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36 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Strange True Stories of Louisiana,
By PLAQUEMINE LOCK STATE HISTORIC SITE (PLAQUEMINE, LA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Strange True Stories of Louisiana (Paperback)
Seven unusual, true stories set in Louisiana comprise the reissue of George Washington Cable's STRANGE TRUE STORIES OF LOUISIANA. First published in 1888, these stories are a gold mine of cultural lore and historical facts. As interesting as the stories themselves are the accounts of how Cable acquired them."The Young Aunt with White Hair" is set in Spanish occupied Louisiana in 1782 and describes the horrors experienced by a young woman on the long journey to New Orleans from Germany: robbed by sailors on the ship; an Indian attack near the mouth of the Mississippi River, during which her husband and baby are brutally murdered; being held captive by Indians and told she was to be the chief's dinner. Her ordeal was so great that her hair turned snow white in a matter of hours, and she never recovered from the experience. Humor and suspense make "The Two Sisters" just plain fun to read. Two teenage girls- one a tomboy and one a demure, sweet lady- undertake a dangerous trek across the Atchafalaya swamp to North Louisiana in 1795. It's not only a good story, but the details of clothing, places and people are priceless. "Plaquemine was composed of a church, two stores, as many drinking-shops, and about fifty cabins, one of which was the courthouse. Here lived a multitude of Catalans, Acadians, Negros and Indians. ..It was at Plaquemine that we bade adieu to the old Mississippi.." The story if "Alix de Morainville" reads like a fairy tale: the birth-deformed baby farmed out to a peasant family; the arranged marriage that turns out to be a love match; the convent stay; the marriage of dear friend Madelaine to Count Louis de la Houssaye and the couple's departure for the Louisiana colony; presentation to Queen Marie Antoinette; Aleix's grand wedding at Notre Dame Cathedral; the onset of the French Revolution; widowhood; rescue; and flight first to England and then to Louisiana. The other stories are "Salome Muller, The White Slave," "The Haunted House in Royal Street," "Attalie Brouillard," and "War Diary of a Union Woman in the South."
20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Strange true stories from Creole Louisianna,
By
This review is from: Strange True Stories of Louisiana (Paperback)
As we traveled along Interstate 10 between New Orleans and "Red Baton," I mused about the girders which held the highway up out of the bayous. What must travel or life in general have been like in that part of Louisianna a century or so ago.George Washington Cable first collected these seven stories about Louisianna and published them in 1888. He calls them true stories. They are stories from times before his own from 1782 to after the Civil War. At the same time these stories are strange to Cable because life had changed so much in Louisianna between the time that the stories occurred and his own time. The stories start with the story of Louise who came to Louisianna and almost became the dinner of a local chief. This tragic tale is quickly followed by the "bright and happy" story of Francoise and Suzanne who travel through the "wilds" of Atchafalaya. Alix's story is next. She was once introduced to Marie Antoinette. Then the French Revolution came and Alix lost her first husband. She will be a character that I long admire but I ask you to read the story to see why. Salome Muller was a German who lost most of her family enroute to Louisianna. (Some 1200 of the 1800 who attempted to make that trip never arrived.) Salome became a slave. Yet some 20 years or so later her family took her case to the State Supreme Court to free her. The These are true stories from people who lived in Creole Louisianna, a time strange to us now.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Louisiana stories,
By
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This review is from: Strange True Stories of Louisiana (Paperback)
As a fourth-generation Louisianian, I consider many of its true stories to be strange. It's a strange state, but one learns to love, or at least tolerate, some of its quirks. I found myself wishing that George W. Cable had written a much larger book because these stories are fascinating. The stories from the diaries of women who lived in early and Civil War Louisiana were the most intriguing. (In my opinion, Southern women's diaries have given history a much more feasible, human touch.) I now understand the Siege of Vicksburg because it was presented to us from the viewpoint of a civilian woman who lived through it. Cable is a trustworthy source of Louisiana-ana.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
INTERESTING, FASCINATING,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Strange True Stories of Louisiana (Paperback)
I have enjoyed reading the stories!
We need to remember though, that CONSERVATIVE meant the democratic party of that time, yes, democrats of old and 50 years ago were 'conservative' and they RULED the south from top to bottom! The reason I add this is that I find it fascinating how politics played in these stories back then. Liberal meant the up and coming 'Lincoln republican' and conservative meant 'democrat'. Liberal in European countries still means FREEDOM and small government; We are the one's to have flipped the meaning, as here liberals mean a big, heavy handed, controlling government. I will be visiting New Orleans soon when my husband returns for R&R from Kuwait. I also will be attending Loyola University; the online MSN program, and want to visit some historical sites! This book gives me some great ideas! Love it! Highly recommended!
4.0 out of 5 stars
a little jewel,
By
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This review is from: Strange True Stories of Louisiana (Paperback)
Some may be disappointed but I wasn't. It's a nice read for people wanting to get a feel for New Orleans. Easy to pick up - read- put down- pick up again. Entertaining stories but don't know if I agree they are true.
1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Strange True Stories of Louisiana (Paperback)
I enjoy stories like this. It came on time. I'm sure I will enjoy it.Thank you
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Strange True Stories of Louisiana by George Washington Cable (Paperback - May 30, 1994)
$7.99
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