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Sitting Up With the Dead: A Storied Journey Through the American South

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An enthralling, rollicking tour among the storytellers of the American Deep South.

The story of the South is not finished. The southeastern states of America, the old Confederacy, bristle with storytellers who refuse to be silent. Many of the tales passed down from generation to generation to be told and re-told continue to change their shape to suit their time, stretching elastically to find new ways of retailing the People’s Truth. Travelling back and forth, from the Carolinas to Louisiana, from the Appalachians to Atlantic islands, from Virginian valleys to Florida swamps, and sitting before bewitching storytellers who tell her tales that hold her hard, Pamela Petro gathers up a fistful of history, and sieves out of it the shiny truths that these stories have been polishing over the years. Here is another America altogether, lingering on behind the façade of the ubiquitous strip-mall of anodyne, branded commerce and communication, moving to other rhythms, reaching back into the past to clutch at the shattering events that shaped it and haunt it still.

450 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 1, 2002

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About the author

Pamela Petro

6 books20 followers
Pamela writes books and essays, takes photos--which she sometimes prints on rocks, or purposely shoots out of focus by moving her camera- teaches, and lives with her partner (and forthcoming puppy!) in Northampton, MA. Her new book is called The Long Field - A Memoir, Wales, and the Presence of Absence. It's about how the small country of Wales became a big part of her life. When she's not writing, making art, traveling to Wales--or just traveling--or reading, cooking, playing tennis, and writing emails, she teaches Creative Nonfiction on Lesley University's MFA in Creative Writing Program and at Smith College. She's also Co-Director of the Dylan Thomas Summer School in Creative Writing (open to everyone!) at the University of Wales Trinity St David, in Lampeter, Wales.

Here's her website: https://www.pamelapetro.com

Here's an essay she wrote that she really likes: https://www.harvardreview.org/content...

And here's another essay with some of her curious photos: https://www.guernicamag.com/shedding-...

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
356 reviews2 followers
May 22, 2017
I love stories and tales. I've heard them all my life; one of my earliest memories is begging my grandmother to "tell me tales." In college, I discovered so many of these old stories were older still--how the "Froggy Went A-Courtin'" song my Granddaddy taught me dated back to the courtship of Elizabeth I and the Duke of Anjou, or how my great-grandfather's "Who's Got My Big Toe?" came with the family from Ireland, centuries before.

This book is a gathering of stories and storytellers from all over the South. It starts with a forward from the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, TN (gee, it's grown since we went as kids), and ends in the swamps of Louisiana. It's history as story and parables, as memories and dreams. Some I'd heard--Wicked John, The Grey Man--and most I hadn't. It's a good book, and a thoughtful one. If you like such, I recommend this winding book. Then, go listen to The Moonlit Road podcast.
Profile Image for Vickie.
35 reviews3 followers
June 25, 2009
This book was not at all what I thought it would be - a road trip story in the south. It was about one woman's journey to learn more about the art and history of story-telling, which is most strong in the south. There were tonnes of references to the Civil War and a lot about the history of the south and slavery.

At times I found the protagonist a little indulgent - this was like a prolonged thesis, but nonetheless it was also full of interesting stories and you can do your own research into some of her muses, including people like Ray Hicks.

Well worth it, if you want to know more about the south or have an interest in theatre/ story telling.
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111 reviews
September 24, 2020
Listened to this on audio. It was great, on the whole; at times it got to be a bit too many stories to read/listen to. But, to its credit, it felt like I was listening to the stories of the storytellers that the book is about.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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