Showing posts with label north carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label north carolina. Show all posts

Holy Smoke: The Big Book of North Carolina Barbecue Review

Holy Smoke: The Big Book of North Carolina Barbecue
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This book covers the bases of North Carolina Barbecue. It discusses the history of North Carolina Barbecue, how to cook pork shoulders and whole hogs, gives recipes for famous Eastern and Piedmont barbecue sauces and various side dishes and desserts, and has interviews with the foremost North Carolina barbecue restaurant owners who cook in the traditional style. The book is fun, interesting, and informative. Highly recommended.
Review by Certified Barbecue Judge (Memphis, Kansas City, North Carolina)


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The Floatplane Notebooks (Ballantine Reader's Circle) Review

The Floatplane Notebooks (Ballantine Reader's Circle)
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"The Floatplane Notebooks" tells the story of the Copelands, a typical Southern family that gathers every year to clean up the family cemetery. Using the narrative structure of Faulkner's "As I Lay Dying" (a series of single-narrator chapters), the family experiences a devastating event that threatens to unravel the family fabric. In the end, all is well, and powerfully bittersweet.
The story has what is easily one if the funniest scenes I've ever read (regarding a well and a flashlight), and the way the story is resolved at the end is truly touching (the careful reader will see that the two scenes are closely related). Another notable feature is the observations of one of the book's main characters - a wisteria vine. This may seem strange, unless the reader realizes that the vine is essentially the theme of the story, for it represents death (a ubiquitous theme in all great Southern literature). The Copeland family could easily solve the problem of cleaning the family graveyard by just killing the wisteria vine. But, if they do, they then have no real reason to gather every year. This is a family that is united by and finds strength in death.
This is a truly unique and great story, though not appropriate for younger readers. Skilled readers will find much to appreciate. "The Floatplane Notebooks" is Southern Lit at its very best. READ THIS BOOK.

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Louisiana's Song (Maggie Valley Novels) Review

Louisiana's Song (Maggie Valley Novels)
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Louisiana's Song is the second in Kerry Madden's trilogy that takes place in Maggie Valley in North Carolina's Smoky Mountains. It's the early 1960s and the Weems family life is narrated through the eyes of twelve-year-old Livy Two.
In Gentle's Holler (see our earlier review), the Weems dad is seriously injured in a car accident. It's eight months later and the family eagerly awaits his homecoming. Dad is going to be recuperating in the smokehouse and Louisiana has painted the walls with family memories. The children's excitement is dashed when they realize dad's brain injury has severely impacted his memory. He's confused, cranky, doesn't seem to recognize his children and often hears music playing in his head.
Money is tight (a perpetual problem in the Weems household) and Grandma Horace is subsidizing the family. She takes to heart the adage that `the person with the gold makes the rules' and has snatched the `head of household' role. She wants to move home and badgers mom Weems with the idea of taking the family back to Enka where a steady paycheck can be found.
While navigating the trials of dad's accident, money problems and Grandma Horace's threats, Livy, Louisiana and the other children do their best to contribute to the family coffers, pull together, and have some fun. From the bookmobile where Livy Two works, the letters to a Nashville agent, the pancake house, an amusement part and the contributions of a shy, tall Louisiana selling her art, we breathe the beloved mountain air where the Weems family lives and feel the strength of a proud mountain family determined to beat back poverty and take on life in their own terms.
In the age of `it's all about me' and little of `us,' Madden shares the idea that there is much value in pulling together and helping others. The values are positive, the tenacity and creativity of the Weems family is delightful. And Livy Two is an extraordinary narrator.
Waiting for the third book in the trilogy is difficult. Will the Weems family move from Maggie Valley? Oh, no! That's a problem waiting to unfold.
Armchair Interviews says: Highly recommended. Be sure to read Gentle's Holler too.

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Livy Two is happy that Daddy is finally out of his coma, but the befuddled man who comes home is not the daddy the Weems family once knew. He forgets their names, he wanders off—he won't even touch his beloved banjo. Set in Appalachia in 1963, this heartwarming, and heart-wrenching, follow-up to Gentle's Holler is narrated by the irrepressible Livy Two, and traces the ups and downs of her large mountain family. Shy and awkward 11-year-old Louise (Louisiana) becomes the reluctant hero as she develops a talent for painting, takes care of Daddy, and shows a surprised Livy Two that sometimes the quietest sibling turns out to be the strongest.

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