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Full Description
"I don't have any children, so I've decided to claim all the future freedom-fighters and hell-raisers as my kin," wrote journalist Molly Ivins. Ivins is one of the biggest hell-raisers profiled in this collection of essays by Hal Crowther, but there is plenty hell-raising and freedom-fighting to go around. Crowther is a writer whose own career is marked by sharp political and social commentary in the pages of national and regional outlets, from Time to the Atlanta Constitution to The Oxford American. In this collection, he turns his attention to best and the brightest of the recently departed generation in the South. These essays commemorate the passing of iconic Southern figures such as John Hope Franklin, Doc Watson, Judy Bonds, and James Dickey. Crowther has known most of the folks he profiles and has lived in their particular landscape for decades; he has some stories to tell, and he does so with a particular appreciation for his subjects' accomplishments, their surroundings, and even, in the case of politicos Jesse Helms and George Wallace, their particular brand of notoriousness. Novelist and commentator Silas House, author of Southernmost and A Parchment of Leaves, introduces the collection.
Contents
FREEDOM FIGHTERS AND HELL RAISERS
by Hal Crowther
Table of Contents
Foreword by Silas House
Introduction
Molly Ivins, The Red Rose of Texas
John Hope Franklin, A Long View, Unsweetened
Father Thomas Berry, Deep Greens and Blues
Lance Corporal Brian Anderson, A Farewell to Arms
James Dickey, The Last Wolverine
Sister Evelyn Mattern, Confession, Dedicated to a Fighting Nun
James Still, A Man of the World
Marshall Frady, Son of a Preacher Man
Kirk Varnedoe, A Prophet from Savannah
Jesse Winchester, The Tennessee Kid
Anne Braden, An Embarrassing Woman
Tommy Thompson,The Last Song of Father Banjo
Eubie Blake, A Century of Ragtime
Judy Bonds, This Land is Your Land
Frank M. Johnson, The Last Southern Hero
Jesse Helms, The Last of His Kind?
Will Campbell, God's Will
George Wallace, Requiem for a Bantamweight
Doc Watson, But Now I See