West Virginia Books
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Perhaps the Best "Rumpelstiltskin" StoryReview Date: 2001-10-10
A fine example of children's literature!Review Date: 2004-06-10
Quashiba finds herself in a precarious situation. Due to a slight untruth told by her mother to a visiting king, the young lady is forced to marry to king with the promise that she can weave fine golden cloth.
Though she is attended by handmaidens and receives her every want, her new husband demands that she come through with her mother?s promise after they are married one year and a day.
The time arrives and the girl knows not what to do. A little man with a wooden leg, a tail and wearing striped trousers magically appears one evening. He offers to help her make the fabric but with a price for his assistance: she has three nights and three chances per night to guess his name; if she doesn?t, she will be his tiny companion?forever.
After two days of successfully presenting the golden thread to her spouse, as well of two days of unsuccessfully guessing the little man?s name, the Quashiba feels impending doom. However, during dinner, her husband tells of his unusual encounter with a little man named "Lit'manhn Bittyun."
Quashiba is relieved and that evening when the little man comes, she toys with him with two fake names, finally announcing his real name.
The sprite storms off and is never seen again.
Knowledgeable readers will automatically see the similarity between this tale and the European ?Rumplestiltskin?. The book's illustrations are vivid and thought-provoking, making this book a KO for the primary classroom, combining fantasy, familial relationships, and effective use of dialect/language.
The late Hamilton has scored another winner that will embellish the home as well as the classroom.
Perhaps the Best "Rumpelstiltskin" StoryReview Date: 2001-10-10
The book is richly illustrated with vibrant colors and the words are pleasing to read silently or aloud. Both Virginia Hamiltion and the Dillons prove to be masters of their respective crafts and together produce a winning combination in their version of this classic tale.
Crazy James
beautiful!Review Date: 2001-03-03
Hamilton and the Dillons - A winning combination!Review Date: 2001-02-16

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A striking look into a musician's lifeReview Date: 2006-05-09
Sapper's SongReview Date: 2006-01-18
"Lost Highway" tells the tale of bluegrass musician Sapper Reeves, who in a vintage Chrysler rides the 1940's backroads of West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee with his compadres, the other two 'Still Creek Boys'. Though he's a wizard with the banjo, his band can't catch a break and seems destined for obscurity.
Richard Currey is a truly fine writer, excelling in detailing the epiphanies of Sapper's small town life. For example, there is a wonderful scene in which Sapper awakens one night as a winter blizzard is moving in, and goes to rouse his son so that they might together savor the beauty of the snowfall in the quiet, resting town.
All of the book, in fact, seems to exist in a protective bubble of nostalgia. Scene after scene is as perfectly drawn as the period piece illustrations that Gary Kelley designs for "Rolling Stone."
The romance of Sapper's life is the same as that of a minor league baseball player who never made the big leagues. It's the beauty of an obscure dream. Sapper's life is so compressed and idyllic that subplots about his marital problems and his son's eventual misadventure in Vietnam do not resound enough to provide a real conflict. Without real tension, the book is a pleasant cul de sac, a visit to the past and the magic hollow where music originates --- light years beyond what Robert Waller could do, but lacking the gravitas of a major novel.
Three-and-a-half stars.
The Comeback KidReview Date: 2005-08-21
Don't overlook this master of prose. Pushcart and O. Henry winner, Currey's voice is a powerful force in the world of literature.
Looking Forward to this....Review Date: 2005-08-21
A Great BookReview Date: 2001-07-15

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Ludie's LifeReview Date: 2007-11-08
A compelling and heartbreakingly honest readReview Date: 2007-01-05
As a West Virginia native, Rylant draws deeply on her roots and family connections to portray the life of an individual woman. A unique setting, the coal camps of West Virginia, provide a stark, work-till-you-die background to the comings and goings that make up a family grown against the backdrop of towering mountains.
While the mountains provide, they also seclude, and mountain people tend to be self sufficient because they learn early on how difficult the mountains can make life. Groceries, funerals, church and hospitals are always a challenge because of the mountains. Rylant explains how emotionally dangerous seeing the ocean can be to someone living in the mountains.
"The ocean went on too far
for Ludie,
who preferred seeing only the next ridge
out her kitchen window,
where trees grew whose names she knew
and a creek flowed,
small enough."
Rylant's depiction of Ludie as she experiences a plethora of events in marriage, children and life is stark and clean. This is exactly how Ludie liked her coal camp house built by the mine owners and set in identical rows at the base of the mountain. Ludie's house and life were simply furnished and regularly sanitized.
Ludie's life is shared with the reader through her thoughts about this relative or that neighbor. Rylant writes as if she has been granted express permission to record Ludie's sometimes-harsh opinions and melancholy remembrances. Rylant turns a fictional character's voice into such a realistic pathos that the reader can feel like an unwelcome voyeur addicted to seeking the sordid intricacies of Ludie's existence. While Ludie lives a good woman's life, her own sense of reality leads her to think unkind things about everyone and everything, from children to church.
Ludie lived a long life full of the "...joy, laughter, heartache, and loss..." that accompanies any life. There are more moments of painful reality than hilarity, but Rylant turns country humor with effortless grace. When speaking of her daughter finding religion after growing up refusing it, Ludie says, "Imagine the strain on that marriage. An ex-junkie from the Bronx and a born-again Christian hillbilly. It didn't last. He moved out, found a reasonable woman and remarried." Rylant has always been a master of irony and doesn't overuse the tactic in LUDIE'S LIFE, but inserts it when the reader least expects it. The effect is more realism, as if Ludie is sitting across the old kitchen table telling you a story and adding her own wry comments along the way.
Rylant writes of one woman, but thousands and thousands have lived Ludie's life and will identify some of their own histories woven into the rich fabric of this book. Some will shout hooray, some will sob, and some will stoically close the book and lay it aside knowing that the real truth of their lives has been rendered in black and white for the entire world to know. LUDIE'S LIFE is a brilliant contribution to the growing collection of Appalachian literature that tells the story as honestly and purely as life in the mountains has always been and always will be.
--- Reviewed by Joy Held
interestingReview Date: 2006-12-31
It was a quick read that gave you a look into the past.
Teens or young adults should enjoy this book. Some of the themes such as sex and other relationships that dealt with in the book are too over young children's heads.
One woman's life that will touch your heartReview Date: 2006-11-15
Growing up poor--hungry in her stepmother's uncaring life--Ludie learns to take care of herself at a young age, marrying very young because she needed a way out. She and Rupe raised six children, and were separated only when he died from the affects of mining in his late 70s.
Ludie didn't fear much--except loneliness--and knew in her 90s she could soon join her sister, granddaughter and Rupe--and would be lonely no more.
As I read, I noted so many lines worth rereading--or worth thinking about again and again, like ...
-- Ludie did not doubt that she was worthy of life, God's child, and necessary.
-- What happens when someone who is old and still sees out of the same eyes?
-- (A switch) ... was only a twig from a tree, after all. It wasn't personal, it wasn't vicious, the way words can be. ... she never tore her children down that way.
-- Ludie had made soldiers and teachers and nurses for the world (her children).
-- Ludie had seen too much of life to waste any time telling others how to live.
That final quote is my most favorite--I think.
Having never read anything by this Newbery Medalists author, I will now. This is not a book I would have selected--but now that I have been so moved by the messages in it, I am telling everyone about it.
Her storytelling is first rate, her imagery powerful, her pictures of people we know or wish we did--all add up to Ludie's Life.
Cynthia Ryland has written more than 100 books, including the poetry collection Boris; the Newbery-winning novel Missing May; and Appalachia: The voices of Sleeping Birds, which received the Boston Glob-Horn Book Award. Rylant lives in Portland, Oregon, but returned to her home state of West Virginia for this story.
Armchair Interviews says: Powerful read that will haunt you with its message of love, hope, birth, death--and all of life that lies in between.
"Poverty is hardest on those intelligent enough to understand it."Review Date: 2006-11-06
This small, but poignant volume speaks to the power of understatement, celebrating the long life of a woman who survives poverty, disappointments and hardship, carving out a niche of home and family that that is distinctly American in flavor. Born in Alabama, but spending most of her years in West Virginia, Ludie comes of age with America, her aspirations simple, marriage, home, family, hard work and peace of mind. Deprived of a mother as a young girl, Ludie is uncomfortable in her father's home with a new stepmother:
"Ludie's life was happy and sad...
There was no thought
to what work
she might do in her life...
Not when you're stealing food
off your own supper table."
Lack haunts Ludie; she never forgets the humiliation of stealing scraps from the dinner table, avoiding those who live in excess, content in the company of her husband, a West Virginia coal miner, and her six children. The stages of life follow, one after another, the changes in society reflected in Ludie's family, her children and grandchildren reflecting a century defined by the assassination of a president, an unpopular war and a fragmenting family structure. Yet this woman remains steady and resolute, a predictable rock to the family that returns to her. She never once sees the awesome beauty of the ocean, although her children do: "No mountain child ever finds words for an ocean", her resistance prompted by a history of poverty:
"The ocean is free
a luxury everyone can afford,
but Ludie learned early on
that there is a price for everything."
Ludie moves quietly through the years, never asking much beyond what she and her husband can provide, an uneventful yet proud passage, adapting, caring for the children who call her "mother" instead of "mama". A godly woman with the core values of a simple existence, Ludie is the American woman of the 20th century, before the great cultural upheaval that would so define the second half of the century:
"Ludie had seen too much of life
to waste any time
telling others how to live."
She passes quietly one day "in a small narrow bed in a nursing home" at the age of ninety-five, her legacy the grieving children and grandchildren who found comfort in the stolid presence of a woman in tune with her century. Luan Gaines/2006.

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Tries to do to muchReview Date: 2004-12-26
The author attempts to cover all of this and provide unlimited human-interest stories too. He fails, as one part of the story elbows another out of the way, while tripping over a third part. This is not a poorly written book. The problem is origination and discipline. No story is completed and human-interest keeps interrupting. A major problem is maps! In the Illustrations section are three useless maps. First, they are in the wrong place, second the two dealing with battles have to little detail, lastly if you have not looked at the illustrations you will not know they are there.
This is the second book I have read on this campaign. I have not improved my knowledge or understanding by reading it.
Great Storyteller Tells Tale of West Virginia's BirthReview Date: 2004-08-28
This book is just terrific: brisk narrative pace, interesting characters, colorful anecdotes. It deals simultaneously with the Civil War's initial clash of arms in the mountains of western Virginia, and the political machinations that surrounded the birth of West Virginia and its entry into the Union as the 35th state.
Western Virginia is the place where Generals McClellan and Lee make their Civil War debuts. It is from these mountains that McClellen emerges as the Young Napoleon, hailed as the Union's savior. McClellen's prodigious organizational skills are clearly evident; for example, he pioneers the use of the telegraph in battlefield communications -- one of a dozen Civil War "firsts" the author cites. But the tendencies that would later cost McClellen his command and sully his reputation in military history already begin to rear their heads: exaggeration of enemy troop strength; battlefield timidity ("he sat there with indecision stamped on every line of his countenance"); a haughty, supercilious manner.
In contrast to McClellan, Lee limps out of western Virginia with his reputation greatly diminished -- undermined by uncooperative mountain weather, poor timing and internecine fueds between political generals that precluded battlefield coordination. It was during the bleak days in western Virginia that Lee grew a white beard, and earned the derisive sobriquet, "Granny Lee."
The western Virginia campaign often receives short shrift in Civil War histories, overshadowed by the larger, bloodier engagements that followed. "Rebels at the Gate" fills the void and does so with an engaging, well-paced narrative. This book is sure to delight anyone interested in the American Civil War.
A gripping and involving narrative of a turbulent timeReview Date: 2004-06-08
A Worthy Companion to "Lee vs. McClellan"Review Date: 2004-08-29
He also writes of spies, of bushwackers like the deadly Nancy Hart, a little spitfire who killed a Union jailer taking her photo, of the various West Virginia politicians who clamored to 'secede' themselves from the Confederacy, and the figures of history, - Stonewall Jackson, George McClellan, Robert E. Lee, and the sarcastic "bitter" (Ambrose) Bierce, whose Civil War experience, which began in West Virginia, had a profound impact on his future writings.
As a previous reviewer has noted, Lesser has a storyteller's gift, but he also knows his history. A worthy work to place alongside the Newell book, if you can still get a copy.
Rebels at the Gates Opens an Overlooked Period in the ACWReview Date: 2004-05-13
A long time resident of West Virginia and western Virginia (the Shenandoah valley) and a sometime student of the American Civil War, I happily learned much that I didn't know about some of my favorite places and historical figures. Intrigued, I read this book straight through.

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Great for the exploring photographerReview Date: 2008-04-11
Highly recommended for waterfall lovers in the VA and WV region.
Waterfalls of Virginia and West VirginiaReview Date: 2007-02-08
Great Book!! Beautiful Photography!!Review Date: 2002-07-27
A book for all waterfall lovers Review Date: 2005-09-16
Great addition to existing hiking mapsReview Date: 2006-08-07
and do use the Gazetteer that is referenced.
Directions and trail description are right on, more informative
than what the park service gives you.
I have hiked many of the Waterfalls referenced, and would never
have found some without this Book & Gazetteer.(outside of parks)
I have purchased other books about Waterfalls in VA, and this
is by far the best.
Note-to-self (and others): I just hiked the Rose River Falls
loop that includes the Dark Hollow Falls, in SNP, this past
weekend, 1) "all trailheads that start on SkyLine Drive go downhill",
that means hiking back UP 2) Recommend hiking the loop
in a ClockWise Direction, as when you are hiking back UP the
other side of the loop, you have a beautiful view of the Rose
River and Hogcamp Branch and the many, many cascades of water
over the rocks,as it distracts you from the long hike back up to the parking area. Literally about a mile along the water.

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real warReview Date: 2000-07-03
An excellent acount of West Virginia's Coal Mine WarsReview Date: 1998-11-11
One of the best books ever about the W.Va. mine warsReview Date: 2006-08-13
Appalachians Are Not Lazy HicksReview Date: 1999-11-02
The president had to declare martial law - twice.
While Lee doesn't exactly have a beautiful, rolling style, he tells it like it was; he was there.
If you want to know about the true character of the Appalachian people, read this book.

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Great Research of the FEUDReview Date: 2004-09-07
Waller has meticulously studied the subject matter, and it's worth reading. And American tragedy.
Well-researched and written account of the famous feud alongReview Date: 1998-05-28
Useful, but flawed in several important aspects . . .Review Date: 2002-09-21
Hatfields and McCoysReview Date: 2002-07-21
In her introduction, Professor Waller discusses the previous interpretations of the feud. The first states that, "the feud and the culture from which it emerged were anachronisms in modern society" and "they represented a primitive way of life which had somehow been preserved in much the same way that prehistoric fossils are preserved." The second school of thought suggests that the feud was a result of the transformation that was occurring in the region due to the "onslaught of industrialization." Waller rejects both of these interpretations because of three aspects of the feud that she has identified as violence, family, and timing. Waller has concluded after much research that "in the 1870s and 1880s, the Tug Valley may have been boisterous and rowdy, but it was far from dangerous" and that "something unusual was happening eithin this particular community which drove a few individuals and families to resort to extreme measures." And Waller discounts the family explanation because " supportersof the Hatfields and of the Mccoys consisted of numerous individuals unrelated to those families; in fact, more than half of each group were unrelated to the feud leaders. More puzzling, there were McCoys on the Hatfield side and Hatfields on the McCoy side." Waller rejects also that the feud was caused by the Civil War. She dates the feud from 1878-1900, and identifies two phases with a five year interim. Waller offers that the feud must be examined internally and also in the light of regional and national trends.
The Tug Valley in the years following the Civil War underwent profound changes. Due to rapid growth in population and the finite agricultural resources available in the Valley, a sort of greedy desperation began to emerge in the character of some inhabitants of the Tug Valley. Also at this time outside interest in the vast resources of the Appalachias was taking the form of big money men and local agents purchasing huge tracts of land in order to exploit the mountains for their coal and timber. Gradually the mountaineer was transformed from an inependent farmer to an impoverished wage laborer. attempting to buck this trend is none other than Devil Anse Hatfield. Through hard work and some crafty legal maneuvers, Anse becomes proprieter of a sizable timber busines. And in the process incurs the wrath of Old Ranel McCoy and Perry Cline. Old Ranel through his own foolishness has not prospered, and Anse has bested Cline in a court action and removed him from his lands, which are then awarded to Anse. This is what Professor Waller has discovered to be the crux of the feud--economic power and control and its resultant societal implications. Anse has climbed the ladder while others have watched, and they are jealous.
These truths were initially lost because of the sensational handling of the feud by the newspapers of the day. Altina Waller has been successful in separating the myths from the reality. She states in conclusion that, "the feudists were struggling with the same historical forces of transformation that had been changing Americal since before the American Revolution." This is the larger picture.

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My Favorite BookReview Date: 2000-03-29
A fine family chronicleReview Date: 1998-11-16
Keep at itReview Date: 1999-12-04
Revealing our dreamsReview Date: 2000-01-13


Updated 7th Ed. Monongahela Natl Forest Hiking GuideReview Date: 2008-01-18
of the 'Guide'; Ranger Districts; Table of Trails (notes/intersections/distance/elev. min-max/TR#) THEN......a thorough detail of each TRAIL (TR#, Trail Name. Scenery, difficulty, distance, conditon, elevation, segments, access, photographs). Recommended literature, and solicitation to "help improve this guide".
monongahelaReview Date: 2005-10-05
The best comprehensive guide to the MonReview Date: 2005-03-10
Comprehensive hiking guide of MNFReview Date: 2006-01-02
The trail descriptions refer to the topo maps in the book and include highlights of the trails. The trails are also marked on the topo maps in the book.
The book is divided by Ranger Districts within the Forest, which makes covering this huge area of forest more manageable. It also includes information about other areas in the Forest such as Blackwater Falls State Park.
Having used this guide I definitely recommend it. The only downside to such a comprehensive book is that it is a little bit too heavy to be carried on the trail. I have used it for planning purposes and have purchased the USGS topo maps to carry while hiking.

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A tale to keep you on the edge of your chairReview Date: 2002-07-02
When secretive Susan Rourke moves in nearby, then disappears, Zoe suspects she has been murdered. Handprints in dried bloodstains, a dented front door hanging by one hinge, a history of abuse by her husband Patrick -- all seem to confirm her suspicions. Then Patrick turns up dead. Zoe's investigation uncovers unsuspected secrets as this lively story progresses.
Labovitz definitely has a knack for telling a riveting tale, and for creating characters that are intriguing. We can hope that the author will entertain us with more stories like this. The main character, Zoe, is amusing and resourceful and readers will look forward to hearing more about her adventures.
The story was very interesting and the book worth reading.Review Date: 1999-09-02
Exciting New AuthorReview Date: 1999-08-12
Well-done West Virginia cozyReview Date: 1999-05-04
She watched in horror as an abusive spouse murdered her best friend. In turn, she killed the man. However, filled with guilt, and remorse, former Justice Department employee Zoe Kergullis flees DC to the quiet safety of Bickle County, West Virginia, home of her cousin.
Zoe meets Susan R, a person who has recently rented a trailer with her spouse. Susan acts like an individual afraid of the world, even going so far as to not providing her last name to Zoe. A few days later Zoe goes to see how Susan is doing only to find lots of blood but no people. An organized search for Susan and her husband Paul begins. Soon, the searchers turn up Paul's murdered corpse. The police believe Susan killed her abusive mate. Zoe decides to do her own investigation, which begins at the famous Ordinary inn, an alleged stop on the nineteenth century Underground RailRoad.
ORDINARY JUSTICE is anything but ordinary. The West Virginia cozy provides readers with a genuine feel for the rural area as well as an interesting historical perspective. The story line skillfully and intelligently deals with spousal abuse. Zoe is a warm protagonist who conducts an entertaining inquiry. Fans of regional who-done-its have a new author, Trudy Labovitz, whose in depth characterizations make this novel well worth reading.
Harriet Klausner
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The book is richly illustrated with vibrant colors and the words are pleasing to read silently or aloud. Both Virginia Hamiltion and the Dillons prove to be masters of their respective crafts and together produce a winning combination in their version of this classic tale.
Crazy James