In Reconstruction in the Cane Fields, John C. Rodrigue examines emancipation and the difficult tr...
In Belles and Poets,Julia Nitz analyzes the Civil War diary writing of eight white women from the...
Told in the words of the musicians themselves, Keeping the Beat on the Street celebrates the rene...
Literature on the civil rights movement has long highlighted the leadership of ministerial men an...
A rare Sephardic Jew in the Old South and a favorite of Jefferson Davis, Judah P. Benjamin has be...
In My Lookalike at the Krishna Temple,Jacqueline Osherow considers expressions of spirituality fr...
Meghan Kenny's debut collection, Love Is No Small Thing, gives readers an assembly of keenly draw...
Betty Adcock brings fierce insight to her seventh poetry collection, Rough Fugue. Her elegant sta...
Louisiana Coushatta Basket Makers brings together oral histories, tribal records, archival materi...
In this, his first book, originally published in 1971, noted historian Emory M. Thomas offers an ...
New Yorker James Baldwin once declared that a black man can look at a map of the United States, c...
In The Shattered Cross,Linda Carol Jones explores the lives and work of five priests of the Sémin...