In this best-selling novel, Patrick Smith tells the story of three generations of the MacIveys, a Florida family who battle the hardships of the frontier to rise from a dirt-poor Cracker life to the wealth and standing of real estate tycoons. The story opens in 1858, when Tobias MacIvey arrives in the Florida wilderness to start a new life with his wife and infant son, and ends two generations later in 1968 with Solomon MacIvey, who realizes that the land has been exploited far beyond human need.The sweeping story that emerges is a rich, rugged Florida history featuring a memorable cast of crusty, indomitable Crackers battling wild animals, rustlers, Confederate deserters, mosquitoes, starvation, hurricanes, and freezes to carve a kingdom out of the swamp. But their most formidable adversary turns out to be greed, including finally their own.Love and tenderness are here too: the hopes and passions of each new generation, friendships with the persecuted blacks and Indians, and respect for the land and its wildlife.Patrick Smith's novel is now available for young readers. A teacher's manual is available for using A Land Remembered to teach language arts, social studies, and science coordinated with the Sunshine State Standards of the Florida Department of Education.
Patrick Smith is a 1999 inductee into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame, the highest and most prestigious cultural honor that can be bestowed upon an individual by the State of Florida. In May 2002 Smith was the recipient of the Florida Historical Society’s Fay Schweim Award as the “Greatest Living Floridian.” The one-time-only award was established to honor the one individual who has contributed the most to Florida in recent history. Smith was cited for the impact his novels have made on Floridians, both natives and newcomers to the state, and for the worldwide acclaim he has received.
Smith has been nominated three times for the Pulitzer Prize, in 1973 for Forever Island, which was a 1974 selection of the Reader’s Digest Condensed Book Club and has been published in 46 countries; in 1978 for Angel City, which was produced as a “Movie of the Week” for the CBS television network and has aired worldwide; and in 1984 for A Land Remembered, which was an Editors’ Choice selection of the New York Times Book Review. In the 2001 The Best of Florida statewide poll taken by Florida Monthly magazine, A Land Remembered was ranked #1 Best Florida Book. The novel also ranked #1 in all the polls since then. Smith’s lifetime work was nominated for the 1985 Nobel Prize for Literature, and since then he has received five additional nominations.
In 2008 he was honored with a Literary Heritage Award at the 1st Annual Heritage Book Festival in St Augustine. FLorida's Secretary of State Kurt Browning presented the award.
In 1995 Patrick Smith was elected by The Southern Academy of Letters, Arts and Science for its highest literary award, The Order of the South. Previous recipients include Eudora Welty, James Dickey, and Reynolds Price. In 1996 he was named a Florida Ambassador of the Arts, an honor given each year by the state of Florida to someone who has made significant contributions to Florida's cultural growth. In 1999 Smith was inducted into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame, which is the highest and most prestigious cultural honor the state bestows upon an individual artist. Prior inductees include writers Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Zora Neale Hurston, and Ernest Hemingway.
In October 1990 he received the University of Mississippi’s Distinguished Alumni Award and was inducted into the University’s Alumni Hall of Fame. In 1997, the Florida Historical Society created a new annual award, the Patrick D. Smith Florida Literature Award, in his honor.
Thousands of people of all ages have enjoyed his books and his talks. With his new DVD, A Sense of Place, you can spend an intimate hour with this soft-spoken author and gain an insight into the creative processes that resulted in his beloved books.
Patrick lives in Merritt Island, Florida with his wife Iris and his beloved cats.
My children and I LOVE this book. I have read it out loud to them three time over the past 7 years. Every time, we laugh louder and cry more. This book, set during the pioneer days of Florida have helped to give us a glimpse at life in the Sunshine state before Disney, before Air Conditioning, and before the beaches were over run with hotels and tourists. The characters are endearing, the story keep us entertained, and we learn a lot about our history. This is one of our favorite books.
In the story "A Land Remembered", the setting begins back in 1858, where the state of Florida is undeveloped land. The family, the MacIveys, moved down to Southern Florida to start a new life. While living there, the family dealt with many challenges ranging from foul weather to wild animals and rustlers. After being fed up with the conditions, the family decided to move west and start over with their lives. Tobias MacIvey, (the father) gets information with some Native American Indians, saying that he should get cattle and herds, to get paid for them. After Tobias had followed the Indians advice, things started to look better for the MacIveys. They were able to buy the things they wanted/ needed, and this made their lives a whole lot easier.
I really liked this book because it made me imagine what it would be like to live in that time. The book talked about three generations of the MacIvey family, and how things had drastically changed in that time. My favorite part of this book was when Tobias and Zech were hunting with their dogs and found Skilit in the woods. The calmness and the tone of the book made me want to read this novel for fun.
I would suggest this book to people of all ages, because of the history and realness the book represents. It is very language friendly and it has a peaceful tone to it. For instance, there is a scene in the book where Tobias allowed some lost Native American Indians into their home so they could eat a supper. I think more people should read this book, because it is really well done. It is a great read, and people should read this more often.
The story followed the migration of the young MacIvey family (Tobias, Emma, and their adolescent son, Zech) from the war-torn state of Georgia, 1863, into the untamed wild lands of La Florida. For the next seventeen years, the family traveled all over the state, battling the wildlife, climate, and natural habitation to stay alive and make a living. They had nothing to start with, but with ingenuity, ambition, and determination, they worked to build a successful lifestyle capturing wild cattle, herding them across the land, getting them nice and fat, and then selling them for a profit.
The work was strenuous and exhausting, and oftentimes they were met with disappointment, defeat, and tragedy. In fact, some tragedies turned graphic. (In the adult edition, they were probably extremely graphic.) They faced wild animals, swarms of insects, hurricanes, humidity, floods, freezing temperatures, rustlers, illness, and more.
Some scenarios were hard to wrap my head around, like swarms of mosquitoes choking cattle and humans to death. (I mean, I once was bit 35 times in the course of a few hours by a mosquito while I was supposed to be asleep; but I have never had thousands of mosquitos in my mouth, nose, and throat. I do hope that's a thing of the past.)
There were also successes. Tobias was doing so well for himself and was able to find extra willing men to work for him. He made so much money that he stored the coins in sacks and forgot about them. His son, Zech, decided to use the money to purchase the land they were sitting on, which happened to be twenty thousand acres at twenty cents an acre. By then, Zech was an able-bodied young man, and he found himself an educated young lady and married her.
That was a happy ending, but it is only part one. Part two continues the life of Zech and his wife and their family, which I will have to catch up with later, when I hopefully read the adult version.
I really like this book, especially because not only is it mostly funny, kid-appropriate, and entertaining in many different ways, it is also informational! I love Zec, Emma, Tobious, Frog, Bonzo, Skillet, Nip, Tuck, and of course Ishmeal!
Beautifully descriptive of what Florida must have been like when it was all wild and unsettled. The strength of the characters and what they went through to stay alive shows a strength that is hard to imagine.
In the book, A Land Remembered by Patrick D. Smith, A poor family is living in the rural parts of Florida, trying to make a living by farming during the civil war. Soon the patriarch of the family, Tobias is sent away to obsequiously help the war effort for the Confederates to repress the Union, but when he came back, his home was destroyed, and his belongings were stolen. He and his apprehensive family decide to move further south and try cattle driving. Their goal was to make it to Punta Rassa to sell the cows for money, and they met friends along the way to help them. The group made it to Punta Rassa and sold the cows for lots of money, then the family continues doing more and bigger drives. Things are usually not as bad as you think they will be. The apprehensive family thought it would be risky to grapple the journey to get their cows to Punta Rassa “In here, there is only death”, but they made it with most of their cows intact “We moved slow coming here and let ‘em eat all they wanted. They ought to go over five hundred pounds each.” Never Give up, When Tobias and Zech tried the crucible and got lost trying to find the Seminoles, they turned back and looked for a new way, even though they thought it was hopeless “There were times I didn’t think we’d make it.”, and Tobias was debased with malaria. “In his weakened condition, he allowed himself to be overruled.” Commercial Plan Ethos Pathos Logos The person offering the book is a Floridian farmer, which is what the book is about. Describes how the family in the book beats all odds just to live another day. The actor wanted to book about Floridian old time life, which is what the book is about.
Review A Land Remembered is an historical fiction story in Florida during the civil war, which the author really makes you feel like you are there. The characters possess traits that any normal farmer is the late 1800’s would need, like Tobias knows how to move around the land and to hunt, and Emma knows how to cook. The author uses words that really describe what is going on and can make things look really good, or really bad. The scene that moved me was when the family made it to Punta Rassa, and they could finally sell their cows and stop barely scraping by and refine their lives. I thought that the book was thrilling from the beginning, it makes you feel like you are with the MacIveys on their exciting journey. The author has a B.A. degree and a master’s degree in English from the university of Mississippi and was a recipient of the Florida Historical society’s fay Schweim award. This novel could affect my ability to create a commercial because it is about a family barely scraping by to survive and grappling onto the last bit of hope they have, which could be pathos. In the commercial, acting like a Floridian farmer could be ethos because that is what the book is about. The casual person in the commercial would want a book about Florida’s history, which is what the book is about, which would be Logos. While reading the novel, I learned about how rough Florida’s terrain was and how the people living there had what it takes to survive. This story made me a better reader because it had an interesting topic and gave me a good visual of what was happening, and I could easily write about it without having to look back into the book to remember what happened. The book made it easy to think about what happened because it was a well detailed story but worded clearly enough to understand it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Found this & Vol. 2 when organizing some of my boys childhood books. They had been given to us by dear friends when we lived in JAX. My friend read these books to her son's 4th grade class when studying FL history in 2006. I don't know how we never read them as the boys loved all things adventure & this certainly fit the bill! Written for students, there are some missing adult details, but I loved the books as an adult & certainly picked up a lot of FL history along the way. Couldn't write a better synopsis than what has already been written so will include for my own purposes... This is the story of three generations of MacIveys, a Florida family who battle frontier hardships to rise from a dirt-poor Cracker life to the wealth and standing of real estate tycoons. Tobias MacIvey arrives in the Florida wilderness in 1858 eking a new life with his wife Emma & infant son Zech. The saga ends in 1968 with Solomon MacIvey, who realizes the land has been exploited far beyond human need (of which he took part in). The rugged Florida history features crusty Crackers, Skillit, Frog, & Bonzo, & Seminole Indians including Towanda. Battling wild animals, rustlers, Confederate deserters, mosquitoes, starvation, hurricanes, and freezes the family carves a cattle ranching & orange grove kingdom out of the swamp. The most formidable adversary of the MacIvey family becomes greed by the third generation when Sol reaps the benefits of his father & grandfather's lifetimes of hard work. There is love, tenderness, hope & passion in each new generation, friendships with persecuted blacks & Indians, & respect for the land and its wildlife.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Everyone likes different books, but, in my opinion, A LAND REMEMBERED is pretty tedious reading. Reading it in the classroom in connection with a unit on old-Florida would work well, but the characters are too simple and plain for a required summer reading book. After the fire the protagonists (whose names I forget because they’re forgettable characters) are like, "Oh shucks, our house burned down. Oh well, let's just accept it and move on." 🤨 If my house burned down, I'd be sharing my deepest, darkest sadness and fears about it. It's just not relatable to kids today. The characters are too flat. I appreciate the simplicity of it, but to hold a kid's summer attention there needs to be more action or adventure AND emotion!
I loved this book! Since I knew virtually nothing about the history of Florida, it was fascinating from the get-go! I have ordered Volume II since the only version our library system has is the Teen version. This book starts out with the MacIvey family moving down from Georgia as the Civil War begins. They just find a safe location and begin to eke out a really hardscrabble existence. By the end of Volume 1, they have made it to become landowners, cattlemen, and orange growers. A fascinating look at "frontier" Florida.
I read this one with a student in our tutoring sessions. She would rate it 1 star and she never has a bad word to say about anything. So I was curious and asked her what made her think that. She had two reasons: 1) They ate too much raccoon stew and that is disgusting. 2) They always have too many hard times. So while I thought it did a great job describing pioneer life in Florida, she needed something with a little less adversity in it and no raccoon stew!
A Land Remembered” is a really good read about a pioneer family in Florida and how they struggle, survive, and eventually build a legacy. It’s part adventure, part family drama, and it makes you feel like you’re right there in the old Florida wilderness. The story is easy to follow but still powerful, and it shows both the beauty and the cost of progress. I’d definitely recommend it.
I read Volume 1 in one evening. I couldn't put it down. I have been wanting to read A Land Remembered for years. I loved it and am looking forward to finding Volume 2. I am a big fan of Patrick D. Smith. He has transported me to a Florida that is sadly missing in this day and age.
A wholesome good read about wild Florida and the making of America. One families journey from tents to high rises. t’s a great reminder that all progress is not good progress when it comes to development.
Many people don't know that Florida's history is based on cattle, and that the term Florida Cracker refers to herding cows as opposed to slavery. This is a great book, perhaps the only book, that covers early pioneer life in Florida from the perspective of cattle herding.
Definitely a fun and interesting read. I liked the fact that this book was about Florida so it was easy for me to picture the scenery and Florida wilderness.