I think this novel is a little too sentimental, this is the only mark against it though. Dykeman writes on people and place in really amazing ways, I think many sections of this book are worthy of revisiting and close reading. Reading this alongside 'The French Broad', reveals lots about the Appalachia as a place and also Dykeman's feelings on the place and people of the Appalachia.
The story is engaging and interesting. It offers confrontational problems to the reader; at times however, these are resolved with too much surety in the text. This novel is all really about the characterisation of the Clayburn family - through the Clayburns, Dykeman is able to explore the entirety of the changes, the virtues, and the failings of the Appalachian people and communities.