Brown Bag Lunch @ Pearl
For the past three decades, historian and archivist Forrest Lamar Cooper has
written a regular column for Mississippi Magazine about unusual,
fascinating aspects of the state's history, culture, products, and people.
Whether describing the Jubilee Beverage Company of Jackson, the origins of the
Mississippi State Fair, a Mississippi veteran who fought at Iwo Jima, or
Biloxi's Riviera Hotel, Cooper's "Looking Back" columns are thoroughly
researched and written with verve and clarity.
Looking Back Mississippi: Towns and Places collects thirty-nine of
Cooper's best essays on the various cities, towns, dwellings, parks, and
institutions of historical resonance. Covering all corners of the state, from
the mid-1800s to the 1930s, the volume offers an engaging, convivial alternative
history of Mississippi, one that emphasizes the obscure and small-scale over the
big picture. Each short essay is accompanied by photographic and illustrative
postcards from Cooper's private collection.
These postcards and other memorabilia give delightful visual clarity to
Cooper's historical accounts of towns as far north as Hernando and as coastal as
Pass Christian, from the Delta to the Pine Belt. Cooper focuses on Mississippi
places, and the people and events that made them famous. Much of the
architecture and even the terrain-as with the Gulf Coast's once legendary orange
groves-has disappeared, making Cooper's postcards invaluable resources for
understanding and visualizing what no longer exists. Looking Back
Mississippi provides a treasure trove of history and insight into
long-vanished corners of the state (amazon.com).
Bring a sack lunch. Drinks and desserts provided by the Friends of the Pearl Library. We hope to see you there!



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