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Old Man River: The Mississippi River in North American History

par Paul Schneider

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10912249,851 (3.23)1
A fascinating account of how the Mississippi River shaped America.
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An easy read but the history was rather shallow. To do the massive subject justice the book would need to be thousands of pages long. Try to review the history of the Mississippi watershed from early pre-historic times until today just could not be covered well in such a short work.

What was there was interesting but I would have liked much more detail & depth. Very few pages or time was spent on modern history and the history/impact of floods over time. ( )
  labdaddy4 | Mar 11, 2014 |
A thoroughly entertaining read spanning prehistory through present day about a lifeline through the heart of the U.S. Having traveled along the Mississippi River so many times, I was quite familiar with a number of towns and sites mentioned in the book as well as the general history. However, there was so much more that Schneider brings to light that makes me want to explore the length of this great river all the more. Also, the book is written in a relaxed and engaging manner. If you're looking for an interesting and comprehensive read in preparation for your Mississippi River exploration, I recommend this book to you. ( )
  KateBaxter | Dec 24, 2013 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
A big sprawling book as wide as the Mississippi drainage in its scope, and as meandering as the lower course of the river. Beginning five hundred million years ago, Schneider briefly traces the history of the land through drifting and rifting continents, seaways, and mountain ranges to the formation of the proto-Mississippi sixty five million years ago. He then leaps forward to 1841 and the discovery of dinosaur fossils in Missouri. Then it's back and forth through Folsom points and glaciations, early civilizations and the author's own wanderings, Spanish and French exploration, and (eventually) the Civil War. The short chapters keep the narrative moving, and if there is more coverage of the east half of the drainage and its relatively recent human history than I would have liked, as opposed to the westward expansion - well, I suppose an author can't please everyone. I did eventually read the whole book and mostly enjoyed it, but for me it's not a keeper. YMMV. ( )
  gwernin | Oct 29, 2013 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Author Paul Schneider has characterized this book as more a biography that a history. 'Old Man River' tells the stories of the Mississippi River - - its tributaries and drainages. Tracing the history from its prehistoric, ice age, Paleolithic roots, Schneider touches on geologic history, archaeological evidence, and anthropological findings to weave together the tales and legends of this river system. The river has been the scene of historical events with ancient cultures followed by the arrival of European explorers and American settlers. Schneider's book continues to present day examination of this busiest waterway of the planet - - a natural wonder that has been shaped and reshaped. It's modern history is American history. (lj) ( )
  eduscapes | Oct 20, 2013 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Paul Schneider’s Old Man River is a book that defies easy categorization. It touches on history, geography, geology, archaeology, and flood-control engineering—with elements of travel narrative and popular natural history thrown in—but is not, strictly speaking, about any of those things. The geographic scope of the book is equally broad: not just the river itself, but its tributaries and drainage basin, which encompasses nearly half of North America. Old Man River, like Walt Whitman, contains multitudes.

How well all this works for you will depend, to a great extent, on what you want out of the book. Old Man River is neither a conventional, steadily paced narrative history, like John Barry’s Rising Tide, nor a sharply delineated but well-rounded study of a place, like John McPhee’s The Pine Barrens. It is a loosely organized collection of self-contained, stand-alone pieces—some chapter-length, others little more than vignettes—that suggests a more accurate subtitle might have been: “Things about the history of the Mississippi Basin that interested me.” Antebellum river pirates thus get attention out of all proportion to their historical significance, while the drier subject of the Mississippi’s role in industrialization and the rise of the “rust belt” goes begging. The discovery of the famous Folsom and Clovis (NM) archaeological sites in the 1920s lose most of their historical context, and are related instead to Schneider’s own discoveries of Native American artifacts.

None of this makes Old Man River a bad book, or even an unsuccessful one. Schneider writes beautifully, and readers whose interests match his will likely be enthralled. It is, however, a book more likely to please fans of literary nonfiction than those seeking a serious, detailed study of the Mississippi and its impact on the humans around it. ( )
1 voter ABVR | Oct 14, 2013 |
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He is blessed over all mortals who loses no moment of the passing life in remembering the past. -- Henry David Thoreau
One cannot see too many summer sunrises on the Mississippi. -- Mark Twain
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For my father, Peter, and my son, Nathaniel.
And also, for Jack Macrae, good friend and editor.
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It doesn't matter from what perspective you look at the river in the middle of the continent -- geologically, ecologically, prehistorically, ethnographically, economically, industrially, socially, musically, literarily, culturally, or over the gunnels of your canoe midstream.
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A fascinating account of how the Mississippi River shaped America.

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