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Madame Lalaurie, Mistress of the Haunted House
Madame Lalaurie Mistress of the Haunted House Author:Carolyn Morrow Long Inside the ?Most Haunted? House in New Orleans?Explores a pivotal event in a city that drips legends from every pore. In the end, Long reminds us that history has just one indisputable ?truth??the past was a complex world whose deeds continue to haunt us.??Elizabeth Shown Mills, author of Isle of Canes ?A page-turner. History, folklore, myth?thi... more »s book has it all, like almost everything in New Orleans.??Nathalie Dessens, author of From Saint-Domingue to New OrleansThe legend of Madame Delphine Lalaurie, a wealthy society matron, has haunted the city of New Orleans for nearly two hundred years.
When fire destroyed part of her home in 1834, the public was outraged to learn that behind closed doors Lalaurie routinely bound, starved, and tortured her slaves. Forced to flee the city, her guilt was unquestioned, and tales of her actions have become increasingly fanciful and grotesque over the decades. Even today, the Lalaurie house is described as the city?s ?most haunted? during ghost tours.
Carolyn Long, a meticulous researcher of New Orleans history, disentangles the threads of fact and legend that have intertwined over the decades. Was Madame Lalaurie a sadistic abuser? Mentally ill? Or merely the victim of an unfair and sensationalist press? Using carefully documented eyewitness testimony, archival documents, and family letters, Long recounts Lalaurie?s life from legal troubles before the fire and scandal through her exile to France and death in Paris in 1849.
Themes of mental illness, wealth, power, and questions of morality in a society that condoned the purchase and ownership of other human beings pervade the book, lending it an appeal to anyone interested in antebellum history. Long?s ability to tease the truth from the knots of sensationalism is uncanny as she draws the facts from the legend of Madame Lalaurie?s haunted house. Carolyn Morrow Long retired from the National Museum of American History in 2001. She is the author of A New Orleans Voudou Priestess. She lives in Washington, D.C., and New Orleans.« less