(Part 3) Top products from r/NewOrleans

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We found 21 product mentions on r/NewOrleans. We ranked the 273 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/NewOrleans:

u/parkeea · 3 pointsr/NewOrleans

And since this is /r/NewOrleans and we like to keep it local, check out this good read by Rich Cohen, The Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America's Banana King

> When Samuel Zemurray arrived in America in 1891, he was tall, gangly, and penniless. When he died in the grandest house in New Orleans sixty-nine years later, he was among the richest, most powerful men in the world. In between, he worked as a fruit peddler, a banana hauler, a dockside hustler, and a plantation owner. He battled and conquered the United Fruit Company, becoming a symbol of the best and worst of the United States: proof that America is the land of opportunity, but also a classic example of the corporate pirate who treats foreign nations as the backdrop for his adventures. In Latin America, when people shouted “Yankee, go home!” it was men like Zemurray they had in mind.

> Rich Cohen’s brilliant historical profile The Fish That Ate the Whale unveils Zemurray as a hidden kingmaker and capitalist revolutionary, driven by an indomitable will to succeed. Known as El Amigo, the Gringo, or simply Z, the Banana Man lived one of the great untold stories of the last hundred years. Starting with nothing but a cart of freckled bananas, he built a sprawling empire of banana cowboys, mercenary soldiers, Honduran peasants, CIA agents, and American statesmen. From hustling on the docks of New Orleans to overthrowing Central American governments, from feuding with Huey Long to working with the Dulles brothers, Zemurray emerges as an unforgettable figure, connected to the birth of modern American diplomacy, public relations, business, and war—a monumental life that reads like a parable of the American dream.

u/2drums1cymbal · 8 pointsr/NewOrleans

Gumbo Tales - by Sara Roahan -- The most beautifully written book about New Orleans cuisine I've ever encountered. Hilarious, poignant, reflective, uplifting and sad. Don't read if you're hungry. Or if you're not near food because you will become hungry.

The World that Made New Orleans -- Ned Sublette -- A narrative history book that looks at all the cultures, people, government systems and all the historical events that shaped the formation of New Orleans. Great read, if only for the chapter where the author incredulously wonders why people would argue Thomas Jefferson didn't sleep with his slaves.

Nine Lives - Dan Baum -- An oral history of nine New Orleanians that lived through Hurricane Betsy and Hurricane Katrina. Includes tales from the wife of legendary Mardi Gras Indian Tootie Montana, marching band director Wilbert Rawlins (also featured in "The Whole Gritty City") and the President of the Rex Organization, among others. Beautifully composed and written.

City of Refuge - Tom Piazza -- Historical fiction following a group of people as they recover from Katrina. Looks at people from every walk of life in New Orleans and does a great job of transmitting their individual struggles in the wake of the storm.

New Orleans, Mon Amour -- A collection of writings and short stories about life in New Orleans. Probably the most romanticized of all the books I've listed but no less awesome.

I also have to second the recommendations made for Confederacy of Dunces (one of the funniest, laugh-out-loud books you'll ever read) and the Moviegoer.

(Edit: City of Refuge is fiction)

u/acalmerkarma · 3 pointsr/NewOrleans

I also highly recommend Frenchmen, Desire, Good Children And Other Streets Of New Orleans. Super fascinating in that it relates history of different areas by street names and the sotries behind them.

u/PapaverDream · 2 pointsr/NewOrleans

Try Robert Penn Warren's All the King's Men for a great fictional read. I've linked you here to the restored edition of the text, which is the verdion I studied at UNO and heavily recommend.

The location setting of the book is never explicitly said, though it has heavy parallels to Huey Long. In discussions about what our state book should be, this is the book I always suggest. I absolutely adore Confederacy of Dunces, of course, but Confederacy is way too New Orleans-centric to really be a good candidate for our state book.

All the King's Men is engaging and well written and will leave parts of your soul empty.

u/Eileen_Palglace · -1 pointsr/NewOrleans

I think I don't know enough about civil engineering to say, and I'm pretty confident you don't either. If you've got specific evidence of malfeasance or corruption, bring it and I'll probably believe you—it's not like there hasn't been such before—but kneejerk cynicism ain't evidence. This is a totally unprecedented problem, with a vast number of unknowns and shifting conditions as I already pointed out. It seems ludicrous to me to assume with total confidence that you can predict what dollar figure should fix it.

Here. Pick up a copy of this. It's not only a great humor book, it's the best guide I've ever read to why simplistic demands like yours about complex engineering problems like theirs just don't mean jack shit. (Heh. You wouldn't happen to be an executive by any chance? You sure talk like one.)

u/SoundAGiraffeMakes · 2 pointsr/NewOrleans

Inside the Carnival was a pretty great book that goes through all the best highlights of Louisiana politics... the big-name all stars, why we vote at strange times, why our system is different than the 'other 49 normal states.' It's non-fiction though.... or at least as non-fiction as Louisiana politics can be.

Seriously though, funny... except when it's depressing.

u/weischris · 3 pointsr/NewOrleans

The Accidental City: Improvising New Orleans
Is pretty good, its got some dry parts, but interesting.

https://www.amazon.com/Accidental-City-Improvising-New-Orleans/dp/0674725905

u/sethgecko · 3 pointsr/NewOrleans

LSU's problem is not budget cuts. Their CS bachelor and masters programs have been unaccredited and very poor for 20 years. Their CS PhD program on the other hand is quite good but that's a completely different entity. (I'm not saying brilliant people haven't graduated from LSU CS, but those people were brilliant themselves and largely could have done without the 4 year term in undergrad since they learned more on the job than in Coates Hall)

SLU, LSU and all state universities are going through budget cuts. I'm on the advisory board for SLU and ULL and in the case of SLU in 2004, 67% of their funding came from the state. In 2014, it's down to only 28% from the state. So, tuition has gone up. The pressure for private donations has risen sharply. But despite this SLU CS revamped the department in 2005 including modern technology into the curriculum, modern theoretical concepts and increased its student project exposure with modern technology and techniques many times over.

So while LSU recently added a class incorporating AngularJS in it, SLU has been teaching students cutting edge technology and theory and technics like SOLID principles, MVC and now AngularJS for a decade now. I was directly involved in SLU continuing their ABET accreditation 6 years ago and wasn't even needed for the 2014 check. SLU is also constructing a new building for CS, despite having build a new for them less than 16 years ago. I don't know how I feel about it but whatever, it's a perk.

The difference isn't money, it's people. SLU and ULL CS profs have LSU profs beat by a country mile. The SLU curriculum is constantly adapted for the industry. The student focus is experience and application of the theoretical techniques. The theory classes will teach you a dictionary is faster than a list and in the project courses, which start sophomore year, you will see why and will never forget it.

Consulting firms cherry pick ULL and SLU junior project presentations for new hires while LSU CS graduates are largely unimpressive until their 3 year maturity.

So snag a used copy of the cs bible and give Doc a call.

u/fakejoebiden · 3 pointsr/NewOrleans

Race and Reunion by David Blight is an amazing book that very clearly traces the rise of the Lost Cause narrative of the Civil War and the incredible effort that Confederate veterans and, to a great extent, northern politicians put in to re-framing the meaning of the Civil War in the post-war period. It's a really amazing story, one that is woefully misunderstood today.

u/markreid504 · 2 pointsr/NewOrleans

Gilbert Din's book is perhaps the most researched of them all. It's an incredible story of an incredible group of people really. If you have any questions, PM me.

u/donasay · 7 pointsr/NewOrleans

The last madam. It's about Norma Wallace and the brothel she ran at 1026 Conti st for close to 50 years.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Last-Madam-Orleans-Underworld/dp/0306810123

u/saybruh · 2 pointsr/NewOrleans

if you are looking for a little bit of crime history, read http://www.amazon.com/Mafia-Kingfish-Marcello-Assassination-Kennedy/dp/0451164180

also look for articles by Connie Atkinson.

u/having_said_that · 1 pointr/NewOrleans

You're so sensitive.

This thread among historians may be interesting to read:
http://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/yoyys/your_opinion_how_accurate_is_it_to_say_the_civil/?sort=top

I like this comment:

>I like to say that, to someone who learned about the civil from high school, the civil war was about slavery. To someone who took civil war history as an undergrad the war was about conflicting economic systems, tariffs, regional cultural differences, or something else. And that to the grad student studying the war, it was about slavery.

I've also heard good things about this book:

http://www.amazon.com/What-This-Cruel-War-Over/dp/0307277321