"Carolyn Kolb takes readers on a delightful stroll through yesteryear, New Orleans style. Combining a visitor's wonder and a native's insight, she recalls the best of the past, both distant and recentwhat we ate, what we read, the music we heard, the traditions we cherished. Filled with anecdotes and illustrations, New Orleans Memories brings a smile to the lipsand to the heartsof those who love New Orleans."
Florence M. Jumonville, Louisiana and Special Collections Department, Earl K. Long Library, University of New Orleans
"New Orleans is so rich in history that those who care about the city need to read a book like this just to keep pace. Carolyn Kolb is an historian who looks at the past not just from the perspectives of generals and politicians, but as experienced by the everyday people who collectively established their own cultural beachhead. As a history columnist for New Orleans Magazine, her ongoing assignment has been to look for stories from contemporary historythose tales where there are still living sources who can provide recollections that might otherwise be lost forever. Not only do the columns provide entertaining reading, but they provide an important civic function by preserving memories in print. This is a book to be enjoyed, but don't delaythe future is advancing rapidly."
Errol Laborde, executive vice president and editor-in-chief for Renaissance Publishing LLC
"Almost anywhere you turn in Carolyn Kolb's delightful homage to her native city, something novel or long forgotten leaps to lifeold restaurants and recipes, defunct newspapers and shuttered bookstores, ballrooms and theaters gone to seed, plus a cast of characters as colorful as the city they once inhabited. Kolb knows these institutions and people intimately, and she writes about them with grace and circumspection."
Lawrence N. Powell, professor emeritus in the Department of History at Tulane University and author of The Accidental City: Improvising New Orleans
"Carolyn Kolb's book is titled New Orleans Memories: One Writer's City, but it encompasses anyone who has ever put pen to paper in the Crescent City. It is both personal and universal and will be a joy to read over and again."
Nell Nolan, social columnist, teacher, and actress