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$4.25
1. Louisiana (Rookie Read-About Geography)
 
$179.52
2. Historical Atlas of Louisiana
$15.75
3. Bienville's Dilemma: A Historical
$300.00
4. Charting Louisiana: Five Hundred
$11.04
5. Louisiana (One Nation)
 
6. Louisiana Geography
 
7. Louisiana: Its Land and People
$14.36
8. Treme: Race and Place in a New
$32.00
9. Losing Ground: Identity and Land
 
10. Geography of Louisiana
$4.50
11. Louisiana Geography Projects:
 
12. Coastal plant geography of Mauritius
13. Geography of Louisiana
$59.12
14. Louisiana Geography Introduction:
 
$9.95
15. Photojournal: The Cajun Mardi
 
16. Louisiana, a geography
$14.13
17. Geography of Louisiana: List of
$14.13
18. Geography of Shreveport, Louisiana:
$31.99
19. Time and Place in New Orleans:
 
$15.00
20. Those Strange Louisiana Names

1. Louisiana (Rookie Read-About Geography)
by Judith Jensen Hyde
Paperback: 31 Pages (2007-09)
list price: US$5.95 -- used & new: US$4.25
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 051621747X
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The popular Rookie Books expand their horizons to all corners of the globe!With the Rookie Read-About Geography series, emergent readers will take off on adventures to cities, nations, waterways, and habitats around the world… and right in their own backyards! ... Read more


2. Historical Atlas of Louisiana
by Charles Robert Goins, John Michael Caldwell
 Hardcover: 1 Pages (1995-04)
list price: US$65.00 -- used & new: US$179.52
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0806125896
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars from jacket
from inside jacket from inside jacket
The state of Louisiana brings special images to mind: Mardi Gras, the French quarter, plantations, Cajuns, Huey Long, moss laden live oaks, and water. This comprehensive, up-to-date atlas, with dozens of maps in color, summarizes the geography, history, and economics of Louisiana's uniquely Southern milieu, from ancient days to the present.
The Atlas highlights Louisiana's physical environment and natural resources, aboriginal setting and Native American tribes, European contacts and settlement, political development, population and urbanization, transportation, agriculture, industry and commerce, and cultural growth. Each of the 99 pages of maps Is accompanied by an essay describing and summarizing important geographic features or historical events. The Atlas also includes a full length introduction, gazetteer, references and an index.
... Read more


3. Bienville's Dilemma: A Historical Geography of New Orleans
by Richard Campanella
Paperback: 429 Pages (2008-11-04)
list price: US$25.00 -- used & new: US$15.75
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Asin: 1887366857
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Bienville's Dilemma presents sixty-eight articles on the historical geography of New Orleans, covering the formation and foundation of the city, its urbanization and population, its humanization into a place of distinction, the manipulation of its environment, its devastation by Hurricane Katrina, and its ongoing recovery. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (5)

5-0 out of 5 stars Extraordinary Insight Into New Orleans
Most of the media coverage after Katrina failed to grasp the history surrounding the creation of this great city.Bienville's Dilemma does an exceptional job of compiling a significant amount of relevant data.

5-0 out of 5 stars Compelling
This book is essential reading for anybody who plans to build in New Orleans from a doghouse to a 20 story building.A great source of real New Orleans facts and history.

5-0 out of 5 stars A Unique and Valuable Book
"Bienville's Dilemma" is a terrific contribution to the history of New Orleans and its times. Richard Campanella uses a non-traditional format to tell his story. He starts with a time-line that contains major milestones in New Orlean's past and continues with eight'landscape' segments. Each segment is made up of multiple stand-alone papers on some aspects of the entire 'historical geography'.The segments do support the overall story, but the reader can really start anywhere and learn something important.

WWII brought our family to the New Orleans area and I grew up there in the 1940's and '50s. My wife was born in the area. Like many others, we left New Orleans after our marriage and have lived in many places. However, the city holds a peculiar attraction for us. It is continuing to change, and Campanella highlights the many aspects of what change means in New Orleans.This is a good book for the native, the visitor, or just the curious.

5-0 out of 5 stars NOLA's Dilemmas
An important book on New Orleans that gives us a fresh way to view the history and culture of this singular city. Mr. Campanella presents us with a series of dilemmas that the city and the people who populate it have grappled with from its founding to the present day. From the impact of landscape, environment and politics at its inception and its post-Katrina future, to the ebb and flow of the many cultures who have contributed to its unique character and place in America and the world.

As with his previous book [[ASIN:1887366687 Geographies of New Orleans: Urban Fabrics Before the Storm] the author's depth and breadth of scholarship is impressive. Exhaustively researched and lavishly illustrated with photographs and illuminating graphics that bring alive the issues raised in the text. To call this book thorough and detailed would almost be damning it with faint praise.

I finished it with a much clearer and richer understanding of the city and how its historical dilemmas have yielded to new but related ones. Resolving these, as it has been since Bienville's time, remains very much a work in progress. The how, where and why of New Orleans. Fascinating!

5-0 out of 5 stars An indispensable Look at New Orleans
Richard Campanella Chronicles the History of New Orleans' Landscape
By Susan Larson, Book Editor, New Orleans Times-Picayune
November 05, 2008

Everyone in New Orleans will recognize the truth behind the title of geographer Richard Campanella's new history of the city. "Bienville's Dilemma" -- which he succinctly distills to "questionable geography, questionable future" -- has been an issue since the city's 1718 founding. And "dilemma," defined by the dictionary as "a problem involving a difficult or unpleasant choice which will bring undesirable consequences," characterizes the state in which all New Orleanians find themselves post-Katrina.

For Campanella, who is the associate director of Tulane University's Center for Bioenvironmental Research and a research professor with Tulane's Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, New Orleans has been a case of obsession at first sight.

He is the author of "New Orleans Then and Now" (1999), "Time and Place in New Orleans" (2002) and "Geographies of New Orleans" (2006). His new book, "Bienville's Dilemma," includes 68 brief articles and essays written in his characteristic lucid and straightforward style, all describing various human interactions with the local landscape -- forming it, settling it, urbanizing it, populating it, manipulating it, humanizing it -- and its eventual devastation and ongoing restoration

He draws from rich readings in travelers' accounts, newspaper articles and previous geographies, as well as his own observations, so important in the sections dealing with Katrina and its aftermath. The result is an immensely readable treasure trove of history, one a reader could open to any page for a source of enlightenment, education or pure delight. And the 58-page timeline of the city's history is an invaluable reference in itself.

"The idea of a dilemma," Campanella said, "has helped me come to terms with our challenges here, mostly in issues of land loss and natural hazard risks, if you think of them as dilemmas first and problems second. First and foremost, there are the choices we have to make based on value judgments, and once the difficult choice is made you have a problem that can be solved by good science and engineering. But your first choice may render an unforeseen consequence. I find all this intellectually stimulating as well as morally challenging."

Campanella is such a riveting writer that he can make anything fascinating -- the composition of soil; the battle for control of water; patterns of settlement in the city; the history of Creolism, which he calls "our home-grown ethnicity"; the ways in which we have "scored and scoured" the land, with canals and levees, structures that were originally designed for our safety but have become sources of hazard; the way we have made groceries since the very beginning; the pride of being a New Orleans native; the developments of wards and faubourgs.

In a chapter called "Devastating the Landscape," he writes of storms and fires and floods, cautioning of the "truism long recognized by hazard planners: the aftermath of one disaster becomes the prelude to the next." Time and time again, he sees the patterns in the city's problems.

One of the most fascinating chapters -- and Campanella originally hoped that it would serve as the title for his book -- tells the story of "Manuel's Dilemma" for the first time. During the hurricane of 1915, forecaster Isaac M. Cline warned Manuel Marquez, the caretaker at the Anglers' Lodge in the Rigolets, that people there should be evacuated on the last train. Desperation grew as Manuel was forced to choose between saving himself or his people. Marquez went off to search for his people, missed the train, and perished. "This is one of the chapters that I enjoyed contributing to the public record," Campanella said.

Here's how Campanella describes the implications of "Manuel's Dilemma":
"Colossal decisions -- involving evacuating, relocating, hunkering down, giving up, resisting, conceding, fighting, accepting -- confront citizens of New Orleans and southeastern Louisiana, oftentimes to the exasperated and impatient disbelief of Americans elsewhere. Should we remain in eroding marshes and continue centuries of tradition, or end our way of life and move inland so that aggressive coastal restoration may commence? Should we maintain all low-lying, far-flung neighborhoods and trust that levees will protect us? Or should we concede these areas to nature and build only on higher ground? Should we try to save everyone, at the risk of losing everyone? Or should we ask some to sacrifice everything so that others may maintain something? Shall we strive toward the probable survival of half the society, or the possible survival of the entire society?"

Citing the arguments of the abandonists, the concessionists and the maintainers in the heated arguments about the city's future after Katrina, Campanella writes that the answer was, apparently, "Let people return and rebuild as they can and as they wish, and we'll act on the patterns as they fall in place."

One underlying theme of this book is the rich inspiration New Orleans has provided to its citizens and its visitors, its provocative situation in the national consciousness. Everyone, informed or not, feels he can pronounce on the city. And we have learned from those pronunciations, as Campanella notes about the rich contributions of 18th century Ursuline nun Marie-Madeleine Hachard, whose letters offer a wealth of information useful to a geographer.

"Every time I bike past the Bienville (and Chartres) intersection, I look up at the second floor of the building -- and that building is from the 1800s, the original building is long gone -- and I picture her sitting up there, making those amazing observations," he said. "I think about how much we know about 1727 New Orleans because of her articulate and amazing letters."

New Orleans has benefited from the rich records left during its heyday, when it was the third largest city in the country and an obligatory stop during a grand tour of America.

"There's the instinct to pass judgment on New Orleans," Campanella said. "Many times it's flattering. There are so many, myself included, who are so enthralled by this city on first sight. And others who are repelled."
And then there are those who are both.

"Well, there's your dilemma!" Campanella said, laughing.

As he writes, "Ask an informed American citizen today to ruminate on Dallas or Atlanta or Phoenix, and you will probably get small talk, lukewarm pleasantries, and a brief conversation. Ask them what they think about New Orleans, and you are in for not only an opinionated retort, but a sentimental smile, a scolding finger or a treasured memory, a shaking head, or an exasperated shrug over the course of a conversation spanning the spectrum of the human experience. This enigmatic capacity to rile and inspire, to scandalize and charm, to liberate and fascinate, helps explain why thousands of people have rejected the amenities and opportunities of the lukewarm Dallases and Atlantas and Phoenixes of the world, and chosen instead to cast their lot with this troubled old port -- embracing all its splendors and dilemmas, all its booms and busts, all its joys and tragedies."
One of the most provocative chapters looks at the contributions of transplants to the city, and the difference between transplants and natives.

"Nativity as ethnicity is one of the most neglected areas of research in the social sciences," Campanella said. "There's little research on how people who have deep roots in a place differ from their neighbors who have moved there. We have plenty of research on immigration and immigrants. But you see different patterns of human geography when you ascribe patterns of nativity."

One of his more interesting observations is that "Transplants are more likely to listen to National Public Radio and listener-supported WWOZ than commercial radio, and tend to be 'Jazzfest people' rather than 'Mardi Gras people.' They predominate disproportionately at events involving the arts, culture, and social, urban, and environmental causes."

Campanella says that his book "takes a very frank look at the city. Some readers may be uncomfortable with the documentation of things like decline, but this is not an advocacy piece."

Campanella, who bikes from his home in the Bywater to Tulane each day on what he calls the "bicycle business tour," often stops to photograph interesting images along the way. One of the most striking pictures in the book, included in the 48-page section of maps and photos and graphs, depicts the graffiti on the side of a building in the Bayou St. John neighborhood: "You'll find your way by the mileposts of hope." It's perfect poetry.

"The city writes it," he said. "I just document it."
... Read more


4. Charting Louisiana: Five Hundred Years of Maps
Hardcover: 408 Pages (2003-04-01)
list price: US$95.00 -- used & new: US$300.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0917860470
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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To celebrate the bicentennial of the Louisiana Purchase, The Historic New Orleans Collection (THNOC) has pursued the ambitious goal of publishing an atlas that depicts Louisiana's history through maps. The result of those efforts is Charting Louisiana. This book, THNOC's bicentennial gift to the public, offers a rich selection of historic and contemporary maps from various sources that collectively illustrate the region's diverse history, from its multinational colonial experiences to the modern American state.

Charting Louisiana presents 104 maps from THNOC's holdings, representing the full range of the institution's cartographic treasures. The atlas also features sixty-seven important works from the Geography and Map Division of the Library of Congress—custodian of the largest cartographic collection in the world—and contributions from other United States repositories, including the Louisiana State Museum and Chicago's Newberry Library. Archives in France, Spain, Great Britain, and Mexico generously provided the balance, as befits Louisiana's international history.

The product of this cooperative effort is an unprecedented compilation of 193 high-quality reproductions of important maps illustrating the development of Louisiana from the early sixteenth century to the present, along with historical essays providing a broader context for understanding the maps. Complete with a detailed cartobibliography and list of selected readings, Charting Louisiana is a lush, captivating, and valuable source of information for history buffs, scholars, and map lovers, providing ample opportunities for new interpretations of the state's history as well as that of the nation.
... Read more

Customer Reviews (3)

5-0 out of 5 stars The "Uncharted" is "Charted"
I purchased this volume at the Louisiana Book Festival the year it came out.I even got the authors/editors to sign it.During a presentation and discussion of the book, it fell to the floor with a loud thud.The speaker quipped that it was "heavy reading". While it is a large book, I would hardly rate it a "coffee table book". This is an excellent well done book with a lot of color and information throughout.Maps from all the countries that had an interest (and some that didn't) in the Louisiana territory from the age of exploration until the last of the twentieth century.Excellent price too!I would've waited but I really wanted the signatures.I can't ever see selling this book.It is a great aid to re-enactors and living history personnel.No museum in the Louisiana Purchase should be without this book either.Kudos!

5-0 out of 5 stars A wonderful history of Louisiana in maps
This coffee table volume was produced to celebrate the bicentennial of the Louisiana Purchase. It contains 193 high-quality reproductions of important maps illustrating the development of Louisiana from the early sixteenth century to the present. Each map is accompanied by an historical essay placing the map in its cultural context. There is a detailed cartobibliography and list of selected readings.

The maps themselves are wonderfully reproduced. Here are a couple of examples of the essays:

"21. A Map of Louisiana And Of The River Mississippi by John Senex. London, [1718 or 1719]. The Historic New Orleans Collection

"A restless band of Carolina tranders--who crossed the Appalachian Mountains seeking closer economic relations with Native American nations to the west--galvanized English interest in Louisiana and the Mississippi River valley. In light of this development, English mapmaker John Senex responded to market demands with this map, copying liberally from Guillaume de L'Isle's ca.1718 Carte de la Louisiane et du Cours du Mississipi. This plagiarism did not, of course, include L'Isle's notation about French claims to Carolina. Interestingly, Senex dedicated his map to William Law, the father of financier John Law, whose scheme to develop French Louisiana eventually caused the ruin of many European investors."

***

"74. Louisiana from Mathew Carey's General Atlas Improved and Enlarged: Being A Collection of Maps of the World and Quarters...[Philadelphia, 1814]. The Historic New Orleans Collection

Mathew Carey became a pioneer American map publisher following his immigration to Philadelphia from Dublin in 1784. Carey set up a publishing firm financed by the marquis de Lafayette, with whom he had earlier become friends in Paris. His success in publishing Guthrie's Geography Improved led him to similar projects. Carey's American Atlas of 1795 was the earliest atlas of the United States. His American Pocket Atlas, in which the map of Louisiana appeared, was published in editions of 1796, 1801, 1809, 1813, and 1814. He had issued the earliest printed map of Louisiana as a state in 1813, which appears here in an enlarged version from his 1814 General Atlas. This map was probably compiled by Samuel Lewis, Carey's principal mapmaker."

This book makes for fascinating reading and study.

Robert C. Ross 2008

5-0 out of 5 stars More than a Coffee Table Book
This beautifully produced volume deserves a prominant place on anyone's coffee table. Abstractors and professional landmen, especially if they live in Louisiana and its surrounding states, will fall in love with it. ... Read more


5. Louisiana (One Nation)
by Capstone Press Geography Department
Library Binding: 48 Pages (2002-09-01)
list price: US$22.65 -- used & new: US$11.04
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0736812423
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Product Description
Provides an overview of the state of Louisiana, covering its history, geography, economy, people, and points of interest. ... Read more


6. Louisiana Geography
by W.C. Buchanan
 Hardcover: Pages (1959-01-01)

Asin: B0041137QI
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7. Louisiana: Its Land and People
by Fred B. Kniffen
 Hardcover: 288 Pages (1988-01)
list price: US$29.95
Isbn: 0807113697
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A geography of Louisiana, covering its weather, climate, land contours, soils, vegetation and resources; and investigating the effects man has had on its landscape, from the prehistoric Indians through the industries and urbanization of the present. ... Read more


8. Treme: Race and Place in a New Orleans Neighborhood (Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation)
by Michael E. Crutcher Jr.
Paperback: 204 Pages (2010-12-01)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$14.36
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0820335959
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Across Rampart Street from the French Quarter, the Faubourg Tremé neighborhood is arguably the most important location for African American culture in New Orleans. Closely associated with traditional jazz and “second line” parading, Tremé is now the setting for an eponymous television series created by David Simon (best known for his work on The Wire).
 
Michael Crutcher argues that Tremé’s story is essentially spatial—a story of how neighborhood boundaries are drawn and take on meaning and of how places within neighborhoods are made and unmade by people and politics. Tremé has long been sealed off from more prominent parts of the city, originally by the fortified walls that gave Rampart Street its name, and so has become a refuge for less powerful New Orleanians. This notion of Tremé as a safe haven—the flipside of its reputation as a “neglected” place—has been essential to its role as a cultural incubator, Crutcher argues, from the antebellum slave dances in Congo Square to jazz pickup sessions at Joe’s Cozy Corner.
 
Tremé takes up a wide range of issues in urban life, including highway construction, gentrification, and the role of public architecture in sustaining collective memory. Equally sensitive both to black-white relations and to differences within the African American community, it is a vivid evocation of one of America’s most distinctive places.
... Read more

9. Losing Ground: Identity and Land Loss in Coastal Louisiana
by David M. Burley
Hardcover: 176 Pages (2010-04-26)
list price: US$40.00 -- used & new: US$32.00
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Asin: 1604734884
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What is it like to lose your front porch to the ocean? To watch saltwater destroy your favorite fishing holes? To see playgrounds and churches subside and succumb to brackish and rising water? The residents of coastal Louisiana know. For them hurricanes are but exclamation points in an incessant loss of coastal land now estimated to occur at a rate of at least twenty-four square miles per year.

In Losing Ground, coastal Louisianans communicate the significance of place and environment. During interviews taken just before the 2005 hurricanes, they send out a plea to alleviate the damage. They speak with an urgency that exemplifies a fear of losing not just property and familiar surroundings, but their identity as well.

People along Louisiana's southeastern coast hold a deep attachment to place, and this shows in the urgency of the narratives David M. Burley collects here. The meanings that residents attribute to coastal land loss reflect a tenuous and uprooted sense of self. The process of coastal land loss and all of its social components, from the familial to the political, impacts these residents' concepts of history and the future. Burley updates many of his subjects' narratives to reveal what has happened in the wake of the back-to-back disasters of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

... Read more

10. Geography of Louisiana
by Elaine G. Yodis, Craig E. Colten
 Paperback: Pages (2007)

Isbn: 0073393746
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars Text Book
Delivery was a bit slow, but the book was in really good condition and a good price! ... Read more


11. Louisiana Geography Projects: 30 Cool, Activities, Crafts, Experiments & More for Kids to Do to Learn About Your State (Louisiana Experience)
by Carole Marsh
Paperback: 32 Pages (2003-05)
list price: US$5.95 -- used & new: US$4.50
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0635018373
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12. Coastal plant geography of Mauritius (Louisiana State University studies)
by Jonathan D Sauer
 Unknown Binding: 153 Pages (1961)

Asin: B0006AXB4G
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13. Geography of Louisiana
by David Johnson
Paperback: Pages (1998-06)
list price: US$38.70
Isbn: 0072281308
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14. Louisiana Geography Introduction: Shrewsbury, Louisiana, Simpson, Louisiana, Sikes, Louisiana, Houma - Bayou Cane - Thibodaux Metropolitan Area
Paperback: 530 Pages (2010-09-15)
list price: US$59.12 -- used & new: US$59.12
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1157111181
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Chapters: Shrewsbury, Louisiana, Simpson, Louisiana, Sikes, Louisiana, Houma - Bayou Cane - Thibodaux Metropolitan Area, Port Hudson, Louisiana, Last Island, Louisiana, Toledo Bend Reservoir, Galvez, Louisiana, Robert, Louisiana, Tchefuncte River, Lafayette Regional Airport, Midland, Louisiana, Lafreniere Park, Tangipahoa River, Bethany, Louisiana, Jarreau, Louisiana, Cancer Alley, Prairieville, Louisiana, Manchac, Louisiana, Indian Bayou, Louisiana, Intracoastal City, Louisiana, Black Lake, Tickfaw River, Port Hudson State Historic Site, Lacassine, Louisiana, Delacroix Island, Louisiana, Bourg, Louisiana, Belle Alliance, Louisiana, Ponchatoula Creek, Bush, Louisiana, St. Amant, Louisiana, Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, Elysian Fields Avenue, Lake St. Catherine, Lettsworth, Louisiana, Beauregard Town, Mowata, Louisiana, Convent, Louisiana, Ventress, Louisiana, Keithville, Louisiana, Melrose, Louisiana, Charon, Louisiana, Louisiana Highway 3260, Lottie, Louisiana, Rigolets, Cloutierville, Louisiana, Innis, Louisiana, Lyons Point, Louisiana, Gibson, Louisiana, Vacherie, Louisiana, Driskill Mountain, Louisiana Highway 1040, Oscar, Louisiana, Acy, Louisiana, Colyell, Louisiana, Valverda, Louisiana, Lake, Louisiana, Frellsen, Louisiana, Almedia, Louisiana, Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge, West South Central States, Dutchtown, Louisiana, Eugene Island Block 330 Oil Field, Duplessis, Louisiana, Pontiff Playground, Louisiana State Museum, Mccrea, Louisiana, Holden, Louisiana, River Parishes, Mermentau River, Grand Cote National Wildlife Refuge, Calhoun, Louisiana, Hobart, Louisiana, Big Branch Marsh National Wildlife Refuge, Bayou Des Cannes, Bayou Queue de Tortue, Bayou Nezpique, Cameron Prairie National Wildlife Refuge, Old River Control Structure, Houma-Terrebonne Airport, Shell Keys National Wildlife Refuge, Coteau Holmes, Louisiana, Shreveport Downtown Airport, Catahoula National Wildlife Refuge, Tensas River National Wil...More: http://booksllc.net/?id=4872653 ... Read more


15. Photojournal: The Cajun Mardi Gras in Southwest Louisiana.: An article from: Focus on Geography
by Malcolm Comeaux
 Digital: 12 Pages (2010-03-22)
list price: US$9.95 -- used & new: US$9.95
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Asin: B003Z6SEXG
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Product Description
This digital document is an article from Focus on Geography, published by American Geographical Society on March 22, 2010. The length of the article is 3434 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Photojournal: The Cajun Mardi Gras in Southwest Louisiana.
Author: Malcolm Comeaux
Publication: Focus on Geography (Magazine/Journal)
Date: March 22, 2010
Publisher: American Geographical Society
Volume: 53Issue: 1Page: 14(10)

Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning ... Read more


16. Louisiana, a geography
by Oscar Douglas Abington
 Unknown Binding: 186 Pages (1989)

Asin: B000720BLE
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17. Geography of Louisiana: List of Louisiana Parishes by French-Speaking Population, Western Gulf Coastal Grasslands, Big Creek Bottom
Paperback: 34 Pages (2010-09-15)
list price: US$14.14 -- used & new: US$14.13
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1157100074
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Chapters: List of Louisiana Parishes by French-Speaking Population, Western Gulf Coastal Grasslands, Big Creek Bottom, Marsh Island, Geography of Shreveport, Vermilion Bay, Timbalier Bay, Timbalier Island, Saint Helena Meridian, Louisiana Meridian, Acadian Coast. Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 32. Not illustrated. Free updates online. Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: The list of Louisiana parishes by French-speaking population was created from the 2000 Census of the United States. Census collects data on languages spoken at home by inhabitants of Louisiana five years of age or more. Responses "French" and "Cajun" are included. Statewide, out of a population 5 years and older of 4,152,122, some 179,750 people reported French as their home language, while 14,365 reported "Cajun". A further 4,465 who reported French Creole and are not counted below. ...More: http://booksllc.net/?id=10231194 ... Read more


18. Geography of Shreveport, Louisiana: Bossier City, Louisiana
Paperback: 42 Pages (2010-05-31)
list price: US$14.14 -- used & new: US$14.13
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Asin: 1156180422
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Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Bossier City, Louisiana - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia In the 1830s Bossier City was known as Bennett's Bluff. Bennett's Bluff was named after William Bennett, who with his wife Mary Ciley and his business partner James Cane, owned a plantation near the Red River, in now south Bossier. The Cane ... Read more


19. Time and Place in New Orleans: Past Geographies in the Present Day
by Richard Campanella
Hardcover: 208 Pages (2002-04-30)
list price: US$45.00 -- used & new: US$31.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1565549910
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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New Orleans seems to occupy a special geography as unique as its spicy cuisine or its spirited jazz music. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (3)

3-0 out of 5 stars Very Interesting But Poorly Designed
Here's a geography book in coffee-table guise that has a lot going for it: expert research, generous format and a sympathetic publisher. It's a valuable addition to standard academic textbooks about the Crescent City. The author deftly peels back the strata that define New Orleans and make it all the more evanescent. I learned a great deal about the hidden realm squirming under our feet here in N'awlins. However: The book is, to put it simply, 10 pounds of good intention in a 5 pound bag. The author has analyzed the geography and its effect on the city from so many angles, with so much data, that the effect is overwhelming, even to a professional technical writer such as myself. As much as possible was shoe-horned into this book, without considering readability. A magnifying glass is a must for the small text and even smaller captions on the amazing number of graphs and charts. Geography is Campanella's forte, but social history is not: he is out of his depth trying to revisit the Creole/American boundary question. The designer and publisher should have tactfully reined in the author's manic approach, and the result would have been a much better, more taut tome.

4-0 out of 5 stars Terrific book for looking below the surface
I admit to being fascinated by pictorial histories of cities. I enjoy being able to stand on a street corner, or on the observation deck of a tall building, with such a book in hand and "see" into the past. All cities are formed by their geography and this is perhaps truer for New Orleans than most. Campanella, an environmental analyst and historical geographer, and the author of _New Orleans Then and Now,_ begins with the problematic founding of the city (the malarial swampland between the river and the lake wasn't anyone's first choice). As the city expanded, land reclamation became necessary, but this was complicated by the high water table and the need for a complex drainage system. Its geography also formed the city's culture, its districts, neighborhoods, nodes, street patterns, and shifting industrial center. But many readers may be less interested in the civil engineering case studies and more attentive to this coffee-table volume's glossy photographs, many of them aerial. And most residents of the Crescent City will agree with his description of St. Charles Avenue as the city's "spinal cord" and perhaps be surprised to learn that many of the radiating streets of their city are the exact descendants of footpaths traced on early maps.

5-0 out of 5 stars A highly recommended topographical & geographical portrayal
Time And Place In New Orleans: Past Geographies In The Present Day by Richard Campanella (Assistant Director of Environmental Analysis at the Center for Bioenvironmental Research at Tulane and Xavier Universities) is a trip through time, showcasing the history of New Orleans in words and color photography, and illustrating its most notable geographical and architectural landmarks. From the problematic founding of New Orleans to the mixture of cultural elements that make it so distinctive today, Time And Place In New Orleans is a truly informative and highly recommended topographical and geographical portrayal of the growth and development of an American city lying along the curved banks of the Mississippi River. ... Read more


20. Those Strange Louisiana Names
by Codman Parkerson
 Paperback: Pages (1969-06)
list price: US$3.95 -- used & new: US$15.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1579800386
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Great Coffee Table Book
This brief book is an excellent length to read through in a sitting.It's a very interesting collection of history and curiosity satisfaction.

4-0 out of 5 stars A fine gift for yourself or a friend moving to Louisiana.
This very short book lists names of places,rivers, bayous, and lakes in Louisiana.It givesthe origin and meaning of the name, and the native American tribe that it was derived from. If you live in or are moving to Louisiana you will enjoy this book; a great gift too.Mike Waldon ... Read more


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