
Taking Flight
Jun 19, 2008
By: Elizabeth Dewberry
After Katrina, a New Orleans artist strives to connect art and the environment
Forever Pine
Jun 19, 2008
By: Sandy Lang
A Louisiana company salvages precious wood and gives it new life
The String King
Jun 19, 2008
By: Matt Hendrickson
T Bone Burnett on growing up in Fort Worth, playing with Bob Dylan, and why Andy Warhol matters to music
Bug Off
Jun 18, 2008
By: Roy Blount Jr.
You have to be tricky to get even with pesky flies
Guitar God
Jun 13, 2008
By: Donovan Webster
In the hills of southwest Virginia, Wayne Henderson makes music by hand
Horse Sense
Jun 13, 2008
By: Damon Lee Fowler
An Atlanta architect sets a new standard for equestrian centers
Church in the Woods
Jun 13, 2008
By: Roger Pinckney
At the ruins of an old church, a family honors a tradition begun generations before
Compost Happens
Apr 22, 2008
By: Roy Blount Jr.
How to make a dirt pile worth believing in
Lapdog
Apr 22, 2008
By: Charles Gaines
How I was trained by my Yorkie
Minton Sparks Catches Fire
Apr 22, 2008
By: Marshall Chapman
The love child of Flannery O'Connor and Hank Williams lights up the stage
The Flower Doctor
Apr 22, 2008
By: Rosa Shand
A South Carolina neurologist cultivates his legacy through a stunning rare Southern plant
Blade Maker
Apr 22, 2008
By: Monte Burke
Jerry Fisk can turn just about any hunk of metal into a very sharp work of art
The Call Master
Feb 21, 2008
By: Bryan Keith Hunter
A North Carolina woodworker crafts one-of-a-kind birdcalls
Garden Retreat
Feb 14, 2008
By: Allston McCrady
A South Carolina designer reinterprets a classic garden structure
Southern Crew
Feb 14, 2008
By: Elizabeth Connor
Rowing in Tennessee’s Secret City Head Race
Blues Train
Jan 07, 2008
By: Ravi Howard
An afternoon with cultural critic Albert Murray
Tower Power
Jan 07, 2008
By: Steve Eubanks
Architect Keith Summerour takes his vision of vertical living to rural Georgia
Ode to Bourbon
Nov 07, 2007
By: Roy Blount, Jr.
Sweet Reflection on a Sour Mash
Inside Crazy Sista's Kitchen
Nov 07, 2007
By: J. Wes Yoder
Spinning plates and swapping stories at LuLu’s in Alabama with chef and owner Lucy Buffett
Life After Politics
Nov 07, 2007
By: Alex Sanders
After losing a senatorial election, the writer finds redemption in monks and fruitcakes
Emerald Greens
Nov 06, 2007
By: Steve Eubanks
Two Southern cousins dream up Doonbeg Golf Club in Ireland
Mumsy's Big Move
Nov 06, 2007
By: Charlie Geer
A Southern grandmother heads west to forget
Shifting Tides
Sep 24, 2007
By: John Barry
Relying on the Mississippi to rebuild New Orleans
Mating Game
Sep 24, 2007
By: Barbara Ensrud
Pairing bird and bottle to perfection
Bermuda White
Jun 26, 2007
By: Ben Brown
Storm-Worthy New Urbanism on the Beach
Jubilee
Jun 26, 2007
By: Jimbo Meador
Gigging Fish by Tide and Moon
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Mississippi River Road
By: A Pictorial Journey by Andy Anderson
September 25, 2007

There are some things elemental toward grace and fellowship.
credit: Andy Anderson
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A traveler twisting along the blacktop road that follows the Mississippi River between New Orleans and somewhere in northern Arkansas will see just about anything from clusters of modern housing to cloud-making factories. But away from the cities one will be startled by long colonnades of 250-year-old oak trees, brick slave cabins abandoned in hummocks of poison oak, rambling houses that have been falling down for a hundred years, cypress board by cypress board, the wood eternal refusing to give up to thunderstorms that in the summer wash them down nearly every afternoon.
One sees brick foundations of forgotten sugar mills and groves of muscle-bound live oaks that signal a home site but no home — a sight that causes one to stop the car and look for a house and find only a walkway or a front step to oblivion. Farther up the road a cluster of tombs rests out in a field, their estate, blood kin, entire context for being, lost to time. A stray palm tree or line of pecans on the flat horizon will signal a place where there used to be something, but what?
Every few miles a broad-galleried nineteenth century commissary or plantation headquarters or saloon is tightly closed up with shutters and locks as though waiting for a need to open. Some of them look to have been sealed for sixty or seventy years. They tease the observer to wonder what went on in these buildings — what is still inside. The region is marked with fading hints of its history lying toppled in the grass or padlocked behind iron shutters. If there are people about, they are working. Nobody would come out in the sun if there wasn’t something of importance to attend to. They often don’t look up as a driver passes. They don’t need to wave at people not from here.
Long sections of the river road offer up an avenue of middle-class people doing well in their out-of-the-way homeland, and other long sections show poor people living where everything is vine-wracked, sagging, weed-haunted, painted by mildew. Buildings seem homemade; little lopsided stores bear hand-lettered signs; primitive clapboard churches seem made with a jackknife; leaning houses a hundred fifty years old, unrenovated but occupied, stay up by habit. It occurs that if anyone has a job, he’s got a long drive to get to it.
Contrasting with the poverty is the antique splendor of the occasional Big House, vast porches, massive columns, billiard table lawns. Some are blindingly white restorations and are still the homes of plantation owners. Some are boarded-up, dim hulks. Even the ruins are reminders of the great wealth made off this river-fed land. Away in the back fields one sees storm-raveled, blood-rust roofs of the idle mule barns and tractor sheds. Some tracts are fallow, and the relic buildings and machinery point back in time to the rhythms of manual agriculture, to the seasonal labors demanded by the cane or cotton crop, to a time when thousands of people were in the fields working for the man who lived in the white three-story house stippled with many chimneys.
Riding some stretches of river road is like being in two centuries at once. The windowless houses emanate a spirituality suggesting that the world is constantly dissolving in wind and rain, the poor places demonstrating how it all happens — this Heraclitean fire we are caught up in, this gradual diminishing toward the next world.
The river road gives rise to many emotions, chief among them that one is in a great but incomplete museum bearing countless ambiguous fragments of past life. The whole region is like a tombstone partially erased by two centuries of bad weather.
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