Saturday, August 20, 2011

A Second Look at The Pirates Laffite


One of my favorite biographies is "The Pirates Laffite, the Treacherous World of the Corsairs of the Gulf,' By William C. (Jack) Davis. Published in May of 2005, this book met with good reviews, including a prominent one by the New York Times, but the horror of Hurricane Katrina killed interest in New Orleans related history by the end of the summer, and the book subsequently had mediocre sales. It merits so much better.

As a fan of Jean Laffite since the time I saw the 1958 "Buccaneer" movie when I was 9 years old in 1965, I fervently had wished for a book that would tell the true history of the privateer, minus the folklore that seemed to have a stranglehold on every biography, from Lyle Saxon's "Lafitte the Pirate" to Jack Ramsay's "Jean Laffite, Prince of Pirates." I wanted a prominent historian and skilled researcher to become as interested in the Laffites as myself, someone who could write a book on a par with Marquis James Pulitzer Prize winning biography of Andrew Jackson. Finally, in 1999, I got my wish. Davis, who is best known for his Civil War histories, just had published his "Three Roads to the Alamo" history of Bowie, Crockett and Travis, and in the process had become intrigued by Jean Laffite. He got a contract in place and began researching, contacting me for some leads. I found a new friend plus the realization of my quest.

Most of the Laffite enthusiasts at the time such as fellow members of the Laffite Society of Galveston thought there was little new to be learned about the Laffite brothers other than what had already been printed, but Davis proved them happily wrong, and boy did he, perusing thoroughly the vast holdings of original documents at the Notarial Archives of New Orleans, and visiting library locations across the United States for on-site research. He tracked down obscure and previously unknown Laffite materials including a letter written by Jean Laffite in 1814 to Edward Livingston which is at Princeton University in Livingston's papers. In Davis' travels, he gathered a formidable assortment of Laffite documents and related miscellany, all of which he evaluated with his experienced historian's eyes to sift the truth from the tall tale.

"The Pirates Laffite" is a hefty book at 706 pages, with many explanatory footnotes. The footnotes tend to scare off some readers who seem to want the "Laffite Lite" experience of Winston Groom's "Patriotic Fire: Andrew Jackson and Jean Laffite at the Battle of New Orleans," but the notes are invaluable for the added depth they give to an understanding of the Laffites' world.

Perhaps most importantly, "The Pirates Laffite" finally gives elder brother Pierre his just due. The Jean Lafitte National Historic Park is named after the more famous brother, but it was actually Pierre who was present there at Chalmette battlefield on Jan. 8, 1815.

Written superbly in a flowing narrative style, "The Pirates Laffite" has a place of honor on my bookshelves. It continues to be a valued resource into the history of the early national period in the south and the smugglers, privateers and pirates who populated the Gulf of Mexico at the time.
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Thursday, August 18, 2011

Saving the World from Nature Deficit Disorder



Richard Louv, author of "The Nature Principle, Human Restoration and the End of Nature-Deficit Disorder," is on a mission to bring people back to nature. In scientific studies he cites, Louv shows that people given a "nature prescription" actually can regain their health much quicker than those on regular pills. He likens it to zoo animals, says if we shut up zoo animals inside boxes with just windows, it would be called inhumane, but we do it all the time to office workers and other human employees. As a consequence, people become depressed and ill with a host of diseases which feed on lowered immune systems. The answer according to the author may be as simple as a walk outdoors once a day, stopping to listen to the birds and breath in the fresh air, or gardening in one's own backyard.

It seems incredible that something so simple as taking a walk outdoors can be so beneficial, but Louv claims it can, and the studies seem to back him up. Could playing video games indoors for hours be the cause of some children's attention deficit disorder and need for medication such as Ritalin? Could the answer just be to play outdoors once a day? Parents might want to study this book well.

I enjoyed "The Nature Principle" very much and heartily recommend it for its fresh look at what could help cure some diseases without medication.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Mini-Review Get Rich Click

"Get Rich Click the Ultimate Guide to Making Money on the Internet" by Marc Ostrofsky is a wonderful resource for the stay at home small business to add functionality to blogs and websites through affiliate and associate programs. This is easily one of the best and most useful books in my library, and I keep it by my computer for quick referral.

The Top Secret Seal Team Six Story


Okay, so what am I doing reading "Seal Team Six,Memoirs of an Elite Navy Seal Sniper," by Howard E. Wasdin and Stephen Templin? Normally I do not read current military books, but after Seal Team Six successfully tracked down and killed Osama bin Laden, I was curious about what sort of training these highly skilled Navy Seals have. Turns out to qualify for the Navy's best of the best, you have to be something just shy of Superman, able to hold and control your breath under water, run obstacle courses that even Iron Man competitors fail, and have a developed sixth sense about the enemy targets that borders on the paranormal. Former Seal Team Six member Wasdin relates how he managed to do all this, and utilize them on acquiring and eliminating targets pre-picked by the CIA under the White House leaders' direction.
Wasdin says the easiest part of the training for him was the obstacle course and the hardest part was the shooting range practicing close-quarters combat. He said during these training exercises, "Seal Team Six alone spent more money just on 9mm ammunition than the entire Marine Corps spent on all its ammunition."
Seal Team Six members aren't all about killing enemies: Wasdin said in Somalia he and others helped a young Somali boy get medical treatment for infections which set in after a Somali bomb took off his feet and part of one leg. To accomplish this, they had to set up a "hard entry" into the boy's home the first few times, but when the family saw they were caring for their son, they lost their fear and gratefully accepted the help.
In short, though trained to be killing machines, Seal Team Six members are in the end human just like you and me. But when they have a job to do, they do it exceedingly well.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Wild and Weird Oklahoma


Considering my area of northeast Oklahoma has the Spooklight, one of the weirdest tourist sights in the entire US, I naturally fell in love with the new book "Weird Oklahoma" by Wesley Treat and edited by Mark Sceurman and Mark Moran. Tagged the "Tri-State Spook Light,' the natural phenomenon of a ball of light gets four pages in the book along with a couple of photos! I've only seen it once, one night when I was driving in its area to visit some friends; the swaying light followed my van, stopped when I stopped, and continued when I drove on, but left me as I reached the end of its road.

I thought the Spooklight was the weirdest thing in Oklahoma, but there are plenty of other contenders for that title. For example, the Shaman's Portal in the Oklahoma Panhandle which is said to have swallowed unsuspecting travelers over the last few centuries; a beast with the head of an alligator and a humanoid body which lurked around Tahlequah in the 1840s; the Hex House of Tulsa, known as the most haunted location in that area for years; the Heavener Runestone, thought to have been created by Vikings; Gravity Hills of Bartlesville, where cars roll uphill, and loads of ghosts, murderers, eerie places, and unbelievably strange sights. Weird Oklahoma is a very entertaining book, full of color photos and fun tales of the odd to be found throughout the state, well worth perusing on a summer afternoon.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Wise Words for Potential Entrepreneurs


Got to admit I'm somewhat ambivalent in my take on Carol Roth's new business book, "The Entrepreneur Equation." If I had had this book back in 1992 when I started my professional photography business, it probably never would have gotten off the ground because Carol's business checkpoint questions would have convinced me I was doomed to failure at the get-go. But my business was a success for eight years, and I only closed it due to the accelerating technology of digital photography which made every Tom, Dick and Harry a photographer.

So should potential entrepreneurs heed Roth's warnings to take hard looks at your business prospects before opening shop? Yes, I think for the majority of people this is true, unless you want a business of what Ms. Roth calls a "jobbie," a sole proprietorship with no employees.
I had a "jobbie" at my studio; no one but me did all the work, and if I got sick, I still had to follow through with appointments, especially weddings. When I got put in the hospital briefly, the business had to be closed, and there was no one to call back the messages on the phone.

Roth wisely outlines the realities, risks and rewards of having one's own business in her book. She brings ample experience to the table, having helped clients raise more than $1 billion in capital, complete multi-million dollar mergers and acquisition deals, secure high-profile licensing and partnership deals, and create brand enthusiast programs among others.

My only beef with the book is that it seems to be more focused on the medium-sized business with employees, as she says that is the type of business which can build equity, something which is difficult if not impossible to do as a sole proprietor with no employees. So with the caveat that this book is really not for the "jobbie" intent on making crafts for Etsy or eBay, I do recommend it for posing the difficult questions which one should answer for oneself before taking out a second mortgage to start a small business.