Arcadia's Latest Book Offers an Illustrated Look at the Start of the Civil War

Charleston City Paper | April 12, 2011
One of the more colorful and historically specific releases of their Images of America series, Arcadia Publishing's latest Charleston-based book The First Shot is an impressive, military-themed history lesson and collection of images.

Charleston City Paper

Founded in 1997, the locally owned and operated City Paper is Charleston's only weekly alternative newspaper and the second-largest publication in the metro Charleston area. Reaching a strong mix of active, affluent locals and tourists, the City Paper has thrived...
More »
Contact for Reprint Rights
  • Market Served: Metropolitan Area
  • Address: 1049 Morrison Drive, Charleston, SC 29403
  • Phone: (843) 577-5304
www.charlestoncitypaper.com

rssTop Stories

Lizz Winstead bites back

The political pundit and creator of The Daily Show discusses the feminist elite, slut-shaming, and the difference between essay and memoir
Orlando Weekly  |  Billy Manes  |  05-09-2013  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Bankrupting Nature: Denying Our Planetary Boundaries

Global warming is but one of nine or 10 different ways in which human civilization is threatening to cross boundaries of over-consumption and overuse. These, will undermine the natural foundations on which our civilization is built.
Random Lengths News  |  Paul Rosenberg  |  04-22-2013  |  Books
More Top Stories in Books »

AAN on Twitter

More @AltWeeklies » Twitter Directory »

Making Worlds

In "The Kings and Queens of Roam," author Daniel Wallace illustrates the power words have to make worlds, both in the tragic whimsy of the world his words create and in the sad, scary world one character builds for another.
Jackson Free Press  |  Kathleen M. Mitchell  |  05-14-2013  |  Books

That Other Quagmire

Sonali Kolhatkar remembers Afghanistan, even if the rest of us don't.
OC Weekly  |  Gustavo Arellano  |  05-22-2007  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Lee on Literature: One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

How Ken Kesey's book, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, helped to significantly change public opinion about the value of state mental institutions.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Lee Miller  |  02-08-2013  |  Books