Southern Comfort: The Garden District of New Orleans SYNOPSIS
The Garden District of New Orleans is known for its graciousness and ease. This book, filled with color photographs, details the architecture and life of the area. Also included is information on the homes in the city, the planners of this area, and early visitors, such as Mark Twain.
FROM THE CRITICS
Booknews
This edition features lavish color photographs and interior shots to jazz up the b&w ones demonstrating why the stately ante- and post-bellum mansions with their formally landscaped grounds have made this 1830s New Orleans planned urban district as tourist- and study-worthy as the raucous Latin Quarter. The house of neo-Gothic writer Anne Rice lurks from the back cover. Originally published by MIT Press, 1989. 10x10". Distributed by Chronicle Books. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
Antiques Journal
Author of the respected history, New Orleans Unmasked, S. Frederick Starr is a well-known authority on the history and culture of New Orleans. Southern Comfort: The Garden District of New Orleans is equally well-known for the popularity and critical acclaim of its first edition quickly sold out. A testament to the book's scholarship and the enduring popularity of and interests in the historic Garden District of New Orleans.
As much a cultural history as it is an architectural one, Southern Comfort tells much of its story through the histories of the architects, homeowners, developers, and laborers who shaped this extraordinary neighborhood. Author and historian Starr brings readers back not only to the historical origins of the city but also into the home themselves. Chapters discuss such founding magnates as James Robb, the lives of the most significantly influential city planners and architects, and the way of life in an antebellum society for both the wealthy master and mistress as well as slave, servant, and retainer.