Walk Till the Dogs Get Mean: Meditations on the Forbidden from Contemporary Appalachia

Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$32.34
Publisher
Ohio University Press
Publish Date
Pages
288
Dimensions
5.9 X 8.9 X 0.7 inches | 1.15 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780821421680
BISAC Categories:

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author

Adrian Blevins was born in Abingdon, Virginia. She is the author of Live from the Homesick Jamboree, The Brass Girl Brouhaha, and two chapbooks. She has received a Kate Tufts Discovery Award, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award, and a Pushcart Prize, among others. She teaches at Colby College.

Karen Salyer McElmurray's Surrendered Child: A Birth Mother's Journey was a National Book Critics Circle Notable Book. Her novels are The Motel of the Stars and Strange Birds in the Tree of Heaven. The recipient of a National Endowment from the Arts Fellowship, McElmurray teaches at West Virginia Wesleyan College.

Reviews
"Walk Till the Dogs Get Mean offers lively discussion of the role of silence and silencing in Appalachian culture. Blevins and McElmurray have assembled an impressive array of established and new voices. The essays are provocative, electric, occasionally heart-rending, occasionally hilarious, but always thoughtful and essential."--Dinty W. Moore, author of Between Panic & Desire
"The essays of Walk Till the Dogs Get Mean create a cumulative effect of startling honesty. Like any worthwhile act of reckoning, this anthology is not particularly concerned with providing answers to the tough personal or cultural dilemmas posed in the essays. Instead it focuses on the writers' willingness to engage permanently open questions. In fact, the sheer variety of style and form collected in this book offers its own powerful testament to the evolving legacy of literary Appalachia."--Chapter16.org/Knoxville Sentinel
"The book's diverse reflections... offer a fascinating cross-section of contemporary Appalachian authors' experiences in regard to their unorthodoxy of gender, religion, race, or class in the region."--Now and Then
"There's galvanizing power in the pages of Walk Till the Dogs Get Mean. The voices collected here, crying out of an Appalachia too often defined by outsiders, ask us to raise our own voices against those who would speak for us, against our whispered inner fears that our stories aren't worth telling. This is a book for our sons and daughters. I know I'll be handing it down to mine."--Amy Greene, author of Bloodroot and Long Man
"The times they are a-changin', even in one of the most traditional of places, Appalachia. Shuck off your biases and read this book--a lot of suffering here but also persistence, triumph, achievement, fulfillment, and joy."--Loyal Jones, author of Faith and Meaning in the Southern Uplands