Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-639-1 LC 2008008156 | 476 est. pages 440 photos | Nov. 2008 | $35.95t Tennessee Studies Sports & Recreation
in the footsteps of champions
the university of tennessee lady volunteers, the first three decades Debby Schriver | With a Foreword by Mia Hamm
In the Footsteps of Champions: The University of Tennessee Lady Volunteers, the First Three Decades invites readers to experience the journey of women’s intercollegiate athletics from the beginning to the present day. While the recordsetting basketball dynasty of Coach Pat Summitt and the regional and national successes of ten other sports teams create fascinating stories in themselves, the saga of the Lady Volunteers actually begins as early as 1893, when the first women enrolled as students at the University of Tennessee. This book captures the enthusiasm, determination, and vision of those who created the foundations for this leading women’s athletic program. Studentathletes, coaches, fans, faculty, and staff share their memories of the years prior to Title IX legislation, the first years of the program’s development as a free-standing department, and the strong presence that the Lady
Conduct and Orientation. She was also a team leader in the Human Resources Training Department. She is the coeditor, with Lucia McMahon, of To Read My Heart: The Journal of Rachel VanDyke, 1810–1811. For four years she was editor of The Orientation Review, published by the National Orientations Directors’ Association. Also of Interest
Six Seasons Remembered The National Championship Years of Tennessee Football Haywood Harris and Gus Manning Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-317-8 | $29.95t
From Sandlots to the Super Bowl The National Football League, 1920–1967 Craig R. Coenen Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-447-2 | $39.95t
About the Author
Debby Schriver is retired from the University of Tennessee, where she served as associate dean of Student
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Volunteer program has today. Special features include first-person stories by coaches and student-athletes from the era preceding 1976 and the three following decades. Unique views from behind the scenes, plus the largest collection of photographs featuring women’s intercollegiate athletics ever published will draw the interest of the historian, sports enthusiast, and follower of women’s athletics. Readers will trace the journeys of their favorite Lady Volunteers from childhood through college and to the successful lives they lead today. The perspectives of these student-athletes provide insight into the role of sports in education and human development. In the Footsteps of Champions is fun to read, inspiring, and appealing to anyone who enjoys sports.
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Photo by Johnny Molloy.
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Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-628-5 LC 2007047848 | 280 est. pages Nov. 2008 | $24.95t Appalachian Studies—Smokies
mount rogers national recreation area guidebook a complete resource for outdoor enthusiasts Johnny Molloy
Encompassing
more than 140,000 acres of scenic beauty in southwestern Virginia, the Mount Rogers National Recreation Area offers outdoor enthusiasts a myriad of activities, from hiking, camping, and fishing to horseback riding, picnicking, swimming, tour driving, and biking. In the only comprehensive guidebook for this region, now newly updated, Johnny Molloy covers all of these activities and more, providing visitors with everything they need, including detailed maps, to enjoy the entire Mount Rogers area—one of the true jewels of Southern Appalachia. Molloy details the more than 430 miles of marked and maintained trails that crisscross the Mount Rogers NRA and nearby Grayson Highlands State Park. Organized both by type, such as long trails and rail trails, and by the areas they cover, including West Side, Central Area, Far East, and High Country, the trail descriptions include comprehen-
Complementing the sections on the extensive trail system are chapters on many other recreational options. Anglers will find lists of the best streams and tips for both fly and spin-cast fishing. For those seeking a way to cool off after a mountain excursion, the book locates the area’s favorite swimming holes. Molloy also reveals the best roads from which to view the gorgeous scenery and wildlife of the Mount Rogers area. Rounding out the guidebook is information on national forest and state park campgrounds, picnic areas, and accommodations and services in nearby towns, including motels, bedand-breakfasts, outfitters, and stores.
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sive narratives of each hike, noting the various trail junctions, stream crossings, and trailside features with their distances from the trailhead. With each trail summary is an information box that offers quick access to such pertinent data as trail type (foot, horse, and/or bike), difficulty, length, degree of use, trail connections, and highlights.
About the Author
Johnny Molloy is a freelance writer and the author of more than thirty outdoor guidebooks, including, most recently, A Falcon Guide to Mammoth Cave and Beach and Coastal Camping in Florida. His first book, Trial by Trail: Backpacking in the Smoky Mountains, was published by the University of Tennessee Press in 1996. Also of Interest
Cherokee National Forest Hiking Guide Second Edition Edited by William H. Skelton New Foreword by Lamar Alexander Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-374-1 | $24.95t
Hiking the Big South Fork Third Edition Brenda G. Deaver, Jo Anna Smith, and Howard Ray Duncan Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-031-3 | $14.95t
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Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-640-7 LC 2008005804 | 176 est. pages 14 photographs | Feb. 2008 | $19.95s Appalachian Studies—Smokies
king of the moonshiners lewis r. redmond in fact and fiction Edited by Bruce E. Stewart | With a Foreword by Durwood Dunn
is an American archetype. Living a hardscrabble life in the mountains of the South, he turns to making moonshine in a homemade still, hidden from the prying eyes of the “revenuers”—the federal agents who pursue him because he doesn’t pay taxes. In reality a lawbreaker, in our mythology the moonshiner is the hero who fights valiantly to eke out a living while being unfairly dogged by the “infernal feds.” Developed and embellished through more than a century of American popular culture, this image has put down deep roots in our collective psyche. King of the Moonshiners shows us how those roots first began to grow. Lewis R. Redmond was an archetypal moonshiner. On March 1, 1876, the twenty-one-year-old North Carolinian shot and killed a U.S. deputy marshal who tried to arrest him on charges of illicit distilling. He then fled to Pickens County, South Carolina, where, within three years, he gained national notoriety
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as the “King of the Moonshiners.” More than any other individual moonshiner in southern Appalachia, Redmond captured the imagination of middle-class Americans. Then, as now, media coverage had a lot to do with his reputation. This book includes three publications that helped to transform Redmond into a national celebrity. The first is a newspaper interview of Redmond, first published in the Charleston News and Courier in June 1878 and subsequently reprinted in newspapers throughout the country. This sympathetic portrayal made Redmond a household name. The second publication is Edward B. Crittenden’s 1879 dime novel (and fiction it certainly is), which solidified Redmond’s reputation as the most dangerous man in southern Appalachia. The third piece was written shortly after Redmond’s capture in 1881, allegedly to set the record straight. As Bruce Stewart ably demonstrates, Redmond and his legend were the products of a specific historical moment:
leaders of the “New South” wanted to shed the region’s hillbilly reputation while northern writers, looking for colorful stories, created a new and mythic version of Appalachia. Through these original documents, contemporary readers have the opportunity to relive that fascinating time. About the Editor
Bruce E. Stewart is an assistant professor of history at Appalachian State University. He has contributed articles to Georgia Historical Quarterly, Appalachian Journal, North Carolina Historical Review, and Journal of Southern History. Also of Interest
Miners, Millhands, and Mountaineers Ronald D Eller Paper ISBN 978-0-87049-341-6 | $25s Appalachian Echoes Series Durwood Dunn, Nonfiction Editor
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The “hillbilly hero”
Paper 978-1-57233-637-7 336 est. pages | 5 Photographs Sept. 2008 | $24.95t Appalachian Studies—Smokies Fiction—American
their ancient grudge Harry Harrison Kroll With an Introduction by Richard L. Saunders
First published in 1946, Harry Kroll’s portrayal of the legendary Hatfield-McCoy feud (1878–90) is seen through the eyes of six women of the two families. Their Ancient Grudge stands as the last major treatment of this iconic sliver of American culture completed before the struggle was examined and reinterpreted by a later generation of historians. Although the brutal cycle of the conflict often takes center stage, the novel is replete with sensitive observations of Appalachian nature and landscape, and most strikingly, the cultural positions occupied by women. In crafting this compelling tale, Kroll drew both on historical studies and on interviews with descendants of the Hatfield and McCoy families as well as with other residents of the Tug Valley area of Kentucky and West Virginia. For this edition, Richard Saunders has written an introduction discussing Kroll’s background, his influence on Appalachian literature,
Also of Interest
About the Author
Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-280-5 | $19.95t
Harry Harrison Kroll (1888–1967) was the author of nearly twenty novels and over a thousand pieces of published short fiction. As a teacher at Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee, he influenced a generation of Appalachian writers, including James Still, Jesse Stuart, and Don West.
Fools’ Parade
Richard L. Saunders is Special Collections librarian and archivist at the University of Tennessee, Martin. He is the editor of A Yellowstone Reader and A Lady’s Ranch Life in Montana and is presently completing a biography of Kroll.
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and his colorful ability to convey the nature of mountain culture and society throughout his works.
Hawk’s Nest A Novel Hubert Skidmore
A Novel Davis Grubb Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-114-3 | $19.95t
Blood Kin A Novel Mark Powell Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-546-2 | $32t
The Road A Novel John Ehle Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-016-0 | $24.95t
Appalachian Echoes Series Thomas E. Douglass, Fiction Editor
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“In the tradition of the old Southern humorists, Mark Twain, Erskine Caldwell, and Harry Crews, Madison Jones’s The Adventures of Douglas Bragg is a coming-of-age novel full of jokes, pranks, shenanigans, tall tales, country music, drug-running morticians, houses of ill repute, hypocritical preachers, communes, and fun. It also has a heart of gold.” —Hugh Ruppersburg, coeditor of The New Georgia Companion to Georgia Literature
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-636-0 LC 2008010776 | 264 est. page Oct. 2008 | $29.95t Fiction—American
the adventures of douglas bragg a novel Madison Jones
Douglas Bragg decided to take a trip through the South with no particular destination in mind. And so the journey begins for the young hero of legendary writer Madison Jones’s newest novel, The Adventures of Douglas Bragg. Leaving his native Birmingham to see a world more interesting than his own, “college man” Bragg sets out on his hitchhiking trip. Before long, he is picked up by a salesman who seems normal enough—that is, until Bragg meets the salesman’s mother. This sets off a series of events that alternates between the utterly ridiculous and the potentially disastrous. On his journey, Bragg encounters a rogue’s gallery of bizarre and often unsavory characters. There’s Bo, the
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odious pig farmer; J.T., his delusional country-star-wannabe son; Buster Bell, a washed-up Nashville musician better known for his outrageous house parties than for his music; and Mr. L. J. Hibbs, full-time funeral director—and parttime drug-dealer. Bragg himself comes off as no angel; he is a rogue in the truest sense of the word. A habitual liar and shameless trickster, he often uses his talent for duplicity to extricate himself from the most desperate situations. And yet, he is not a true reprobate, finally showing that underneath he does in fact have a conscience. Jones’s novel is a true example of southern picaresque that combines gentle satire and wicked humor. The episodes in this light-hearted tale of a conniving, but nevertheless lovable,
traveler never quite turn out the way you would expect. About the author
Madison Jones is the author of A Cry of Absence, An Exile, and Nashville 1864: The Dying of the Light. An Exile was made into the 1970 movie I Walk the Line. Jones is emeritus professor and writer-in-residence at Auburn University. Also of Interest
Autumn Spring Sam Pickering Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-596-7 | $19.95t
Some Day I May Find Honest Work A Newspaper Humorist’s Life Sam Venable Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-600-1 | $19.95t
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In the fall of 1960,
“Blue Awesome Ascending is surrealism at its best. . . . The prose quality is exquisite. The line-by-line writing is poetic and musical—each page is a new adventure. In fact, each sentence presents a new turn of phrase, a stop-you-in-your-tracks insight, or a darkly comic witticism.” —Jeanne Leiby, editor of Southern Review and author of Downriver: Short Stories
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-629-2 LC 2008005802 | 256 est. pages Aug. 2008 | $29.95t Fiction—American
blue awesome ascending a novel Hubert Whitlow
Pearl Harbor has just been bombed, and thirteen-year-old Blue Awesome Easterly yearns to grow up fast, join the Army Air Corps, and become a hero. But one-eyed Aunt Spook warns him: “Beware the light!” She knows, because “the swamp people told me while I was in a trance,” that Blue Awesome is fated to see events from the past—revealed in flashes of light only he can see. “This light never dies,” cautions Aunt Spook. “And it never forgets what it sees.” Blue Awesome’s parents operate their funeral parlor/telephone business out of their home, Welcome Hall, in deep south Home Free, a small village not far from Swamp Ha-Ha, an area as “rural as raw peanuts.” Blue Awesome’s mother, Ethyl, more or less runs the businesses by herself because his
Take a pinch of Gabriel García Márquez, a dollop of Riddley Walker, a touch of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, a smidgen of William Kotzwinkle—blend thoroughly, bake at high heat (swamp temperature would be best) and you have this entirely new confection, Blue Awesome Ascending. Prepare for a feast.
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father, Poordaddy, teaches in his private, tuition-free Classic Academy for Young Men. The Easterlys are getting by fine until the commander of the new Army base asks them to secretly embalm a murdered African American officer. When word gets out, local vigilantes turn their world upside down. But that’s just the half of it.
About the Author
Hubert H. Whitlow Jr. is Professor Emeritus of Library Science and Political Science at Georgia Highlands College. He has published stories in Southern Humanities Review and Louisville Review, and Beloit Fiction Journal. Also of Interest
A Family Secret A Novel Eliza Frances Andrews Edited by S. Kittrell Rushing Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-439-7 | $40s
Grist The Journal of Writers Paper ISBN 978-0-9799366-0-9 | $11.95t
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“The land, the heat, the South’s societal complexities (and perplexities) are all here. Utterly involving, wise and perceptive, this is a novel to remember. If you liked To Kill a Mockingbird, you will love The Prudent Mariner.” —Kelly Cherry, judge of the 2008 Peter Taylor Prize for the Novel
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-641-4 336 est. pages | Oct. 2008 $32.95t Literature and Criticism—Fiction Fiction—American
the prudent mariner a novel Leslie Walker Williams
white girl in coastal Georgia fabricates a romance between her elder sister and an African American laborer, inadvertently leading to the man’s lynching. A crowd gathers and a photographer records the event on picture postcards. In one of these, the young girl stands smiling beside the hanged man. More than fifty years later, nine-yearold Riddley Cross discovers these postcards amid her late grandfather’s belongings. As she tries to make sense of why the postcards are in her family’s possession, and why the photographed girl seems so familiar, Riddley becomes haunted by apparitions and dreams of lynchings. The postcards force her to question what she has been taught about the world, the South, and her family—and what she has not. The mysteries of the lynching postcards start to unravel after her widowed
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grandmother, Adele, moves in with the family. Afflicted with Alzheimer’s disease, Adele speaks only to murmur the occasional insult or curse. Nonetheless, she and Riddley become companions of a sort, based largely on their common affinity for silence, wandering, and the nearby river. When Riddley develops a friendship with her neighbor Carver, an artist and iconoclast, the connections between the postcards and Riddley’s family gradually come to light, and a series of tragic events begins to unfold. In The Prudent Mariner, Williams offers a searing exploration of the legacies of complicity and violence, silence and regret, and the unforeseeable ways the past shapes and impinges upon the present.
rently lives in Vancouver, British Columbia. Her short stories have appeared in the Iowa Review, the Madison Review, Harvard Review, and American Fiction. The Prudent Mariner, her first novel, was awarded the Peter Taylor Prize for the Novel, and the Morris Hackney Literary Award for the Novel. Also of Interest
Blood Kin A Novel Mark Powell Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-546-2 | $32t
Fire on Mt. Maggiore A Novel John Parras Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-445-8 | $32.95t
About the Author
Leslie Walker Williams was born and raised in Savannah, Georgia, and cur-
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In 1913 a young
“This is a book that is sensible and smart. It throbs with life and style and the hard iron of living—the words beaten into tensile strength, all rust scoured into thought.” —Sam Pickering
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-632-2 LC 2008010461 | 180 est. pages Nov. 2008 | $29.95t Literature and Criticism—American and Canadian Nonfiction
by heart
reflections of a rust belt bard Philip Brady
With a perfect balance of playfulness, humor, and apology, Philip Brady calls himself a bard. But he explains that, before the title became shrouded in mystery, bards were simply teachers, unknown and poor, who gave literal voice to poems through recitations. Woven throughout these twenty essays is Brady’s resistance to the academic expectations and settings of poetic instruction, enabling him to elicit the most authentic and surprising responses from a range of voices. He is motivated by the possibility of poetry expressed in the grittiest of places and takes readers from the rust belts of Ohio, to the far-flung pubs of Ireland, to Zairian classrooms with few books and fidgety lightbulbs. Most of all, he believes that, while bad poetry is a fact of life, good poetry should be studied and learned by heart. These essays are meditations grounded in the author’s life as a poet, teacher,
Press. He is the author of three books of poetry, Weal (winner of Ashland Poetry Press’s Snyder Prize); Forged Correspondences, (chosen for Ploughshares’ Editors’ Shelf by Maxine Kumin); and Fathom; and a memoir, To Prove My Blood: A Memoir of Emigrations & the Afterlife. He is the co-editor, with James F. Carens, of Critical Essays on James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. He plays in Brady’s Leap, a New-Celtic band which has produced two CDs of original music.
About the Author
A Little Fling and Other Essays
Philip Brady is a professor of English at Youngstown State University, where he directs the Poetry Center and Etruscan
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publisher, musician, traveler, and organizer. In one, readers encounter nontraditional students who attend class after work and whose lives are already shaped by burden. Brady recognizes the tension between reading poetry as an academic exercise and reading it for its power to endow all people with a broader sense of the self that is informed by both the dead and the living. He celebrates the challenges that his students bring to the classroom by forging headlong into discussions that other instructors would cringe at—as when a student declares that he doesn’t like reading old poetry but instead likes greeting-card poems. Brady masterfully turns this potentially deflating moment into one that is both validating and deeply inspiring—for student and reader.
Also of Interest
The Napkin Manuscripts Selected Essays and an Interview With a Foreword by Doris Betts Michael McFee Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-540-0 | $29.95s
Sam Pickering Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-062-7 | $26t
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“This book is thoroughly researched and documented, and its ideas and style will appeal to the general reader interested in Agee but also in a range of related disciplines. . . . Davis reveals the Agee we never fully knew.” —David Madden, Robert Penn Warren Professor of Creative Writing, Louisiana State University
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-607-0 LC 2007049482 | 296 est. pages Nov. 2008 | $39.95s Literature and Criticism—American and Canadian
the making of james agee Hugh Davis
during his short life, James Agee (1909–1955) is today perhaps best remembered as a novelist—his posthumously published A Death in the Family won a Pulitzer Prize in 1958— but he was also a poet, screenwriter, journalist, essayist, book reviewer, and movie critic. In The Making of James Agee, Hugh Davis takes a comprehensive look at Agee’s career, showing the interrelatedness of his concerns as a writer. A full view of Agee’s oeuvre, Davis argues, illuminates its deeply political nature as well as a debt to various sources, particularly European surrealism, that have been little noted by previous Agee scholars.
associates who were so immersed in the tenets of modernism that they distorted Agee’s work (and aesthetic intent) in an attempt to purify it in modernist terms. In revealing a writer of far greater complexity than the Agee myth allows, Davis explores, for example, the leftist poetry that Agee wrote in the 1930s, which was almost completely suppressed by his editors. He also throws a fresh light on Agee’s collaboration with photographer Walker Evans on Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and reevaluates A Death of in the Family in light of recent scholarship that has produced an almost entirely new version of the novel, one much closer to Agee’s original intentions.
Davis challenges the view of Agee that has persisted since his death—that he is best understood primarily as a romantic individualist at odds with convention and the literary mainstream—and argues that this myth was largely constructed by friends and
A much-needed corrective to the many misconceptions about Agee, Davis’s study is a provocative and lucidly written work that is certain to spark new dialogues about one of the most fascinating figures in twentiethcentury American literature.
Wildly productive
About the Author
Hugh Davis is a lecturer in the Department of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He is the coeditor, with Michael Lofaro, of James Agee Rediscovered: The Journals of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and Other New Manuscripts and is the associate general editor of the projected tenvolume scholarly edition of The Works of James Agee. Also of Interest
James Agee Selected Journalism Edited by Paul Ashdown Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-429-8 | $19.95t
A Death in the Family
The Works of James Agee, Vol. 1 Michael A. Lofaro, General Editor Hugh Davis, Associate Editor Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-594-3 | $49.95s
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A Restoration of the Author’s Text Edited by Michael A. Lofaro
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-638-4 280 est. pages | Jan. 2008 $42s
©iStockphoto.com/vm
Tennessee Studies Education—General
opportunity lost
race and poverty in the memphis city school system Marcus D. Pohlmann
In Opportunity
Lost, Marcus D. Pohlmann examines the troubling issue of why Memphis city school students are underperforming at alarming rates. His provocative interdisciplinary analysis, combining both history and social science, examines the events before and after desegregation, compares a city school to an affluent suburban school to pinpoint imbalances, and offers critical assessments of various educational reforms. Employing a rich trove of data to demonstrate the realities of racial and economic inequality, Pohlmann underscores the difficulties that plague the urban schools and their students— problems that persist despite the fact that the city schools often have more resource advantages than the county schools: better student-to-teacher ratios, more teachers with advanced degrees, and even greater spending on each student. Pohlmann demonstrates that
Postindustrial City; coauthor, with Michael P. Kirby, of Racial Politics at the Crossroads: Memphis Elects W. W. Herenton; and editor of the six-volume African American Political Thought. Also of Interest
The Burden of Brown In addition to his analysis of the problems, Pohlmann lays out educational reforms that run the gamut from early intervention and parental involvement to increasing class size and teacher compensation, improving time utilization, and more. Pohlmann’s illuminating and original study has wide application for a problem that bedevils inner-city children everywhere and prevents the promise of equality from reaching all of our nation’s citizens.
Thirty Years of School Desegregation Raymond Wolters Paper ISBN 978-0-87049-750-6 | $29.95s
Maxine Smith’s Unwilling Pupils Lessons Learned in Memphis’s Civil Rights Classroom Sherry L. Hoppe and Bruce W. Speck Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-587-5 | $39.95t
About the Author
Marcus D. Pohlmann is professor of political science at Rhodes College. He is the author of Governing the
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postindustrial economic shifts and continuing racial exclusion have resulted in a predominance of low-income students at these schools. This economic disadvantage has had a lasting impact on performance among students at all grade levels and has not been reversed simply by increasing resources.
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“Andrzejewski’s application of Foucault’s panoptic theory to a broad range of building typologies serves to test his more metaphorical notion of the gaze in a diversity of situations beyond that of the prison. . . . The author’s comparative method is original and yields new insight into the widespread role of surveillance in American life.” —Ken Breisch, University of Southern California
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-631-5 LC 2008005351 | 272 est. pages 80 Photographs | Dec. 2008 | $39s Architecture—History Architecture—Vernacular Victorian Studies
From Handbook of Correctional Institution Design and Construction (Washington, DC: United States Bureau of Prisons, 1949)
building power
architecture and surveillance in victorian america Anna Vemer Andrzejewski
examines the ways in which concerns about surveillance informed the design and organization of important building types in the United States between the mid-nineteenth century and World War I. Beginning with settings such as prisons, which were specifically planned around surveillance, Anna Vemer Andrzejewski shows how surveillance also affected the design and use of various buildings and environments, including post offices, factories, offices, houses, and camp meetings. Working with great dexterity from case studies as well as scholarly sources, she argues that surveillance not only motivated a range of common buildings but was also a defining practice of modernism. This wide-ranging study draws on fundamental concepts from Michel Foucault, even as it revises and extends them. For Andrzejewski, surveillance is ( 14 )
any act of sustained, close observation of others that is intended to transform behavior—of those under surveillance as well as those who initiate it. This definition allows her to illuminate the many ways in which those in positions of power have attempted to influence the actions of others, whether to create and enforce hierarchical boundaries between people, as in the workplace, or to affirm bonds between like-minded individuals, as at Victorian-era revivalist camp meetings. Thinking about surveillance in these terms also allows Andrzejewski to consider ways in which it has influenced diverse American spaces, ranging from obvious settings relatively removed from daily life (like penal institutions) to everyday spaces familiar to most Americans (like middleclass houses). Moving across the era, as well as across building types, she shows that as the goals and contexts for surveillance changed, so did its realization in the built environment, resulting in a
complicated landscape that influenced both everyday life and the principles of modernism. about the author
Anna Vemer Andrzejewski is assistant professor of art history at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Also of Interest
Detention Castles of Stone and Steel Landscape, Labor, and the Urban Penitentiary James C. Garman Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-354-3 | $37s
Masonic Temples Freemasonry, Ritual Architecture, and Masculine Archetypes William D. Moore Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-496-0 | $34.95s
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Building Power
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-573-8 LC 2008000380 | 328 est. pages Feb. 2009 | $48s Archaeology Anthropology—Physical American Studies
Native
Tillsonburg Village, representative ceramics
iroquoian archaeology and analytic scale Edited by Laurie E. Miroff and Timothy D. Knapp
A more robust
archaeological interpretation can be produced if a multiscalar approach is brought to bear on the study of the past. In Iroquoian Archaeology and Analytic Scale, ten contributors conducting studies of groups around New York State and southern Ontario present contemporary research focused not only on examining the role of scale and how it impacts the field of Iroquoian studies, but also how archaeologists studying other Native Americans can expand their own research. Specifically, the contributors employ a variety of spatial, temporal, and methodological scales to reveal patterns and insights into the cultural interactions that might otherwise be missed by a less multiscalar approach. Furthermore, the diversity of research spans nearly a millennium, from AD 900 to 1800, and encompasses
This volume of Iroquoian-specific yet wide-ranging essays will be of interest to anyone specializing in Native American studies in the Northeast. It will also benefit archaeologists who wish to gain a better understanding of how using a multiscalar approach in their own research can be an integral step toward a more dynamic view of the Native American lived experience.
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several different topographical settings, including major river floodplains, upland headwater areas, and terraces along smaller tributaries, yielding a plethora of current findings from the largest of villages to the smallest of seasonal campsites. Laurie E. Miroff and Timothy D. Knapp have organized these essays in roughly chronological fashion and provide an introduction that addresses the importance of a multiscalar analysis.
About the Editors
Laurie E. Miroff is an adjunct professor of anthropology at Binghamton University and a project director at the Public Archaeology Facility, Binghamton University. She is associate editor of Northeast Anthropology, and her articles have appeared in Northeast Historical Archaeology and other journals. Timothy D. Knapp is assistant to the director for prehistoric research at the Public Archaeology Facility at Binghamton University. Also of Interest
Smoking and Culture The Archaeology of Tobacco Pipes in Eastern North America Edited by Sean Rafferty and Rob Mann Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-350-5 | $48s
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“Anyone reading just a few of Parker’s letters will see the undeniable tie between the homefront and battlefront, the tie between a soldier’s duty and his family.” —Lesley J. Gordon, co-editor, Inside the Confederate Nation: Essays in Honor of Emory M. Thomas
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-630-8 LC 2008000424 | 240 est. pages 8 Photographs | Nov. 2008 | $34.95t History—Civil War History—American
lee’s last casualty
the life and letters of sgt. robert w. parker, second virginia cavalry Edited by Catherine Wright
extraordinarily rich collection were written by Robert W. Parker, an enlisted Confederate cavalryman who is thought to have been the last man killed in action in the Army of Northern Virginia during the Civil War. He is representative of the Confederate Everyman: a modest farmer in the antebellum years, he was spurred by his patriotic fervor spurred him at the beginning of the war to enlist in the Confederate Army, serving until his death during the last charge at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865. Parker fought in most of the major campaigns in Virginia, including the 1862 Valley Campaign, the 1862 Peninsula Campaign, the 1863 Maryland Campaign, and the 1864 Overland Campaign. In letters to his wife, Rebecca, back home in Bedford County, Virginia, Parker described his life as an enlisted soldier in the Second Regiment Virginia Cavalry.
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About the Editor
Catherine Wright provides a valuable introduction that illuminates not only these particular letters but also the many roles of correspondence during the Civil War. She points out how women—in this case, Parker’s wife and his mother—made sure that men in the ranks understood that more than politics or manly honor was at stake in fighting the Yankees. Parker believed that the war was a supreme test in which God would look deep into the souls of Northerners and Southerners.
Also of Interest
Catherine M. Wright is a collections manager at the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia. She was formerly a curator at the Stonewall Jackson House in Lexington, Virginia.
Loss of the Sultana and Reminiscences of Survivors Edited by Chester D. Berry Voices of the Civil War Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-372-7 | $45t
Our Trust Is in the God of Battles The Civil War Letters of Robert Franklin Bunting, Chaplain, Terry’s Texas Rangers Edited by Thomas W. Cutrer Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-458-8 | $45t
Anyone with an interest in how a typical soldier experienced the Civil War will find these letters both absorbing and enlightening. order online at utpress.org
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The letters in this
His letters reveal how local communities worked together to provide the necessary stuff of war to soldiers, from food and clothing to moral support. They also show the importance of correspondence and religion in sustaining Confederate morale and nationalism.
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-613-1 360 est. pages | Nov. 2008 $39.95t History—Civil War History—American Charming Nellie. From Polley’s original 1908 publication.
a soldier’s letters to charming nellie
the correspondence of joseph b. polley, hood’s texas brigade Edited by Richard B. McCaslin
One of the most cited collections of letters by a Civil War soldier, A Soldier’s Letters to Charming Nellie was originally published in 1908. A unit history of the 4th Texas Infantry in epistolary form, Joseph B. Polley’s letters make available the correspondence of a soldier who participated in virtually all military action in the Eastern Theater. Polley was an unusually gifted writer, with a talent for satire and humor unmatched by most Civil War diarists. While the collection met with an enthusiastic audience upon its appearance, it has not been without controversy. Scholars have debated some of the letters’ authenticity; many appeared in the Confederate Veteran long after the end of the war, and questions remain about whether they were all written during the Civil War or if some were composed at the turn of the century or later.
The volume will aid historians interested in the activities of the Army of Northern Virginia and its commanders, and especially students of Hood’s Texas Brigade.
Also of Interest
Our Trust Is in the God of Battles The Civil War Letters of Robert Franklin Bunting, Chaplain, Terry’s Texas Rangers Edited by Thomas W. Cutrer Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-458-8 | $45t
No Pardons to Ask, nor Apologies to Make The Journal of William Henry King, Gray’s 28th Louisiana Infantry Regiment Edited by Gary D. Joiner, Marilyn S. Joiner, and Clifton D. Cardin Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-461-8 | $44t
Memoirs of the Stuart Horse Artillery Battalion
About the Editor
Moorman’s and Hart’s Batteries Edited by Robert J. Trout
Richard B. McCaslin is professor of history at the University of North Texas. He is the author of Tainted Breeze: The Great Hanging at Gainesville, Texas, October 1862; Lee in the Shadow of Washington; and The Last Stronghold: The Campaign for Fort Fisher.
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-605-6 / $45t
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In this definitive, annotated edition, Richard B. McCaslin has prepared new transcriptions of the letters and compared variant versions of them, resolving many of the historiographical puzzles that surround this wonderful collection. McCaslin also includes an analysis of when, how, and why Polley wrote the letters.
Voices of the Civil War Peter S. Carmichael, Series Editor
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Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-635-3 LC 2008003998 | 296 est. pages 48 photographs | Oct 2008 | $45s History—Civil War
A Panel of the Memorial Tablets. From Yale in the Civil War by Ellswoth Eliot Jr. Published by Yale University Press, 1932.
yale’s confederates a biographical dictionary Nathaniel Cheairs Hughes Jr.
embedded in abolitionist New England, Yale University had a surprisingly large number of its students and alumni join the cause of the Confederacy. These men were a diverse lot, coming not just from the South but from other corners of the country. And even more surprisingly, years after the secessionist conflict, Yale honored the wartime service of these Confederate “prodigals” in famed Memorial Hall alongside their many classmates who fought on the other side. Yale’s Confederates brings together short biographies of over five hundred Yale students and graduates who served in the Confederate army and government. It reveals where these men came from and the consequences of the choices they made. Drawing upon rarely used source material, Hughes introduces new faces and fresh stories to the annals of Civil War history. Included here are
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Yale’s Confederates tells the fascinating stories of their days at Yale and of their decision to fight for a cause in which they deeply believed. It reveals, ultimately, how important their legacy is to the history of the university and to our country as a whole.
About the author
Nathaniel Cheairs Hughes Jr. is the author of more than twenty books on the American Civil War, including The Life and Wars of Gideon J. Pillow, The Pride of the Confederate Artillery: The Washington Artillery in the Army of Tennessee, and Brigadier General Tyree H. Bell, C.S.A: Forrest’s Fighting Lieutenant. Also of Interest
Tennesseans in the Civil War, Parts i & ii A Military History of Confederate and Union Units with Available Rosters of Personnel Tennessee Historical Commission Part I Cloth ISBN 978-0-87402-017-5 | $38s Part II Cloth ISBN 978-0-87402-018-2 | $48s
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Though deeply
inventors and doctors, poets and theologians, educators and politicians. These men were idealistic, well traveled, curious, brave, and, for the most part, patriotic. Many became key leaders in the Confederacy; their ranks included generals, a secretary of state, even a postmaster. Some paid dearly for their choices, either dying on the battlefield or losing considerable wealth and prestige. But many built successful careers after the fighting was over. One former Confederate restored an abandoned school for young women; another wrote an economic history of the United States; still others became lawyers and influential leaders in their communities.
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-647-6 568 est. pages | $55s James K. Polk. Oil on canvas by Thomas Sully, 1783–1872. Philipse Manor Hall State Historic Site. New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.
Biography and Letters American History Tennessee Studies
correspondence of james k. polk volume 11, 1846 | Edited by Wayne Cutler
James L. Rogers II and Benjamin H. Severance, Associate Editors Cynthia J. Rogers, Trevor A. Smith, William K. Bolt, Assistant Editors
The eleventh
volume of the Correspondence of James K. Polk contains some of the most consequential and interesting material in the series. Failure to restore diplomatic relations with Mexico, the advent of the Mexican-American war, British preparations for war over the Oregon country, the signing of the Oregon Treaty, passage of key domestic legislation, and Democratic losses in the fall state and congressional elections dominate the military and political subjects of the correspondence. In prior volumes, Polk’s letters focused almost entirely on politics and so left his private concerns largely untreated. Writing from the President’s House, he made press copies of all of his outgoing correspondence and so recorded a more expansive range of his interests. Letters relating to his extended family, his pur-
About the Editor
Also of Interest
Correspondence of James K. Polk Volumes 2–10 $55 each volume Please visit utpress.org for details about each volume.
Wayne Cutler became director of the Polk Project in 1975, served as associate editor of the fourth volume of the correspondence, and headed the editorial team in the preparation of the fifth and subsequent volumes in the series. He began his professional career in 1966 as an editorial associate of the Southwestern Historical Quarterly and moved to the assistant editorship of the Henry Clay Project in 1970. He retired from the University of Tennessee in July 2006.
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chase of a Nashville residence, and his addition of slaves to his Mississippi plantation offer a more personal view of the nation’s eleventh president.
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LEFT: The Fifty-first Ohio Infantry Regiment. From Ohio Historical Society. OPPOSITE TOP: Capitol Artillery. Western Reserve Historical Society. OPPOSITE BOTTOM: Exchange barracks No. 1. Western Reserve Historical Society.
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-633-9 LC 2008001838 | 348 est. pages 35 photographs | Dec. 2008 | $45s History—Civil War History—American
nashville
the occupied city, 1862–1863 Walter T. Durham
Nashville table of contents Preface 2008 Preface to the First Edition A Historical Name Guide to Nashville City Streets I. Panic II. Disbelief and Flight III. Invasion IV. Ocupation Consolidated V. Controlling the City VI. City Under Siege VII. Unprotected City VIII. Army of the Cumberland IX. Johnson’s Strong Hand X. Dual Siege XI. A Time of Waiting XII. Divided Loyalties XIII. After Stones River XIV. Living With the Yankees XV. Smugglers, Spies, and the Loyalty Oath XVI. Garrison Town Bibliography Index
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table of contents Preface 2008 Preface to the First Edition A Historical Name Guide to Nashville City Streets I. No Deliverance II. Human Factors III. Community Made Over IV. Commerce and Civilian Control V. Confederate Target VI. War Touches Everyone VII. Supply Facilities and City Defenses VIII. The Loyalty Oath IX. The Army’s Heavy Hand X. Reconstruction and Andrew Johnson XI. Thomas Awaits Hood XII. Nashville Besieged XIII. Cavalry and an Ice Storm XIV. Battle at Last XV. The Aftermath of Battle XVI. Loyal Unionists Control State Government XVII. A New Era Begins Addendum Bibliography Index
In 1862, Nashville
became the first Southern state capital to be captured by the Union Army; that occupation would not end until after the Civil War’s conclusion in 1865. In two incisive books, first published more than twenty years ago and available once more for a new generation of readers, Walter T. Durham traces occupied Nashville’s reluctant transition from Rebel stronghold to partner of the Union.
Together, these volumes highlight the importance of local history within Civil War scholarship and assess the impact of the war on people other than combat soldiers and places other than battlefields. Nashville examines the first seventeen months of the Union occupation, showing how the local population coped with the sudden presence of an enemy force. It also explores the role of military governor Andrew Johnson and how he asserted his authority over the city. Reluctant Partners depicts a city coming to grips with the rapidly fading prospect of a Confederate victory and how, faced with this reality, its citizens began to cooperate with Johnson and the Union. Their reward was a booming economy and scant battle damage. With new prefaces discussing the two decades of scholarship that have emerged since their original appearance, these volumes offer an absorbing view of Union occupa-
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Reluctant Partners
&
Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-634-6 LC 2008001840 | 366 est. pages | 35 photographs Dec. 2008 | $45s History—Civil War History—American
reluctant partners nashville and the union, 1863–1865 Walter T. Durham
tion at the most local of levels. Durham’s work remains at the forefront of reconsidering the Civil War in the Upper South. Students and scholars of the Civil War—particularly in its social dimensions—as well as devotees of Tennessee history will find these new editions invaluable. About the Author
Walter T. Durham is the author of seventeen books, including Balie Peyton of Tennessee: Nineteenth-Century Politics and Thoroughbreds and Volunteer Forty-niners: Tennesseans and the California Gold Rush. He has been the Tennessee state historian since 2002. Also of Interest
Middle Tennessee, 1775–1825 Progress and Popular Democracy on the Southwestern Frontier Kristofer Ray Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-597-4 | $41s
Middle Tennessee Society Transformed, 1860–1870 War and Peace in the Upper South, With a New Preface Stephen V. Ash Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-539-4 | $24.95s
Nashville The Western Confederacy’s Final Gamble James Lee McDonough Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-322-2 | $39.95t
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recent releases university of tennessee press
Poet of the Lost Cause
Rugby, Tennessee Some Account of the Settlement Founded on the Cumberland Plateau Thomas Hughes
A Life of Father Ryan Donald Robert Beagle and Bryan Albin Giemza ISBN 978-1-57233-606-3 Cloth | 360 pages | $48.95s
highway 61 heart of the delta Randall Norris and Jean-Philippe Cyprès ISBN 978-1-57233-614-8 Cloth | 216 pages | $36.95t
ISBN 978-1-57233-611-7 Paper | 216 pages | $17.95s
A Spirit of Dialogue
Cave Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands Essays in Honor of Patty Jo Watson Edited by David H. Dye ISBN 978-1-57233-608-7 Cloth | 304 pages | $42.95s
Incarnations of gbañje, the Born-to-Die, in African American Literature Christopher N. Okonkwo ISBN 978-1-57233-615-5 Cloth | 296 pages | $48s
Gentlemen Merchants The Ramseys at Swan Pond
A Charleston Family’s Odyssey, 1828–1870 Edited by Philip N. Racine
The Archaeology and History of an East Tennessee Farm Charles H. Faulkner
ISBN 978-1-57233-616-2 Cloth | 876 pages | $38.95s
ISBN 978-1-57233-609-4 Cloth | 184 pages | $39.95s
ISBN 978-1-57233-623-0 Cloth | 196 pages | $29.95t
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David W. Reed
Breaking the Backbone of the Rebellion A. Wilson Greene
ISBN 978-1-57233-617-9 Cloth | 152 pages | $33s
ISBN 978-1-57233-610-0 Cloth | 592 pages | $49.95t
To Lift Up My Race order online at utpress.org
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living on portraits of tennessee survivors and liberators Robert Heller and the Tennessee Holocaust Commission
The Battle of Shiloh and the Organizations Engaged
The Final Battles of the Petersburg Campaign
recent releases university of tennessee press
The Essential Writings of Samuel Robert Cassius Edited by Edward J. Robinson ISBN 978-1-57233-618-6 Cloth | 240 pages | $46.95s
Backgrounds and Contexts John C. Shields ISBN 978-1-57233-499-1 Cloth | 240 pages | $37.95s
The Golden Age of Battlefield Preservation
A Godsend to His People The Essential Writings and Speeches of Marshall Keeble Edited by Edward J. Robinson ISBN 978-1-57233-619-3 Cloth | 168 pages | $39.95s
The Decade of the 1890s and the Establishment of America’s First Five Military Parks Timothy B. Smith ISBN 978-1-57233-622-3 Cloth | 320 pages | $38.95t
Donald W. Linzey Memoirs of the Stuart Horse Artillery Battalion
Reading the Old Man
a natural history guide to great smoky mountains national park ISBN 978-1-57233-612-4 Paper | 312 pages | $24.95t
Moorman’s and Hart’s Batteries Edited by Robert J. Trout
John Brown in American Culture Bruce Ronda ISBN 978-1-57233-620-9 Cloth | 240 pages | $39.95t
ISBN 978-1-57233-605-6 Cloth | 392 pages | $45t
The Seduction of Miss Evelyn Hazen
The Life and Times of Ray Hicks
Jane Van Ryan ISBN 978-0-9785637-0-7 Paper | 320 pages | $14.95t
Keeper of the Jack Tales Lynn Salsi ISBN 978-1-57233-621-6 Cloth | 264 pages | $34.95t
grist the journal of writers The University of Tennessee English Department Brad Tice, Managing Editor ISBN 978-0-9799366-0-9 Paper | 264 pages | $11.95t
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Phillis Wheatley’s Poetics of Liberation order online at utpress.org
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new in paper university of tennessee press
Roanoke, Virginia, 1882–1912 Magic City of the New South Rand Dotson ISBN 978-1-57233-643-8 Paper | $25.95s
“This is a thoughtful, deeply researched, and particularly well-written book. Dotson maintains control over a significant body of research, never letting himself get overwhelmed by the details. He strikes a fine balance between discussions of social history, economic change, and local politics.” —Louis Kyriakoudes, author of The Social Origins of the Urban South: Race, Gender, and Migration in Nashville and Middle Tennessee, 1890–1930.
Roanoke, Virginia, 1882–1917, tells the story of a city that for a brief period was widely hailed as a regional model for industrialization as well as the ultimate success symbol for the rehabilitation of the former Confederacy. In a region where modernization seemed to move at a glacial pace, those looking for signs of what they were triumphantly calling the “New South” pointed to Roanoke. This insightful social history of Roanoke is a significant work, sure to attract readers with an interest in urbanization, race relations, and progressive reform.
Run in the Fam’ly A Novel John J. McLaughlin Peter Taylor Prize for the Novel ISBN 978-1-57233-645-2 Paper | $19.95t
Winner of the Jesse H. Jones Award for Best Book of Fiction and the Steven Turner Award for Best Work of First Fiction.
“Run in the Fam’ly is an emotionally detailed exploration of a level of American society rarely seen in American fiction. It focuses on the desperate lower class people called ‘inner city’, dramatized by Jake Robertson, his family, and his buddies. Mr. McLaughlin employs his mastery of vernacular speech, his understanding of the street cultures of Chicago and Oakland, and his deeply human understanding, to explore the troubled and often violent bonds which hold together a black family. Run in the Fam’ly is an exceptional work of fiction.” —James Alan McPherson, author of Elbow Room, winner of the Pulitzer Prize
“Run in the Fam’ly proves that John J. McLaughlin is a writer of exceptional talent and enormous vision. His themes are important, his characters are convincing as well as affecting, and his capture of voice dazzling. His writing is infused with unsentimental compassion. I was very moved by this ambitious novel, a marvelous debut.”
“John J. McLaughlin writes with great heart, humanity, and fierce compassion. Run in the Fam’ly is a sensitive and probing look at family and poverty, an ambitious debut novel that echoes Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath in its social consciousness, empathy, and exploration of the bedrock that binds us beneath the chasms of circumstance." —Alexander Parsons, author of Leaving Disneyland, winner of the AWP Novel Award
On Harper Lee Essays and Reflections Edited by Alice Hall Petry ISBN 978-1-57233-642-1 Paper | $21.95s
Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel To Kill a Mockingbird remains one of the most enduring works of southern fiction ever written. Although a literary phenomenon—tens of millions of copies sold worldwide—there is surprisingly little secondary literature on Lee and her only novel. On Harper Lee: Essays and Reflections is the first collection of original essays on the author and her magnum opus. Written for scholars as well as general readers, On Harper Lee is an accessible collection on one of America’s most important novels and its often enigmatic creator.
—Bharati Mukherjee, author of The Middleman, winner of the National Book Critics’ Circle Award
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