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Home » Homesickness, and the Struggle to Come Home to Appalachia
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Homesickness, and the Struggle to Come Home to Appalachia
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This week on Inside Appalachia, we talk about what brings people back home to the mountains of Appalachia. And we’ll hear about what happens when people finally do come home. Can the reality of home ever truly live up to our memories of it?
The longing for a place can be as inexplicable as it is inescapable. Why do residents from Appalachian states like Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Virginia have such fiercely loyal connections and often a longing to return? In this episode we try to wrap our heads around this intangible, mysterious thing called Homesickness.
In this episode, you’ll hear:
Roger May, a photographer who recently moved back to West Virginia after spending most of his lifetime away.
Jesse Donaldson, author of the book, On Homesickness, a Plea. The book is based on the tension between his own mixture of romance and reality.
J.D. Belcher and wife Jina, both grew up in McDowell County. Despite high rates of unemployment in their area, they each found a way to stay in southern West Virginia. They say they wouldn’t want to live anywhere else. J.D. was recently contracted by the McDowell County Visitors Bureau, to produce a video and a website, called “Meet McDowell” to help promote the area’s bed and breakfasts and local restaurants:
Niki Meadows, who grew up in Point Pleasant, West Virginia but moved away to North Carolina for work. She shares why she finally decided to move home.
Jon Henderson, a Texas native who found a new home in the mountains of east Tennessee.
Ann Lockard, who grew up in Boone County, West Virginia. After spending a few years away, she rediscovered why home was special to her and found a way to move back home.
Terry Tincher, who also grew up in Boone County, West Virginia and now lives in Atlanta, Georgia. He misses the mountains, but because of work, has not found a way back.
Credit courtesy Jesse Donaldson/ WVU Press
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Writer Jesse Donaldson on his book tour in Kentucky
Music in this episode was provided by Dinosaur Burps, Josh Armistead, Dog and Gun, Lobo Loco, Blue Dot Sessions, and Ben Townsend. Our What’s in a Name theme music is by Marteka and William with “Johnson Ridge Special” from their Album Songs of a Tradition.
Roxy Todd and Jessica Lilly produce Inside Appalachia. Catherine Moore edited our show this week. And Zander Aloi mixed this episode. Our executive producer is Jesse Wright. Claire Hemme helped with our digital correspondence. You can find us online on Twitter @InAppalachia.
Online gambling commercials in the state seem to dominate the television and radio airwaves. Those messages are not lost on our college students. Marshall University Broadcast Journalism senior Abigail Ayes just completed an impactful story about student online gambling for the campus news program, MU Report. Randy Yohe, who is also Ayes’ instructor, spoke with the student reporter about her findings.
The annual Mothman Festival has a competition for the title of ‘most unusual Appalachian celebration.’ Bath County, Kentucky, celebrated a historic occurrence this week. The meat shower of 1876. That’s when pieces of meat mysteriously fell from the sky onto a farm.
With a final budget now approved by both the House and Senate and headed to Gov. Patrick Morrisey for a signature, West Virginia budget watchers say there are looming expenses that haven’t been taken into consideration. Also, more Americans than ever have access to a kind of savings account that lets them set aside pre-tax money for medical expenses. But this option takes a little effort to set up and navigate.
On this West Virginia Week, the state budget is headed to Gov. Patrick Morrisey, a statewide public camping ban bill moves forward, and Inside Appalachia visits Good Hot Fish.