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From My Highest Hill: Carolina Mountain Folks

di Olive Tilford Dargan

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In From My Highest Hill, a long-overlooked masterpiece of American literature, Olive Tilford Dargan captures with affection and uncanny accuracy the character traits, attitudes, folkways, and dialect of the people who lived in the Great Smoky Mountains during the early years of the twentieth century. First published in 1925 as Highland Annals, the story cycle was extensively revised before it was reissued under its current title in 1941. The second edition included for the first time fifty striking illustrations by photographer Bayard Wootten. Among the delightful characters who come to life in the book are Serena, who "'always take[s] the gait [she] can keep,'" and Sam, who has "'always got duck-oil on his tongue.'" In her moving and amusing encounters with her highland neighbors, Dargan's narrator, an outsider and a woman alone, learns many valuable lessons from them and gradually wins their acceptance and trust. The republication of From My Highest Hill is comparable in significance to the rediscovery of Kate Chopin's Awakening in the 1960s and of Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God in the 1970s. This edition includes an introduction that describes Olive Dargan's life and literary career and assesses From My Highest Hill from a critical perspective. It also contains an afterword that provides biographical information about Bayard Wootten and commentary on her illustrations. The Author: Olive Tilford Dargan (1869-1968), a Kentucky native who lived for two decades in the mountains of western North Carolina, published many critically acclaimed works of poetry, drama, and prose fiction. Her 1932 radical feminist novel,Call Home the Heart, was reprinted by the Feminist Press in 1983. The Editors:  Anna Shannon Elfenbein teaches classes in American fiction and film and women's studies at West Virginia University. She is the author of Women on the Color Line: Evolving Stereotypes and the Writings of George Washington Cable, Grace King, Kate Chopin and an editor of Engendering the Word: Feminist Essays in Psychosexual Poetics. Jonathan Morrow is a doctoral candidate at West Virginia University and has contributed essays to Feminist Writers, The Encyclopedia of Novels Into Films, and the journal Art Papers.… (altro)
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This collection of stories is semi-autobiographical. The author was an "enlightened intellectual" who came to live in the Smokies in the early 20th century. Much to her surprise, she learned as much from her local neighbors as they learned from her. "Serena and Wild Strawberries" is one of my very favorite short stories ever, and reveals how Dargan came to respect the Smokies region and its people.
Anyone traveling to the mountain biking "mecca" Tsali Recreational Area on Fontana Lake passes right by the mountain were Dargan lived and farmed for several decades. Her books written under the pseudonym, Fielding Burke, are also exceptional. "Call Home the Heart" tells of mountain people who moved east to the mill town of Gastonia and got caught up in the textile strikes. ( )
  PerryEury | Dec 28, 2018 |
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In From My Highest Hill, a long-overlooked masterpiece of American literature, Olive Tilford Dargan captures with affection and uncanny accuracy the character traits, attitudes, folkways, and dialect of the people who lived in the Great Smoky Mountains during the early years of the twentieth century. First published in 1925 as Highland Annals, the story cycle was extensively revised before it was reissued under its current title in 1941. The second edition included for the first time fifty striking illustrations by photographer Bayard Wootten. Among the delightful characters who come to life in the book are Serena, who "'always take[s] the gait [she] can keep,'" and Sam, who has "'always got duck-oil on his tongue.'" In her moving and amusing encounters with her highland neighbors, Dargan's narrator, an outsider and a woman alone, learns many valuable lessons from them and gradually wins their acceptance and trust. The republication of From My Highest Hill is comparable in significance to the rediscovery of Kate Chopin's Awakening in the 1960s and of Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God in the 1970s. This edition includes an introduction that describes Olive Dargan's life and literary career and assesses From My Highest Hill from a critical perspective. It also contains an afterword that provides biographical information about Bayard Wootten and commentary on her illustrations. The Author: Olive Tilford Dargan (1869-1968), a Kentucky native who lived for two decades in the mountains of western North Carolina, published many critically acclaimed works of poetry, drama, and prose fiction. Her 1932 radical feminist novel,Call Home the Heart, was reprinted by the Feminist Press in 1983. The Editors:  Anna Shannon Elfenbein teaches classes in American fiction and film and women's studies at West Virginia University. She is the author of Women on the Color Line: Evolving Stereotypes and the Writings of George Washington Cable, Grace King, Kate Chopin and an editor of Engendering the Word: Feminist Essays in Psychosexual Poetics. Jonathan Morrow is a doctoral candidate at West Virginia University and has contributed essays to Feminist Writers, The Encyclopedia of Novels Into Films, and the journal Art Papers.

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