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Book reviews for "Sullivan,_Walter" sorted by average review score:

The Long, Long Love (Voices of the South)
Published in Paperback by Louisiana State University Press (1999)
Author: Walter Sullivan
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touching and hilarious
Though it deals with serious subject matter, this book is absolutely hilarious. The characters are well-drawn, believable, and deal with difficult situations. This one is a page-turner; the reader won't want to put it down until this entire story is unfolded. The plot takes turns you won't suspect until they happen, and it would be sinful to give them away to you now! Even if you don't normally read books in this genre, I guarantee you'll enjoy every word.


The War the Women Lived: Female Voices from the Confederate South
Published in Hardcover by J S Sanders & Co (1996)
Author: Walter Sullivan
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Whispers from the Grave
The Women of the Confederacy speak. Culled from journals, diaries and published memoirs of the most cruel war of all, a Civil War, these women tell of hardships endured and unbelievable savagery on both sides. If this book was fiction it would be a good read. As eyewitness accounts it is a great read. Experience the horrors, the insights, the frame-of-mind of a violent time from our past. This book will enrich you


Bedford Forrest and His Critter Company (Southern Classics Series)
Published in Paperback by J S Sanders & Co (1992)
Authors: Andrew Nelson Lytle and Walter Sullivan
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A Stunning Achievement
Cunning as the Devil was Nathan Bedford Forrest and this book indicates just how quick and clever this military genius was. Little wonder then that Lee considered this dark knight to be his finest soldier, above even the legendary Stonewall Jackson.

Great reading, but definitely not for the "P.C." crowd.
In terms of his impact on modern warfare, no general of the Civil War had more than Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest. Not Grant, not Lee, not Longstreet or Sherman. This is the man. No less a general than Erwin Rommel studied Forrest's tactics and implemented them with modern weaponry when his Afrika Korps marched all over Libya and Egypt in World War II.

The reason I say this book isn't for the "politically correct" is that it was written some 70 years ago, by a man of the old South who obviously idolized Forrest and everything he stood for. As you know already, not everything Forrest stood for was good. He was 100 years ahead of his time as a soldier, but stuck in 1860 in his personal beliefs.

But...getting into the book. He was a brilliant commander who never had enough men under his command to turn the war in the South's favor. Still, he was a hero to the people of the Tennessee river valley where he won most of his victories, with good reason. When the Union troops overran these areas and placed them under military rule, Forrest made sure they treated the citizens decently. Once he even saved a group of innocent men from a flaming death at the hands of vengeful Union soldiers whom he was defeating in battle. Reading these and other stories makes you understand why he was such a hero to the author, who would have heard first-hand accounts of Forrest's exploits.

Lytle believes that the South would have won the war if Forrest had been placed in command of the main Confederate army in the west, and he's probably right. Forrest was an extraordinary individual who had more impact on the 20th century than any other Civil War general.

Great
I never fully appreciated the intellect of Forrest until I finished this book. It peels away the myths about the man, and tells about what he was really like. I loved it, and often flip around in it from time to time. A must for Civil War buffs!


The Voyage of the Beagle
Published in Paperback by New American Library (1988)
Authors: Charles Darwin and Walter Sullivan
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A technical disappointment
The CD version of this book is very easy to use and the search function is wonderful. HOWEVER there is no way to copy text off the screen so you can paste it into other applications. I find this very frustrating and a big disappointment.

The CD version of "The Origin of Species" suffers from the same problem. Beware.

Darwin emerges as a scientist
This was not the best choice for listening to in the car: too much tedious detail, and I found my mind wandering too often. Still, it was interesting, and I learned a lot.

Darwin was a promising but obscure student at Cambridge when he was suggested for the trip. By the time he returned, his reputation was made. It's not hard to see why: this book is packed with careful observations and attention to detail, as well as thoughtful analyses of topics from species extinction (though not origins at this stage) to the formation of coral atolls. Darwin is clearly very well-read and makes frequent references to the noted authorities of the time, sometimes supporting them and sometimes disagreeing.

I hadn't actually realized that the voyage of the Beagle was as long as it was. I saw it as a year or so, going from England to South America and back again. It was in fact a five-year, round-the-world cruise, covering the Pacific Islands, New Zealand, Australia, and numerous other locales as well as the well-known South America and the Galapagos.

My favorite parts are actually the more human anecdotes. Darwin is less than enchanted with New Zealand and Australia, and is not afraid of saying so, noting that most of the citizens are ex-convicts. My favorite single anecdote, though, is about the South American governor who is so dedicated to the rule of law that he has himself put in the stocks when he violates one of his own laws. Darwin also indicates his dislike of slavery and admits to feeling shame when he accidentally causes a male slave to flinch when he makes a threatening gesture to him. So much for that creationist conceit.

There are two appendices not written by Darwin. One is a summary of the orders given to Captain Fitzroy about the mission of the Beagle, which is very telling of the naval issues of the time. It focuses on getting accurate locations of known ports as well as the possible finding of new ones. As a Hornblower fan (and therefore with some interest in naval trivia), I found this very interesting.

The other appendix is Captain Fitzroy's attempt to construe their geological observations to be evidence of the Noachian Deluge. This is not on the same intellectual level as Darwin's writings, and I found it mostly of intellectual interest as evidence that creationist arguments have changed hardly at all in the last 175 years.

All in all, it's an interesting book and a classic of natural history, though not something I'd recommend listening to unless one has a passion for the subject.

You can't tell me he wasn't having fun
Remember this says "Journal" and that is what it is. It is his first parson adventures on and off the Beagle. He even includes stories about the people on the ship, the ship's life, and maintenance. He is always going ashore and venturing beyond the ship charter to go where no Englishman has gone before. He makes friends with tyrants and the down trodden. Once, to get an animal to come to him, he lay on his back and waved his arms and legs in the air. Whatever you do, do not turn your back on him. He is always knocking something on the head and taking it back for study. It is fun trying to match the old names for places with the new.


Allen Tate: A Recollection (Southern Literary Studies)
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (1988)
Author: Walter Sullivan
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Assault on the unknown; the International Geophysical Year
Published in Unknown Binding by ()
Author: Walter Sullivan
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A Band of Prophets: The Vanderbilt Agrarians After Fifty Years (Southern Literary Studies)
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (1982)
Authors: William C. Havard and Walter Sullivan
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BASEBALL MAKES FRIENDS
Published in Paperback by Vantage Press (23 June, 2000)
Authors: Walter ""Tux" Sullivan, Walter Rtuxx Sullivan, and Walter "Tux" Sullivan
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Black Holes: The Edge of Space, the Edge of Time
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday (1979)
Author: Walter Sullivan
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Black Holes: The Edge of Space, the End of Time
Published in Paperback by Warner Books (1982)
Author: Walter Sullivan
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