Vicki Lane is the author of The Day of Small
Things and of the Elizabeth Goodweather Appalachian Mysteries which include
Signs in the Blood, Art's Blood, Old Wounds, Anthony-nominated In a Dark
Season, and Under the Skin.
She also teaches in UNC-Asheville’s Great Smokies Writing Program. Vicki draws
her inspiration from rural western North Carolina where she and her family have
tended a mountainside farm since 1975.
Visit Vicki at her daily blog, on Facebook or at her website.
Writing the Mountains
by Vicki Lane
The hills are alive with the sound of …scribbling
and keyboarding. At least, that’s the way it’s beginning to seem. My neck of
the woods -- the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina and more especially
the Asheville area -- is increasingly popular with writers as a setting for
their stories.
Take Lee Smith, whose books
about the South ring true and clear -- Lee has a fine new book out set mostly in
Asheville. Guests on Earth is the
story of a young girl who is a patient at Highland Hospital during the time
Zelda Fitzgerald was there. It’s a great look at the place and the period, as
well as the famously troubled wife of F. Scott Fitzgerald, but more than that,
it’s a thoughtful depiction of mental illness.
Tommy Hays’s latest offering What I Came to Tell You
is also set in Asheville with scenes set at the Thomas Wolfe House and
historic Riverside Cemetery. It’s billed as young adult but I think it would
appeal to any age. A timeless tale of love and loss and guilt and redemption.
Sallie Bissell’s part
Cherokee litigator Mary Crow is back in another Appalachian thriller The Music of Ghosts. Sallie can write
some creepy stuff – you might not want to read this when you’re alone…
Ron Rash – whose Serena
(set in the area) has been made into a movie starring Jennifer Lawrence (of
The Hunger Games – part of which was
set in and filmed in North Carolina) has several others set in my own Madison
County – The World Made Straight and The Cove. Ron is an
amazing writer – when I first discovered him, I went on a binge of reading his
backlist. The Cove is set during WWI,
and tells the story of Laurel Shelton, a simple mountain girl, and her love for
an escapee from one of a group of German Merchant Marines being interned at a
once-famous hotel in Hot Springs (NC) – the same hotel I wrote about in Under the Skin.
And this same hotel and German intern camp are the
center piece of Terry Roberts’ recent A Short Time to Stay Here. I met Terry when he
emailed me and mentioned that his great great grandfather Benjamin Franklin
Freeman had lived near our farm. I investigated and found B.F. Freeman’s grave
in the cemetery that adjoins one of our pastures. Small world.
Still in Madison County, Mark Pinsky’s recently
published Met Her on the
Mountain is the result of Mark’s forty year
obsession with the unsolved murder of a Vista worker – they were still talking
about this when we first moved to Madison and Mark has set forth a plausible
solution as well as a close examination of small town politics and the ‘them
vs, us’ mindset that may well have influenced the investigation in this case.
Also from Madison County – and in the most authentic
way possible – are the books of Sheila Kay Adams, a seventh-generation ballad singer
(and my younger son’s eighth grade teacher.) Back then Sheila was working on a
book, inspired by a workshop she’d taken with Lee Smith and poet (later poet
laureate of NC) Kathryn Stripling Byer. To my great joy, Sheila asked if I’d
proofread Come Go Home With Me, a
collection of charming vignettes about her growing up in Sodom Laurel. And as I
read, I thought to myself, she’s just
telling stories – like she was sitting next to me. I wonder if maybe I couldn’t
tell a story too . . .
And then I found that I could and added my Elizabeth Goodweather
books to the heady mix of Appalachian story telling. Over time I went on to
discover – and meet in person – many more fine writers whose inspiration came
from Appalachia.
I first met Kathryn Stripling Byer
when I went with Sheila Kay Adams to hear Lee Smith speak and then to a party
at Kay’s house. Kay’s poetry is simple, beautiful, and accessible – she speaks
the language of the mountains – Descent,
Girl in the Midst of the Harvest, Black Shawl, Catching Light – her
collections of poetry are luminous evocations of the simplest of things – those
that matter the most.
Tony Earley became a
friend before I ever had a publisher. He’s best known, perhaps, for Jim the Boy but his wicked sense of
humor shows up in his short stories, some of which have been published in The New Yorker. The most recent is an
adaptation of the traditional Appalachian Jack Tales.
Charles Frazier, best known
for the phenomenal Cold Mountain, put his hero Inman in my neck of the woods. I
was thrilled beyond belief, if not reduced to a babbling fan girl, when he came
to lunch at my house last year. You never know who’ll turn up in these mountains…
Pamela Duncan, Wayne Caldwell, Wiley Cash, Mark
DeCastrique, Fred Chappell, Robert Morgan, Silas House . . . the list goes on and on. Who am I leaving out
in my wandering census of western North Carolina writing? Lots, I’m sure, This link will take you
to some more good ones.
They say you can’t swing a cat in Asheville without
hitting a massage therapist – I suspect the same is true in western NC for
writers. Maybe it’s something in the water.
9 comments:
Vicki, Welcome! It is always a delight to welcome you back to Meanderings and Muses.
What a fine group of writers we have in our front AND back yard. It makes me proud.
p.s. - Wishing you and John a Happy 50th Wedding Anniversary! and many more.
Kaye, many thanks for inviting me back to Meandering and Muses -- I've suddenly realized how many authors writing about WNC I didn't mention -- Kathryn Magendie, Sarah Addison Allen, Charles Price... no doubt many more. Mea culpa, you all ... please chime in with names I've overlooked.
How could one not be inspired in those beautiful mountains!
What a place to live with all that imagining and scribbling! Thanks for the list and your wonderful contributions to it!
i will be bottling some of that water when i am there this coming weekend...smiles...it was good to me last time i was there, so...
Having read and enjoyed all of the authors above, I would be thrilled to get a new Vicki Lane book to read! Hint, hint ! XOX
I feel so honored to live among some of the best writers around. So many have written marvelously entertaining books about the mountains. I loved Lee Smith's latest and can't wait for Wiley Cash's new one to to published soon. Now, if we could just get another Vicki Lane book...
I third the notion that it would be terrific to hear a new Vicki Lane novel was in the offing.
In fact, that very point was made when your name came up (oh so fondly) last night at the Crime Bake conference outside of Boston. Please know the New England branch of your fan club is as enthusiastic about your work as everyone else.
Dear all -- thanks for stopping by! I'm working on a (non-Elizabeth) Civil War era novel, set in my NC county (which is at least Elizabeth territory.) Someday...
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