Bess Lomax Hawes grew up with her father John Lomax and brother Alan in
the first family of American folk music. Her compelling account of the
folk music boom of the mid-twentieth century and the development of
"public-sector" folklore includes family friends Ruth Crawford Seeger
and Carl Sandburg, fellow Almanac Singers Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger,
and other musicians and artists. Her own creative endeavors as producer
of American folk culture films, author of academic papers and books, and
coauthor of the Kingston Trio's hit "MTA Song" (adapted from a local
political campaign jingle) unfold alongside her teaching of guitar and
American folk music to thousands of adults in Los Angeles. Whether
instructing college students in anthropology, learning singing games
from the Georgia Sea Island Singers, or directing the Folk and
Traditional Arts Program at the National Endowment for the Arts, Hawes
tells the larger-than-life story of a woman dedicated to preserving and
appreciating America's traditional cultures.