Student Mental Health Resources And West Virginia’s Poet Laureate, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, students and their parents across West Virgnia can now access free online mental health resources and a conversation with West Virginia’s poet laureate.

On this West Virginia Morning, students and their parents across West Virgnia can now access free online mental health resources. That’s after a pilot program in five counties via a partnership between the West Virginia’s Department of Education and the Cook Center for Human Connection so impressed education officials was expanded to all of West Virginia’s 55 counties in May.

Also, Ohio County author Marc Harshman has spent decades writing poetry and children’s books and has served as West Virginia’s state poet laureate since 2012. This year, Harshman was recognized by Shepherd University as the 2024 Appalachian Heritage Writer-in-Residence. He sat down with reporter Jack Walker to discuss his work and Appalachian literature

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University and Marshall University School of Journalism and Mass Communications.

Maria Young produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

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.

Anthology Covers Spectrum Of Appalachian Literature

Appalachian writers produce a tremendous amount of work, but finding it isn’t always easy. Katherine Ledford and Theresa Lloyd, professors of Appalachian literature at Appalachian State University and East Tennessee State University respectively, decided to create an anthology they could use in their classrooms. 

The effort took more than a decade, but it is finally available in the form of the 745 page “Writing Appalachia Anthology” from the University Press of Kentucky.

Eric Douglas spoke with Lloyd and Ledford by Zoom to learn more about the book. 

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Douglas: Tell me how this project started.

Lloyd: I started teaching Appalachian literature in 1997 and I was frustrated. There were some good anthologies out there, but I was frustrated by what they didn’t have in them. There were few African American writers, for example, and almost no urban writers. I thought that it was really important to include those people in Appalachian literature. So, I started putting together a course pack, and in some respects, I’ve been researching this thing since 1997.

Douglas: What was the selection process like? How did you choose what to keep in and what to let go?

Ledford: We have a variety of times represented; we have a variety of authors represented. We have a variety of places within the region, both rural and urban; suburban spaces. We have the sweep of the geographical space of Appalachia. We consciously worked very hard to make sure we were including northern Appalachian writers. So, there are writers from Pennsylvania and New York. 

We did use the Appalachian Regional Commission’s definition of what Appalachia is geographically. So, we have quite a few northern Appalachian writers in addition to writers from central Appalachia, Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia, and then southern Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee. 

Douglas: There’s this perception that all Appalachian writing is about grandma living up a holler and it’s stereotypical, even as writing goes.

Lloyd: I call that “mama and biscuits literature.” And there are a lot of writers out there who are from Appalachia, or who write about Appalachia, who don’t write about mama and biscuits. This isn’t to say that there’s not some really important material that comes out of rural Appalachia. I mean, clearly there is, but for us to say that that’s all there is to the region, it’s really to perpetrate the same stereotypes of people who are critical of the region. Yes, I think it is important to redeem the attitude toward the rural, but it’s also important to acknowledge the full diversity of writers who are here.

Douglas: Have you two actually read the entire thing? 

Both: Yes. Yeah, many, many, many times.

Douglas: I didn’t know if you split it in half or something.  

Ledford: We tag-teamed quite a bit, but then we would flip. So, Tess might write a headnote, take a first stab at writing the introductory biographical information and situating that writer and the work within a larger context, and then eventually we would flip those around and I would give my opinion on that as well. We really know this inside out. 

Douglas: Any big surprises for either of you? Any writer or essay that made you think “This is new to me and this is fantastic?” Any big AHA moments?

Lloyd: In a way, I’ve been having these AHA moments for 20 years as I come upon these writers. One of the most recent moments that I’ve had, as I was just thinking about the anthology, we knew we wanted to include poets from Black Mountain College, the Black Mountain poets. We just think that’s a really important part of Appalachia. But I wasn’t totally sure who we should include because there’s some really outstanding people there. 

I went to one of my colleagues, Jesse Graves, who is a poet that teaches at East Tennessee State, and he suggested that we should consider Jonathan Williams. When I read Jonathan Williams’ poetry, that was a true AHA moment for me.

Ledford: I think for me, Robert Gipe’s novel, “Trampoline: An Illustrated Novel.” We have a chapter from that. I’m a literature person through and through. Robert’s work isn’t necessarily a graphic novel in the sense of a cartoon panel kind of thing. That’s not what Robert is doing. But he includes pen drawings, line drawings, that he’s done himself, every few pages, sometimes multiple ones on a page, that comment on the story that’s being told. 

I like words on the page. I’m a word girl. So, I want words, words, words. For me, getting to really dig into Robert’s novel, select which chapter we wanted, gave me a new appreciation for this new, emerging form of literature where you have those drawings that are commenting on and supporting and giving a new perspective on the text.

The Writing Appalachia Anthology is a collection of works from more than 150 writers, spanning from the days of the earliest settlers until modern day. 

This interview is part of a series of interviews with authors from, or writing about, Appalachia. 

Pearl S. Buck Grapevine Travels to Michigan

A grapevine clipping from the home of Pearl S. Buck, a world renowned author with West Virginia roots, just arrived in Michigan and soon will be planted at a high school literary garden.

It began as an idea last summer. Jennifer McQuillan teaches literature at West Bloomfield High School in Michigan, and she wanted to give her students something that would get them off their phones- and become better connected to the writing in decades old books.

“There are gardens that are devoted to Emily Dickinson or to Shakespeare, but there’s not been a garden in a secondary school setting that brings together important plants from American authors like this anywhere, to our knowledge,” said McQuillan.

Since last August, the garden has grown. Thirty-four plants have been sent from the homesteads of American authors, including Kurt Vonnegut, Ernest Hemingway and Alice Walker.

McQuillan says she wasn’t quite sure if the students would connect the garden with the literature she was teaching them.

“The turning point came around December, when we were reading Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Buds and Bird Voices”. And he writes about a lilac bush out of his window. And we had that lilac bush growing in the literary garden. And that was the moment when the kids went, ‘oh my gosh, we have something really special here.’”

Fast forward to this summer. McQuillan’s garden will soon include a clipping from a 120-year-old grapevine that drapes across the front entrance to the birthplace of writer Pearl S. Buck

Kirk Judd, a board member for the Pearl S. Buck Birthplace Foundation, says Buck wrote about the grapevine. “She remembers being 9 years old, sitting on the upper level porch, reading her Charles Dickens, and eating grapes from the grapevine.”

Grapevine at Stulting House, Pearl S. Buck’s grandparents’ home where she was born,

Judd says that even though she spent most of her childhood abroad, Pearl S. Buck always thought of West Virginia as home.

Born at her grandparents’ home in Hillsboro, West Virginia, Buck was the first American woman awarded the Nobel Prize for literature, and her bestselling novel The Good Earth won the Pulitzer Prize.

She passed away in 1973. But the grapevine that she remembered so vividly from her West Virginia birthplace is very much still alive.

Jennifer McQuillan says it’s the first plant they’ve received from West Virginia. She teaches Pearl Buck’s writing in both her American and World Literature classes. McQuillan says she’s really happy to add Buck to the literary garden- both as an American and a world author who wrote extensively about China, her other home away from West Virginia.  

“Because she’s sought both as a native author and as an author who is making her mark in another country as well. So I think that’s a really compelling story and I’m really excited to share that story with my students this fall.”

McQuillan will be working with her students to connect Buck’s writing to the grapevine they’ll be planting this summer, with the help of master gardeners in Michigan. She hopes both the grapevine, and a love for literature, will take root and grow.

Mountain Christmas: A New Children’s Book From W.Va. Poet Laureate

The West Virginia Book Company commissioned a new children’s book from West Virginia’s poet laureate and author Marc Harshman. The book, entitled Mountain Christmas, was published last month and is now in stores across the state. It’s about sleighbells heard by all sorts of people and creatures in iconic scenes found throughout the Mountain State.

Harshman says the owner of the West Virginia Book Company, Bill Clements, approached him a couple years ago about writing the book.

“It’s a story about Santa coming to West Virginia. As an author wanting to make a West Virginia-friendly book I was intentional about including a diverse range of places here in West Virginia such as the state capital, the Greenbank Observatory, the Wheeling Suspension Bridge, Black Water Falls.”

Stanzas feature Appalachian professionals as well: a scientist, a coal miner, a barge captain on the river, a soldier.  Harshman wanted to write a book the whole family can enjoy.

“I wanted to capture that sense of joy and anticipation, that longing – even a certain poignancy which might not be recognizable by a child but would be instantly hopefully appealing to an adult reader.”

Harshman says the process of creating the book was unique. He worked closely with editor Bill Clements and was able to choose and work with a friend and local illustrator, Cecy Rose.

“It was a first for me, it was a real project,” said Rose, a Wheeling artist and teacher.

“[Harshman] really provided with his stanzas the visual pictures for me; Bill was all about the magic, he kept telling me, ‘Just make it magical.’ And that wasn’t hard because I had a lot of input from my students who are all very young.”

The 17 illustrations are bright and vivid acrylic paintings. In life they’re about 11 inches by 14 inches–close the actual dimensions of the hardback book which stands 11 inches tall and 8 and a half inches wide. Rose says it took seven months to illustrate the entire book.  

“Santa was the biggest challenge,” Rose recalls, “because I didn’t want him to look too comical or cartoonish, so I referred to a lot of classical children’s book, and how I remembered Santa, and he came out sort of Nordic looking. I was pleased with that and I loved the idea of the sleighbells so in every illustration the sleighbells are appearing somewhere in the picture even if Santa doesn’t.”

Perhaps one other notable feature was publisher Bill Clements’ decision to use a special font called OpenDyslexic. The new, open-source font has letters that are weighted at the bottom and spaced a little more widely to make reading a little easier for folks with dyslexia. 

Public book signings are planned:

  • Wheeling Artisan Center (3rd floor): Thursday December 10, 5:30 – 7 pm
  • New Martinsville School: Friday December 11, 5:00 – 6:30 pm

A few of the stores around the state where people can find Mountain Christmas:

  • Drug Emporium in Barboursville
  • Main Line Books in Elkins
  • Tamarack in Beckley
  • Taylor Books in Charleston
  • Wheeling Artisan Center in Wheeling
  • Words and Music in Wheeling
  • Etc in Wheeling
  • South Branch Inn in Moorefield
  • Open Book in Lewisburg
  • WV Food and Things in Parkersburg

Pearl S. Buck: Someone Every West Virginian Should Know, Why and How

West Virginia University announced a partnership with West Virginia Wesleyan College that will honor and celebrate, preserve and offer for research a collection of works by Pulitzer Prize winning author and Nobel Laureate Pearl S. Buck.

Message from WVU: In order to preserve and promote the legacy of Pearl S. Buck, West Virginia University and West Virginia Wesleyan College are collaborating with the Pearl S, Buck Birthplace Foundation to increase use of the Pearl S. Buck Collection and stimulate Pearl S. Buck studies in West Virginia and beyond. Goals of this partnership include archival preservation, the creation of a Pearl S. Buck Collection website, and the development of education and outreach initiatives including research grants, a biennial conference and award, and a new publication series through the WVU Press.

West Virginia’s Pearl

Pearl S. Buck was born in 1892 in Hillsboro, West Virginia. Three months later, her missionary parents moved with her to China where she spent the large majority of the first 40 years of her life. Can West Virginians claim her as one of their own? A resounding “yes” could be heard in the halls of the WVU library which will now be home to many of her writings.

WVU President Gordon Gee kicked off a recent event in Morgantown to celebrate the collection of the late author. Gee spoke about Buck’s connection to West Virginia.

 

Many of Pearl Buck’s life experiences and political views can be discovered in her writings. She covered a wide range of topics from immigration, adoption, and war, to women’s rights.

In fact, in a 1958 interview with Pearl Buck, Mike Wallace tried to pin her down as a militant, man-hating feminist. Buck was very reserved and rejected the title. She said she worried for men and women in a society trying to prepare them both for a manner of success defined in patriarchal terms. Then… she transcended the question completely and spoke on the lonely human condition in the West and the burdens of freedom:

A Rock Star

Buck began to write in the twenties and continued to write until her death in March of 1973, authoring some 100 works. Her first novel, East Wind, West Wind, appeared in 1930. Her second book The Good Earth stood on the American list of best sellers for a long time and earned her several awards, including a Pulitzer Prize in 1932. Then in 1938, Buck became the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize for literature. 

“She was sort of a rock star at that time, and so when she spoke there were always people listening,” said acting president of the Pearl S. Buck Birthplace Foundation, Kirk Judd. He said Pearl was truly a citizen of the globe. Armed with fame and considerable fortune, a global perspective, an education, and steeped in West Virginian morals, she became an outspoken humanitarian. Judd said she’s considered by many to have been wise beyond her years.

The Collection

The Buck collection of manuscripts and other documents which were housed for many years at WV Wesleyan found a new home at WVU. The collection is owned by the Pearl S. Buck Birthplace Foundation, and includes over 70 of her works including novels, short stories, and children’s books—all of which will also be made available online.

Jolie Lewis is a former board member of the foundation who came up to see the collection dedicated in Morgantown.

 

Lewis also echoed remarks uttered during the dedication, imparting that Pearl S. Buck’s work is a treasure and a source of inspiration for all West Virginians.

Exit mobile version