To Live and Die in Dixie was envisioned as a companion to I'll Take My Stand, in the hopes the two volumes may rest side-by-side (between readings) on an accessible shelf for as long as the job may take.
To Live and Die in Dixie was envisioned as a companion to I'll Take My Stand, in the hopes the two volumes may rest side-by-side (between readings) on an accessible shelf for as long as the job may take.
For detailed analyses on Civil War memory and the Lost Cause, see Alice Fahs & Joan Waugh, eds., The Memory of the Civil War in American Culture (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 2004); Blight, Race and Reunion; Gary W.
To Live and Die in Dixie: How the South Formed a Nation
Mary Kay Andrews brings back cleaning lady and sleuth Callahan Garrity in the whodunit To Live and Die in Dixie.
To Live and Die in Dixie: Essays on the Confederacy
To Live and Die in Dixie
To Live and Die in Dixie: True Tales Retold
How the Confederacy came into being. A state by state history of the secession movement and the formation of the sovereign Confederate States of America.
Includes a timeline for the county, as well as a list of local businesses and family surnames.
“Bright and sassy.” — New York Times Book Review The second entry in the thoroughly original and witty series about Callahan Garrity in which the cleaning lady cum sleuth runs afoul of right-wing radicals and a dangerous collector ...
Following her sensational debut in Every Crooked Nanny, housecleaner and occasional P.I. Callahan Garrity uncovers some deadly messes in an Atlanta mansion, including a bloody body in the bedroom.
" ... The Third Mississippi Volunteer Infantry, C.S.A. from the origin of its oldest companies, the "Biloxi Rifle Guards" and "Gainesville Volunteers," organized in 1859, to the regiment's disbandment in...
Politics and automobile racing seem worlds apart but that's not so when returning stock car racing to its roots (Southern, male, and white) is the goal of right wing supremacists.