Bourbon A history of the American spirit

Dane Huckelbridge

Book - 2014

A history of bourbon traces its origins in the backwoods of Appalachia to the multi-billion dollar international bourbon whiskey industry today and introduces the cast of characters central to its creation and development.

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2014].
©2014.
Language
English
Main Author
Dane Huckelbridge (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
278 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliography (pages 265-270) and index.
ISBN
9780062241399
  • Prologue: America in a bottle
  • Catalans, corn beer, and the Age of Discovery
  • A tale of two Georges
  • The Scots-Irish are coming, the Scots-Irish are coming!
  • Bourbon's rebellious phase
  • Whiskey from a gilded glass
  • How the West was fun
  • An Irishman, an Italian, a Pole walk into a bar--and prohibition begins
  • G.I. Joe gets his first DUI
  • It's a small (batch) world after all
  • Epilogue: Bourbon renewal.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this raucously entertaining history of the spirit, writer Huckelbridge imbibes deeply of the heady stories of the pioneers who discovered the golden nectar and who bottled it and passed it around for all to enjoy. Huckelbridge credits the Catalan mystic Ramon Llull with developing a method of "producing hard liquor from fermented drinks low in alcohol." In the American colonies, Captain George Thorpe produced the first corn-based liquor that resembles today's bottle of Jim Beam and Maker's Mark. Huckelbridge traces the story of the golden liquid up through the American Revolution through Prohibition and up to the present. In 1897, the Pure Food and Drug Act defined what constituted real bourbon, while the Bottled-in-Bond Act provided the government's seal of authenticity for bottled whiskey, allowing bourbon to be marketed readily. Drink deeply from Huckelbridge's free-flowing stories, and you'll soon be besotted with the honeyed history of bourbon. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A mirthful, erudite appreciation of bourbon and its striking history. Journalist Huckelbridge may sound like a blend of Sam Elliott's gravelly chuckle and the down-home narrator of old Disney cartoon movies"So here we arearriving at last at that big bang' moment your Faithful Author promised the eager reader at the chapter's onset"but the man knows his bourbon from his rye and his small-batch ambrosia from his grain alcohol cut with sulfuric acid and cream of tartar. In this entertaining tour d'horizon of bourbon's birth and long, healthy life, the author dispels plenty of bogus historybourbon is not America's Founding Drink; that would be rumon his way to uncovering the drink's roots, its peregrinations, its popularity and its recent rebirth as the boutique booze of choice, "with its contrived authenticity and hints of ironic hipsterdom." Bourbon became the nation's hard drink for one reason: corn. By the time the colonists had survived their first Jamestown winterthe few who did, that isthey had figured that out, and 400 years provided ample room for a number of good bourbon stories to take shape, which Huckelbridge tells with clat: how the drink fueled the Hatfield-McCoy fight, its part in the settling of the frontier by the Scots-Irish, how the long journey to market gave it the aging the impatient distiller neglected, and how distilleries played a part in the war effort ("Plan on softening up those fortifications on Guadalcanal before your boys go? For each and every 16-inch naval shell that comes off the line, 19 gallons [of industrial alcohol] are required"). In one of the more sharp-eyed chapters, Huckelbridge tells the tale of how class and ethnic bigotry played a leading role in the passage of Prohibition and how the need for tax revenues made Congress see the light through the amber liquid. A snappy history of the popular spirit's rise and continued ascent.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.