55 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Essential and entertaining reference for all Americans, May 4, 2001
This review is from: 1001 Things Everyone Should Know About The South (Paperback)
Born in Texas of Texan parents, but raised outside the South (except for six years or so in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, DC, which aren't nearly as Southern as they used to be), I've always felt self-consciously removed from what I'd like to consider my heritage. Thanks to John Shelton Reed and Dale Volberg Reed's great book, I've not only discovered I'm more Southern than I realized, but know a lot more about that section of the country than I did before.
'1001 Things Everyone Should Know about the South' is a book anyone can open at random and start reading anywhere. But if you read it straight through, systematically, I'm willing to guarantee almost anyone they'll discover things about the South they never knew before.
This book is not a fancied-up version of
You Might Be A Redneck If....
The Reeds are serious researchers and writers, and they look at the South through the lenses of history, geography, ethnology, linguistics, religion, art, music, literature, architecture, cooking, politics, economics, and more. There are the obligatory sections on the Confederacy and the War, of course, but the Reeds understand, as other historians and writers have also noted, that the CSA was a period of barely five years out of more than 400 years of Southern history. (One of the things everyone should know about the South is that there were European settlers in Virginia, Texas, and Florida before anyone save Native Americans had set foot on Plymouth Rock.) This is one of the things that made '1001 Things ...' a far more satisfying book for me than was Michael Andrew Grissom's
Southern by the Grace of God, which had a tendency to view everything through the prism of the War.
There is an enormous amount of interesting material in this book, ranging from the difference between 'Cajun' and 'Creole,' to the differences in habits between Southerners and folks in other parts of the nation (northerners subscribe to more dog magazines but Southerners own more dogs), to regional differences in linguistics and cuisine (finally I've found someplace that explains regional varieties of barbecue, though as a loyal son of Texas I have to agree that brisket, not pork, is the proper barbecuing meat [#647]).
Among the other interesting things I learned: 80 percent of Southern parents teach their children to say 'sir' and 'ma'am' to adults (mine sure did), whereas only 46 percent of non-Southern parents do [#148]; 80 percent of Southerners also admit to using 'you-all' or 'y'all' occasionally as the second person plural, whereas most non-Southerners almost never do [#147]; one of the characteristics of Southern writers is that many of them only discovered their 'Southernness' when they lived outside the South [#472 -- hey! Like me!], and that Southern artists, or at least artists from the South, include Jasper Johns, Charles Willson Peale and Rembrandt Peale, John James Audubon, and Robert Rauschenberg, among many others.
My favorite living writer, Florence King (author of
Confessions of a Failed Southern Lady, among much else), said of this book, 'Every page is a treat!' As usual, I agree with her absolutely.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Near encyclopedic coverage of Southern essentials and trivia, August 30, 2000
This review is from: 1001 Things Everyone Should Know About The South (Paperback)
This book is a delight. It's not a treatise for reading straight through but more a dipper's delight.
This book covers nearly everything anybody could reasonably want to know about The South - and a great deal more. The authors' treatment is rather eclectic - some major Southern indicia get fairly cursory treatment whilst some trivia get dwelt upon lovingly. I loved the treatment of Moon Pie - a delicacy unknown to European shores.
The Reeds have done an excellent job of combining scholarship with lightness of touch. The format is one of brief entries on topics (approx 100-500 words) loosely but alphabetically arranged by theme. It nicely complements John Shelton Reed's "My tears spoiled my aim" without covering the same ground.
Leave a copy in your bathroom - your guests will thank you!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Everything you wanted to know, January 25, 2000
This review is from: 1001 Things Everyone Should Know About The South (Paperback)
This covers everything you should know in an amazing economy of space. It is like an encyclopedia in one volume. Everything that is southern is in this book. Things you have thought and wondered about is in this book, with unique and rare photos. It is hard to put this book down, one looks up one fact and stumbles on other facts that lead to something else. It is like the world wide web. A totally engrossing book, a reference book that is a must for all southern libraries.
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