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THEY CALLED US RIVER RATS

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Description

They Called Us River Rats: The Last Batture Settlement of New Orleans is the previously untold story of perhaps the oldest outsider settlement in America, an invisible community on the annually flooded shores of the Mississippi River. This community exists in the place between the normal high and low water line of the Mississippi River, a zone known in Louisiana as the batture. For the better part of two centuries, batture dwellers such as Macon Fry have raised shantyboats on stilts, built water-adapted homes, foraged, fished, and survived using the skills a river teaches.

Until now the stories of this way of life have existed only in the memories of those who have lived here. Beginning in 2000, Fry set about recording the stories of all the old batture dwellers he could find: maritime workers, willow furniture makers, fishermen, artists, and river shrimpers. Along the way, Fry uncovered fascinating tales of fortune tellers, faith healers, and wild bird trappers who defiantly lived on the river.

They Called Us River Rats also explores the troubled relationship between people inside the levees, the often-reviled batture folks, and the river itself. It traces the struggle between batture folks and city authorities, the commercial interests that claimed the river, and Louisiana’s most powerful politicians. These conflicts have ended in legal battles, displacement, incarceration, and even lynching.

Today Fry is among the senior generation of “River Rats” living in a vestigial colony of twelve “camps” on New Orleans’s river batture, a fragment of a settlement that once stretched nearly six miles and numbered hundreds of homes. It is the last riparian settlement on the Lower Mississippi and a contrarian, independent life outside urban zoning, planning, and flood protection. This book is for everyone who ever felt the pull of the Mississippi River or saw its towering levees and wondered who could live on the other side.


Reviews

"The batture has long been the most liminal of spaces in New Orleans, part land, part water, part urban, part rural. Here, finally, is the inside story of the city’s last batture community, told by long-time ‘river rat’ Macon Fry. Readers will learn how life in one of America’s most unusual neighborhoods imparts an important lesson about living with nature. "

- Richard Campanella, geographer, author, and professor at Tulane University School of Architecture

"Macon Fry’s They Called Us River Rats is a tour through a landscape most people never hear about—the thin brown line of occupied borderland between New Orleans’ Mississippi River levees and the river itself. Few souls have been hardy enough to stake a claim there and stick it out through storms, floods, and the attrition of time. Fry is one of them, and this book—part memoir, part natural history, part social history—is a unique, fascinating ride. "

- Tom Piazza, author of Why New Orleans Matters and City of Refuge

"A very cool book about a very cool place to live. "

- Roy Blount Jr., author of Feet on the Street: Rambles Around New Orleans and Save Room for Pie: Food Songs and Chewy Ruminations

"The New Orleans batture lies on the banks of the Mississippi River, outside of the city’s levee system, not a place just anyone would want to live, as Macon Fry has done for decades. They Called Us River Rats is a captivating recounting of that time, but also a history of the community, who for centuries, has chosen to call the batture home. His exhaustive knowledge of the river and its denizens is enhanced by his narrative mastery and elegant prose. Fry’s book is an exceptional and very necessary addition to the New Orleans literary and historical canon. "

- Nancy Dixon, editor of N.O. Lit: 200 Years of New Orleans Literature and New Orleans & the World, 1718–2018 Tricentennial Anthology