Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states Abbeville Aiken Allendale Anderson Bamberg Barnwell Beaufort Berkeley Calhoun Catawba Central Charleston Charleston-Trident Cheraw Cherokee Chester Chesterfield Clarendon Clemson Clinton Colleton Columbia Columbia-Lexington Conway Darlington Denmark Dillon Dorchester Edgefield Fairfield Florence Fort_Mill Gaffney Georgetown Grand_Strand-Myrtle_Beach Greenville Greenwood Hampton Hemingway Hilton_Head_Island Horry Isle_of_Palms Jasper Johns_Island Kershaw Lancaster Landrum Laurens Lee Lexington Lowcountry Marion Marlboro McCormick Mount_Pleasant Myrtle_Beach Newberry North_Augusta Oconee Olanta Orangeburg Pageland Pawleys_Island Pickens Quinby Richland Ruby Saint_Helena_Island Saluda Spartanburg Sumter Tega_Cay Thoroughbred_Country Tigerville Union Williamsburg Yemassee York
More Pages: South Carolina Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "South Carolina", sorted by average review score:

Kidplaces: A Guide to Family Activities in the Triangle
Published in Paperback by Carolina Academic Press (March, 2001)
Authors: Kimberlee C. Maselli, Kim Maselli, and Mesa Kidplaces Somer
Average review score:

excellent for kids.
excellent resource for families with children of all ages. especially terrific for people just moving into the area. some places are no longer in business or have moved so it would be great if the authors could publish an updated version.


The Last Days of Big Grassy Fork
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Kentucky (January, 2002)
Author: Hunter James
Average review score:

Fighting Urban Sprawl
This work should be of more than passing interest to those who more and more find themselves beset on every side by urban sprawl. The author sets out in many ways to preserve an old family homestead; but, more important, seeks ways to make the place profitable. His attempts are often hilarious, the more so when they fail, and they never lack meaning for others who share his feelings about the need for ways to protect ourselves from the menace of an urbanization that has rapidly got out of contol.


Let Us Meet in Heaven: The Civil War Letters of James Michael Barr, 5th South Carolina Cavalry
Published in Hardcover by McWhiney Foundation Pr (September, 2001)
Authors: James Michael Barr and Thomas D. Mays
Average review score:

A compelling, informative primary source
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.


Letters of Eliza Wilkinson
Published in Hardcover by Ayer Co Pub (June, 1969)
Author: Eliza Wilkinson
Average review score:

Fiesty woman's perspective of the Revolutionary War
These letters are written by a young widow during the Revolutionary War. She is quite an excellent writer with astute observations, although at that time in history, women weren't allowed the privilege of expressing their sentiments politically. A wonderful book, but over much too fast!


Like Unto Like: A Novel (Southern Classics Series (Paper))
Published in Paperback by University of South Carolina Press (June, 1997)
Authors: Katherine Sherwood Bonner McDowell, Jane Turner Censer, Sherwood Bonner, University of South Carolina Institute for Southern Studies, and South Caroliniana Society
Average review score:

An over-looked novel of the Civil War that deserves readers!
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.


Little Muddy Waters: A Gullah Folk Tale
Published in Hardcover by Sandlapper Pub Co (December, 1997)
Authors: Ronald Daise, Barbara McArtor, and Carol E. Tuynman
Average review score:

Fantastic Book! Great Illustration!
The book has a great story line and when listened to the cassette tape with Ron Daise reading it in the Gullah accent makes it even better. The illustration and use of colors are fantastic. Barbara McArtor does a great job with color selection and keeping a childs eye captive. She uses bright, vivid colors. She also continues her story (picture) line throughout the book. You will notice the cat numerous times and her characters are always carried from one page to another keeping in uniform with the previous page. This is a must buy for your child. I'd like to see a list of more books illustrated by Ms. McArtor.


Lonely Planet Georgia and the Carolinas (Georgia and the Carolinas, 1st Ed)
Published in Paperback by Lonely Planet (January, 2002)
Authors: Jeremy Gray, Jeff Davis, and China Williams
Average review score:

Lonely Planet is best travel series ever!
I am an extensive user of travel guides, particularly ones for travelers on a budget. The Lonely Planet books have the same budget travel info on hotels, airline travel, how to get around by bus, train, etc. that my other favorite series, "Let's Go" has. However, you don't get to learn as much history and culture in the Let's Go books like you do in Lonely Planet. Let's Go is more of a reference book. Lonely Planet teaches you local culture and has much more comprehensive coverage of the region, especially this one-the Carolinas and Georgia. Let's Go doesn't give North and South Carolina nearly as much justice as this Lonely Planet book. Let's Go never mentions the Triad or Wilmington, NC. Lonely Planet has a good section on those. This book makes the least-heralded travel destinations look interesting. This series is also updated an average of every two years, and they welcome input from readers and they use it for the next edition.

This book has an entire section on Atlanta, including a set of very good maps and a MARTA map. You will do well in Atlanta with this book. Charleston and Myrtle Beach, and somewhat of Columbia, SC are well documented, and the up-country of Greenville/Spartanburg are represented. In North Carolina, you'll learn about the Triangle, Charlotte, the Western NC mountain region, and all the beach areas from top to bottom. Georgia has the entire state covered, even the mountain areas of the northeastern part of the state, where there are some excellent state parks, and of course, the southern end of the Appalachian Trail. You will also get to explore Savannah, Augusta, Hilton Head, and much more. There is a good deal of info in the book, and it isn't overbearing to find your way around in it.

Very good information for international travelers from abroad as well. For those of you who visit our area and have never been to the South before, you'll get a handy primer on its eccentricities and its triumphs, as well as how to get along with the most genteel and aristocratic of Southern ladies and gentlemen.


Long Green: The Rise and Fall of Tobacco in South Carolina
Published in Hardcover by University of Georgia Press (July, 2000)
Authors: Eldred E. Prince and Robert R. Simpson
Average review score:

well worth the read
This beautifully-produced historical account of the tobacco industry in the Pee Dee region of SC stayed in the pile of books on my bedside table for about a month before it finally cycled to the top. Having received the book as a present, I was mildly curious when I picked it up. "OK," I thought, as I began what I believed would be, at best, a cursory examination, "it's a history book." What a pleasant surprise I received! I was immediately drawn in to the story by the eloquent writing style of the authors and the appropriate use of southern expressions. I felt as if I was experiencing the frustration and the joy of the tobacco farmers as they labored to bring in the crop in this unique region of the country. I found each of the illustrations in the book to be clearly presented and to closely fit the part of the story being told. Within a short period of time after beginning my reading, I began going to bed early to allow myself more reading time. Since I only adopt that reading behavior for the page-turners, I knew then I was hooked! My interest continued right on through the cogent explanation of the structure of the tobacco-subsidy system and finally to the conclusion and the insightful comments of the authors regarding the future of the tobacco industry. I wish to thank Prince & Simpson for their intelligent coverage of a complex part of American culture. I strongly recommend this book for anyone interested in real southern culture, and not that fake, hick Hollywood version so often portrayed in movies, and for anyone interested in really knowing what the tobacco industry is about.


The Lost Sword of the Confederate Ghost: A Mystery in Two Centuries
Published in Paperback by White Mane Publishing Co. (February, 1999)
Author: Emily C. Monte
Average review score:

Awesome
Great history and mistery, amazing creativity from kids whoactually wrote this book. The book was actually made by some 6th gradegroup at a school I used to go to. The kids made this book and the author was made by a computer that scarmbled our school's name (Columbia Montessori Elementary School) into one name.


Lowcountry Scenes
Published in Hardcover by Sandlapper Pub Co (01 October, 2000)
Author: Jon Wongrey
Average review score:

The only picture book of the SC Lowcountry available.
The beautiful colorful images of Lowcountry scenes allows the reader to visit some interesting people and unique places of the magnificient Lowcountry. Veering away from common scenes, Jon Wongrey captures the true spirit of the South Carolina Lowcountry and its culture with striking photos and fascinating images.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: united_states Abbeville Aiken Allendale Anderson Bamberg Barnwell Beaufort Berkeley Calhoun Catawba Central Charleston Charleston-Trident Cheraw Cherokee Chester Chesterfield Clarendon Clemson Clinton Colleton Columbia Columbia-Lexington Conway Darlington Denmark Dillon Dorchester Edgefield Fairfield Florence Fort_Mill Gaffney Georgetown Grand_Strand-Myrtle_Beach Greenville Greenwood Hampton Hemingway Hilton_Head_Island Horry Isle_of_Palms Jasper Johns_Island Kershaw Lancaster Landrum Laurens Lee Lexington Lowcountry Marion Marlboro McCormick Mount_Pleasant Myrtle_Beach Newberry North_Augusta Oconee Olanta Orangeburg Pageland Pawleys_Island Pickens Quinby Richland Ruby Saint_Helena_Island Saluda Spartanburg Sumter Tega_Cay Thoroughbred_Country Tigerville Union Williamsburg Yemassee York
More Pages: South Carolina Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22