W.Va. Fiction Competition Open For Submissions

Submissions for the West Virginia Fiction Competition are open until May 1. The statewide writing contest is held annually by the Shepherd University Center for Appalachian Studies and Communities.

Submissions for the West Virginia Fiction Competition are open until May 1.

The statewide writing contest is held annually by the Shepherd University Center for Appalachian Studies and Communities. It is open to anyone living or attending school in West Virginia.

Once the submission period closes, a group of editors and creative writing teachers will select eight to 10 finalists for this year’s contest.

The final winners will be determined by West Virginia Poet Laureate Marc Harshman, who will also write reviews of all the finalists’ stories.

The prize for the first-place winner is $500. Second and third-place winners will each receive a prize of $100. Additionally, one middle or high school student will receive the Judges’ Choice Prize.

The competition aims to “foster an appreciation of Appalachian people, culture and values,” by honoring writers with “distinctive and promising” skills, according to a Thursday press release from Shepherd.

Winners and finalists could also have an opportunity to publish their work in the “Anthology of Appalachian Writers,” an annual literary publication from Shepherd.

For more information on this year’s West Virginia Fiction Competition, visit Shepherd University’s website.

Folkways Highlights Of 2023, Inside Appalachia

Since 2019, Inside Appalachia has brought you stories from our Folkways Reporting Project. Folkways was created to boost awareness of Appalachian folk traditions and how they’re passed between people. In 2023, we added 25 stories to our growing archive that explore diverse arts, culture, food and people of Appalachia. This week, look back at some of the past year’s Folkways highlights.

Since 2019, Inside Appalachia has brought you stories from our Folkways Reporting Project

Folkways was created to boost awareness of Appalachian folk traditions and how they’re passed between people. In 2023, we added 25 stories to our growing archive that explore diverse arts, culture, food and people of Appalachia. 

This week, look back at some of the past year’s Folkways highlights. 

In This Episode:


Flat Five Studios Fame And Future

Flat Five merchandise hangs in the recording studio. Flat Five Studio in Virginia made a big splash in the 1990s. Now, it’s looking to the future and a new generation.

Credit: Mason Adams/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Flat Five Studio was a small recording studio in Salem, Virginia. For years, the studio thrived recording local bands and a lot of bluegrass acts. Then, the Dave Matthews Band in eastern Virginia began looking for a quiet place to record its first album.

Host Mason Adams brought us this story. 

Mushroom Hunting In VA And WV

A single, ancient chanterelle on the forest floor proved to be the only mushroom found the day of the hunt.

Credit: Wendy Welch/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Wild food foraging has been a staple of Appalachian folk culture for generations. In recent years, mushroom hunting has taken off with fungi enthusiasts heading to the woods to seek out their favorites.

Folkways Reporter Wendy Welch spent time with some of them in Virginia and West Virginia and brings us this story. 

Taxidermy In Yadkin County

Taxidermist Amy Ritchie is sharing the love of her craft with other enthusiasts.

Credit: Margaret McLeod Leef/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

A lot of people are fascinated by the results of taxidermy — whether it’s a stuffed skunk on display at a park’s visitor’s center, or a big buck on a friend’s wall. The preservation and mounting of dead animals have been around since at least the middle ages.

Folkways Reporter Margaret McLeod Leef has the story of one expert practitioner in Yadkin County, North Carolina.

A Family Connection To Face Jugs

You’ve probably seen pottery with a face on it somewhere. There are lots of examples of this type of art out there — from cheap souvenir shop knick-knacks to museum-quality pieces that can sell for millions of dollars.

Some are connected to African Face Jugs, an art that enslaved people brought with them to America.

Folkways Reporter Zack Harold traced the story of face jugs, beginning in the basement pottery studio of West Virginia artist Ed Klimek.    

African Face Jugs came to America through Slavery. Artist Jim McDowell uses the art form to speak about the African American experience.

Courtesy

——

Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by The Dirty River Boys, Noam Pikelny, Carolina Chocolate Drops, Carpenter Ants and Allan Cathead Johnston.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

‘Matriarch Of Appalachian Folk Art’ Minnie Adkins Going Strong At 89

Some call it primitive, but perhaps it’s better to call folk art “unpretentious.” People call 89-year-old Minnie Adkins the Matriarch of Appalachian Folk Art. She says she’s just a whittler.

Appalachian Folk Art cuts to the heart of Appalachian life. 

Some call it primitive, but perhaps it’s better to call folk art “unpretentious.” People call 89-year-old Minnie Adkins the Matriarch of Appalachian Folk Art. She says she’s just a whittler. 

Born in the midst of the Great Depression, Minnie grew up a farm girl. Her father also ran a sawmill and dug coal out of a tunnel on a nearby hillside. For extra money, he made ax handles and homemade sleds. Minnie said there was a lot of whittling to it. When her father saw she was intrigued with a mostly young boy’s pastime, he gave his daughter a pocket knife. That helped begin a prelude to folk art history.

The Eastern Kentucky woodcarver recently sat down over a bowl of homemade soup and talked about blue roosters, children’s books and fighting poverty with art. 

“I loved whittling as a child and I made toys for myself,” Minnie said “I made slingshots and bow and arrows and a little paw paw whistle and all kinds of stuff to play with.” 

Minnie’s whittling creativity expanded as she grew up. But she went back to the slingshot – and saw something more hidden within the y-shaped branch.

“I was making a sling shot and you know how the prongs go like that and the handle like that,” Minnie said. “I thought that well, if that had a tail and a head on it, that could be a rooster with a pair of legs. And I tried it and it turned out good. And from then on I kept making roosters.”

Minnie Adkins Big Blue Rooster in front on the Huntington Museum of Art

Minnie continued to whittle her roosters, (soon to be painted blue and become her signature piece), along with various birds and other hand-sized creatures. She would give the pieces away or sell them for a meager price. Her avocation graduated to something more when she and her husband Garland took some of her carved creations to a mecca of Appalachian Folk Art, the gallery at Morehead State University.

A variety of Minnie Adkins’ carved wooden figures on her workbench.

“I sold about three pieces: a cow, horse and something else for $35,” Minnie said. “After that, me and Garland would go down there to the art department, and when we’d drive in, a whole bunch of workers would come out, and we’d sell our stuff on the hood of the truck, and they’d buy everything we took. They’d hurry out there to see which one could get there first.”

Soon after, a new-found friend and art vendor would come to Minnie’s Elliott County, Kentucky home once a month and pick up what she and Garland had made. She said he’d take it all down south and sell it to art galleries and such. When Minnie’s work was featured in a big coffee table book called “Appalachian Artists of the Southern Mountains” her avocation turned into vocation – and a star was born. 

“After that book came out, people began to hunt for me and Garland from all over the country,” Minnie said.

Minnie Adkins talking with Vickie Yohe in her workshop.

Minnie and Garland lived in one of the poorest counties in eastern Kentucky. Elliott County had no major highway, not one railroad track – not even a stop light.  She took it upon herself to get some of her friends and neighbors whittling and painting. 

“When Garland was alive, Randy, you remember coming down here, we had 15 folk artists making folk art and making a living at it,” Minnie said. “They’re all gone but me and Tommy and Jimmy Lewis. They’ve not been at it long as I have, but they’ve got a reputation with their folk art too.”

What does the Russian ballet have to do with this Appalachian tale?  In 1992, at Kentucky’s Centre College, a multicultural hub, Soviet ballet dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov was giving master classes and performing at Centre’s Norton Center for the Arts.  Minnie was invited that celebratory weekend to receive the first Norton Center award for achievement in the arts in Kentucky.

Centre College Communications Director, musician and children books author Mike Norris was asked to squire Minnie Adkins around for the event.  

“Within about five minutes, I felt like I’ve known her all my life,” Mike said. “She told me later, she felt the same way about me. She’s probably the most generous person I’ve ever met. She was wearing these little wooden carved animals. She had made foxes, bear, she brought a bunch of them with her and somebody would praise one. And she said, ‘Well, here honey, just take it with you.’ And she’d take it off her neck and give it to them.”

Mike said Minnie gave him a whittled blue guitar about 12 inches tall since she had heard he played guitar. As a thanks, Mike sent her a cassette tape that he had recorded with the Raggedy Robins String Band. 

One song’s opening line went like this; “A bright blue rooster and a three legged hog, a wore out tractor and a no-count dog.”

“She called me up about a week later,” Mike said. “And she said, ‘Well, I wish you hadn’t given me that tape.’ And I said why? And she said ‘it’s got that song on it about the bright blue rooster and I can’t quit thinking about it and it’s aggravating.’ And I said well just lay down to rest and maybe you’ll feel better when you get up.”

Mike said Minnie didn’t rest but went to work, and a week later he got a big box in the mail.

“There was this beautiful 14-inch-tall blue rooster that she had carved with his beautiful plume tail,” Mike said. “Just giving it to me out of the goodness of her heart, maybe to get it out of her head. And I set it up on my mantel and then I couldn’t quit thinking about it every time I’d walk by. About a week later, I called her back and I said ‘Many of my songs got the bright blue rooster, the three legged hog, the wore out tractor, the no count dog. If you’d carve all the figures in the book, I believe we could make a children’s book.’ And she didn’t say yay or nay. But another week went by and I got a box. And it had a three legged hog in it. And the third week came and I got a box with a wore out tractor, ‘worn out’ we would say in English class. The fourth week I got a bigger box and it had two dogs and she had a little note in there and she said ‘you decide which one’s the most no count.’ So that got us started.”

With Mike writing and Minnie illustrating, the pair is now working on their fifth children’s book. Taking the collaboration a major step further, Mike and Minnie have constructed an art gallery display with hundreds of carvings and the stories to bring 30 years worth of their books to a new life.

Museum display:; Three carved wooden sheep with hymnals singing “Amazing Grace.”

“It was kind of like that old program that used to be on TV in the 50’s, called ‘This is Your Life,’ Mike said. “It was kind of a tour of our creative life and it’s something to be remembered. We hope it’s going to continue to travel. There’s interest from other museums as well.”

Minnie’s artistic endeavors branched into other mediums, painting, ceramics, quilting and hand-blown glass, all decorated with her animal and human designs. Her works sell in the hundreds and thousands of dollars.   

Woodcarver Minnie Adkins and Vickie Yohe with a Minnie whittled fox.

Minnie’s public recognition has come in landslides. Numerous distinguished American art awards, collegiate certificates of merit, an honorary doctorate, and the prestigious Kentucky Governor’s Artist Award for her contributions to art and artists. 

Minnie says her faith teaches her that humility and helping others are the true rewards. She said she doesn’t understand what “Matriarch of Appalachian Folk Art” means – but maybe she does.

“What does matriarch mean?” Minnie said, chuckling. “I don’t want to be, you know, lifted up like I’m something because I’m not. The Bible teaches us our righteousness is as filthy rags. So that doesn’t say a lot for us that when we get to thinking we’re a goody two shoes. I feel like I just love to help somebody that wants to help themselves. But a lot of people think it’s too much work.”

Mike said simply that nobody has done it longer, done it more and done it better than Minnie Atkins.

“She’ll be 90 years old,” Mike said. “And she has not slowed down. She works six days a week. She’s got as much enthusiasm as she ever had. Minnie, just by the volume and the quality of her work, it just rises above the crowd. She’s been called the most important female woodcarver in America, and I don’t know whether I’d even put female in front of that or not.”

Right next to Minnie’s whittling chair sits a well worn, dogged eared, place mark-filled Bible. She said that book is her life’s manual for living, and she’s far from done. She had a stand pat answer for when she might retire from whittlin’.

WVPB’s Randy Yohe interviews Minnie Adkins in her Isonville, KY home

“Until they put me underground if I’m able,” Minnie said. “I’ve been awfully blessed. I just can’t thank the good Lord enough for his blessings. That Bible, Martha Sluss and my sister in London, and somebody else bought me that Bible when I was 50 years old. And you see I’ve really worked with it.”

Wassailing, Folk Art And Grandma’s Potato Candy, Inside Appalachia

This week on Inside Appalachia, we go a-wassailing in Asheville, North Carolina. We also visit Kentucky’s Minnie Adkins. She’s had a long career as a folk artist, which began with a pocket knife. And, family recipes bring generations together. But what happens when you’ve got grandma’s potato candy recipe, and it doesn’t have exact measurements?

This week, we go a-wassailing in Asheville, North Carolina. It’s kind of like Christmas caroling, with a kick.

We also visit Kentucky’s Minnie Adkins. She’s had a long career as a folk artist, which began with a pocket knife. 

And, family recipes bring generations together. But what happens when you’ve got grandma’s potato candy recipe, and it doesn’t have exact measurements? 

You’ll hear these stories and more this week, Inside Appalachia.

In This Episode:


Here We Go A-Wassailing

Wassailers gather on a porch in the Montford neighborhood of Asheville, North Carolina in December 2022. It was customary in England and Wales for wassailers to be offered food and drink in exchange for singing.

Credit: Rebecca Williams/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

It’s the time of year when merrymakers roam the streets to sing and bring good cheer. In Asheville, North Carolina, one group of friends has taken up the English tradition of wassailing to connect to their roots.

Folkways Reporter Rebecca Williams has this story.

A Visit With A Matriarch Of Folk Art

Whittler Minnie Adkins.

Credit: Randy Yohe/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Minnie Adkins has elevated whittling to an art. In fact, some people have even described the 89-year-old Kentucky woodcarver as “the matriarch of Appalachian Folk Art.” But Adkins? She says she’s just a whittler.

Randy Yohe sat down with Adkins to talk with her about her craft.

Reverse Engineering Grandma’s Candy

Brenda Sandoval testing the consistency of the potato mixture.

Credit: Capri Cafaro/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Treasured family recipes get passed down, but not all of these old recipes used standard measurements. So how do you know you’re getting the mix right, especially if you’ve never tried it? 

For Brenda Sandoval in Harper’s Ferry, West Virginia, an old family recipe involved some trial and error – and an assist from a cousin. Folkways Reporter Capri Cafaro has more.

Story Wars

Over the holidays, lots of people break out the party games. West Virginia native Harrison Reishman has developed a card game he’s hoping becomes a favorite at your next get-together. It’s called Story Wars, where players try to come up with the wildest, craziest story. Bill Lynch has more. 

——

Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by The Sycomores, Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, the Cappella Bell Choir and Bob Thompson. Special thanks to Roxy Todd for recording Jim Bartlett playing the pipe organ with an assortment of goats.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Inclusive Square Dancing, Zine Fest And Playing The Spoons, Inside Appalachia

This week on Inside Appalachia, we pick up a little light reading at the Johnson City Zine Fest. And… Grab your dancing shoes and learn about a movement to make square dance calling more inclusive. Also, the perils of playing the spoons.

This week, we pick up a little light reading at the Johnson City Zine Fest.

And… Grab your dancing shoes and learn about a movement to make square dance calling more inclusive.

Also, the perils of playing the spoons.

You’ll hear these stories and more this week, Inside Appalachia.

In This Episode:


Making Square Dancing More Inclusive

Calling a square dance is tricky business. It’s a skill that’s been handed down for generations, but a growing number of callers are updating the language to be more inclusive to keep the tradition alive.

Folkways Reporter Lydia Warren brought us the story.

A Visit To Zine Fest

Credit: Mason Adams/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

A zine, as in magazine, is a self-published pamphlet or brochure, or even a booklet. Some are very low-tech and rudimentary, and others are elaborately designed works of art. They’re all unique, and reflect the people who make them. Mason Adams went to Johnson City Zine Fest, met zine makers and talked with them.

All About The Spoons

Jeff Fedan has been teaching aspiring spoons players how to play for years. He is also one of the co-founders and organizers of the yearly Pattyfest.

Credit: Lauren Griffin/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

If you love string-band music, you don’t have to go too far to find a bluegrass or old-time jam here in the Appalachian mountains. Musicians get together, try out new licks and teach each other songs. But, you don’t have to play fiddle or guitar to get in on the music. Playing along might be as easy as just grabbing something out of a kitchen drawer.

Folkways reporter Lauren Griffin has the story.

The Life And Legacy of Woody Williams

The front of the Gold Star Families Memorial Monument in Charleston, West Virginia.

Credit: Janet Kunicki/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

“Woody Williams: An Extraordinary Life of Service” is a new documentary exploring the life of Hershel “Woody” Williams, the last living World War II recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor. Williams, who died last year at the age of 98, spent decades working for veterans and their families.

Bill Lynch spoke with WVPB’s Randy Yohe and Janet Kunicki. They spent more than a year exploring Williams’ life and legacy for the documentary. 

——-

Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by the Carpenter Ants, Harvey and Copeland, Rev. Payton’s Big Damn Band, Le Tigre, John Blissard, The Sycomores, Hazel Dickens and Frank George.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

The Rock Band Wednesday, Quilting And The Moonshine Messiah, Inside Appalachia

This week on Inside Appalachia, Karly Hartzman of Asheville indie rock band Wednesday, talks about songwriting, place and spending a lot of time with a band on tour. We also meet Emily Jones Hudson, who started a workshop to try and reinvigorate quilting in her community in Kentucky. Also, we check in with the Alabama Astronaut and learn about a uniquely Appalachian form of art – religious music heard only in snake-handling churches.

This week, Karly Hartzman of Asheville indie rock band Wednesday, talks about songwriting, place and spending a lot of time with a band on tour. 

We also meet Emily Jones Hudson, who started a workshop to try and reinvigorate quilting in her community in Kentucky. 

Also, we check in with the Alabama Astronaut and learn about a uniquely Appalachian form of art – religious music heard only in snake-handling churches. 

In This Episode:


Wednesday Talks Yesterday And Today

The rock band Wednesday is based in Asheville, North Carolina. The band made big waves when its record, “Rat Saw God” came out in April 2023. The music site Pitchfork gave it 8.8 out of 10 and named it Best New Music.

Before Wednesday set out on a big European tour, Mason Adams caught up with singer/songwriter Karly Hartzman.

Stitching Back A Tradition Of Quilting

(L-R) Sandra Jones, Emily Jones Hudson, Rebecca Cornett and Katie Glover with the quilt they made together during the first Stories Behind the Quilt workshop series.

Credit: Capri Cafaro/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Quilts in Appalachia are often handed down from generation to generation and while some traditional arts have faded, people have never really stopped quilting. But the tradition can be patchy in some areas. Emily Jones Hudson noticed fewer quilters in her hometown of Hazard, Kentucky, especially among African Americans. So, she created a quilting workshop series to encourage people to revitalize an art and recapture some history. 

Folkways Reporter Capri Cafaro brings us the story. 

See more at the Southeast Kentucky African American Museum and Culture Center.

Making The Moonshine Messiah

“The Moonshine Messiah” is the first novel of West Virginia native Russell W. Johnson.

Courtesy

November is National Novel Writing Month. All over the country, aspiring novelists have been writing their hearts out in hopes of penning the next best seller.

But the hard part to getting a novel into a reader’s hands might not be the writing. Author Russell Johnson makes his home in North Carolina, but his debut novel, “Moonshine Messiah,” is set in the West Virginia coal fields, where his parents are from. 

Bill Lynch spoke with Johnson about writing and the long road to getting published. 

All About The Alabama Astronaut

Musician, singer-songwriter, painter, podcaster and former preacher Abe Partridge.

Courtesy Photo

Usually, when you hear about snake-handling, it’s in an exploitative way, but the folks who handle snakes are more like people you might know. They also play a style of Appalachian music that’s largely gone undocumented. That music is the subject of a podcast released in 2022 called Alabama Astronaut.

Folkways Reporter Zack Harold spoke with co-host Abe Partridge about how a project intended to document this music ended up being about a whole lot more.

——

Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Wednesday, John Blissard, Little David and Christian Lopez. 

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Exit mobile version