Welcome!

Appalachian women writers are a largely unknown, under-appreciated group.There are, of course, a couple of exceptions, but for the most part much of the work of these women escapes larger public knowledge. This website is an attempt to remedy that, and has been created as part of a research project for Women's Studies. The writers you will find here are few, but they vary from the very famous to the virtually unknown. Seasoned writers such as Lee Smith are accompanied by ladies just coming onto the scene, such as Crystal Wilkinson.
I hope that this brief introduction to a few Appalachian Women Writers will leave you hungry for more! Please explore the links at the top, which will provide information about each of the authors.

Appalachia

Appalachia
By Muriel Miller Dressler

I am Appalachia. In my veins
Runs fierce mountain pride; the hill-fed streams
Of passion; and, stranger, you don’t know me!
You’ve analyzed my every move–you still
Go away shaking your head. I remain
Enigmatic. How can you find rapport with me–
You, who never stood in the bowels of hell,
Never felt a mountain shake and open its jaws
To partake of human sacrifice?
You, who never stood on a high mountain
Watching the sun unwind its spiral rays:
Who never searched the glens for wild flowers,
Never picked mayapples or black walnuts; never ran
Wildly through the woods in pure delight,
Nor dangled your feet in a lazy creek?
You, who never danced to wild sweet notes,
Outpouring of nimble-fingered fiddlers;
Who never just “sat a spell,” on a porch,
Chewing and whittling; or hearing in pastime
The deep-throated bay of chasing hounds
And hunters shouting with joy, “He’s treed!”
You, who never once carried a coffin
To a family plot high up on a ridge
Because mountain folk know it’s best to lie
Where breezes from the hills whisper, “You’re home”;
You, who never saw from the valley that graves on a hill
Bring easement of pain to those below?
I tell you, stranger, hill folk know
What life is all about; they don’t need pills
To tranquilize the sorrow and joy of living.
I am Appalachia: and, stranger,
Though you’ve studied me, you still don’t know.

From Wild Sweet Notes: Fifty Years of West Virginia Poetry 1950-1999 published by Publishers Place, Inc., 2000. via http://redravencircle.wordpress.com