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City of a Million Dreams

A History of New Orleans at Year 300

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In 2015, the beautiful jazz funeral in New Orleans for composer Allen Toussaint coincided with a debate over removing four Confederate monuments. Mayor Mitch Landrieu led the ceremony, attended by living legends of jazz, music aficionados, politicians, and everyday people. The scene captured the history and culture of the city in microcosm — a city legendary for its noisy, complicated, tradition-rich splendor. In City of a Million Dreams, Jason Berry delivers a character-driven history of New Orleans at its tricentennial. Chronicling cycles of invention, struggle, death, and rebirth, Berry reveals the city's survival as a triumph of diversity, its map-of-the-world neighborhoods marked by resilience despite hurricanes, epidemics, fires, and floods.
Berry orchestrates a parade of vibrant personalities, from the founder Bienville, a warrior emblazoned with snake tattoos; to Governor William C. C. Claiborne, General Andrew Jackson, and Pere Antoine, an influential priest and secret agent of the Inquisition; Sister Gertrude Morgan, a street evangelist and visionary artist of the 1960s; and Michael White, the famous clarinetist who remade his life after losing everything in Hurricane Katrina. The textured profiles of this extraordinary cast furnish a dramatic narrative of the beloved city, famous the world over for mysterious rituals as people dance when they bury their dead.
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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2018
      A vivid evocation of the Big Easy, whose nickname sidesteps three centuries of uneasy history.Writer and documentary film producer Berry (Render Unto Rome: The Secret Life of Money in the Catholic Church, 2012, etc.) opens with a juxtaposition of two important moments in the recent history of New Orleans: the 2015 funeral of musical legend Allen Toussaint, which "resembled an affair of state," and the fiery debate over removing Confederate statues from the city's public places. This "clash of icons" speaks to the significant question of what the city's history really is: Is New Orleans a space where transformative works of art and music have been born or a place where some of the worst angels of our nature have been let loose? The answer, of course, is both. Borrowing the thought from novelist Walker Percy that the people of New Orleans are "happiest when making money, caring for the dead, or 'putting on masks at Mardi Gras so nobody knows who they are, ' " Berry explores key moments in the clash of cultures and powers. Carved out of the scrubby Mississippi River lowlands as an entrepôt and anchor for France's inland empire, New Orleans was, by its 10th year, "a black majority town with slave labor." Indians were enslaved, too, even as the French concluded treaties with faraway Indian nations. The city was affected by both the Reign of Terror in Paris and the slave revolt in Saint-Domingue, both of which indirectly led to the acquisition of New Orleans as part of Thomas Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase--said the seller, a cash-strapped Napoleon Bonaparte, "I renounce it with the greatest regret....I require money." Confederate center, strategically important port, birthplace of jazz, setting of tragedy and disaster, and now a site of gentrification: Berry nimbly covers New Orleans in all its aspects over 300 years, "a map of the world in miniature, a blue city floating against the odds of sea rise and climate convulsions, blue forever in its long sweet song."Every major city should have such a guide to its past.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      November 15, 2018
      As the Big Easy approaches the dawn of the fourth century since its founding, journalist and documentarian Berry (Vows of Silence?, 2004) looks back with a sweeping narrative upon the multistoried history of his hometown. Between New Orleans' first emergence from the wetlands of the Mississippi River delta to its still-ongoing resurrection from the devastations of Hurricane Katrina, Berry strings together the visions, tribulations, setbacks, and triumphs from which this unique and uniquely American city arose. He focuses throughout on the lives of key figures; French founders, Spanish administrators, cotton kings and enslaved people, soldiers, spiritualists, musicians, civil activists, mayors, and Mardi Gras krewes parade along the avenues of Berry's account. Though many of these individuals are distant ones, several are people whom Berry himself has known and lived among. In this way, he adds to the broad breadth of his history with the intimate details of people whose dreams and dramas have contributed to the many-layered culture, ethnicity, and spirit of the Crescent City during its first 300 years.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from September 1, 2018
      A vivid evocation of the Big Easy, whose nickname sidesteps three centuries of uneasy history.Writer and documentary film producer Berry (Render Unto Rome: The Secret Life of Money in the Catholic Church, 2012, etc.) opens with a juxtaposition of two important moments in the recent history of New Orleans: the 2015 funeral of musical legend Allen Toussaint, which "resembled an affair of state," and the fiery debate over removing Confederate statues from the city's public places. This "clash of icons" speaks to the significant question of what the city's history really is: Is New Orleans a space where transformative works of art and music have been born or a place where some of the worst angels of our nature have been let loose? The answer, of course, is both. Borrowing the thought from novelist Walker Percy that the people of New Orleans are "happiest when making money, caring for the dead, or 'putting on masks at Mardi Gras so nobody knows who they are, ' " Berry explores key moments in the clash of cultures and powers. Carved out of the scrubby Mississippi River lowlands as an entrep�t and anchor for France's inland empire, New Orleans was, by its 10th year, "a black majority town with slave labor." Indians were enslaved, too, even as the French concluded treaties with faraway Indian nations. The city was affected by both the Reign of Terror in Paris and the slave revolt in Saint-Domingue, both of which indirectly led to the acquisition of New Orleans as part of Thomas Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase--said the seller, a cash-strapped Napoleon Bonaparte, "I renounce it with the greatest regret....I require money." Confederate center, strategically important port, birthplace of jazz, setting of tragedy and disaster, and now a site of gentrification: Berry nimbly covers New Orleans in all its aspects over 300 years, "a map of the world in miniature, a blue city floating against the odds of sea rise and climate convulsions, blue forever in its long sweet song."Every major city should have such a guide to its past.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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