Hi, I am Jim, I love Kentucky, and traveling in and around Kentucky! I also love the entire country, and all of the beautiful and strange places here and there! This blog covers the overlooked, forgotten, and underrated places, people, and moments in history in America, with a focus on Kentucky! It will cover great tourists stops, books about people and history, and include photos and postcard scans.
Mackinac Bridge
Tuesday, January 31, 2023
Our Norwegian Jewel Cruise to Alaska September 2022
Monday, January 30, 2023
"The Klondike Fever: The Life and Death of the Last Great Gold Rush" by Pierre Berton
"The Klondike Fever" weighs in at a nearly 450 pages, not counting notes and bibliography. This is a nice, big full book.
I DID read a critical amateur online review of the book, by someone who bashed the book for not being PC enough. There are a few words in the book that most of us would not use in conversation today. 1955 was a different time, AND, an author in 1955 covering events in the late 1800s gets a solid pass in my opinion. The book is authentic and close to the timeline of the source. I appreciate a book that is so real, and not edited so as not to offend the easily offended of today.
Anyway, even at over 400 pages, I read this book quick, as Berton describes the first few prospectors finding gold (and a lot of it) in a specific area. Over a very short period of time, the landscape, the people and the economy associated with it are changed forever. Towns develop, local economies are formed, and norms are established. The author really gives a good description of the characters, the places and the events that happen.
Of course, all sorts of issues pop up. Boats are used (and OVER used) in getting people there. Paths and trails are established. Fortunes are made not just on the gold, but on selling things to the prospectors that they forgot to bring, or didn't realize they may want once there (kittens anyone?). AND, in an area plentiful with gold, the value of the dollar gets greatly distorted.
AND, as all good things come to an end..... That happens with the gold rush too.
The book flows nicely too. Pierre Berton tells a constant stream of short stories moving the events along. Yes, he is talking about thousands of prospectors coming to an area, setting up, and then moving along- but the story is told weaving in and out of hundreds of brief, short stories about specific people at that time. There are lots of fun facts peppered in to the big story.
"The Klondike Fever" was just a fun read for me and I really enjoyed it.
Thursday, January 26, 2023
Gatlinburg Spur Tunnel repairs 2023
Tuesday, January 24, 2023
Deer Sighting Pigeon Forge Tennessee
Sunday, January 22, 2023
Burg Steakhouse in Gatlinburg Tennessee
Saturday, January 21, 2023
"Tennessee Tales the Textbooks Don't Tell" by Jennie Ivey, W. Calvin Dickinson and Lisa W. Rand
I found a nice signed copy of the book, "Tennessee Tales the Textbooks Don't Tell" recently at an antique shop and I am so glad that I found this one!
This is a great book with some simple to understand history about Tennessee. It covers all of the legendary people and places, and even has a short interesting facts chapter at the end. All 3 of the Presidents from the state are covered, as is divisions within the state during the Civil War, and of course, Elvis!
I enjoyed reading about Martin Luther King's becoming a martyr in Memphis. The authors then give information on what happened to his assassin.
The book did come out several years ago, and, at the time of writing, Brushy Mountain Prison was still a working facility. It is now (as I have mentioned on this blog several times) opened to tourists.
Anyway, I think a book like this for each state would be wonderful!
Friday, January 20, 2023
Pigeon Forge Tennessee Lights at Night in January
Wednesday, January 18, 2023
Gatlinburg Tennessee at night in January
Mean Mug Coffeehouse Fort Oglethorpe GA 10 2022
Sunday, January 15, 2023
"The Saltville Massacre" by Thomas D. Mays
Saturday, January 14, 2023
Sweet Read Books and Coffee in Woodstock Georgia
The Sweet Rad in Woodstock Georgia is a coffee/bookstore, making it one of my favorite places on Earth. VERY cool shop with cozy places to sit, and look through a potential book purchase as you sip coffee!
Wednesday, January 11, 2023
Woodstock Georgia October 2022
Tuesday, January 10, 2023
"The Smoke at Dawn" by Jeff Shaara
I have read several of the Shaara books, but I was waiting to read my copy of "The Smoke at Dawn" before going to that part of Tennessee again.
So, I finally read the 500 page volume. Its funny, because the Shaara books are huge, but they have such a great flow to them. They read like a much shorter book because it is so easy to get into them.
Another thing about the Shaara books....This isn't a dry telling of the battle, that most of us have a hard time following. Jeff Shaara (and his dad before him) really try to get into the heads of the characters. I feel like they try hard to understand, and write about the logic inside of the minds of the legendary generals.
I think the author really paints a clear picture of how the main generals (Bragg, CSA, and Rosecrans, US) came to both fail at this battle. George Thomas, Rosecrans replacement, really sticks out as a fascinating, and often overlooked (by history) character
I feel like I KNOW some of these guys better myself now too. I would absolutely expect Braxton Bragg to not get a basic joke told by a common Johnny Reb. I would also expect Jefferson Davis to defend Bragg to his mutinous army.
Sure, this is historic fiction, but I feel like I understand so much more about the players involved after reading one of Shaara's books.