Reed's book evolved after he was asked to be the first Sociologist to give the Louisiana State University Fleming Lectures of Southern History and is told as a story of people and their reciprocal connection to New Orleans, the French Quarter and each other. Armed with a cast of fun characters, set in Jazz age New Orleans, Reed's Dixie is the story of a fun, fleeting and artistically bountiful time in the Crescent City.
Reed knits together the individual stories of each unique and lovingly articulated member of this memorialized social circle with humor, and an appreciation for history. His book includes a historian's favorite tools, both an index and a thick section of user-friendly notes. Though only a minority of the famous creoles ever enjoyed much notoriety, those who mixed in the social circle shaped their local world together. The community that was at the center of artistic life of the Vieux Carre in the 1920's was more than just an interesting bit of serendipity. Its members used their social activities to boost one another's art within their own positions, proving the necessity of community and fraternity in artistic scenes. Reed's sociologist credentials illustrate how this circle of drinking, dancing, artistic, architecture loving, traveling, literary bunch of quasi-misfits helped to save the Montmartre of the South and nurtured a small but unapologetically Southern contribution of art, literature and culture unique as the city itself.