“An idiosyncratic but often lively tour of French history . . . At turns bombastic, entertaining, eccentric, and insightful.”—Christian Science Monitor
“The author seeks to persuade readers that his adopted home is more than a lovely and endearing place . . . Writing in a breezy and informal style, Allman digs deep into Lauzerte’s history and that of Quercy. But he also shows how that history fits into wider geopolitical currents . . . [Allman is] an exuberant and entertaining raconteur.”—Washington Independent Review of Books
“Expansive . . . Ambitious . . . It’s the memoir portion about life in a small French village that will stick in your brain.”—Parade
“A mountain view of history in France. When journalist Allman bought an 800-year-old house in Lauzerte, a mountain village in southwestern France, he found himself steeped in the tumultuous history of the region, which he recounts with zesty enthusiasm in a combination of memoir, historical narrative, and travelogue . . . An engaging, richly detailed tale.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Sumptuous . . . The most penetrating aspect of Allman’s narrative is his exploration of how his relationship with the town has altered his perception of what history is and how it moves, which often takes a wry turn, as when he explains that his ‘paella man’ exemplifies an ancient ‘noblesse oblige.’ This enthralls.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“[Allman’s] writing is often brilliant, warm, and clever. The stories of present-day Lauzerte are, by turns, gripping and amusing; the details of Allman’s routines and the people of the village are touching and edifying. The historical portions emphasize brutal incidents and people . . . Best suited for fans of Allman’s work, along with readers intrigued by a little-known French town, the author’s 800-year-old house, and the book’s contemporary elements. This will appeal to readers who enjoy Martin Walker’s Bruno, Chief of Police mystery series as well.”—Library Journal
Praise for Finding Florida:
Longlisted for the National Book Award
“A take-no-prisoners account . . . Extremely timely and relevant.”—New York Times Book Review
“Gripping.”—Salon
“A magisterial rip at the state’s invaders, conquerors and rulers.”—Orlando Magazine
“A rich and lively history of Florida, minus the Disney gloss . . . [Allman] shatters five centuries of mythmaking to tell the real story. . . . A splendid rendering of the messy human story of our fourth-most populous state.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Allman’s engaging, eye-opening, and heavily researched history of Florida spans half a millennium, from the myth of Ponce de León’s Fountain of Youth to the 2012 shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, and it is a fulsome cavalcade of would-be conquistadors, epically corrupt and racist politicians, and oligarch wannabes.”—Booklist
“An immense and important work.”—Bookforum
“I loved Allman’s extraordinary book. . . . Almost every county in Florida bears the name of a butcher, a slavedriver, a madman, a scoundrel or a thief, in a state where for half a millennium the governing mandate seems to be Defeat the Truth, Triumph over Reality. T.D. Allman’s counter-narrative to all the pretty lies is a scouring hurricane of research, investigation, and soul-cleansing wrath, and I doubt there has ever been a better, or more important, book written about the Sunshine State, the birthplace of imperial hubris, American-style.”—Bob Shacochis, author of The Immaculate Invasion and The Woman Who Lost Her Soul
“Equal parts social analysis, historical review, and jeremiad, Finding Florida is a passionate, often scathing, and remarkably comprehensive encounter with a confounding, contradictory, and ever-elusive place. If your idea of hell is being chained to a galley oar between a politician and a Chamber of Commerce exec, then you are likely to love this book.”—Les Standiford, author of Last Train to Paradise
“Manuscripts repeatedly find their way into print that ignore the reality of Florida’s past and, in so doing, skew our understanding of what Florida has been, what it is now, what it’s likely to become, and what that means for everyone. T. D. Allman’s book turns all that on its head. It directly challenges the existing historiography with highly intelligent insight and crafting of narrative in a way that permits the reader to immerse himself in a world far from the expected one. Finding Florida is provocative to the point of daring. Thomas Jefferson claimed a little revolution was needed about every twenty years. Florida and its historiography is long overdue for one.”—Canter Brown, Jr., Professor of History, Fort Valley State University
“Finding Florida is fascinating, comprehensive, and accessible to the non-specialist reader. While Allman covers an enormous amount of material—taking Florida from uninhabited swampland to the sidewalk culture of South Beach—he does so in such engaging ways that the reader is never overwhelmed. Indeed, each chapter is in itself a satisfying and illuminating narrative, stock full of vivid characters. Somehow he has managed to pull together a compelling read without sacrificing historical substance, a feat to which many professional historians aspire. His wry voice conveys a point of view that gently pushes readers to understand Florida as an American synecdoche.”—Glenda Gilmore, Peter V. and C. Vann Woodward Professor of History, Yale University
“Allman provides connections between events, trends, individuals, cultures, geography and geology that all worked to shape Florida’s past and our future. But the real reason to pick up this book is that it’s a ripping good read; with its fast pace, wry humor, polished prose, and compelling story, I just could not put it down.”—Thomas Van Lent, senior scientist at the Everglades Foundation