition.

  • - New and Selected Poems
    av Brenda Marie Osbey
    371

    Like the feast day recalled in its title, this collection of twenty poems venerates the dead. Brenda Marie Osbey invokes, impersonates, and converses with her Afro-New Orleans forebears, both blood ancestors and spiritual predecessors, weaving in hypnotic cadence a spell as potent as the religious and magical mysteries of her native culture.

  • av Charles W. Ramsdell
    371

    In this groundbreaking study, Charles Ramsdell explores the causes of the South's defeat in the Civil War. Finding traditional military explanations insufficient, he argues that deficiencies on the homefront were fundamental to the collapse of the Confederacy.

  • av Douglas Brinkley & Carl T. Rowan
    471

    Originally published in 1952 and long out of print, South of Freedom is a first-rate account of what it was like to live as a second-class citizen, to experience the segregation, humiliation, danger, stereotypes, economic exploitation, and taboos that were all part of life for African Americans in the 1940s and 1950s.

  • - Poems
    av Claudia Emerson
    327

    Written by the winner of the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, Pharaoh, Pharaohis a meditation on time, memory, inheritance, and the irony of loss, loss of one's land, of one's past, of love itself.

  • - New and Selected Poems
    av Lisel Mueller
    407

    In a collection that represents over thirty-five years of her writing life, this distinguished poet explores a wide range of subjects, which include her cultural and family history and reflect her fascination with music and the discoveries offered by language.

  • - A Biography
    av John Richard Alden
    621

    In this highly acclaimed and enduring biography, John Alden traces the interwoven histories of George Washington and the nation he helped to create, defend, and guide toward the future. Alden revisits the major events of Washington's personal and professional life, but the core of the biography concerns Washington's leadership roles.

  • av George Cary Eggleston & Gaines M. Foster
    407

    Originally published in 1875, George Cary Eggleston's memoir, which proved immensely popular among readers throughout the country, is a nostalgic, often amusing collection of essays based on the author's Civil War experiences.

  • - A Tale in Verse and Voices
    av Robert Penn Warren
    371

    Told in the distinct voices of characters long dead and now gathered at an unspecified place and time, this poem recalls events leading to and resulting from the 1811 murder of a young slave by Thomas Jefferson's nephew.

  • av Arthur W. Bergeron Jr
    547

    Examines the 111 artillery, cavalry, and infantry units that Louisiana furnished to the Confederate armies. No other reference has the complete and accurate record of Louisiana's contribution to the war. For each unit, Bergeron provides a brief account of its war activities, including battles, losses, and dates of important events.

  • - A Comparison of St. Domingue and Cuba
    av Gwendolyn Midlo Hall
    557

    First published in 1971, Gwendolyn Midlo Hall's comparison of two developing sugar plantation systems - St. Domingue's (Haiti) in the eighteenth century and Cuba's in the nineteenth century - changed the focus in comparative slavery studies.

  • - A Biography
    av Wayne F. Cooper
    537

    Although recognised today as one of the genuine pioneers of black literature in this century, Claude McKay (1890-1948) died penniless and almost forgotten in a Chicago hospital. In this masterly study, Wayne Cooper presents a fascinating, detailed account of McKay's complex, chaotic, and frequently contradictory life.

  • - An Inquiry into a Civil War Slave Conspiracy
    av Winthrop D. Jordan
    537

  • - A Novel
    av Elizabeth Spencer
    537

  • av David M. Potter & Daniel W. Crofts
    537

    Originally published in 1942, this perceptive and impartial analysis of one of the most baffling periods in American history, the months between the election of Lincoln and the fall of Fort Sumter, was a bold declaration of intellectual independence.

  • - The Lost Cause and the Southern Mind
    av Barbara L. Bellows & Thomas Lawrence Connelly
    387

    More than a century after Appomattox, the Civil War and the idea of the "Lost Cause" remain at the center of the southern mind. God and General Longstreet traces the persistence and the transformation of the Lost Cause from the first generation of former Confederates to more recent times.

  • - A Critical Interpretation
    av Olga W. Vickery
    621

    Hailed by reviewers upon its publication more than thirty years ago, The Novels of William Faulkner remains the preeminent interpretation of Faulkner in the formalist critical tradition while it inspires Faulknerians of all methodologies. Part One contains detailed analyses of every novel from Soldiers' Pay to The Reivers, with particular emphasis on elucidation of character, theme, and structural technique. Part Two discusses interrelated patterns and preoccupations in Faulkner's writing generally. Insightful and well reasoned, Olga W. Vickery's work continues to be of enormous benefit to readers and scholars.

  • - Poems
    av Jane Gentry
    337

    In this collection Jane Gentry evokes, in images as haunting as the Kentucky landscape, a garden thriving with the flowers of memory, a physical world that reflects a realm of transcendence. A Garden in Kentucky is a place of mystery, terror, beauty, and wonder, a garden to which readers will find themselves retuning again and again.

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