University of Alabama Press, 2000 eISBN: 978-0-8173-8998-7 | Paper: 978-0-8173-1072-1 Library of Congress Classification F326.C275 2000 Dewey Decimal Classification 976.1
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Stars Fell on Alabama is truly a classic. The book enjoyed enormous popularity and notoriety when it was first published (it was a selection of The Literary Guild and also sold widely in Europe). It can be described as a book of folkways—not journalism, or history, or a novel. At times it is impressionistic; at other times it conveys deep insights into the character of Alabama. Carmer visited every region of the state, always accompanied by someone intimately familiar with the locality. The mosaic that emerges from the pages of his book portrays Alabama’s human landscape in all its variety, and it is a work essential to an understanding of Alabama and its culture.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Carl Carmer, a Harvard-educated New York state native, was one of America's most popular writers during the 1940s and 1950s with thirty seven books, documentary films, his own radio program, and four albums of regional songs to his credit. He taught at The University of Alabama for seven years during the 1920s.
Howell Raines, an Alabama native and former New York Times editorial page editor and Pulitzer Prize winner, is the author of My Soul Is Rested: Movement Days in the Deep South Remembered and Fly Fishing through the Midlife Crisis.
REVIEWS
"Carmer reveals himself here as a writer of more than ordinaryperceptiveness and imagination, with the power of extracting from whathe sees, hears, and feels an essence which is fundamentally poetic."
—New York Times
— -
"The 'strange country' that Carmer visited hardly exists anymore save in his pages. Alabama is a healthier, richer, more just, and better-educated place. Yet whenever I read the dazzling initial image of the book—when I see through Carl Carmer's words a blood-colored moon and pine trees standing darkly against the sky--it is possible to understand the power of that old, dark magic."
University of Alabama Press, 2000 eISBN: 978-0-8173-8998-7 Paper: 978-0-8173-1072-1
Stars Fell on Alabama is truly a classic. The book enjoyed enormous popularity and notoriety when it was first published (it was a selection of The Literary Guild and also sold widely in Europe). It can be described as a book of folkways—not journalism, or history, or a novel. At times it is impressionistic; at other times it conveys deep insights into the character of Alabama. Carmer visited every region of the state, always accompanied by someone intimately familiar with the locality. The mosaic that emerges from the pages of his book portrays Alabama’s human landscape in all its variety, and it is a work essential to an understanding of Alabama and its culture.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Carl Carmer, a Harvard-educated New York state native, was one of America's most popular writers during the 1940s and 1950s with thirty seven books, documentary films, his own radio program, and four albums of regional songs to his credit. He taught at The University of Alabama for seven years during the 1920s.
Howell Raines, an Alabama native and former New York Times editorial page editor and Pulitzer Prize winner, is the author of My Soul Is Rested: Movement Days in the Deep South Remembered and Fly Fishing through the Midlife Crisis.
REVIEWS
"Carmer reveals himself here as a writer of more than ordinaryperceptiveness and imagination, with the power of extracting from whathe sees, hears, and feels an essence which is fundamentally poetic."
—New York Times
— -
"The 'strange country' that Carmer visited hardly exists anymore save in his pages. Alabama is a healthier, richer, more just, and better-educated place. Yet whenever I read the dazzling initial image of the book—when I see through Carl Carmer's words a blood-colored moon and pine trees standing darkly against the sky--it is possible to understand the power of that old, dark magic."
—From the Introduction by Howell Raines
— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CONTENTS
Introduction
Raines,
Howell
Foreword
Author's Note
Part I.
Tuscaloosa Nights
I
I Arrive
II
Tuscaloosa
III
Black Rituals
1.
Golf Course Cabin
2.
Shoutin' in Moonlight
IV
Flaming Cross
Part II.
In the Red Hills
I
Ladies Bow, Gents Know How
II
All-day Singing
III
Footwashing
IV
Sweet William Came from the Western States
V
Court Week
VI
Birmingham
Part III.
Black Belt
I
Greene County Rally
II
Big House
1.
Thorn Hill
2.
Rosemount
3.
Gaineswood and Bluff Hall
III
Plaisant Pays de France
IV
Front Gallery
1.
The Tale of the Gilded Mirror
2.
The Tale of the Wedding Ring
3.
The Tale of the White Dove
4.
The Tale of the Stud Nigger
V
The Tombigbee Outlaws
1.
Railroad Bill
2.
The Outlaw Sheriff of Sumter County
3.
Rube Burrow: Alabama Robin Hood
VI
God in the Canebrake
1.
Ben Delimus
2.
The Sims War
3.
The Prophetess of Eutaw
VII
White Man's Nigger: I
VIII
Miss Polly
IX
Brer Rabbit Multiplies
X
Lynching
Part IV.
Conjure Country
I
Two-toe Tom
II
A Good Man to Work For
III
Processional
IV
White Man's Nigger: II
V
Conjure Woman
VI
Reminiscence
Part V.
Mobile and the Bayou Country
I
Mobile
II
Coq d'lnde
III
Dauphin Island
Part VI.
Cajan
I
Citronelle
II
The Hell-raisin'
III
Twilight of the Races
Afterword
From the Author's Notebook
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC