This week, some of the stories on our show inspired college student art — including a vivid image of a bear smashing a clarinet. Also, a Hare Krishna community in West Virginia serves vegetarian food made in three sacred kitchens. And, COVID-19 exposed the contempt society has for marginalized people. One author says, these folks are anything but passive.
Willie Carver Jr. And Marina Waters, Inside Appalachia
Willie Carver Jr. and the cover of his new book, "Tore All To Pieces."Courtesy Photo
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In author Willie Carver, Jr.’s new book, he reconsiders a negative childhood experience with a neighborhood girl who might have just been looking for a friend.
Also, a southwestern Virginia community rang the alarm after more and more of its children were diagnosed with cancer. A local journalist is trying to unravel the cause.
And, the city of Asheville has a new crusading reporter. He’s a puppet.
You’ll hear this story and more this week, Inside Appalachia.
The cover of Tore All To Pieces by Willie Carver Jr.
Courtesy of University Press of Kentucky
Kentucky writer and educator Willie Edward Taylor Carver, Jr. has a new book. It’s a mosaic novel that draws from his upbringing, and his experiences as a gay man in Appalachia. The title is Tore All To Pieces, and it weaves together poetry and short stories into a narrative about people and place.
Producer Bill Lynch spoke with Carver about the book, and about the joys of bologna gravy.
Health Care Hollow In Tennessee
The Perry County Community Hospital shuttered in 2020 and sat vacant for years. It reopened under new owners in September 2025.
Photo Credit: LaTonya Turner/WPLN News
Hospitals in rural America are closing at an alarming pace, and Tennessee has the highest closure rate.
WPLN in Nashville is looking at the trend, and what’s being done to reverse course.
Reporter Catherine Sweeney went to Linden a Tennessee town that watched its hospital go dark but is now on the path to recovery.
Childhood Cancer Rates Rise In Scott County, Virginia
Andryk Williams is joined by a therapy dog.
Photo courtesy of Kelsey Williams
A cancer diagnosis can be devastating. And tragic when it happens to a child.
But when multiple childhood cancer cases appear in a community, folks start asking questions. That’s what’s happening in Scott County, Virginia. Scott County has seen a dramatic rise in childhood cancer diagnoses.
Marina Waters is a reporter who’s been covering the issue. Host Mason Adams spoke with her.
Preserving Little Green Apples
Early transparent green apples from the market ready to be cut up for freezing.
Photo Credit: Connie Bailey Kitts/West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Fruit trees in much of central Appalachia are just coming off their spring bloom. Their fruit won’t be ripe until late summer, early fall, but some varieties of apples show up early. Some folks call them June Apples, June transparent apples or even early transparents. The growing season and flavor of this fruit set it apart. And generations of Appalachians have kept these apple trees alive.
In one of our early Folkways stories, from 2020, reporter Connie Kitts discovered that these early apples were in danger of disappearing.
Air Pollution Can Cause Lung Cancer
For decades, we’ve known smoking can lead to lung cancer. Public health messages usually focus on personal behavior that the only way to prevent lung cancer is for people to stop smoking. But new research finds a connection between lung cancer and air pollution, particularly in urban areas.
The Allegheny Front’s Julie Grant spoke with researchers about reducing cancer rates through environmental policy.
Asheville’s New Puppet Correspondent
Little Ginger at the BPR studio on March 6, 2026.
Photo Credit: Laura Hackett/BPR
There’s a new “voice for the people” in Asheville. He’s a blue puppet with bright red hair. His name is Little Ginger and you can find him on Instagram. He’s a crusading reporter, taking on potholes and local property taxes.
Blue Ridge Public Radio’s Laura Hackett has more.
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Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Mary Hott, Paul Loomis, John Blissard and Hello June.
Bill Lynch is our producer. Abby Neff 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.
This week, some of the stories on our show inspired college student art — including a vivid image of a bear smashing a clarinet. Also, a Hare Krishna community in West Virginia serves vegetarian food made in three sacred kitchens. And, COVID-19 exposed the contempt society has for marginalized people. One author says, these folks are anything but passive.
The Nelsonville Music Festival celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. The Ohio-based festival over the years has hosted American music icons, like John Prine, Willie Nelson and Loretta Lynn, while also supporting regional artists. Inside Appalachia’s Abby Neff spoke with festival founder Tim Peacock to learn more.
If your aging parent needs surgery, you might need to take time away from work to care for them. A federal policy called the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) gives many employees job-protected leave for caregiving. But it has noteworthy limitations.
One in six West Virginians is food insecure. Meaning, 270,000 people in the state regularly don’t know where their next meal will come from. Assistant News Director Maria Young recently toured Mountaineer Food Bank’s greatly expanded, new facility to find out what it takes to meet that need every day – and what it will take in the years to come.