A really fantastic look at working class and impoverished women’s lives across Appalachia through the early 1970s. Set up as a series of short stories, you learn so much about what it meant to live in this region, the ways massive corporations exploited the area’s resources and people, and a lovely reminder of what it originally meant to be a redneck.
There are some very progressive takes from these women that really highlight the stark differences between what it used to mean to be southern / Appalachian vs the bastardization of these labels that we see across the right.
Compelling and irreverent, this is going to be one of my top books of 2025.
Read this if you’re interested in women’s history, working class history, labor unions, class struggles, homemaking in the 20th century, or even the ways police have been used to defend capitol in the 20s-60s
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“Shirley's platform is a guaranteed annual income. She believes it is the right of every human being to have enough to eat, decent housing, clothes to wear, and proper medical attention. She knows from her own experience what it is like to go without these things.”
“The time will come. Someday us poor is going to overrule. We're gonna do it, by the help of God we're gonna do it. I believe it. I honest to God do. The poor is going to overrule. I've got faith in that.”
“The coal operators, fearing the strength of the rebellious miners, hired 325 armed guards. Some of the armed guards were deputized and given legal sanction to search houses of families on strike, to arrest any coal miner suspected of
"insubordination" to the coal operators, and to shoot and kill any miner they might consider "dangerous."
But Dad, the reason he wanted the gun was some of the miners and their families was starving and they needed some food. He aimed to get it for them.”
“Mommy told them they couldn't come in the house unless they left their guns outside. So they left their guns outside and come on in. They tore everything up.
Mommy stood there and held a shotgun on them the whole time they was there.
Mommy held the shotgun on them and made them put everything right back just the way it had been before, made them clean up the house.”