Related Vacation Book Subjects: Maryland
More Pages: Southern Maryland Page 1 2
Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Southern Maryland", sorted by average review score:

Hunt to Harbor: A Maryland Cookbook
Published in Paperback by Perry Pub (August, 1997)
Authors: Junior League of Baltimore and Kurt L. Schmoke
Average review score:

Great for Entertaining!
Since 1912, the Junior League has been a leader in volunteer service to Baltimore. It is an organization of women committed to promoting voluntarism, developing the potential of women and improving communities through the effective action and leadership of trained volunteers. The Junior League is open to women of all races, religions and national origins who demonstrate an interest in and commitment to voluntarism. This cookbook is filled with wonderful recipes you will make again and again for company. The chapters include Beverages, Appetizers, Eggs, Pasta & Cheeses, Soups & Sandwiches, Fish & Shellfish, Poultry & Game, Meats, Vegetables & Side Dishes, Breads, Salads, Sauces & Spreads, Desserts, Pies & Pastries, Cakes, Cookies & Candy, Pickles & Relishes, Celebrities, Restaurants, Caterers & Vineyards, Ethnic Festivals, Menus and This & That. Be sure to try the Crab Cakes on pg. 84 and the Chicken and Crescent Almondine on pg 114. You won't be disappointed!


Loyalists in the Southern Campaign of the Revolutionary War Volume II: Official Rolls of Loyalists Recruited from Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Those Recruited from Other Colonies for the British Legion, Guides and Pioneers, Loyal Foresters, and Queen's Rangers
Published in Paperback by Clearfield Co (December, 1999)
Author: Murtie June Clark
Average review score:

Genealogical Research on American Loyalists
This is an excellent book for those interested in doing research on american loyalists who served in any of the loyalist regiments. It consists of copies of the loyalist muster rolls, which musters were taken approximately every two months. It will sometimes also provide a little bit of biographical material on individual loyalists, such as where they came from, where they went when they left the regiment, whether they were absent due to being a prisoner, having been killed in action or out wounded.


Eat, Drink & Be Merry in Maryland (Maryland Paperback Bookshelf)
Published in Paperback by Johns Hopkins Univ Pr (January, 1998)
Author: Frederick Philip Stieff
Average review score:

A great find
...this book is a culinary and historic gem. I am fortunate enough to own a first edition of this highly entertaining collection of recipes and folklore, not to mention the copious illustrations, and believe me, I don't keep in the kitchen with the workaday cookbooks! It is my personal favorite among my many books about food (which are different than cookbooks) Yes, it is surely politically incorrect, but that's the way it was, and we can't change history. Those of us who delight in the wonders of Maryland ccoking and the eccentricities of the Maryland (Baltimore) personality will be higly rewarded. And the recipes are good, too! To quote from Oliver Wendell Holmes, to whom Stieff dedicated his book, "Baltimore...the gastronomic metropolitis of the Union... Why don't you put a canvas-back duck on top of the Washington column?...Why ask for other glories when you have soft crabs?..." Any lover of culinary lore will treasure this work.

A marvelous look at the food of Maryland in the 1930's.
I can't believe that this book is coming out in reprint. This is a marvelous look at the food of Maryland in the 1930's. From this, however, some of the foods to be found in here - like terrapin (turtle) - are not to be found in the Maryland restaurants today, but some - like the Crab Cakes Baltimore - are made just as they are nowadays. I lived in Maryland for 20 years and reading these recipes gives me fond rememberences. These recipes were gathered by Stieff by talking to people he met in his travels and writing down what they had to say. These were never published before, and hence are an important historical document from the times. The reason I can't believe this book is being reprinted is that it would never pass the politically correct standards of the '90's if being printed as a new book. It (at least the original hardcover edition) is printed with cartoons to make it entertaining to read. Here's 3 of them: (Picture of an old woman talking to a fish merchant at his counter) Woman: "I don't like the looks of this 'ere 'addock." Merchant: "Well, if it's looks ye're after, lydy, ye'd do better by the goldfish !" (Picture of an old black gentleman in glasses and a beard) Man: "Chickens, suh, am de usefulles' animal dey is. Yo' can et dem befo' dey's born and after dey's daid". (Picture of a middle aged black woman with a corn cob pipe talking to a black preacher) "Parshon, Ah'd like to kill dat low-down husban' o' mine." "Why, Car'line, what he done ?" "Done ? Why, dat hunk o' black trash lef' de chicken-house do' open and all de chickens has gone." "Why, Car'line, dat ain't nothing to get worried about. Don't you know dat accordin' to de gospel of Luke and John dat 'Chickens Come Home to Roos'!' " "Come home ! Why, Parson, dose chickens'll go home." I know this is authentic because this is exactly how my grandfather used to talk. In spite of, or maybe because of, this down homeness, I still love this book. The recipes are authentic and good, and reading it will send you back to the time of the 30's. Just remember to take a deep breath before re-entering the '90's


The Chesapeake Cookbook: The Best Home Cooking of Maryland, Delaware, and Tidewater Virginia
Published in Hardcover by Clarkson N. Potter (July, 1990)
Authors: Susan Belsinger and Carolyn Dille
Average review score:

Worth the investment!
Delicious recipe ideas and beautiful photography make this book a wonderful gift. It has great ideas for menus and different occasions. A true sampling of the Chesapeake's lifestyle and flavors.


Mammals of the Carolinas, Virginia, and Maryland (Fred W. Morrison Series in Southern Studies)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of North Carolina Pr (November, 1985)
Authors: William David Webster, James F. Parnell, and Walter C. Biggs
Average review score:

marvelous field guide
It's a hardcover, so not the most comfortable field guide to throw in a backpack, but I don't have any other complaints about this book.

Animal profiles are accompanied by excellent color photographs, basic statistics about each animal (distribution, habitat, abundance, etc.), and a shaded map outlining just where each animal's distribution is. Entries for each animal are detailed enough, but don't seem to go on so long that a person would lose interest.

One more gripe: pictures of the animals feet, so that pawprints could be identified easily, would have been a welcome inclusion here. The Simon and Schuster's Guide To Mammals, by Boitani, is an inexpensive book that includes this feature. It might be a helpful second book to get on the topic.

It's an exciting book for young naturalists, too, who will likely get stirred up just by seeing some of the photos (star-nosed mole, northern flying squirrel, big brown bat, etc.).

Essays on conservation, the region, and tips on observation precede the main body of the book. The essays are short and well-written. They should be helpful to anyone who wants to scout out some mammals in the Carolinas, Virginia, or Maryland.

ken32


A Southern Star for Maryland
Published in Paperback by Pub Concepts (September, 1998)
Authors: Lawrence M. Denton and Charles Branch Clark
Average review score:

Keeping Maryland in the Union
Although at times it sounds like a masters-level thesis, Denton's A Southern Star for Maryland is a decent overview of how Maryland reacted to Secession Fever and how the state was compelled to stay in the Union. Denton provides some interesting numbers and analysis to support his thesis that Marylanders were inclined to join the Confederacy, detailing the general pro-Southern nature of the state. He also does a good job of detailing the quick and effective (and often legally questionable) movement by federal officials and Union volunteers to squash pro-secession sentiments in the state.


An Archaeological Resource Management Plan for the Southern Maryland Region
Published in Spiral-bound by Maryland Historical Trust Press (01 February, 1990)
Authors: Dennis J. Pogue, Michael A. Smolek, and Laurie Cameron Steponaitis
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Bicycling central and southern Maryland
Published in Unknown Binding by Cycleways ()
Author: Gail Helfer
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Catholic Families of Southern Maryland: Records of Catholic Residents of St. Mary's County in the Eighteenth Century
Published in Paperback by Clearfield Co (2001)
Author: Timothy J. Orourke
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Civil War on Race Street: The Civil Rights Movement in Cambridge, Maryland (Southern Dissent)
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Florida (July, 2003)
Authors: Peter B. Levy, Randall M. Miller, and Stanley Harrold
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Vacation Book Subjects: Maryland
More Pages: Southern Maryland Page 1 2