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| |  | General | Home » » » Moonshine Memories | | | | | | | Description: | | Signed and numbered limited edition, leatherette bound with photographs. When Tom Allison became a U.S. revenue agent in 1955 in Anniston, Alabama, he was issued a .38-caliber revolver, a badge, a box of ammunition, and a pair of handcuffs. He had to supply his own holster and a pair of lightweight boots for chasing fleeing suspects through the woods and fields and across the branches of mostly rural counties. He was later transferred to the Montgomery office, where he continued his career of enforcing the laws against illegal whiskey stills. For three decades, Allison and his fellow officers located and staked out stills, caught the "violators" when they could, and broke up their operations. Along the way he saw and heard it all, and his stories of his experiences are as potent as the shine he worked to eliminate. Here are the first-person stories of lawmen, informants, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and, of course, the shiners themselves. Allison's Moonshine Memories is part memoir, part history, part folklore, and thoroughly entertaining. | | | Product Details: | | | Author:
| Thomas R. Allison | | Paperback:
| 375 pages | | Publisher:
| NewSouth Books | | Publication Date:
| January 01, 2001 | | Language:
| English | | ISBN:
| 1588380335 | | Package Length:
| 8.96 inches | | Package Width:
| 5.97 inches | | Package Height:
| 1.01 inches | | Package Weight:
| 1.53 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 3 reviews |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 3 customer reviews )
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5 of 5 found the following review helpful:
Thomas R. Allison, MOONSHINE MEMORIESMay 16, 2001
By Harvey H. Jackson Some time back a Montgomery friend asked me to read a memoir that had been written by a former agent for the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Division (ATF) of the IRS -- a "revenuer" as they once were called. The author was Thomas R. Allison. Since much of Allison's career had been spend in northeast Alabama, my friend figured I would be interested, and he was right. So the manuscript was delivered. I read it. Encouraged my friend to encourage the author, and that was all I heard of it until a few months ago, when a copy of Moonshine Memories arrived on my desk, along with a note thanking me for all I had done. Understand this. I didn't do anything. This is the author's work and he should be justly proud. Begun as a way to tell his grandchildren about the life he led, Allison's tales grew into a full-fledged account of the one of the most legend-filled conflicts in southern history -- the cat and mouse contest between moonshiners and revenue agents. It is the story of lawmen chasing rumors, of stake-outs, of raids, of successes, and of failures, of excitement and danger, of painstaking investigations and boring dead-ends. Anyone who loves a good adventure story will love this book. But there is more to Moonshine Memories than ripping good yarns. Woven into the stories is one of the best accounts of how the illegal liquor business worked and how the men assigned to stop it did their job. Here is a look into an aspect of southern culture that, until now, has been obscure if not unknown. If you want to know what inspired songs like "Mountain Dew" and "Thunder Road," read this book. Best of all, if you like to read about southern "personalities," this book is for you. It is a fact that law enforcement and law breaking are two professions that attract unique individuals, some of whom could easily move from one profession to the other, and frequently did. Allison captures these people in print and reveals to readers a cast of characters that will delight and perplex. To sum it up, in Moonshine Memories Thomas Allison tells a good story, a funny story, an exciting story. But more than that, the story he tells preserves a part of Alabama history that is both important and entertaining. What began as a legacy for his grandchildren has become a legacy for us all.Harvey H. Jackson. Review orignially published in the Anniston Star.
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
True stories from rural AlabamaApr 26, 2001
By Foster J. Dickson
"Foster Dickson"
Tom Allison has written a great book about the ATF's work in rural Alabama and Tennessee in busting illegal liquor. There is a lot fo humor in this book and plenty of very interesting characters, all true. I understand that this was written as a memoir, but ended up being very popular. It is definitely worth reading.
Interesting Alabama HistoryOct 03, 2008
By Bama Lady I knew this author personally. This book is an account of the days he worked for ATF. Most southern states had moonshine stills operating in the deep woods and his stories are funny, poignant and well-written.
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