A Tale of Two Alabamas
File: Hamill Macro Updated Created on: 5/22/2007 2:37 PM Last Printed: 5/22/2007 2:38 PM BOOK REVIEW A TALE OF TWO ALABAMAS Susan Pace Hamill* ALABAMA IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY. By Wayne Flynt.** Awarded the 2004 Anne B. and James McMillan Prize. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 2004. Pp. 602. Illustrations. $39.95. * Professor of Law, University of Alabama School of Law. Professor Hamill gratefully acknowl- edges the support of the University of Alabama Law School Foundation, the Edward Brett Randolph Fund, the William H. Sadler Fund, and the staff at the Bounds Law Library, especially Penny Gibson, Creighton Miller, and Paul Pruitt, and also appreciates the hard work and insights from her “Alabama team” of research assistants, led by Kevin Garrison and assisted by Greg Foster and Will Walsh. I am especially pleased that this Book Review is appearing in the issue honoring my colleague Wythe Holt, whose example and support expanded for me the realm of what scholarship can be and do. ** Professor Emeritus, Auburn University; formerly Distinguished University Professor of History, Auburn University. Flynt is the author of eleven books, which have won numerous awards, including the Lillian Smith Book Award for nonfiction, the Clarence Cason Award for Nonfiction Writing, the Out- standing Academic Book from the American Library Association, the James F. Sulzby, Jr., Book Award (three times), and the Alabama Library Association Award for nonfiction (twice). His most important books include ALABAMA: THE HISTORY OF A DEEP SOUTH STATE (1994), a book he co-authored that is widely viewed as the finest single-volume history of an individual state and was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, POOR BUT PROUD: ALABAMA’S POOR WHITES (1989), which also was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, and DIXIE’S FORGOTTEN PEOPLE: THE SOUTH’S POOR WHITES (1979), which was reissued in 2004.
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