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In
Chasing the White Dog, journalist Max Watman traces the historical roots
and contemporary story of hooch. He takes us to the backwoods of
Appalachia and the gritty nip joints of Philadelphia, from a federal
courthouse to Pocono Speedway, profiling the colorful characters who make
up white whiskey's lore. Along the way, Watman chronicles his hilarious
attempts to distill his own moonshine -- the essential ingredients and the
many ways it can all go wrong -- from his initial ill-fated batch to his
first successful jar of 'shine. It begins in Monongahela,
Pennsylvania, where drunk and armed outlaws gathered in the summer of
1794. George Washington mustered 13,000 troops to quell the rebellion, but
by the time they arrived, the rebels had vanished; America's first
moonshiners had packed up their stills and moved on. From these
moonshiners who protested the Whiskey Tax of 1791, to the bathtub gin
runners of the 1920s, to today's booming bootleg businessmen, white
lightning has played a surprisingly large role in American history. It
touched the election of Thomas Jefferson, the invention of the IRS, and
the origins of NASCAR. It is a story of tommy guns, hot rods, and shot
houses, and the story is far from over.
Infiltrating every aspect of small-scale distilling in
America, from the backyard hobbyists to the growing popularity of
microdistilleries, Chasing the White Dog provides a fascinating,
centuries-long history of illicit booze from an unrepentant lover of
moonshine. Max Watman is the author of Race Day, which was an
editors’ choice in the New York Times Book Review. He was the horse racing
correspondent for the New York Sun and has written for various
publications on books, music, food, and drink. He lives in the Hudson
Valley with his wife and son.
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