Home :: Books :: Travel  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel

Women's Fiction
Confederates in the Attic : Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War

Confederates in the Attic : Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 18 19 20 21 22 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I live in the South and loved this book.
Review: Confederates goes into my category of books that I find to be "impossible to read without laughing." And I live in South Carolina and was not aware of all of the eccentrics down here. Tony Horwitz visited Columbia where I live and wrote an article about it for the WALL STREET JOURNAL (this is now chapter 4) and land sakes, did that stir up local talk radio. If you have any interest in the Wo-ah of Nawthun Aggression, take a look at this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Avid explorer in search of the fire in the rebel's soul.
Review: There are many passionate, well-researched Civil War books. What sets this apart is Horwitz's own compassion for the contradictions of the rebel. Lucky for us, his grandfather, a Yiddish speaking immigrant in 1882, passed an infinity for this 'lost cause' on to a writer gifted with insight and humor.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book for diarists as well as Civil War lovers.
Review: Take a trip and meet real people with a genuine love and passion for the Civil War. This is one book to savor and take your time with, perhaps then you too can "escape" into a facinating period of our history.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Anyone who's into the South or Civil War will love this book
Review: Confederates is a great read. Horwitz uses the Civil War as a lens to look at the South. The book is basically a great adventure story about his travels, with a lot of history and sociology thrown in. Like a garage sale junkie, Horwitz can find treasures among the current and past inhabitants of the South. His writing is superb, capturing the complexity of the people he meets and conveying with great humor the passion they feel for their land and its history. Cold Mountain got me started on my Civil War trail. Confederates brings this story into the present. Easily the best book I've read this year.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I'm still thinking about this book a year later....
Review: I read Confederates In The Attic about a year and a half ago; took me about a week and a half. Best book I read that year -- best I've read since then.

Horwitz's style is something to behold. Having agonized myself over the balance of smooth edited prose vs. naturally unpretentious prose, it's amazing how he pulls off both. Sentences are about as lucid, educated and simple as I've seen. Heavily polished, but they don't call attention to themselves at all.

As for content, well, it's simply wonderful. It's a travelogue through American social and political history. A bit pro-Northern and -urban in point of view, it's nonetheless spot-on and great reading.

Basically, he looks for the Lost Cause and its mentality.

While he doesn't write about his failures in finding it, the entire book is everything that he did find -- and boy did he find it.

From wonderfully-painted word portraits of Charleston to embarrassment at dressing like a Confederate in a black-owned store to the BMW of Shelby Foote, the small details and the big pictures are painted quickly and with great humor and education well beyond Horwitz's then 38, 39 years.

"Blue Latitudes" is nowhere near as organized and edited as this book; buy "Confederates" now before its 1998 copyright and 1995 experiences fade from our contemporary political mindset and reality.

Five stars, easy. For anyone who loves history and politics as though a spectator sport, and was the independent and unique student in school.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A pleasant travelogue that lacks analysis
Review: Being a Civil War and reenactment buff, as well as a journalist with a strong interest in civil rights and race relations, I was very anxious to read "Confederates in the Attic." But I was disappointed by Tony Horwitz's straight-reporting style of writing. I found that the stories--while they might be interesting to the entry-level Civil War buff--lacked analysis. Horwitz does not clearly lay out a thesis, nor does he develop his work much beyond a travelogue of his time in the New South.

For example, Horwitz's reporting of the facts surrounding a race-related killing--carefully noting skin color and racial slurs and the presence of the battle-flag-waving Klan, not to mention the quality of the author's backwater hotel room--was not that of a historian making profound connections about race and violence across the span of American history. It was that of a seemingly casual observer--who noted the distressing events in Kentucky with the same casual aloofness as he did his whirlwind tour of Virginia battlefields with living historian Robert Lee Hodge.

On the plus side, however, Horwitz's book did allow me to relive some of my own travels past strip malls to reach a small patch of hallowed ground. Whether farby or hardcore, reenactors are history's footsoldiers, and many of them are fighting to hold onto our critical past before it gets paved over. It was nice to see the spotlight shining brightly on them.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Interesting and Disturbing, but a GREAT READ!
Review: This is an extremely entertaining book and very well written. The characters are real although sometimes you almost wonder and hope that they aren't. The Civilwargasam with Robert Lee Hodge is, well, interesting. Each chapter tells the story of a different stop on Horwitz's journey across the south and there are colorful characters at each. It was very hard to put the book down at times and hard to keep reading it at others. I almost put it down for good with the chapter "Dying For Dixie" Sad! I'm glad that I kept with however. It was quite a ride, but well worth it!! Really a good read!!!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On The (Confederate) Road
Review: When this book first came out, I was concerned that it would, like so many books, paint those who still memorialize the Confederacy as either rabid racists or slack-jawed yokels. However, the photograph of Robert Lee Hodge on the cover kept calling me. Once I took the plunge, I couldn't pull myself out. He critically examines Southrons and our obsession for the War Between The States, yet he does so with pathos, respect, objectivity, and a sense of humor. I haven't enjoyed a vicarious road trip this much since reading Jack Kerouac and Hunter S. Thompson. The chronicle is worth reading, if for nothing else, the 'Gasm with Rob Hodge. He draws some interesting parallels between those re-enacting the 1860's and those attempting to re-enact the 1960's as well.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: take this book with a grain of salt
Review: A very entertaining book but a horrible depiction of the south. This definitely was a page turner but i was confused at the authors intent and i was really taken back by many of the reviews for this book. Many reviewers below have bashed the southern people making them all sound like "backwoods racists". Mr. Horowitz interviewed and wrote about a handful of southern extremists and ,according to many of the previous reviews, this is how the majority of southerners act. I have lived my whole live in the south except for the last two years where i have lived in Japan. I have traveled around the united states and around the world and there is one thing i have noticed that there is "extremist" or "racists" everywhere but i do not compare that country or state to those small minded people. This book should be taken with a grain of salt.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: An Interesting Story, but a Slow Read
Review: This novel is written by Tony Horwitz basically as an account of his travels through the South. On his travles he passes through many historic towns and stops at important landmarks. As interesting as this may sound, this novel is written almost like a 400 page newspaper article. It was a task to bring myself to finishing this novel, but since it was a required assignment I had to. Otherwise I would have put it down after the first chapter and stuck on a shelf somewhere.

For those diehard southerners or anyone who enjoys learning about the Civil War this would probably be an interesting and descent novel. However, for those who look for suspense and action when reading a book I reccomend that you stay away from this particular novel. I have given it a three out of five stars only because some parts did interest me, but for the most part I did not look forward to having to continue reading this book.


<< 1 .. 18 19 20 21 22 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates