Buy this book, it's a barn burner!--Dorothy Allison
In an extraordinarily diverse anthology of poetry, fiction, nonfiction,
and graphic narratives by contemporary Appalachian writers, Red Holler
takes us over and beyond the stock imagery of rural mountain
communities. We travel into housing projects, forest-stripped ravines,
and trailer parks, to explore vibrant hometown and migrant Appalachian
cultures. Editors John E. Branscum and Wayne Thomas have assembled a
collection spanning ten years and communities in locales ranging from
Mississippi to New York, placing fresh new voices alongside widely known
and celebrated authors. Drawing on Appalachian literature's roots in
Native American myth, African American urban legend, and European folk
culture, and embracing Appalachian urban fiction, the Southern Gothic,
gritty no-holds-barred realism, and magical realism, the stories and
poems of Red Holler elegantly cohere to perfectly depict what makes
Appalachia so fascinating: its irreverent and outlaw challenges to
mainstream notions of propriety and convention.