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Ackerman, Kathy Cantley. 2004. The Heart of Revolution: The Radical Life and Novels of Olive Dargan [Olive Tilford Dargan, 1869-1968; pseud. Fielding Burke]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 237 pp.
Adams, Gail Galloway. 2002. “ West Virginia, Literature Of.” In The Companion to Southern Literature: Themes, Genres, Places, People, Movements, and Motifs, eds. J. Flora and L. Mackethan, 957-962. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Adams, Sheila Kay. 1995. Come Go Home With Me: Stories. Foreword by Lee Smith, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 120 pp.
Adams, Sheila Kay. 2004. My Old True Love: A Novel [Civil War-era N.C.; singing, ballad theme]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 289 pp.
Adams, Timothy Dow. 2004. “Telling Stories in Dorothy Allison’s Two or Three Things I Know For Sure” [ New York: Dutton, 1995]. Southern Literary Journal 36 (Spring): 82-99.
Albert, Susan Wittig. 2003. “The Art of Sharyn McCrumb: Anthropologist and Balladeer.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 69-79. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Allison, Dorothy. 2001. “Talking Trash: The Interview: Dorothy Allison” [web page]. By Marilee Strong. 17 pp. http://home.earthlink.net/~uur/trash.htm. (“Originally published in San Francisco Focus, KQED, Northern California Broadcasting”).
Alther, Lisa. 2001. “Healing Laughter: A Conversation (recorded at the Lisa Alther Literary Festival, Emory & Henry College, October 20, 2000).” Interview by Wayne Pond. Iron Mountain Review 17 (Spring): 28-36.
Alther, Lisa. 2001. “Lisa Alther Goes Back to East Tennessee” [considering moving home]. Iron Mountain Review 17 (Spring): 4-5.
Alther, Lisa. 2001. “The Eye of the Lord” [essay; originally appeared in Women’s Review of Books, July 1999]. Iron Mountain Review 17 (Spring): 6-7.
Alvarez, Raymond. 1998. Coal Camp Boys [fiction; 1950s-60s W.Va.]. Fairmont, W.Va.: Word’s Worth Writing Services. 425 pp.
Always a Love Story: Fiction from the Appalachian Mountains. 2001. Special issue, Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Summer): 1-44.
Anderson, Belinda. 2001. The Well Ain’t Dry Yet [short stories; W.Va.]. Charleston, W.Va.: Mountain State Press. 155 pp.
Anderson, Linda. 1999. The Secrets of Sadie Maynard [mystery/romance; W.Va.]. New York: Pocket Star Books. 452 pp.
Anderson, Maggie. 2000. Windfall: New and Selected Poems. Pitt Poetry Series. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 112 pp.
Anderson, Maggie. 2004. “Sentences of Light” [on the poetry of Robert Morgan]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Summer): 37-39.
Andrews, Tom. 2002. Random Symmetries: The Collected Poems of Tom Andrews [1961-2001; W.Va.; hemophilia, HIV]. Oberlin, Ohio: Oberlin College Press. 265 pp.
Angyal, Andrew J. 1995. Wendell Berry [handbook; criticism and interpretation]. Twayne’s United States Author Series; TUSAS no. 654. New York: Twayne Publishers. 181 pp.
Angyal, Andrew J. 1997. “Wendell Berry.” In Encyclopedia of the Essay, ed. T. Chevalier, 87-89. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers.
Annas, Mary Roche. 2000. “Proletarian Disaster and Social Change: Representations of Raymond Williams in Vicki Covington’s Night Ride Home” [1992 novel about 1939 mining town Bessemer, Ala.]. In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 155-165. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Anthony, Joseph C. 2003. “Burning the Question” [critiques poetry and stories of James Goode]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Spring): 14-21.
Appalachian Accents: Articles, Fiction, Essays, Poetry, and Reviews. 2000. Special issue, Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 17 (Summer): 1-53.
Appalachian Poetry: Articles, Essays, Poetry, and Reviews. 1998. Special issue, Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 15 (Summer): 1-40.
Armstrong, Jennifer. 2000. Theodore Roosevelt: Letters from a Young Coal Miner [1901 Pa.; juvenile fiction; Polish immigrant]. Dear Mr. President series. Delray Beach, Fla.: Winslow Press. 118 pp.
Arnold, Edwin T. 2002. “The Mosaic of McCarthy’s Fiction.” In Cormac McCarthy, ed. H. Bloom, 45-51. Modern Critical Views. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers.
Arnold, Edwin T. 2002. “The Mosaic of McCarthy’s Fiction” [b. 1933]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 1-8. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Arnold, Edwin T., ed. 2002. “Donald Harington.” Special issue of Southern Quarterly 40 (Winter): 1-156.
Arnow, Harriette Simpson. 1996 [1963; 1984] Flowering of the Cumberland. Reprint, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press/Bison Books. 464 pp. Originally published, New York: Macmillan; Lexington: University Press of Kentucky)
Arnow, Harriette Simpson. 1999 [1954]. The Dollmaker. Reprint, with an afterword by Joyce Carol Oates. New York: Avon Books. 608 pp. Originally published, New York: Macmillan.
Arnow, Harriette Simpson. 1999. Between the Flowers [Arnow’s second novel, previously unpublished, written in the 1930s]. Edited by Fred Svoboda. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press. 448 pp.
Arnow, Pat, and Jo Carson. 1998. “The Wealth of Story: A Conversation” [interview recorded at the Jo Carson Literary Festival, Emory & Henry College, October 31, 1997]. Iron Mountain Review 14 (Summer): 31-37.
Ashcom, Robert L. 2002. Winter Run [fiction; 1940s Blue Ridge Va. boyhood; race relations]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 240 pp.
Baber, Bob Henry, George Ella Lyon, and Gurney Norman, eds. 1994. Old Wounds, New Words: An Anthology of Recent Appalachian Poetry. Ashland, KY: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 203 pp.
Baber, Bob Henry. 1994. A Picture from Life's Other Side. Richwood, W.Va.: B. H. Baber. 118 pp.
Bahr, Howard. 1998. The Black Flower: A Novel of the Civil War [Franklin, Tenn.; 1864]. New York: Henry Holt. 267 pp.
Baker, Julie. 2002. Up Molasses Mountain [adolescent fiction; 1953 W.Va. coal town; strike]. New York: Wendy Lamb Books/Random House. 209 pp.
Baldacci, David. 2000. Wish You Well [fiction; 1940 Va.]. New York: Warner Books. 401 pp.
Ball, Bo. 2002 [1988]. Appalachian Patterns: Stories [11 stories; 1930s-40s Va.]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. Originally published, Atlanta, Ga.: Independence Publishing Company. 162 pp.
Ballard, Sandra L. 1997. “Harriette Simpson Arnow’s Unpublished Final Novel, Belle.” Appalachian Journal 25 (Fall): 48-61.
Ballard, Sandra L., and Patricia L. Hudson, eds. 2003. Listen Here: Women Writing in Appalachia [anthology; 105 writers; with biographies and bibliographies]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 673 pp. [authors: Sheila Kay Adams, Dorothy Allison, Lisa Alther, Maggie Anderson, Anne W. Armstrong, Harriette Simpson Arnow, Sylvia Trent Auxier, Marilou Awiakta, Artie Ann Bates, Frances Courtenay Baylor, Sue Ellen Bridgers, Florence Cope Bush, Kathryn Stripling Byer, Candie Carawan, Jo Carson, Rebecca Caudill, Lillie D. Chaffin, Loletta Clouse, Ann Cobb, Lisa Coffman, Amy Tipton Cortner, Lou V.P. Crabtree, Olive Tilford Dargan [Fielding Burke], Doris Davenport, Rebecca Harding Davis, Ann Deagon, Angelyn DeBord, Annie Dillard, Hilda Downer, Muriel Miller Dressler, Will Allen Dromgoole, Wilma Dykeman, Sarah Barnwell Elliott, Sidney Saylor Farr, Nikky Finney, Lucy Furman, Denise Giardina, Janice Holt Giles, Nikki Giovanni, Gail Godwin, Connie Jordan Green, Virginia Hamilton, Pauletta Hansel, Corra Harris, Mildred Haun, Ellesa Clay High, Mary Bozeman Hodges, Gloria Houston, Lee Howard, Mary Johnston, Mary Harris “Mother” Jones, Jane Wilson Joyce, May Justus, Edith Summers Kelley, Leatha Kendrick, Barbara Kingsolver, Lisa Koger, Catherine Landis, Lily May Ledford, Grace Lumpkin, George Ella Lyon, Linda Parsons Marion, Catherine Marshall, Belinda Ann Mason, Kathy L. May, Truda Williams McCoy, Sharyn McCrumb, Jeanne McDonald, Karen Salyer McElmurray, Llewellyn McKernan, Irene McKinney, Louise McNeill, Jane Merchant, Emma Bell Miles, Heather Ross Miller, Janice Townley Moore, MariJo Moore, Mary Noailles Murfree, Elaine Fowler Palencia, Jayne Anne Phillips, Lynn Powell, Barbara Presnell, Rita Sims Quillen, Jean Ritchie, Elizabeth Madox Roberts, Anne Newport Royall, Cynthia Rylant, Bettie Sellers, Mary Lee Settle, Anne Shelby, Muriel Earley Sheppard, Betsy Sholl, Ellen Harvey Showell, Bennie Lee Sinclair, Verna Mae Slone, Barbara Smith, Effie Waller Smith, Lee Smith, Jane Stuart, Adriana Trigiani, Dana Wildsmith, Sylvia Wilkinson, Meredith Sue Willis, Leigh Allison Wilson, Mary Elizabeth Witherspoon].
Ballard, Sandra, Patricia Beaver, and Gurney Norman. 1997. “Water Flowing From High Ground: A Conversation; (Recorded at the Gurney Norman Literary Festival, Emory & Henry College, October 25, 1996)” [interview with Gurney Norman]. Iron Mountain Review 13 (Spring): 28-33.
Barker, Garry. 2003 [1986]. Mountain Passage [stories; 1940s-50s Ky.]. Reprint. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 250 pp. Originally published, Berea, Ky.: Kentucke Imprints.
Bates, Artie Ann. 1995. Ragsale [children’s literature; Ky.]. Illustrated by Jeff Chapman-Crane. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 30 pp. unnumbered.
Battlo, Jean. 2002. The Mahotep Synod [murder mystery]. Parsons, W.Va.: McClain Printing Company. 317 pp.
Bausch, Richard, ed. 2001. The Cry of an Occasion: Fiction from the Fellowship of Southern Writers [19 stories; writers include Fred Chappell, Lee Smith, and William Hoffman]. Foreword by George Garrett. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 222 pp.
Bausch, Robert. 2002. The Gypsy Man [fiction; 1959 Shenandoah Mountains, Va.; outlaws]. New York: Harcourt. 495 pp.
Beattie, L. Elisabeth, ed. 1996. Conversations with Kentucky Writers. Foreword by Wade Hall, Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 408 pp.
Belanus, Betty J. 2004. Seasonal: A Novel [main character is a grad student folklorist doing summer fieldwork in 1970s East Tenn.]. Rockville, Md.: Round Barn Press. 192 pp.
Bender, Margaret, ed. 2004. Linguistic Diversity in the South: Changing Codes, Practices, and Ideology [nine essays: dialects: Appalachian, Melungeon, African American, Ocracoke, Lumbee, Cajun, Seminole, Muskogee]. Southern Anthropological Society Proceedings, no. 37. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 160 pp.
Benedict, Pinckney. 1994. Dogs of God [fiction; W.Va.]. New York: Doubleday. 354 pp.
Bennett, Tanya Long. 1998. “The Protean Ivy in Lee Smith’s Fair and Tender Ladies” [character study]. Southern Literary Journal 30 (Spring): 76-95.
Bensko, John. 2000. The Iron City [poems: Ala. coal and steel region]. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. 76 pp.
Benson, Erica J. 2003. “Folk Linguistic Perceptions and the Mapping of Dialect Boundaries” [Ohio; southern third, with Ky. and W.Va., labeled “hillbilly slang”; maps, table]. American Speech 78 (Fall): 307-330.
Berry, K. Wesley. 2000. “The Lay of the Land in Cormac McCarthy’s The Orchard Keeper and Child of God” [reflects “real-life economic and ecological conditions”]. Southern Quarterly 38 (Summer): 61-77.
Berry, K. Wesley. 2002. “The Lay of the Land in Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachia.” In Cormac McCarthy: New Directions, ed. J. Lilly, 47-73. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Berry, Wendell. 1994. Entries. New York: Pantheon. 80 pp.
Berry, Wendell. 1996. A World Lost. [fiction] Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint. 160 pp.
Berry, Wendell. 1997. Two More Stories of the Port William Membership [short fiction]. Frankfort, Ky.: Gnomon Press. 62 pp.
Berry, Wendell. 1998. A Timbered Choir: The Sabbath Poems, 1979-1997. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint. 240 pp.
Berry, Wendell. 1998. The Selected Poems of Wendell Berry [100 poems from nine previous collections]. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint Press. 178 pp.
Berry, Wendell. 1999 [1974]. The Memory of Old Jack [Ky.; fiction classic]. Reprint. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint. 223 pp. Originally published, New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
Berry, Wendell. 2000. Jayber Crow: A Novel [barber of fictional Port William, Ky.]. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint. 384 pp.
Berry, Wendell. 2004 [1969]. The Long-Legged House [author’s first published collection of essays including topics: strip mining, Vietnam, citizenship]. Reprint. Washington, D.C.: Shoemaker & Hoard. 213 pp. Originally published, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World.
Berry, Wendell. 2004. Hannah Coulter: A Novel [Port William, Ky.; “in her late seventies, twice-widowed and alone, Hannah sorts through her memories”]. Washington, D.C.: Shoemaker & Hoard. 190 pp.
Berry, Wendell. 2004. That Distant Land: The Collected Stories [fictional Port William, Ky.: 23 stories spanning 1888-1986]. Washington, D.C.: Shoemaker & Hoard. 440 pp.
Beyers, Chris. 2003. “Louis Zukofsky in Kentucky in History” [1904-1978; his epic poem “A”; Kentucky theme, 1963; chairmaker Chester Cornett; Marx, Spinoza]. College Literature 30 (Fall): 71-88.
Billheimer, John W. 2003. Drybone Hollow [fiction/mystery; W.Va. coal sludge dam burst]. New York: St. Martin’s. 276 pp.
Billheimer, John. 1998. The Contrary Blues [first novel; mystery; Huntington, W.Va.]. New York: St. Martin’s Press. 244 pp.
Billheimer, John. 2000. Highway Robbery [fiction/mystery; Huntington, W.Va.]. New York: St. Martin’s Minotaur. 290 pp.
Billheimer, John. 2001. Dismal Mountain [fiction/mystery; W.Va.; 3 rd in a series]. New York: St. Martin’s Minotaur. 320 pp.
Billips, Martha. 1999. Review of Between the Flowers, by Harriette Simpson Arnow (East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 1999). Appalachian Heritage 27 (Fall): 69-72.
Billips, Martha. 2003. “Reclaiming Ravaged Land: The Arnows of Keno and Nunn Ballew of Hunter’s Horn” [1949; Harriette Arnow (1908-1986)]. Journal of Kentucky Studies 20 (September): 130-139.
Bizarro, Patrick, ed. 1997. Dream Garden: The Poetic Vision of Fred Chappell [interview; 17 essays]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 256 pp.
Bizarro, Patrick, ed. 2004. More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell [15 essays]. With a foreword by Robert Morgan. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 288 pp.
Bizarro, Patrick. 2004. “‘Growth of a Poet’s Mind’ and the Problem of Autobiography: Distance and Point of View in the Writings of Fred Chappell.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 72-91. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Bizarro, Patrick. 2004. “Food as Commodity and Metaphor in Gap Creek: The Making of Julie” [1999 novel by Robert Morgan]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Summer): 29-35.
Bloom, Harold, ed. 2002. Cormac McCarthy [12 essays, chronology, bibliography]. Modern Critical Views. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers. 201 pp.
Blount, Roy, Jr. 2004. “How to Talk Southern” [review essay of Dictionary of Smoky Mountain English (University of Tennessee Press, 2004)]. New York Times Book Review, 21 November, 32-33.
Boggess, Ace, ed. 2004. Wild Sweet Notes II: More Great Poetry from West Virginia [follow-up anthology: 60 poets, 200 poems]. Huntington, W.Va.: Publishers Place. 233 pp.
Bottoms, Greg. 2001. Sentimental, Heartbroken Rednecks: Stories [Shenandoah Valley characters; reminiscent of Breece D’J Pancake]. New York: Context Books. 215 pp.
Bourne, Frank Edward. 2002. “Conversation with James Still” [excerpts from the author’s journal: 1986, 1997]. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Winter): 26-32.
Bouson, J. Brooks. 2001. “‘You Nothing But Trash’: White Trash Shame in Dorothy Allison’s Bastard Out of Carolina.” Southern Literary Journal 34 (Fall): 101-123.
Bradley, Kimberly Brubaker. 2002. Halfway to the Sky [juvenile fiction; Appalachian Trail; 12-year-old’s coming-of-age]. New York: Delacorte. 176 pp.
Brandt, Ann. 1999. Crowfoot Ridge [first novel; romance/suspense; N.C.]. New York: HarperCollins. 278 pp.
Brewton, Vince. 2004. “The Changing Landscape of Violence in Cormac McCarthy’s Early Novels and the Border Trilogy.” Southern Literary Journal 37 (Fall): 121-143.
Brickman, Barbara Jane. 2000. “Imposition and Resistance in Cormac McCarthy’s The Orchard Keeper.” Southern Quarterly 38 (Winter): 123-134.
Brooks, Skip. 2002. Monteith’s Mountains [murder mystery set in 1900, logging-era Gatlinburg, Tenn.]. Boone, N.C.: High Country Publishers. 288 pp.
Brosi, George. 1997. “Jim Wayne Miller: Chronological Bibliography” [30 entries; annotated]. Appalachian Heritage 25 (Fall): 51-54.
Brosi, George. 2002. “Appalachian Literature” [history]. In The Companion to Southern Literature: Themes, Genres, Places, People, Movements, and Motifs, eds. J. Flora and L. Mackethan, 43-48. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Brosi, George. 2002. “Elizabeth Madox Roberts” [1881-1941]. In The History of Southern Women’s Literature, eds. C. Perry and M. Weaks, 349-353. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Brosi, George. 2004. “A Conversation with Lisa Alther.” Appalachian Heritage 32 (Winter): 9-12.
Brosi, George. 2004. “A Voice for Country Working People” [Silas House profiled]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Spring): 9-15.
Brosi, George. 2004. “Robert Morgan’s Mountain Roots” [b. 1944, Henderson Co., N.C.]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Summer): 8-9.
Brosi, George. 2004. “Sharyn McCrumb: A Contemporary Bard.” Appalachian Heritage 32 (Fall): 19-23.
Brown, Bill. 2000. “A Gathering of Light: The Gift of Landscape in the Poetry of George Scarbrough.” Iron Mountain Review 16 (Spring): 10-13.
Brown, Joyce Compton. 2000. “The World of Sharyn McCrumb: Timelessness and Change in the Appalachian Mountains.” Journal of Kentucky Studies 17 (September): 79-89.
Brown, Joyce Compton. 2002. “Horrifying, Brave and Beautiful: Poetic Realism and Appalachian Outmigration in the Poetry of Jeanne Bryner.” Appalachian Heritage 30 (Spring): 31-36.
Brown, Joyce Compton. 2002. “The Dark and Clear Vision of Ron Rash.” Appalachian Heritage 30 (Fall): 15-24.
Brown, Joyce Compton. 2003. “The World of Sharyn McCrumb: Mountain Communities Caught within Tradition and Change.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 159-168. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Bryner, Jeanne. 1995. Breathless [poems]. Wick Poetry Chapbook Series, no. 7. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. 26 pp.
Bryner, Jeanne. 1999. Blind Horse: Poems [focus on outmigration to Ohio steel mills]. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press. 100 pp.
Bryner, Jeanne. 2003. Eclipse: Stories [small-town W.Va., Ohio, Pa.]. Working Lives Series. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press. 149 pp.
Buchanan, Harriette C. 2001. “Gathering ‘Scattered Allegiances’: The Alther Heroine’s Journey ‘in Search of Labels’” [novelist Lisa Alther]. Iron Mountain Review 17 (Spring): 8-15.
Buchanan, Harriette C. 2004. “Ambivalence Towards Home and Heritage for Lisa Alther’s Appalachian Characters.” Appalachian Heritage 32 (Winter): 31-34.
Buchanan, Ron. 2000. “‘To Cause No One Pain’: The Ethical Imperative in William Hoffman’s Literature.” In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 44-57. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Burgess, Scott. 2001. Once to Die [fiction; W.Va.]. Charleston, W.Va.: Quarrier Press. 288 pp.
Burton-Hardee, Carmen. 2002. “Red Dirt Girl as Hero: Dorothy Allison’s Cavedweller as Southern White Trash Hero.” Journal of American Comparative Cultures 25 (Fall & Winter): 243-245.
Butterworth, D. S. 2002. “Pearls as Swine: Recentering the Marginal in Cormac McCarthy’s Suttree” [1979]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 131-137. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Buttram, Larry. 2004. False Witness [fiction; 1963 East Tenn. race relations]. Manassas Park, Va.: New Virginia Publications. 336 pp.
Byer, Kathryn Stripling, and Louanne K. Watley. 2002. “EVElyn Photos and Poems” [special feature]. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Fall): 64-75.
Byer, Kathryn Stripling. 1998. Black Shawl: Poems. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 64 pp.
Byer, Kathryn Stripling. 2002. Catching Light: Poems [collection of the EVElyn poems]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 62 pp.
Byrd, Linda. 1998. “The Emergence of the Sacred Sexual Mother in Lee Smith’s Oral History.” Southern Literary Journal 31 (Fall): 119-142.
Byrd-Cook, Linda J. 2002. “Reconciliation with the Great Mother Goddess in Lee Smith’s Saving Grace [New York: Putnam’s, 1995]. Southern Quarterly 40 (Summer): 97-112.
Byron Herbert Reece [featured historical author; 1917-1958]. 2003. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Spring): 56-72.
Cahalan, James M. 1996. “Edward Abbey, Appalachian Easterner” [Indiana Co., Pa., roots]. Western American Literature 31 (November): 233-253.
Camhi, Rebecca Cale. 2001. Deepwater Mountain: A Novel of West Virginia [historical novel, 1861-1961]. Parsons, W.Va.: McClain Printing Co. 372 pp.
Campbell, H. H. 2000. “Lee Smith and the Bronte Sisters” [Oral History (1984); Wuthering Heights (1847)]. Southern Literary Journal 38 (Fall): 141-149.
Carden, Gary. 2000. Mason Jars in the Flood and Other Stories [1940s-50s N.C.]. Boone, N.C.: Parkway Publishers. 210 pp.
Carver, Bill. 1999. Branch Water Tales. Andrews, N.C.: Mountain Voice Publishers. 221 pp.
Caseley, Martin. 2000. “Through Purgatory to Appalachia” [interview; Charles P. Wright]. PN Review 27 (September-October): 22-25.
Chappell, Fred, and Donald Harington. 2002. “‘The Southern Highlands as Literary Landscape’: An Interview with Fred Chappell and Donald Harington.” Interview by Gene Hyde. Southern Quarterly 40 (Winter): 86-98.
Chappell, Fred, ed. 2003. Locales: Poems from the Fellowship of Southern Writers [incl. Wendell Berry, Fred Chappell, Robert Morgan, George Scarbrough, Charles Wright, and 13 others]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 134 pp.
Chappell, Fred. 1994 [1973]. The Gaudy Place. Reprint. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 178 pp.
Chappell, Fred. 1995. Spring Garden. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 158 pp.
Chappell, Fred. 1996. Farewell, I'm Bound to Leave You. [fiction] New York: St. Martin's/Picador. 220 pp.
Chappell, Fred. 1999. Look Back All the Green Valley [fiction]. New York: Picador USA. 288 pp.
Chappell, Fred. 2000 [1975]. River: A Poem. Reprint, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 64 pp.
Chappell, Fred. 2000. “Taking Measure: Violent Intruders in William Hoffman’s Short Fiction.” In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 9-23. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Chappell, Fred. 2000. “The Waters of Memory” [reflections on writing poetry]. Sewanee Review 108 (Spring): 234-248.
Chappell, Fred. 2000. Family Gathering: Poems. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 72 pp.
Chappell, Fred. 2002 [1968, 1987]. Dagon [“Lovecraftian” fiction; author is Poet Laureate of N.C.]. Reprint. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 177 pp. Originally published, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World.
Chappell, Fred. 2002. “Treasures of Ruin: Donald Harington’s Covert I” [Ozark novelist]. Southern Quarterly 40 (Winter): 9-19.
Chappell, Fred. 2003. “An Interview.” By Casey Clabough. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Summer): 35-41.
Chappell, Fred. 2004. “Morgan’s Things” [reviews Robert Morgan’s short-story volume, The Balm of Gilead Tree (Gnomon Press, 1999)]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Summer): 19-26.
Chappell, Fred. 2004. “Too Many Freds.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 256-271. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Chappell, Fred. 2004. Backsass: Poems [N.C. Poet Laureate, 1998-2003]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 54 pp.
Cheek, Pauline, and Brian Cole. 1999. “The Call of Place in Denise Giardina’s Saints and Villains” [1998]. Part I. “Whose Side Are You On?” by Pauline Cheek. Part II. “Bonhoeffer Today”, by Brian Cole. Iron Mountain Review 15 (Spring): 22-30.
Cherry, Kelly. 2004. “On Reading The Inkling by Fred Chappell in a Building on the UNC-G Campus” [c. 1965]. In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 27. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Chitwood, Michael, and Michael McFee. 2003. “Getting at the Secrets of Things: A Conversation” [interview recorded at the Michael McFee Literary Festival, Emory & Henry College, October 4, 2002]. Iron Mountain Review 19 (Spring): 29-38.
Chitwood, Michael. 1998. The Weave Room [poems; J.P. Stevens Co. textile mill community; Franklin Co., Va.]. Phoenix Poets. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 82 pp.
Chitwood, Michael. 2002. Gospel Road Going: Poems. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Tryon Publishing. 70 pp.
Christianson, Scott R. 2003. “Four Quartets: Fred Chappell’s Midquest and T. S. Eliot” [c. 1981]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Summer): 49-53.
Chung, Haeja K. 1995. "Harriette Simpson Arnow's Authorial Testimony: Toward a Reading of 'The Dollmaker'." Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction 36 (Spring): 211-223.
Chung, Haeja K., ed. 1995. Harriette Simpson Arnow: Critical Essays on Her Work. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press. 301 pp.
Ciuba, Gary M. 2002. “McCarthy’s Enfant Terrible: Mimetic Desire and Sacred Violence in Child of God” [1974]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 93-102. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Clabough, Casey. 2003. “Experimentation and Versatility: Fred Chappell’s Fiction.” Appalachian Heritage 31 (Summer): 27-34.
Clabough, Casey. 2003. “Representing Urban Appalachia: Fred Chappell’s The Gaudy Place” [1973 novel; modeled on Asheville, N.C.]. Journal of Appalachian Studies 9 (Spring): 68-92.
Clark, Amy. 2000. “Can’t Pronounce ‘Appalachia’? Then Don’t Mess With Us” [dialect]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 17 (Summer): 29-30.
Clark, Billy C. 1994 [1964]. Goodbye Kate. Reprint, edited with an introduction by Jerry A. Herndon. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation.
Clark, Billy C. 1999. To Leave My Heart at Catlettsburg [Ky.; poems]. With an introduction by Edwina Pendarvis. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 80 pp.
Clark, Billy C. 2000. By Way of the Forked Stick [four short stories]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 149 pp.
Clark, Billy C. 2001 [1968]. Sourwood Tales [1930s Ky.; Big Sandy River; 18 short stories]. Reprint. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 256 pp. Originally published, New York: Putnam.
Clark, Billy C. 2003 [1966]. The Champion of Sourwood Mountain. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 251 pp. Originally published, New York: Putnam.
Clark, Billy C. 2003. Miss America Kissed Caleb: Stories [11 stories; sketches from 1940s, small-town “Sourwood,” Ky.]. Kentucky Voices. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 173 pp.
Clark, Billy C. [1957] 1995. The Trail of the Hunter's Horn. Reprint, Ashland: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 96 pp.
Clark, Jim, ed. 2001. Fable in the Blood: The Selected Poems of Byron Herbert Reece [Ga.; 1917-1958]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 160 pp.
Clark, Jim. 1997 [1983]. Dancing on Canaan’s Ruins [poems/quest motif; N.C., Tenn.]. Reprint. Wilson, N.C.: Eternal Delight Productions. 64 pp. Originally published, Memphis, Tenn.: Ars Gratiis.
Clark, Jim. 1999. Handiwork: Poems. Laurinburg, N.C.: St. Andrews College Press. 79 pp.
Clark, Jim. 2002. “A Strong and Lonely Voice” [Byron Herbert Reece]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 19 (Winter): 27-31.
Clark, Jim. 2003. “Three Uncollected Poems of Byron Herbert Reece.” Appalachian Heritage 31 (Spring): 58-62.
Clark, Jim. 2004. “Circles of Influence and Confluence: One Writer’s Inspirations” [Byron Herbert Reece]. Nantahala: A Review of Writing and Photography in Appalachia 2, no. 2 (Winter-Spring): Non-Fiction section, 50 paras. Online at http://nantahalareview.org/issue2-2/non-fiction/CLARK.htm.
Claybough, Casey. 2004. “Will, Appetite, Alchemy, Faulkner, and Two French Poets: Fred Chappell’s The Inkling” [Harcourt, Brace & World (1965)]. Southern Quarterly 42 (Summer): 5-18.
Clifford, Emmett. 1998. Night Whispers: A Story of Evil [contemporary murder mystery set in East Tenn.]. Nashville: Cumberland House. 429 pp.
Clouse, Loletta. 2002 [1990]. Wilder [fiction; 1932 Wilder, Tenn., coal mining town and strike]. Reprint. Knoxville, Tenn.: Chicory Books. 252 pp. Originally published, Nashville: Rutledge Hill Press.
Clouse, Loletta. 2002. The Homesteads [fiction; Cumberland Homesteads, Tenn.; New Deal experimental community]. Knoxville, Tenn.: Tennessee Valley Publishing. 282 pp.
Cobb, Ann. 2003. Kinfolks & Other Selected Poems [vernacular poems from 1920s-1930s Knott Co., Ky., collected by Ann Cobb (1874-1960)]. Edited with an introduction by Jeff Daniel Marion. Hindman, Ky.: Hindman Settlement School. 113 pp. (This edition includes all of Cobb’s 1922 collection, Kinfolks, Kentucky Mountain Rhymes, Boston, New York: Houghton Mifflin).
Coberly, Lenore M. 2002. The Handywoman Stories [20 stories; W.Va.; WWII-era]. Athens, Oh.: Swallow Press. 192 pp.
Coberly, Lenore McComas. 2004. “Big Ugly Creek, West Virginia: Interview with Writer Lenore McComas Coberly” [Lincoln Co. poet, fiction writer, editor, and retired teacher]. Interview by Paul Salstrom. Appalachian Journal 31 (Spring/Summer): 368-387.
Cocke, Dudley, Donna Porterfield, and Edward Wemytewa, eds. 2002. Journeys Home: Revealing a Zuni-Appalachia Collaboration [Corn Mountain/Pine Mountain bilingual play]. Zuni, N.M.: Zuni A:shiwi Publishing. 106 pp., plus music CD.
Coe, Marian. 1998. Eve’s Mountain [mystery/romance novel; N.C.]. Little Switzerland, N.C.: SouthLore Press. 362 pp.
Coleman, Ralph. 1998. “A Skiff of Snow” [poems; Wythe Co., Va.]. Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press.
Collett, Dexter. 1994. Bibliography of Theses and Dissertations Pertaining to Southern Appalachian Literature, 1912-1991. Berea: Appalachian Imprints. 136 pp.
Collins, Maurice. 2000. “The Molly Maguires and the Continued Influence of Nineteenth-Century Labor Fiction.” In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 166-185. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Comer, Melissa. 1999. “Rob, Mary Call, and Me: The Search for Self in Appalachian Literature” [young adult Appalachian literature as a genre; bibliography]. New Advocate: For Those Involved with Young People and Their Literature 12 (Spring): 141-153.
Connor, Beverly. 2000. Airtight Case: A Lindsay Chamberlain Novel [mystery; Great Smoky Mountains]. Nashville, Tenn.: Cumberland House. 423 pp.
Conway, Cecelia. 1999. “Slashing the Homemade Quilt in Denise Giardina’s Storming Heaven.” NWSA Journal: A Publication of the National Women’s Studies Association 11 (Fall): 138-156.
Conway, Cecelia. 2002. “Robert Morgan’s Mountain Voice and Lucid Prose.” Appalachian Journal 29 (Fall 2001-Winter 2002): 180-199.
Cook, Martha E. 2000. “Faith and Time: William Hoffman’s View of the Future in The Dark Mountains [his fourth novel, 1963]. In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 121-132. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Cooke, Grace MacGowan. 2003 [1910]. The Power and the Glory: A Novel of Appalachia [Tenn. cotton mill; heroine labor reformer]. Reprint, with an introduction by Elizabeth S. D. Engelhardt. Boston: Northeastern University Press. 373 pp. Originally published, New York: Doubleday, Page & Co.
Cope, Steven R. 2003. The Book of Saws: Fables & Tales. Nicholasville, Ky.: Wind Publications. 126 pp.
Cope, Steven R. 2004. “Excerpts from The Appalaches” [25 proverbs]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Fall): 70.
Cope, Steven R. 2004. Clover’s Log [poems]. Nicholasville, Ky.: Wind Publications. 97 pp.
Core, George. 2000. “Introduction.” In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 1-8. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Covington, Vicki. 2001 [1992]. Night Ride Home” [novel; 1939 Ala. mining town]. Reprint, with a new interview with the author. Literature and the Religious Spirit, no. 2. Waco, Tex.: Baylor University Press. 228 pp.
Cox, Rosemary. 2004. “The Shape of Truth: Men and Women in Fred Chappell’s More Shapes Than One” [St. Martin’s Press, 1991]. In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 150-166. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Crabtree, Lou. 1998. The River Hills and Beyond: Poems. Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press. 53 pp.
Cramer, W. Dale. 2002. Sutter’s Cross [Christian fiction; northern Ga.]. Minneapolis, Minn.: Bethany House. 394 pp.
Crowder-Vaughn, Scott. 2003. “Lot in Life: Names and Places in Sharyn McCrumb’s Ballad Series.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 81-92. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Crowe, Thomas Rain. 1998. “Rocks in the Stream: A Conversation with Jim Wayne Miller” [excerpt of a 1989 interview published in the Asheville Poetry Review 3 (Fall/Winter) 1996]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 15 (Summer): 17-20.
Crowe, Thomas Rain. 2004. “Diversity As the Spice of Life: A Conversation with Western North Carolina Poet Thomas Rain Crowe.” Interview by the editors. Nantahala: A Review of Writing and Photography in Appalachia 2, no. 2 (Winter-Spring): Interview section, 60 paras. Online at http://nantahalareview.org/issue2-2/view/interview.htm with linked MP3 clip.
Crum, Shutta. 2003. Spitting Image [first novel; grades 5-8; 12-year-old girl’s coming-of-age; 1960s Ky.]. New York: Clarion Books. 218 pp.
Crum, Shutta. 2004. My Mountain Song [children’s picture book; girl’s summer visit to grandparents in Ky. mountains]. New York: Clarion Books. 24 pp.
Currey, Richard. 1997. Lost Highway [fiction]. New York: Houghton Mifflin. 258 pp.
Curtiss, Huston. 2003. Sins of the Seventh Sister [“A Novel Based on a True Story of the Gothic South”; 1929 Elkins, W.Va.]. New York: Harmony Books. 358 pp.
Dargan, Olive Tilford, with photographs by Bayard Wootten. 1998 [1925, 1941 rev.ed.]. From My Highest Hill: Carolina Mountain Folks, with an introduction by Anna Shannon Elfenbein, and an afterword by Jonathan Morrow [fiction; story cycle of Great Smoky Mountains social life and customs]. Reprint. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 336 pp. First published 1925 as Highland Annals, under the pseudonym Fielding Burke.
Davis, Donald. 1996. See Rock City: A Story Journey Through Appalachia. Little Rock: August House. 247 pp.
Davis, Donald. 2004. The Pig Who Went Home on Sunday: An Appalachian Folktale [children’s story; “three little pigs” motif with fox]. Illustrated by Jennifer Mazzucco. Little Rock, Ark.: August House. 40 pp.
Davis, Ed. 2001. I Was So Much Older Then: A Novel [coming of age, 1960s W.Va.]. Sarasota, Fla.: Disc-Us Books. 243 pp.
Davis, Ed. 2001. I Was So Much Older Then [fiction; 1960s W.Va.]. Sarasota, Fla.: Disc-Us Books, Inc. 243 pp.
Davis, William V. 2002. “Making the World with Words: A Reading of Charles Wright’s ‘Appalachian Book of the Dead’.” In Latitude 63 North: Proceedings of the 8th International Region and Nation Literature Conference, Ostersund, Sweden 2-6 August 2000, ed. David Bell, 255-270. Ostersund: Mid-Sweden University College.
DeFoe, Mark. 2001. Aviary [poems]. Buckhannon, W.Va.: Pringle Tree Press. 31 pp.
DeFoe, Mark. 2004. Greatest Hits, 1977-2003 [W.Va. poet; 12 poems plus essay]. Greatest Hits Series, no. 227. Columbus, Ohio: Pudding House Publications. 30 pp.
DeLancey, Kiki. 2002. Coal Miner’s Holiday: Stories [Ohio River Valley; debut fiction]. Louisville, Ky.: Sarabande Books. 224 pp.
Denise Giardina Bibliography [21 entries]. 1999. Iron Mountain Review 15 (Spring): 39.
Denise Giardina Issue. 1999. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 15 (Spring): 1-39.
DePoy, Philip. 2004. The More Shapes Than One Devilin Mystery [Ga.]. New York: St. Martin’s. 260 pp.
Depta, Victor. 1999. Silence of Blackberries [poems]. Martin, Tenn.: Blair Mountain Press. 71 pp.
Depta, Victor. 2000. Gate of Paradise: A Novel [1940s W.Va. coal-mining family]. Martin, Tenn.: Blair Mountain Press. 257 pp.
Depta, Victor. 2000. Plays from Blair Mountain: Four Comedies [“Everyone Who Thirsts”; “The Egg of the World”; “A Boat of Light”; “The Rainbow Gave You Birth”]. Martin, Tenn.: Blair Mountain Press. 248 pp.
Depta, Victor. 2001. Preparing a Room [poems]. Martin, Tenn.: Blair Mountain Press. 87 pp.
Depta, Victor. 2002. Azrael on the Mountain [poems; impact of mountaintop removal mining]. Martin, Tenn.: Blair Mountain Press. 80 pp.
Depta, Victor. 2003. Mountains and Clouds: Four Comedies. Ashland, Ky.: Blair Mountain Press. 234 pp.
Depta, Victor. 2004. A West Virginia Trilogy: Novels [The Gate of Paradise (2000); Idol and Sanctuary (1993); Feasting with Strife (2004)]. Ashland, Ky.: Blair Mountain Press. 475 pp.
Deutermann, Peter T. 2001. Hunting Season [fiction; political thriller set in rural WV]. New York: St. Martin’s. 352 pp.
Deveraux, Jude. 2003. Wild Orchids [mystery set in N.C. mountains]. New York: Atria Books. 341 pp.
Dillard, R. H. W. 2004. “Letters from a Distant Lover: The Novels of Fred Chappell.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 6-26. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. This essay was originally published in a 1973 issue of Hollins Critic, with a 2000 postscript.
Dillingham, Nancy. 2003. First Light: Poems. Alexander, N.C.: Worldcomm Publishers. 104 pp.
Disheroon-Green, Suzanne. 2002. “Jayne Anne Phillips.” In The History of Southern Women’s Literature, eds. C. Perry and M. Weaks, 594-598. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Dockery, Bill. 2000. “Did You’uns Hear That? A Pokeful of Notes on Accent” [dialects; Sevierville, Tenn.]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 17 (Summer): 22-24.
Donlon, Jocelyn Hazelwood. 1995. "Hearing is Believing: Southern Racial Communities and Strategies of Story-Listening in Gloria Naylor and Lee Smith." Twentieth Century Literature 41 (Spring): 16-35.
Donlon, Jocelyn Hazelwood. 1998. “‘Born on the Wrong Side of the Porch’: Violating Traditions in Bastard Out of Carolina” [Dorothy Allison; porch as metaphor and arena between indoor and “out”]. Southern Folklore 55 (no. 2): 133-144.
Dooley, Patrick K. 2000. “Openness to Experience in Stephen Crane’s ‘In the Depths of a Coal Mine’” [1894 Wyoming Co., Pa.]. In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 186-198. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Dougherty, Page. 2002. No One With a Past Is Safe [poems]. Cincinnati, Oh.: Word Press. 91 pp.
Douglass, Thomas, and Denise Giardina. 1999. “Resurrecting the Dead, Recognizing the Human: A Conversation” [interview recorded at the Denise Giardina Literary Festival, Emory & Henry College, November 13, 1998]. Iron Mountain Review 15 (Spring): 31-38.
Douglass, Thomas E. 1994. "Breece Pancake and the Problem with Place: A West Virginia State of Mind." Appalachian Journal 22 (Fall): 60-77.
Douglass, Thomas E. 1996. “A View From Higher Ground: Meredith Sue Willis and the Appalachian Renaissance.” Iron Mountain Review 12 (Spring): 13-18.
Douglass, Thomas E. 1998. A Room Forever: The Life, Work, and Letters of Breece D’J Pancake [W.Va. author; d.1979 at age 26]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 280 pp.
Drayer, David. 2000. Strip Cuts [debut novel; Pa. coal town]. Los Angeles, Calif.: Rowdy House. 292 pp.
Dresser, Nathanael. 1995. "Cultivating Wilderness: The Place of Land in the Fiction of Ed Abbey and Wendell Berry." Growth and Change 26 (Summer): 350-364.
Dugger, Shepherd M. 2001 [1934]. Balsam Groves of the Grandfather Mountain. Reprint. Banner Elk, N.C.: Pudding Stone Press. Originally published, 1895.
Duke, David C. 2002. Writers and Miners: Activism and Imagery in America [surveys 100 years of coal miner character portrayals]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 275 pp.
Dumas, Bethany K. 1999. “Southern Mountain English: The Language of the Ozarks and Southern Appalachia.” In The Workings of Language: From Prescriptions to Perspectives, ed. R. Wheeler, 67-79. Westport, Conn.: Praeger.
Duncan, Julia Nunnally. 2002. Blue Ridge Shadows: Stories [15 short stories; Western N.C.]. Oak Ridge, Tenn.: Iris Press. 192 pp.
Duncan, Pamela. 2001. Moon Women [debut novel; mothers and daughters; N.C.]. New York: Dell Publishing. 352 pp.
Duncan, Pamela. 2003. Plant Life [textile plant; fiction; stories of three generations of female laborers in N.C.]. New York: Delacorte. 321 pp.
Dunlop, Julie. 2003. “The Poetry of Shuck Beans” [essay; “writing a poem is a lot like preparing shuck beans”]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Summer): 61-62.
Dyer, Joyce, ed. 1998. Bloodroot: Reflections on Place by Appalachian Women Writers [essays by 35 women; Appalachian Studies Award winner, 1997]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 304 pp. [authors: Sheila Kay Adams, Lisa Alther, Maggie Anderson, Marilou Awiakta, Artie Ann Bates, Kathryn Stripling Byer, Jo Carson, Lou V.P. Crabtree, Doris Diosa Davenport, Hilda Downer, Wilma Dykeman, Sidney Saylor Farr, Nikky Finney, Denise Giardina, Nikki Giovanni, Gail Godwin, Ellesa Clay High, Lisa Koger, George Ella Lyon, Sharyn McCrumb, Llewellyn McKernan, Heather Ross Miller, Elaine Fowler Palencia, Jayne Anne Phillips, Rita Sims Quillen, Jean Ritchie, Bettie Sellers, Mary Lee Settle, Anne Shelby, Betsy Sholl, Bennie Lee Sinclair, Barbara Smith, Lee Smith, Jane Stuart, Meredith Sue Willis].
Dyer, Joyce. 1998. “Dialogue with a Dead Man” [”Brier Eulogy” for Jim Wayne Miller, d. 1996]. Appalachian Journal 26 (Fall): 32-43.
Dyer, Joyce. 1999. Review essay of Addie: A Memoir, by Mary Lee Settle (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1998). In Appalachian Journal 26 (Summer): 424-430.
Dyer, Joyce. 2002. “‘Accepting Things Near’: Bibliography of Non-Fiction by Jim Wayne Miller” [lists approx. 160 reviews and essays]. Appalachian Journal 30 (Fall): 64-73.
Dykeman, Wilma. 2002. “Interview with Wilma Dykeman: Connecting, Making Choices” [interview conducted Nov. 30, 2000, Asheville, N.C.]. Appalachian Journal 29 (Summer): 444-458.
Earley, Tony. 1994. Here We Are in Paradise: Stories [eight short stories]. Boston: Little, Brown. 198 pp.
Earley, Tony. 2000. Jim the Boy [first novel; N.C.; 1930s coming-of-age]. Boston: Little, Brown. 227 pp.
Earley, Tony. 2001. Somehow Form a Family: Stories That Are Mostly True [ N.C.; ten “personal essays”]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 172 pp.
Easton, Terry. 2000. “Industrialization, Class, and Identity in Denise Giardina’s Storming Heaven” [1987 novel set in 1890-1923 W.Va and Ky.]. Journal of Appalachian Studies 6 nos. 1-2 (Spring/Fall): 151-161.
Eckard, Paula Gallant. 2002. Maternal Body and Voice in Toni Morrison, Bobbie Ann Mason, and Lee Smith [Morrison: The Bluest Eye; Sula; Beloved. Mason: In Country; Spence + Lila; Feather Crowns. Smith: Oral History; Fair and Tender Ladies; Saving Grace]. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. 227 pp.
Edmunds, J. Spencer. 2004. “Metanarrative and the Story of Life in the Kirkman Tetralogy.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 92-118. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Edwards, Grace Toney. 2002. “Marilou Awiakta: Poet for the People.” In Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry, ed. Felicia Mitchell, 19-34. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Egerton, John. 1996. "James Still: In His World." [Hindman school] Appalachian Heritage 24 (Summer): 6-11.
Egolf, Tristan. 1999. Lord of the Barnyard: Killing the Fatted Calf and Arming the Aware in the Corn Belt [fiction; Ky.]. New York: Grove Press. 410 pp.
Ehle, John. 1998 [1967]. The Road [fiction]. Appalachian Echoes. Reprint. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 416 pp. Originally published, New York: Harper & Row.
Ehle, John. 1999 [1982]. The Winter People [fiction; N.C.]. Reprint. Asheboro, N.C.: Down Home Press. 272 pp.
Ellis, Ron. 2001. Cogan’s Woods [fiction; 1960s Ky.; father and son, memoir]. Forward by Rick Bass. Boulder, Colo.: Pruett Publishing. 146 pp.
Engelhardt, Elizabeth S. D. 2003. “A Writer Everywhere and Nowhere: Recovering Appalachia’s Grace MacGowan Cooke” [1863-1944; The Power and the Glory (1910)]. Journal of Kentucky Studies 20 (September): 140-156.
Engelhardt, Elizabeth S. D. 2003. The Tangled Roots of Feminism, Environmentalism, and Appalachian Literature [Emma Bell Miles, Grace MacGowan Cooke, Mary Noailles Murfree, and Effie Waller Smith]. Ohio University Press Series in Ethnicity and Gender in Appalachia. Athens: Ohio University Press. 207 pp.
Ensign, Robert Taylor. 2003. Lean Down Your Ear upon the Earth, and Listen: Thomas Wolfe’s Greener Modernism [fiction criticism, ecological perspective]. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. 156 pp.
Ensor, Allison. 2004. “‘Now, There’s a Story’: The Literature of the Upper Cumberland” [Ky., Tenn.]. In Rural Life and Culture in the Upper Cumberland, eds. M. Birdwell and W. Dickinson, 140-158. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
Ensor, Allison. 2004. “Establishing a Literary Tradition: Tennessee Literature to 1920” [Gunn, Crockett, Harris, Murfree, Dromgoole, Miles]. In A History of Tennessee Arts: Creating Traditions, Expanding Horizons, eds. C. West and M. Binnicker, 263-278. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Evenson, Brian. 2002. “McCarthy’s Wanderers: Nomadology, Violence, and Open Country.” In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 51-59. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Featured Author: Ron Rash [poems, fiction, criticism]. 2002. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Fall): 9-36, 60.
Felts, John H. 2001. “Lapsed Language of Appalachia” [Cold Mountain (1997)]. Verbatim: The Language Quarterly 26 (Winter): 25-27.
Finnegan, Brian. 1997. “Road Stories That Stay Home: Car and Driver in Appalachia and The Stories of Breece D’J Pancake.” Southern Literary Journal 29 (Spring): 87-102.
Fisher, Benjamin F. 2002. “Mary Noailles Murfree” [1850-1922]. In The History of Southern Women’s Literature, eds. C. Perry and M. Weaks, 187-192. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Fisher, Diane Gilliam. 2003. One of Everything [poems; W.Va., women, illness]. Cleveland Poets Series, no. 54. Cleveland, Ohio: Cleveland State University Poetry Center. 59 pp.
Fisher, Diane Gilliam. 2004. Kettle Bottom [poems; 1920-21 W.Va. coal camp voices]. Florence, Mass.: Perugia Press. 88 pp.
Fisher-Wirth, Ann. 2002. “Abjection and ‘the feminine’ in Outer Dark.” In Cormac McCarthy: New Directions, ed. J. Lilly, 125-140. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Flanigan, Beverly Olson. 2001. “Mapping the Ohio Valley: South Midland, Lower North, or Appalachian?” [Linguistic Atlas Project]. American Speech 75 (Winter): 344-347.
Flint, Eric. 2000. 1632 [science fiction; West Virginians time travel to 1632 Germany]. New York: Pocket Books. 504 pp.
Flora, Joseph M. 2002. “Bobbie Ann Mason.” In The History of Southern Women’s Literature, eds. C. Perry and M. Weaks, 550-558. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Flora, Joseph M., and Lucinda H. Mackethan, eds. 2002. The Companion to Southern Literature: Themes, Genres, Places, People, Movements, and Motifs [encyclopedia]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 1054 pp.
Flynn, Nancy. 1997. “Water & Fire” [excerpt from novel-in-progress Eden Undone; Pa. anthracite setting]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 14 (Winter): 14-17.
Fowler, Virginia C. 2002. “And This Poem Recognizes That: Embracing Contrarieties in the Poetry of Nikki Giovanni.” In Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry, ed. Felicia Mitchell, 112-135. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Fox, John, Jr. 1996 [1913]. The Heart of the Hills. Foreword by Darlene Wilson. Reprint, Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 408 pp.
Francisco, Edward, Robert Vaughan, and Linda Francisco, eds. 2001. The South in Perspective: An Anthology of Southern Literature [six chronological periods, with upper and lower South examined for each; special section, “Appalachia Recognized”]. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. 1386 pp.
Francisco, Edward. 2000. “Christ-Hauntedness in George Scarbrough’s Invitation to Kim” [1989]. Iron Mountain Review 16 (Spring): 25-30.
Frank, William L. 2000. “The Novels of William Hoffman: One Writer’s Spiritual Odyssey from World War II to the Twenty-First Century.” In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 58-87. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Frank, William L., ed. 2000. The Fictional World of William Hoffman [9 essays; primary and secondary bibliography]. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. 156 pp.
Frazier, Charles. 1997. Cold Mountain [fiction; Civil War N.C.; Weatherford Award winner]. New York: Atlantic Monthly. 368 pp.
Frazier, Tom. 2000. “Coal Mining, Literature, and the Naturalistic Motif” [1906-1993]. In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 199-208. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Fred Chappell [featured author]. 2003. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Summer): 14-53.
Frederick, Heather Vogel. 1997. “Cynthia Rylant: A Quiet and Reflective Craft” [PW interview; W.Va. author]. Publishers Weekly 244 (July 21): 178-179.
Freeman, Angela B. 1998. “The Origins and Fortunes of Negativity: The West Virginia Worlds of Kromer, Pancake, and Benedict” [Tom Kromer, Breece D’J Pancake, Pinckney Benedict]. Appalachian Journal 25 (Spring): 244-269.
French, William W. 1998. Maryat Lee’s EcoTheater: A Theater for the Twenty-First Century [W.Va.]. Morgantown, W.Va.: West Virginia University Press. 152 pp.
Gantt, Patricia M. 1997. “‘A Mutual Journey’: Wilma Dykeman and Appalachian Regionalism.” In Breaking Boundaries: New Perspectives on Women’s Regional Writing, eds. S. Inness and D. Royer, 197-215. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.
Gantt, Patricia M. 2002. “A Level Gaze Trained at Life: The Poetry of Lisa Coffman.” In Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry, ed. Felicia Mitchell, 69-81. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Garrett, George. 2000. “A Life without End: Two Novels About World War II by William Hoffman.” In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 88-97. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Geer, Richard Owen, and Debra Jones. 1998. “Gathering Mayhaws: Jo Carson and Writing for Community Performance” [piece written for her Swamp Gravy project]. Iron Mountain Review 14 (Summer): 24-30.
George Ella Lyon Issue. 1994. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 10 (Summer): 1-32.
George Scarbrough Bibliography [26 entries]. 2000. Iron Mountain Review 16 (Spring): 40.
George Scarbrough Feature. 2000. “A George Addison Scarbrough Chronology [1915-2001], 6; Editor’s Note: “Lusher Materia Medica I Have Not Seen,” 7-11; “The Inflorescence of Variety: An Iconoclastic Southern Poet,” 12-16; “Poems by George Scarbrough” [12 poems], 17-34. The Washington and Lee University Review 50 (Spring): 5-34.
George Scarbrough Issue. 2000. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 16 (Spring): 1-40.
Giardina, Denise. 2003. Fallam’s Secret [time travel between W.Va. and 1657 England]. New York: W.W. Norton. 331 pp.
Gibson, Mike. 2002. “Knoxville Gave Cormac McCarthy the Raw Material of His Art. And He Gave It Back” [The Orchard Keeper (1965); Suttree (1979); Outer Dark (1968)]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 23-34. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Gifford, James M., Owen B. Nance, and Patricia A. Hall, comp. and eds. 1997. Appalachian Christmas Stories [collected short stories, essays, and poems]. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation.
Gifford, Terry. 2002. “Terrain, Character and Text: Is Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier a Post-Pastoral Novel?” Mississippi Quarterly 55 (Winter 2001-2002): 87-96.
Giles, Janice Holt. 1994 [1951]. Miss Willie. Reprint. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 268 pp.
Giles, Janice Holt. 1994 [1951]. Tara's Healing. Reprint, with a foreword by Wade Hall. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 253 pp.
Giles, Janice Holt. 2000 [1954]. Hill Man [fiction; Ky.]. Reprint, with a foreword by Wade Hall. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 172 pp. Originally published, New York: Pyramid Books, under the pen name John Garth.
Giles, Janice Holt. 2001. Act of Contrition [fiction; written 1957]. First edition. Introduction by Wade Hall. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 240 pp.
Giles, Janice Holt. 2002 [1967]. Shady Grove [author’s sixth Ky. novel]. Reprint, with a foreword by Wade Hall. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 260 pp.
Giles, Janice Holt. 2003 [1964]. Run Me a River [Civil War; Green River, Ky.]. Reprint, with a foreword by Morris A. Grubbs. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 337 pp.
Godden, Richard. 2002. “No End to the Work? Jayne Anne Phillips and the Exquisite Corpse of Southern Labor.” Journal of American Studies 36 (August): 249-279.
Godwin, Gail. 1999. Evensong [fiction; N.C.]. New York: Ballantine Books. 416 pp.
Goldbeck, Christine M. 2000. “Speaking the ‘Speak” [Pa. dialect; anthracite coalfields CoalSpeak; map]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 17 (Summer): 14-17, 20-21.
Goldbeck, Christine M. 2001. “The Mighty and Enduring Pen of John O’Hara” [1905-1970; fictionalized Pottsville, Schuylkill Co., characters in Pa.’s anthracite region]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Summer): 35-39
Goode, James B. 2002. “The Case for Contextualizing Appalachian Culture Studies Within the Academic Enterprise.” Journal of Kentucky Studies 19 (September): 104-107.
Goodrich, Janet. 2001. The Unforeseen Self in the Works of Wendell Berry [analyzed as autobiography; 1957-2000]. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. 167 pp.
Grammer, John M. 2002. “A Thing Against Which Time Will Not Prevail: Pastoral and History in Cormac McCarthy’s South.” In Cormac McCarthy, ed. H. Bloom, 9-22. Modern Critical Views. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers.
Grant, Natalie. 2002. “The Landscape of the Soul: Man and the Natural World in The Orchard Keeper” [1965]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 75-82. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Gray, Libba Moore; illustrated by Lloyd Bloom. 1999. When Uncle Took the Fiddle [juvenile fiction]. New York: Orchard Books. 32 pp.
Greear, Mildred White. 2003. “An Unlikely Friendship” [Byron Herbert Reece]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Spring): 68-72.
Green, Chris. 2002. “Working Truth Inside and Out: Don West, Muriel Rukeyser, Poetry, and the Popular Front in Appalachia, 1932-1948.” Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (Fall): 382-406.
Green, Connie Jordan. 2003 [1989]. The War at Home [youth novel; growing up in WWII Oak Ridge, Tenn.]. Reprint. Oak Ridge, Tenn.: Tellico Books. 138 pp. Originally published, New York: McElderry Books.
Green, Connie. 2000. “Mirrored Through Metaphor: Family in George Scarbrough’s Poetry.” Iron Mountain Review 16 (Spring): 20-24.
Green, Jordan. 1997. “Writing with Class: An Interview with Denise Giardina” [W.Va. novelist]. Southern Exposure 25 (Fall/Winter): 40-43.
Greene, Ben. 1998. “Jeff Daniel Marion: Asking the Questions Well” [appreciation of Marion’s pedagogy by a former student]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 15 (Summer): 25.
Griffin, Brian. 1997. Sparkman in the Sky & Other Stories [winner, 1996 Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction]. Louisville: Sarabande Books. 161 pp.
Grover, Kathleen H. 2004. “Appalachia in Lisa Alther’s Novels.” Appalachian Heritage 32 (Winter): 23-26.
Grubb, Davis. 2001 [1969]. Fools’ Parade [fiction; W.Va.]. Appalachian Echoes. Reprint, with a foreword by Thomas E. Douglass. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 306 pp. Originally published, New York: World Pub. Co.
Grubbs, Morris Allen, ed. 2001. Home and Beyond: An Anthology of Kentucky Short Stories [40 stories]. Introduction by Wade Hall; afterword by Charles E. May. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 400 pp.
Gurney Norman Issue. 1997. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 13 (Spring): 1-39.
Hague, Richard. 2003. Alive in Hard Country: Poems [industrial Ohio Valley]. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press. 96 pp.
Hahn, Mary Downing. 2003. Hear the Wind Blow [adolescent fiction; Civil War Shenandoah Valley, Va.]. New York: Clarion Books. 212 pp.
Hall, Francie, and Kent Oehm, illustrator. 1998. Appalachian ABCs [children’s primer]. Johnson City, Tenn.: Overmountain Press. 54 pp.
Hall, Jacquelyn Dowd. 2003. “Women Writers, the ‘Southern Front,’ and the Dialectical Imagination” [Grace Lumpkin; To Make My Bread (1929); Gastonia textile strike]. The Journal of Southern History 69 (February): 3-38.
Hall, Wade, and Rick Wallach, eds. 2002. Sacred Violence, Vol. I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works; Vol. II: Cormac McCarthy’s Western Novels [b. 1933; Knoxville, Tenn.]. El Paso: Texas Western Press.; 2002.
Hall, Wade. 2002. “The Human Comedy of Cormac McCarthy.” In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 61-73. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Hall, Wade. 2002. “The Human Comedy of Cormac McCarthy.” In Cormac McCarthy, ed. H. Bloom, 53-64. Modern Critical Views. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers.
Hamilton, Virginia. 1999 [1974]. M. C. Higgins, The Great [juvenile fiction; Ohio strip mine; Newbery Award winner]. Reprint. New York: Simon & Schuster. 232 pp.
Hankla, Cathryn. 2002. Poems for the Pardoned. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 56 pp.
Hankla, Cathryn. 2003. The Land Between [novel; “Murder Hole” cave, Va.; Calif.]. Fort Worth, Tex.: Baskerville Publishers. 261 pp.
Hansel, Pauletta. 2001. Divining [poems by co-founder of the 1970s Soupbean Poets who helped establish the Southern Appalachian Writers Cooperative]. Boulder, Colo.: WovenWord Press. 70 pp.
Harington, Donald. 1994. "Donald Harington." Interview by Edwin T. Arnold. Appalachian Journal 21 (Summer): 432-445.
Harington, Donald. 2002. “An Interview with Donald Harington” [Ozark novelist]. Interview by Larry Vonalt. Southern Quarterly 40 (Winter): 69-85.
Harington, Donald. 2002. Thirteen Albatrosses (or, Falling off the Mountain): A Novel [Ozarks]. New York: Henry Holt. 402 pp.
Harington, Donald. 2004. With [fiction; Ozarks; girl’s survival story]. London, England: Toby Press. 491 pp.
Harris, Corra, and Grace Toney Edwards. 1998. The Circuit Rider’s Wife [fiction; Ga.]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 344 pp.
Hawkins, Nyoka, comp. 1997. “A Gurney Norman Bibliography” [69 entries; primary and secondary]. Iron Mountain Review 13 (Spring): 37-39.
Hazen, Kirk, and Ellen Fluharty. 2001. “Defining Appalachian English.” American Language Review 5 (May-June): 32-33.
Hazen, Kirk, and Ellen Fluharty. 2004. “Defining Appalachian English.” In Linguistic Diversity in the South: Changing Codes, Practices, and Ideology, ed. M. Bender, 50-65. Southern Anthropological Society Proceedings, no. 37. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
Headley, Jason. 2004. Small Town Odds [debut novel; set in W.Va.]. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. 341 pp.
Hendricks, Randy. 2003. The Twelfth Year and Other Times: Stories [Monroe Co., Tenn. settings]. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press. 152 pp.
Hendrickson, Robert. 1997. Mountain Range: A Dictionary of Expressions from Appalachia to the Ozarks. Facts on File Dictionary of American Regional Expressions, vol. 4, New York: Facts on File. 147 pp.
Herrin, Roberta. 1996. "Gloria Houston and the Burden of the 'Old Culture'." [children's books] Appalachian Journal 24 (Fall): 30-42.
Herrin, Roberta. 1998. “All That Is Native and Fun: Jo Carson’s Children’s Books.” Iron Mountain Review 14 (Summer): 19-23.
Herring, Gina. 1998. “Politics and Men: What’s ‘Really Important’ About Meredith Sue Willis and Blair Ellen Morgan” [Higher Ground (1981); Only Great Changes (1985, rpt. 1997); Trespassers (1997)]. Appalachian Journal 25 (Summer): 414-422.
Herring, Gina. 1999. “Sentimental Journey: Janice Holt Giles Finds a Career But No Immortality in Appalachia” [review essay of Janice Holt Giles: A Writer’s Life, by Dianne Watkins Stuart (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1998)]. Appalachian Journal 26 (Spring): 274-282.
Herring, Gina. 2000. “Climbing Paradox Mountain: The Stories of Robert Morgan” [review essay of The Balm of Gilead Tree: New and Selected Stories, by Robert Morgan (Frankfort, Ky.: Gnomon Press, 1999)]. Appalachian Journal 27 (Spring): 260-271.
Herring, Gina. 2001. “The Feminine Mystique and Elizabeth Madox Roberts” [review essay of Roberts’ novel The Time of Man (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2000 [1926]). Appalachian Journal 28 (Winter): 188-203.
Herring, Gina. 2002. “‘Approaching the Alter’: Aesthetic Homecoming in the Poetry of Linda Marion and Lynn Powell.” Appalachian Heritage 30 (Spring): 20-30.
Hicks, A. Jane. 2002. “Felix Culpa” [prize-winning poem, with author profile by Jane Harris Woodside]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 19 (Summer): 3-4.
Hicks, Jane. 2004. “How I Became the Voice in the Headset or a Writer’s Crew Chief” [Sharyn McCrumb; St. Dale (New York: Kensington Press, 2005)]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Fall): 24-26.
Higgins, Anna Dunlap. 2003. “‘To Walk These Hills’: Poetic Inspiration for Appalachian Poet Hilda Downer.” North Carolina Literary Review 12: 174-183.
Higgs, Robert J. 1997. “‘Are You Quality, Or Do You Stack?”: Appalachia and the Future of Southern Letters.” Appalachian Journal 25 (Fall): 62-83.
Higgs, Robert J. 1998. “‘Where’s Love?’: The Overheard Quest in the Stories of Jo Carson.” Iron Mountain Review 14 (Summer): 9-18.
Higgs, Robert J. 2004. “Modern Appalachian Writers” [sidebar in Chap. 17, “Tennessee Fiction since 1920”]. In A History of Tennessee Arts: Creating Traditions, Expanding Horizons, eds. C. West and M. Binnicker, 307-308. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
High, Ellisa Clay. 2002. “Maggie Anderson: Two Languages.” In Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry, ed. Felicia Mitchell, 3-9. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Hill, Reinhold L. 2000. “‘These Stories Are Not ‘Real,’ But They Are As True As I Can Make Them’: Lee Smith’s Literary Ethnography.” Southern Folklore 57 (no. 2): 106-118.
Hillchild: A Folklore Chapbook About, for, and by West Virginia Children . Vol. 1, 2002. Edited by Noel W. Tenney and Judy P. Byers. Fairmont: West Virginia Folklife Center at Fairmont State College.
Hodges, Mary Bozeman. 1999. Tough Customers and Other Stories: Tales from Tennessee & Southern Appalachia [fiction; Tenn.]. Introduction by Gurney Norman. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 158 pp.
Hodges, Mary Bozeman. 2003. Plastic Santa, and Other Stories [eight humorous stories]. Oak Ridge, Tenn.: Tellico Books. 71 pp.
Hoffman, William. 1998. Tidewater Blood: A Novel [W.Va.]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books. 300 pp.
Hoffman, William. 2000. Blood and Guile [crime mystery; W.Va.]. New York: HarperCollins. 239 pp.
Hoffman, William. 2002. “William Hoffman’s Fictional Journey: An Interview.” By Casey Clabough. Southern Quarterly 41 (Fall): 80-86.
Hokenson, Jan Walsh. 2001. “Fool’s Wisdom: The Learning of Laughter” [the comic in novelist Lisa Alther’s work]. Iron Mountain Review 17 (Spring): 21-27.
Holbrook, Chris. 1995. Hell and Ohio: Stories of Southern Appalachia. Frankfort, Ky: Gnomon Press.
Holliday, Shawn. 2001. Thomas Wolfe and the Politics of Modernism. American University Studies, Series 24; American Literature, vol. 73. New York: Peter Lang. 156 pp.
Holloway, Kimberley M. 2003. “Introduction: From a Race of Storytellers.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 1-6. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Holloway, Kimberley M. 2003. “Mythical Mountains: The Mythology of Sharyn McCrumb’s Ballad Series.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 111-121. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Holloway, Kimberley M. 2003. “The Past as Present: Ghosts of the Past in Sharyn McCrumb’s Ghost Riders” [2003]. In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 179-184. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Holloway, Kimberley M., ed. 2003. From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb [16 articles and essays]. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press. 200 pp.
Holt, Stephen M. 2000. Late Mowing: Poems and Essays [Ky.]. Introduction by Kathryn Stripling Byer. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 96 pp.
Hopkins, Lila. 2002. Weave Me a Song: A Novel: A Chronicle of Family Devotion, A Story of Love, Betrayal, Forgiveness and Reunion [N.C.]. Boone, N.C.: High Country Publishers. 229 pp.
Hopkins, Shawna Lee. 2002. Rooster Creek Girl Runs Away [fiction; Ky.; 14-year-old]. Chicago: Adams Press. 63 pp.
Horn, Tammy. 2001. “Honey Breeding: An Appalachian Aristaeus in Lee Smith’s Fair and Tender Ladies” [1988]. Journal of Kentucky Studies 18 (September): 106-110.
Horn, Tammy. 2002. “Re-Examining the Negative Appalachian Stereotypes in the Southern Highlands: Evelyn Scott’s Witch Perkins: A Story of the Kentucky Hills [New York: Holt, 1929]. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Summer): 35-40.
Horton, Matthew R. 2002. “‘Hallucinated Recollections’: Narrative as Spatialized Perception of History in The Orchard Keeper.” In Cormac McCarthy: New Directions, ed. J. Lilly, 285-312. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
House, Silas. 2001. “Family Pieces: Interview with Silas House” [author of Clay’s Quilt (2001)]. By Marianne Worthington. Appalachian Heritage 29 (Fall): 15-20.
House, Silas. 2001. Clay’s Quilt: A Novel [Ky.]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 292 pp.
House, Silas. 2002. “Making Himself Heard” [praise for Ron Rash]. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Fall): 11-14.
House, Silas. 2002. “The Hand That Wrote The Dollmaker: A Tribute to Harriette Arnow” [1908-1986]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 19 (Winter): 8-10.
House, Silas. 2002. “What I Don’t Know -- and Do” [using fiction to recreate a lost past; excerpt from A Parchment of Leaves (Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2002)]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 19 (Summer): 35-38.
House, Silas. 2002. A Parchment of Leaves: A Novel [1917 Ky.]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 275 pp.
House, Silas. 2003. “A Conversation with Writer Silas House” [author of Clay’s Quilt (2001) and A Parchment of Leaves (2002)]. Interview by Janna McMahan. Appalachian Journal 31 (Fall): 96-107.
House, Silas. 2003. “A Day with Lee Smith” [interview; profile]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Winter): 16-23.
House, Silas. 2004. “A Matter of Life and Death: Old and New Appalachia Meet in One Foot in Eden” [2002 novel by Ron Rash: Charlotte: Novello Press, 2002]. Iron Mountain Review 20 (Spring): 21-25.
House, Silas. 2004. The Coal Tattoo: A Novel [1960s Ky.; prequel to Clay’s Quilt (2001); Kentucky Literary Award winner for fiction]. Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 336 pp.
House, Teresa Ann Gabbard. 2004. “Stick-Shifts, Bluegills and Dancing” [about her husband, novelist Silas House; see also appended brief “Featured Author” pieces in this issue: “Fascinated by the World,” by Terry Dean Hoskins (Silas’s cousin); “Born to Write,” by Sandra Stidham (Silas’s seventh-grade English teacher); and “Living the Creed,” by Brooke Calton (Silas’s writing student)]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Spring): 16-22.
Houston, Gloria. 1997 [1992]. My Great-Aunt Arizona [N.C.; children’s literature; biography,1876-1969]. New York: Demco Media. (Previously published: New York: HarperCollins)
Hovis, George. 2000. “‘When You Got True Dirt You Got Everything You Need’: Forging an Appalachian Arcadia in Fred Chappell’s Midquest” [1981 epic poem cycle]. Mississippi Quarterly 53 (Summer): 389-414.
Hovis, George. 2004. “Darker Vices and Nearly Incomprehensible Sins: The Fate of Poe in Fred Chappell’s Early Novels.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 28-50. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Howard, Jennifer. 1995. "Interview With Mary Lee Settle." Special Issue: Southern Novelists on Stage and Screen. Southern Quarterly 33 (Winter-Spring): 79-83.
Howard, Jennifer. 1996. "Fred Chappell: From the Mountains to the Mainstream." [PW Interview] Publishers Weekly 243 (Sept. 30): 55-56.
Howard, Julie Kate. 2002. “In Her Own Image: Characterizing Theology in Kathryn Stripling Byer’s Poetry.” Iron Mountain Review 18 (Spring): 24-29.
Huddle, David. 1996. "David Huddle." Interview by Tal Stanley. Appalachian Journal 23 (Winter): 174-187.
Huddle, David. 1999. Summer Lake: New and Selected Poems [Va.]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 172 pp.
Huddle, David. 1999. The Story of a Million Years [first novel; Va.]. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 189 pp.
Huddle, David. 2004. Grayscale: Poems [29 poems; Blue Ridge; author’s fifth collection]. Southern Messenger Poets. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 56 pp.
Hughes, Linda K. 2002. “Harington’s Highlanders: Donald Harington’s Ozarks and the Mapping of Cultures.” Southern Quarterly 40 (Winter): 39-50.
Humez, Nick. 2002. “Uncle Fud” [use of kinship terms; ballads, poetry]. Verbatim: The Language Quarterly 27 (Summer): 23-27.
Huntley, Reid D. 1997. “Thomas Wolfe as a Middle Class Appalachian Writer.” Pembroke Magazine 29: 92-96.
Idol, John L., Jr. 2000. “Thomas Wolfe Gets Over Himself” [literary biography]. Appalachian Journal 27 (Summer): 344-353.
In Their Own Country: Fourteen Entertaining Visits with Fourteen of West Virginia’s Most Celebrated Writers [14 sound discs, each containing an hour-long interview with/about one of the following writers: Irene McKinney, Denise Giardina, Richard Currey, Cynthia Rylant, Keith Maillard, Jayne Anne Phillips, Sandra Belton, Pinckney Benedict, Breece D'J Pancake, Maggie Anderson, Stephen Coonts, Marc Harshman, Davis Grubb, Mary Lee Settle]. 2003. Produced and hosted by Kate Long. Charleston: West Virginia Library Commission.
Inscoe, John C. 1998. “Appalachian Odysseus: Love, War, and Best-Sellerdom in the Blue Ridge” [review essay of Charles Frazier’s novel Cold Mountain, New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1997]. Appalachian Journal 25 (Spring): 330-337.
Isabel Zuber, 1932– [author of new novel Salt; bio-bibliographical guide]. 2004. Contemporary Authors 222: 452-454.
Ivie, Doris, and Leslie M. LaChance, eds. 2001. Breathing the Same Air: An East Tennessee Anthology [Knoxville Writers’ Guild; 83 authors; poetry, short stories, essays, non-fiction]. Knoxville, Tenn.: Celtic Cat Publishing. 318 pp.
Jackson, Joe. 2004. How I Left the Great State of Tennessee and Went on to Better Things: A Novel [1960s picaresque; 16-year-old Dahlia’s coming of age]. New York: Carroll & Graf. 357 pp.
James B. Goode [featured contemporary author]. 2003. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Spring): 6-30.
Jared, Wanda. 2003. “Nora Bonesteel in the Novels of Sharyn McCrumb’s Ballad Series.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 137-144. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Jarrett, Robert L. 1997. Cormac McCarthy. Twayne’s United States Authors Series; TUSAS 679, New York: Twayne Publishers. 175 pp.
Jeff Daniel Marion Issue. 1995. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 11 (Spring): 1-40.
Jeff Daniel Marion [featured contemporary author]. 2003. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Fall): 16-45.
Jenks, Philip. 2002. On the Cave You Live In [poems; W.Va., Ky.]. Chicago: Flood Editions. 50 pp.
Jennings, Rachel. 2003. “Celtic Women and White Guilt: Frankie Silver and Chipita Rodriguez in Folk Memory” [Sharyn McCrumb, The Ballad of Frankie Silver, New York: Dutton, 1998]. Melus 28 (Spring): 17-37.
Jentsch, Nancy K., and Danny L. Miller. 2003. “A Song to Sing: Women in Sharyn McCrumb’s Ballad Series.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 93-110. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Jo Carson Bibliography [30 entries: books, plays, essays and interviews]. 1998. Iron Mountain Review 14 (Summer): 38-39.
Jo Carson Issue. 1998. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 14 (Summer): 1-39.
Johnson, Fenton. 1995. "Fenton Johnson." Interview by Anna Creadick. Appalachian Journal 22 (Winter): 160-173.
Johnson, Fenton. 1996. Geography of the Heart: A Memoir. New York: Scribner. 208 pp.
Johnson, Paul Brett. 1999. Old Dry Frye [children’s folktale]. Illustrations by the author. New York: Scholastic Press. 32 pp. unnumbered.
Johnson, Paul Brett. 2001. Fearless Jack [illustrated children’s folktale]. New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books. 32 pp.
Johnson, Paul Brett. 2002. Jack Outwits the Giants [illustrated children’s folktale]. New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books. 32 pp., unnumbered.
Johnson, Paul Brett. 2003. “Interview with Paul Brett Johnson, Children’s Author & Illustrator.” By Renee Critcher. Appalachian Journal 30 (Summer): 356-366.
Jolliff, William F. 2000. Review essay of four poetry collections: The River Hills and Beyond, by Lou V. Crabtree (Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press, 1998); The Silence of Blackberries, by Victor Depta (Martin, Tenn.: Blair Mountain Press, 1999); When It Came Time, by Jeri McCormick (Cliffs of Moher, Co. Clare: Salmon Publishing, 1998); Necessary Motions, by Sam Rasnake (Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press, 1998). Appalachian Heritage 28 (Winter): 64-74.
Jones, Loyal. 2002. “Leicester Luminist Lighted Local Language and Lore” [memories of Jim Wayne Miller]. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Winter): 18-25.
Jordan, Candace, Larry Pugh, and Teresa Hearl, eds. 1999. Mist on the Mon: West Virginia Short Stories [11 stories; north-central W.Va.]. Morgantown, W.Va.: Morgantown Writers Group. 112 pp.
Joyner, Nancy Carol, interviewer. 1999. “Sue Ellen Bridgers” [novelist; young adult literature]. Appalachian Journal 26 (Summer): 410-421.
Joyner, Nancy Carol. 1997. “Divine Right’s Metatrip.” Iron Mountain Review [Gurney Norman Issue] 13 (Spring): 12-15.
Karon, Jan. 2001. A Common Life: The Wedding Story. The Mitford Years (no. 6) [fictionalized Blowing Rock, N.C.]. New York: Viking. 186 pp.
Karon, Jan. 2002. In This Mountain. The Mitford Years (no. 7). New York: Viking. 382 pp.
Kathryn Stripling Byer Bibliography [27 entries]. 2002. Iron Mountain Review 18 (Spring): 39.
Kathryn Stripling Byer Issue. 2002. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 18 (Spring): 1-39.
Kaufman, Schuyler. 2001. Dear Mouse: A Tale of Love, Murder and Movie-Making in the Carolina Mountains. Boone, N.C.: High Country Publishers. 237 pp.
Kay, Terry. 2003. The Valley of Light: A Novel [WWII veteran; 1948 N.C. mountains]. New York: Atria Books of Simon & Schuster. 239 pp.
Keller, Jane Eblen. 2001. “A Level Place in Up-Hill Times: The Medieval and the Appalachian Woman” [discusses settings in The Great Meadow (1930) and The Time of Man (1926) by Elizabeth Madox Roberts; The Tall Woman (1962) by Wilma Dykeman; and The Dollmaker (1954) by Harriette Simpson Arnow]. Appalachian Heritage 29 (Summer): 21-33.
Kelsay, Michael. 2001. Too Close to Call. [first novel; fictional Oceana, Ky.]. Oxford: University Press of Mississippi. 274 pp.
Kendrick, Leatha, and George Ella Lyon, eds. 2002. Crossing Troublesome: 25 Years of the Appalachian Writers Workshop [anthology of accolades from 120+ staff writers at Hindman Settlement School]. Preface by Robert Morgan. Nicholasville, Ky.: Wind Publications. 204 pp.
Kendrick, Leatha. 1998. “Small Presses: Market Niches & Labors of Love” [poetry focus; Sow’s Ear Press, Wind Publications, Gnomon Press, Bottom Dog Press, and others]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 15 (Summer): 14-16.
Kendrick, Leatha. 2000. Heart Cake [poems]. Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press. 65 pp.
Kendrick, Leatha. 2003. Science in Your Own Back Yard: Poems [breast cancer; self-image]. Monterey, Ky.: Larkspur Press. 35 pp.
Kennedy, Richard S. 2001. “A Look Into Thomas Wolfe’s Workshop: A Review Essay” [O Lost: A Story of the Buried Life (2000); To Loot My Life Clean: The Thomas Wolfe-Maxwell Perkins Correspondence (2000)]. Southern Quarterly 40 (Fall): 147-151.
Kennedy, Sarah. 2002. “‘That Little Gal’s Not Going Anywhere’: Kathryn Stripling Byer’s Incremental Monologues.” Iron Mountain Review 18 (Spring): 9-15.
Kessler, Brad. 2001. Lick Creek: A Novel [1920s W.Va.]. New York: Scribner. 297 pp.
Kinder, Chuck. 2004. Last Mountain Dancer: Hard-Earned Lessons in Love, Loss, and Honky-Tonk Outlaw Life [W.Va.; outlandish “family stories, lies, legends, and history”]. New York: Carroll & Graf. 480 pp.
King, Vincent. 2000. “Hopeful Grief: The Prospect of Postmodernist Feminism in Allison’s Bastard Out of Carolina [1992; incest theme]. Southern Literary Journal 38 (Fall): 122-140.
Kingsolver, Barbara. 2000. Prodigal Summer [fiction]. New York: HarperCollins. 444 pp.
Kingsolver, Barbara. 2001. “Messing with the Sacred: An Interview with Barbara Kingsolver” [transcript of award-winning, 1997 documentary aired on PBS (KET)]. Produced and directed by Guy Mendes. Appalachian Journal 28 (Spring): 304-324.
Kirk, Stephen. 2004. Scribblers: Stalking the Authors of Appalachia [Western N.C.; memoirs, interviews, insights]. Winston-Salem, N.C.: John F. Blair. 240 pp.
Kirkland, James W. 2004. “Tales Tall and True: Fred Chappell’s Look Back All the Green Valley and the Continuity of Narrative Tradition” [New York: Picador USA, 1999]. In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 239-255. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Krasne, Betty. 1994. “Criticism, A Mirror of Social Change: Harriette Arnow and Her Critics.” In Appalachian Adaptations to a Changing World, ed. Norma Myers. Journal of the Appalachian Studies Association 6: 113-129. Johnson City: East Tennessee State University, Center for Appalachian Studies and Services.
Kretzschmar, William A., Jr. 2003. “Mapping Southern English” [language variation; 16 maps]. American Speech 78 (Summer): 130-149.
Labovitz, Trudy. 1999. Ordinary Justice [female detective fiction; W.Va.; murder, moonshine, domestic violence]. Duluth, Minn.: Spinsters Ink. 232 pp.
Labovitz, Trudy. 2000. Deadly Embrace [mystery; W.Va. female detective]. Duluth, Minn.: Spinsters Ink. 200 pp.
Ladd, Barbara. 2002. “‘Longing for the Future’ in Donald Harington’s The Architecture of the Arkansas Ozarks” [Little, Brown, 1975]. Southern Review 38 (Autumn): 827-841.
Landis, Catherine. 2004. Harvest [fiction; East Tenn.; three generations from 1930s TVA displacement to present]. New York: Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin’s Press. 338 pp.
Lang, John. 2000. Understanding Fred Chappell [b. 1936; N.C. poet, novelist, short story writer]. Understanding Contemporary American Literature series. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. 325 pp.
Lang, John. 2002. “Lester Ballard: McCarthy’s Challenge to the Reader’s Compassion” [Child of God (1974)]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 103-111. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Lang, John. 2003. “‘Measures of Grace’: Religious Consciousness in Jeff Daniel Marion’s Poetry.” Appalachian Heritage 31 (Fall): 26-33.
Lang, John. 2004. “Windies and Rusties: Fred Chappell As Humorist.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 204-218. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Langan, John. 2001. “Ballad Form and Catholic Chastity in Elizabeth Madox Robert’s Black Is My Truelove’s Hair” [1938; her last novel]. Appalachian Heritage 29 (Summer): 43-56.
Langan, John. 2001. “Elizabeth Madox Roberts: An Introduction.” Appalachian Heritage 29 (Summer): 19-20.
Lanier, Parks, Jr. 2002. “Appalachian Writers.” In The History of Southern Women’s Literature, eds. C. Perry and M. Weaks, 309-315. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Laskas, Gretchen Moran. 2003. The Midwife’s Tale [debut novel; 1920s-30s W.Va.; Weatherford Award winner]. New York: Dial Press. 256 pp.
Laskas, Gretchen Moran. 2004. “A Hopeful Coming of Age” [reviews Clay’s Quilt, 2001 novel by Silas House]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Spring): 28-31.
Lazenby, Traci. 2004. “Myth and Mundane in More Shapes Than One” [New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1991]. In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 132-149. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
LeCroy, Anne. 2003. “The Lure of the Lore: Two Hamelin Novels by Sharyn McCrumb.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 51-58. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Lee Smith, special issue [with complete bibliography]. 2001. Pembroke Magazine 33: 1-362.
Lee Smith [featured author]. 2003. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Winter): 16-43.
Leeper, Angela C. 2003. “The ‘Other America’: Looking at Appalachian and Cajun/Creole Resources” [children’s literature]. MultiCultural Review 12 (March): 34-42.
Leidig, Dan. 2000. Time Out: Poems [32 poems by former Emory & Henry Dean]. Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press. 39 pp.
LeRoy, J. T. 2000. Sarah [first novel; W.Va. truckstops & transvestites coming of age tale]. New York: Bloomsbury. 166 pp.
LeRoy, J. T. 2001. The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things [short stories; street hustler; W.Va., San Francisco]. New York: Bloomsbury. 224 pp.
Lilley, James D. 2000. “Of Whales and Men: The Dynamics of Cormac McCarthy’s Environmental Imagination.” Southern Quarterly 38 (Winter): 111-122.
Lindberg, Laurie. 1999. “Denise Giardina: Challenging the Bullies of Appalachia.” Iron Mountain Review 15 (Spring): 15-21.
Linney, Romulus. 1997. Mountain Memory: A Play About Appalachian Life. New York: Dramatists Play Service. 53 pp.
Linney, Romulus. 2000. Nine Adaptations for the American Stage. Hanover, N.H.: Smith and Kraus. 432 pp.
Lisa Alther Bibliography [44 entries]. 2001. Iron Mountain Review 17 (Spring): 38-39.
Lisa Alther Issue. 2001. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 17 (Spring): 1-39.
Literary Map of West Virginia [website; 150 authors]. 2004. Project director, Phyllis Wilson Moore; sponsor, West Virginia Folklife Center at Fairmont State University. Illustrated by Noel Tenney. Online at http://www.fscwv.edu/wvfolklife/literary_map/index.shtml.
Loest, Judy. 2002. “Family Reunion” [prize-winning poem, with author profile by Jane Harris Woodside]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 19 (Summer): 7-8.
Long, Cleta M. 1997. Dry Fork’s Daughter [autobiographical poems by former candidate for WV Poet Laureate]. Parsons, W.Va.: McClain Printing Co. 106 pp.
Luce, Dianne C. 1996. “On the Trail of History in McCarthy’s Blood Meridian” [review essay of Notes on Blood Meridian, by John Sepich, Louisville, Ky.: Bellarmine College Press, 1993]. Mississippi Quarterly 49 (Fall): 843-849.
Luce, Dianne C. 2002. “‘They Aint the Thing’: Artifact and Hallucinated Recollection in Cormac McCarthy’s Early Frame-Works.” In Cormac McCarthy, ed. H. Bloom, 113-130. Modern Critical Views. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers.
Luce, Dianne C. 2002. “The Cave of Oblivion: Platonic Mythology in Child of God. In Cormac McCarthy: New Directions, ed. J. Lilly, 171-198. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Lyon, George Ella, ed. 2003. A Kentucky Christmas [collection of Ky. holiday fiction, poems, songs, essays by 67 writers]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 337 pp.
Lyon, George Ella. 1997. With a Hammer for My Heart [fiction]. New York: DK Ink. 224 pp.
Lyon, George Ella. 1999 [1988]. Borrowed Children [juvenile fiction; Depression-era Ky., Tenn.]. Reprint. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 154 pp.
Lyon, George Ella. 1999. Where I’m From, Where Poems Come From. Spring, Tex.: Absey & Co. 98 pp.
Lyon, George Ella. 1999. Where I’m From, Where Poems Come From. Spring, Tex.: Absey & Co. 98 pp.
Lyon, George Ella. 2003. “The Right to a Voice” [essay: poet’s voice]. Appalachian Journal 30 (Winter-Spring): 196-199.
Lyon, George Ella. 2004. Weaving the Rainbow [children’s book; sheep farm]. Illustrated by Stephanie Anderson. New York: Atheneum. 24 pp., unnumbered.
Mackin, Randy. 2000. “By Way of Word” [poetry of George Scarbrough]. Iron Mountain Review 16 (Spring): 14-19.
Madden, David. 1999 [1969]. Cassandra Singing [fiction; Ky.]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 288 pp. Originally published, New York: Crown Publishers.
Maillard, Keith. 2000. Gloria [fiction; 1950s W.Va.]. New York: Soho Press. 643 pp.
Maillard, Keith. 2003. The Clarinet Polka [Polish-Americans in fictional, 1969 Raysburg, i.e. Wheeling, W.Va.]. New York: St. Martin’s Press. 384 pp. First published 2002, Toronto, Thomas Allen Publishers.
Makuck, Peter. 2004. “The Kirkman Novels: First and Last Concerns” [It Is Time, Lord (1963); I Am One of You Forever (1985); Brighten the Corner Where You Are (1990); Farewell, I’m Bound to Leave You (1996); Look Back All the Green Valley (1999)]. In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 167-185. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Mallinson, Christine, and Walt Wolfram. 2002. “Dialect Accommodation in a Bi-Ethnic Mountain Enclave Community: More Evidence on the Development of African American English” [N.C.]. Language in Society 31 (November): 743-775.
Mangham, Mack. 2000. Shadow of the Hawk [N.C.; mystery/romance]. Bloomington, Ind.: 1stBook Library. 228 pp.
Manley, Frank. 1998. The Cockfighter [coming-of-age novel; P.E.N./Hemingway Foundation Award for First Fiction]. Minneapolis, Minn.: Coffee House Press. 206 pp.
Mann, Jeff. 1998. Bliss [poems; 1998 Stonewall Chapbook Award]. Towson, Md.: Brick House Books. 40 pp.
Mann, Jeff. 2002. “Goldenrod Seeds” [prize-winning poem, with author profile by Jane Harris Woodside]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 19 (Summer): 5-6.
Mann, Jeff. 2003. “Devoured” [gay novella set in W.Va.]. In Masters of Midnight: Erotic Tales of the Vampire, by Michael Thomas Ford, William J. Mann, Sean Wolfe, and Jeff Mann, 251-362. New York: Kensington. 352 pp.
Manning, Maurice. 2001. Lawrence Booth’s Book of Visions [Ky.]. Foreword by W. S. Merwin. Yale Series of Younger Poets, vol. 95. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. 80 pp.
Manning, Maurice. 2004. A Companion for Owls: Being the Commonplace Book of D. Boone, Long Hunter, Back Woodsman, &c [70 biographical, sequential poems written in the voice of frontiersman Daniel Boone]. Orlando, Fla.: Harcourt. 128 pp.
Manning, Michelle. 1996. "The Southern Voice of Lee Smith: An Annotated Bibliography." Bulletin of Bibliography 53 (June): 161-172.
Marin, David Lozell. 2002. Crazy Love: A Novel [Tenn.]. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 1994. Lost & Found. Abingdon, Va.: Sow's Ear Press.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 1998. “Try to Picture It: Poetry, Photography, and the Long View.” Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 15 (Summer): 21-24.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 1999. The Chinese Poet Awakens [Marion’s collected and new Chinese poems]. Illustrations by Elizabeth Ellison. Lexington, Ky.: Wind. 55 pp.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 2001. “In Memoriam: James Still (1906-2001).” Iron Mountain Review 17 (Spring): 37.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 2001. Letters Home: Poems [50 story poems from childhood]. Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press. 86 pp.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 2002. Ebbing & Flowing Springs: New and Selected Poems and Prose, 1976-2001. Knoxville, Tenn.: Celtic Cat Publishing. 240 pp.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 2003. “‘Be Still and Know’: An Interview.” By Christine Christianson. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Fall): 35-41.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 2004. “The Journey a Poem Makes: Interviewing Jeff Daniel Marion.” Interview by Ernest Lee [2001 series of meetings]. Appalachian Journal 31 (Winter): 194-211.
Marion, Jeff Daniel. 2004. “The Long Way Around: Circling Back Home, A Metaphor for Writing” [essay]. Appalachian Journal 31 (Winter): 214-220.
Marion, Stephen. 2002. Hollow Ground [debut novel; Tenn. mining town coming-of-age]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 308 pp.
Marius, Richard. 2001. An Affair of Honor [fiction; Marius’ (1933-1999) fourth novel, third of a trilogy]. New York: Knopf. 592 pp.
Marius, Richard. 2002. “Suttree as Window into the Soul of Cormac McCarthy” [Suttree (1979)]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 113-129. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Markelis, Daiva. 2000. “Men Are That Way: The Short Stories of E. S. Johnson” [1906-1908; local color portrayals of wives and daughters of immigrant anthracite miners]. In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 209-218. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Marshall, Catherine. 2001 [1967]. Christy [fiction; Great Smoky Mountains]. Reprint. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan. 501 pp.
Martin, Lou. 2002. Above the Slate: An Appalachian Love Story [fiction; 1930s Harlan Co., Ky.]. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 222 pp.
Maxwell, Angie. 2004. “The South Beheld: The Influence of James Agee on James Dickey” [Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941); Deliverance (1970)]. Southern Quarterly 42 (Winter): 135-151.
May, Charles. 2001. “Tribute to Jim Still, 1906-2001.” Appalachian Heritage 29 (Fall): 7-9.
Maynard, Lee. 2001 [1988]. Crum [fiction; W.Va. coming-of-age classic; b. 1936]. Second edition, with an introduction by Meredith Sue Willis. Morgantown, W.Va.: Vandalia Press (West Virginia University Press). 170 pp. Originally published, New York: Washington Square Press.
Maynard, Lee. 2003. Screaming with the Cannibals [fiction; sequel to Crum(1988, 2001)]. Morgantown, W.Va.: Vandalia Press. 261 pp.
McCaig, Donald. 1998. Jacob’s Ladder: A Story of Virginia During the War [fiction; Civil War]. New York: W.W. Norton. 525 pp.
McCarthy, Cormac. 1996. The Gardener's Son: A Screenplay. Hopewell, N.J.: Ecco Press. 93 pp.
McClanahan, Ed. 1996. A Congress of Wonders. [fiction] Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint Press. 161 pp.
McClanahan, Ed. 1998. My Vita, If You Will: The Uncollected Ed McClanahan [miscellany of short fiction, essays, reviews]. Edited by Tom Marksbury. Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint Press. 274 pp.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 1994. She Walks These Hills. New York: Scribners. 336 pp.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 1995. If I'd Killed Him When I Met Him ... : An Elizabeth MacPherson Novel. New York: Ballantine Books. 276 pp.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 1996. The Rosewood Casket. [fiction] New York: Dutton. 303 pp.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 1997. Foggy Mountain Breakdown: And Other Stories [collected short fiction]. New York: Ballantine Books. 336 pp.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 1998. The Ballad of Frankie Silver [fiction; N.C.]. New York: Dutton. 304 pp.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 2000. The PMS Outlaws [eighth Elizabeth McPherson novel]. New York: Ballantine Books. 295 pp.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 2001. The Songcatcher: A Ballad Novel [multi-generational, Scotland to N.C.]. New York: Dutton. 321 pp.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 2003. “Keepers of the Legends: An Essay on the Influences of Family Legends and Folklore on Fiction.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 7-21. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
McCrumb, Sharyn. 2003. Ghost Riders: A Novel [Civil War; author’s seventh “ballad novel”]. New York: Dutton. 336 pp.
McDonald, Jeanne. 1997. “Lee Smith: At Home in Appalachia.” Poets & Writers 25 (November/December): 32-41.
McElmurray, Karen Salyer. 1999. Strange Birds in the Trees of Heaven [first novel; eastern Ky.]. Athens, Ga.: Hill Street Press. 312 pp.
McFee, Michael, ed. 1994. The Language They Speak Is Things to Eat: Poems by Fifteen Contemporary North Carolina Poets. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 276 pp.
McFee, Michael. 1999. “The Epigrammatical Fred Chappell” [considers Chappell’s 1993 poetry collection C]. Southern Literary Journal 31 (Spring): 95-108.
McFee, Michael. 2002. Earthly: Poems. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Carnegie Mellon University Press. 84 pp.
McFee, Michael. 2003. “Unsent Letter to Robert Morgan” [18 May 1997; “Am I really an Appalachian writer?”]. Iron Mountain Review 19 (Spring): 7-8.
McKee, Glenn. 1998. “Crossing Over Troublesome Creek: The Appalachian Writers Workshop at the Hindman Settlement School.” 1998. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 15 (Summer): 28-29.
McKinney, Denise R., ed. 2004. Poetry As Prayer: Appalachian Women Speak [poems “of a sacred, spiritual, or religious nature” selected from 400 submissions]. Nicholasville, Ky.: Wind Publications. 149 pp.
McKinney, Irene, ed. 2002. Backcountry: Contemporary Writing in West Virginia. Morgantown: Vandalia Press (West Virginia University Press). 273 pp. [Authors represented: Maggie Anderson, Tom Andrews, Pinckney Benedict, Richard Currey, Mark DeFoe, Victor Depta, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Denise Giardina, Davis Grubb, Lisa Koger, Lee Maynard, John McKernan, Llewellyn McKernan, Irene McKinney, Louise McNeill, Ann Pancake, Breece D'J Pancake, Jayne Anne Phillips, Timothy Russell, Mary Lee Settle, A. E. Stringer, and Meredith Sue Willis.]
McKinney, Irene. 2004. Vivid Companion: Poems [Poet Laureate of W.Va.]. Morgantown, W.Va.: Vandalia Press. 98 pp.
McKinney, Karen Janet. 2004. “Tracing the Hawk’s Shadow: Fred Chappell As Storyteller.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 219-238. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
McNeill, Louise. 1994. Fermi Buffalo. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 160 pp.
Megan, Carolyn E. 2002. “Dorothy Allison.” In The History of Southern Women’s Literature, eds. C. Perry and M. Weaks, 584-587. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Meredith Sue Willis Bibliography [48 entries]. 1996. Iron Mountain Review 12 (Spring): 37.
Meredith Sue Willis Issue. 1996. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 12 (Spring): 1-37.
Metress, Christopher. 2001. “‘Via Negativa’: The Way of Unknowing in Cormac McCarthy’s Outer Dark” [his second novel, 1968]. Southern Review 37 (Winter): 147-154.
Michael McFee Bibliography [32 entries]. Iron Mountain Review 19 (Spring): 39-40.
Michael McFee Issue. 2003. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 19 (Spring): 1-40.
Millen, C. M. 2004. Blue Bowl Down: An Appalachian Rhyme [children's picture book; bread-making]. Illustrated by Holly Meade. Cambridge, Mass.: Candlewick Press. 32 pp.
Miller, Danny L. 1996. Wingless Flight: Appalachian Women in Fiction [stereotype; Mary Noailles Murfree, Edith Summers Kelley and Anne W. Armstrong, Emma Bell Miles and Jesse Stuart, James Still, Harriette Simpson Arnow]. Bowling Green, O.: Popular Press.
Miller, Danny L. 1997. “Kin and Kindness in Gurney Norman’s Kinfolks: The Wilgus Stories.” Iron Mountain Review 13 (Spring): 16-23.
Miller, Danny L. 2003. “Sharyn McCrumb’s Use of Ballads in If Ever I Return, Pretty Peggy-O.” In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 59-67. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Miller, Jake. 1999. Looneyville Zip Code 25259 Lore: Appalachian Mountains Folklore, Popular Etymology, Colloquial Speech [W.Va.; glossary, idioms, chapter on ramps]. Philadelphia: Xlibris. 148 pp.
Miller, James A. 2002. “Coming Home to Affrilachia: The Poems of doris davenport.” In Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry, ed. Felicia Mitchell, 96-106. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Miller, Jim Wayne. 1997. The Brier Poems. Frankfort, Ky.: Gnomon Press.
Miller, Jim Wayne. 2002. “Tell Them I Said Something” [on being a good writer (previously unpublished)]. Appalachian Journal 30 (Fall): 60-63.
Miller, Jim Wayne. [1964] 1995. Copperhead Cane: Poems. Reprint, Louisville: Green River Writers/Grex Press. 69 pp.
Miller, Judy K. 2002. “What Kind of Egg Are You? A Profile of Lou V. Crabtree.” In Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry, ed. Felicia Mitchell, 85-93. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Millichap, Joseph R. 2002. “Thomas Wolfe’s Southern Railroads: Look Homeward, Angel and Beyond.” Chap. 3 in Dixie Limited: Railroads, Culture, and the Southern Renaissance, 36-47. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
Mitchell, Felicia, ed. 2002. Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry [includes two poems and a separately-authored essay for each of 20 poets: Maggie Anderson, Marilou Awiakta, Kathryn Stripling Byer, Jo Carson, Lisa Coffman, Lou V. Crabtree, doris davenport, Nikki Giovanni, Patricia A. Johnson, Leatha Kendrick, George Ella Lyon, Linda Parsons Marion, Irene McKinney, Lynn Powell, Rita Sims Quillen, Rita Sizemore Riddle, Bettie Sellers, Besty Sholl, Bennie Lee Sinclair, and Barbara Smith]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 328 pp.
Mitchell, Tanya. 2002. “Beyond Regional Borders: The Emergence of a New Sense of Place, from Mary Murfree to Lee Smith” [insider/outsider values]. Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (Fall): 407-420.
Mitchell, Tanya. 2003. “Gender, Class, and Regional Tradition in Sharyn McCrumb’s She Walks These Hills” [1994]. In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 123-136. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Mitchell, Ted. 1999 [1997]. Thomas Wolfe: A Writer’s Life. Revised edition. Raleigh: North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives and History, and the Appalachian Consortium. Originally published, Asheville, N.C.: Thomas Wolfe Memorial Historic Site.
Mock, Michele L. 2002. “Woman, Nature, and the White Plague: Rebecca Harding Davis’s ‘The Yares of the Black Mountains: A True Story’” [1875; Silhouettes of American Life, New York: Scribner’s (1892), 239-68; tuberculosis; “iconoclastic polarities of gender”]. Legacy 19, no. 2: 152-169.
Montgomery, Michael B. 1997. “The Scotch-Irish Element in Appalachian English: How Broad? How Deep?” In Ulster and North America: Transatlantic Perspectives on the Scotch-Irish, ed. H. Blethen, C. Wood, Jr., 189-212. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.
Montgomery, Michael B., and Joseph S. Hall, eds. 2004. Dictionary of Smoky Mountain English [6000 entries with quotations in context; 1930s informants; Weatherford Award winner for nonfiction]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 710 pp.
Montgomery, Michael. 1995. "Does Tennessee Have Three 'Grand Dialects'?: Evidence From the Linguistic Atlas of the Gulf States." Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin 57 (no. 2): 68-86.
Montgomery, Michael. 1999. “A Superlative Complex in Appalachian English” [word formation]. SECOL Review: Southeastern Conference on Linguistics 23 (Spring): 1-14.
Montgomery, Michael. 2000. “Myths: How a Hunger for Roots Shapes Our Notions About Appalachian English” [mountain speech and dialect; maps]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 17 (Summer): 7-13.
Montgomery, Michael. 2000. “The Idea of Appalachian Isolation” [culture; mountain speech communities]. Appalachian Heritage 28 (Spring): 20-31.
Montgomery, Michael. 2002. “Joseph Hall: The Man and His Work” [made first permanent recordings of Smoky Mountains speech and music, 1939-40]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 19 (Winter): 23-26.
Montgomery, Michael. 2004. “English Language” [overview]. In High Mountains Rising: Appalachia in Time and Place, eds. R. Straw and H. Blethen, 147-164. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
Mooney, Jennifer. 2002. “‘Room Is Made for Whoever’: Jo Carson and the Creation of Dialogical Community.” In Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry, ed. Felicia Mitchell, 50-65. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Mooney, Stephen D. 1999. “‘Beyond Measure’: An Appreciation of Denise Giardina’s Storming Heaven and The Unquiet Earth” [1987; 1992]. Iron Mountain Review 15 (Spring): 9-14.
Mooney, Theresa R. 2000. “Out of the Dark and into the Light: Violence and Vision in James Lee Burke” [1970 coal mining novel, To the Bright and Shining Sun]. In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 226-234. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Moore, Phyllis Wilson. 1999. “West Virginia Literature: A Selected Annotated Bibliography and Guide to Research” [56 entries]. Traditions: A Journal of West Virginia Folk Culture and Educational Awareness 5: 45-47. Online at http://www.mountainlit.com/references.htm.
Moore, Phyllis Wilson. 2002. “WV’s Kanawha Valley as Mary Lee Settle’s Beulah Land.” Traditions: A Journal of West Virginia Folk Culture and Educational Awareness 8: 56-57.
Morgan, Karen, and Meredith Sue Willis. 1996. “Circling Out, Centering In: A Conversation (Recorded at the Meredith Sue Willis Literary Festival, Emory & Henry College, November 10, 1995)” [interview with Meredith Sue Willis]. Iron Mountain Review 12 (Spring): 31-37.
Morgan, Robert. 1994. The Hinterlands: A Mountain Tale in Three Parts. Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 356 pp.
Morgan, Robert. 1995. The Truest Pleasure. Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books. 334 pp.
Morgan, Robert. 1996. "Clearing Ground." [testimonial for Jim Wayne Miller] Appalachian Heritage 24 (Fall): 4-7.
Morgan, Robert. 1996. "Robert Morgan." Interview by Tal Stanley. Appalachian Journal 23 (Spring): 276-292.
Morgan, Robert. 1996. Wild Peavines. [chapbook of poems] Frankfort, Ky.: Gnomon Press.
Morgan, Robert. 1999. Gap Creek [fiction]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books. 336 pp.
Morgan, Robert. 1999. The Balm of Gilead Tree [new and selected stories; N.C.]. Frankfort, Ky.: Gnomon Press. 352 pp.
Morgan, Robert. 2000 [1989]. The Blue Valleys: A Collection of Stories. Reprint, Scribner Paperback Fiction ed. New York: Simon & Schuster. 168 pp. Originally published, Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers.
Morgan, Robert. 2000 [1992]. The Mountains Won’t Remember Us and Other Stories. Reprint, Scribner Paperback Fiction ed. New York: Simon & Schuster. 250 pp. Originally published, Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers.
Morgan, Robert. 2000. Topsoil Road [poems]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 64 pp.
Morgan, Robert. 2001. “Getting the Voices Right: A Conversation with Robert Morgan About The Gardener’s Son” [for the documentary “Acting McCarthy: The Making of Richard Pearce’s ‘The Gardener’s Son’” (1977; screenplay by Cormac McCarthy)]. Interview by Peter Josyph. Southern Quarterly 40 (Fall): 121-131.
Morgan, Robert. 2001. “You Can’t Get There From Here” [influence of poet and N.C. neighbor Carl Sandburg]. Appalachian Journal 28 (Winter): 222-226.
Morgan, Robert. 2001. This Rock [fiction; 1920s N.C.]. Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 323 pp.
Morgan, Robert. 2002. “Cormac McCarthy: The Novel Raised from the Dead” [Child of God (1974)]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 9-21. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Morgan, Robert. 2002. “Interview with Robert Morgan” [interview conducted Nov. 21, 2001, Green River Valley, N.C.]. Appalachian Journal 29 (Summer): 494-504.
Morgan, Robert. 2003. Brave Enemies: A Novel [1780-81 Revolutionary N.C., S.C.]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 309 pp.
Morgan, Robert. 2004. “‘the moral ambiguity of that time’: A Conversation with Robert Morgan.” Interview by Resa Crane Bizzaro and Patrick Bizzaro. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Summer): 11-17.
Morgan, Robert. 2004. “The Birth of Music from the Spirit of Comedy.” Foreword in More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, ix-xiv. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Morgan, Robert. 2004. The Strange Attractor: New and Selected Poems [14 new poems and 79 from nine previous collections spanning 35 years]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 137 pp.
Morgan, Stacy I. 2001. “Migration, Material Culture, and Identity in William Attaway’s Blood on the Forge and Harriette Arnow’s The Dollmaker” [1954]. College English 63 (July): 712-740.
Morrow, Jonathan. 1998. “Afterword.” In From My Highest Hill: Carolina Mountain Folks, by Olive Tilford Dargan [discusses Bayard Wootten’s documentary photographs included in this reprint of the 1941 edition]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. Pp. 223-247.
Morsberger, Robert E. 2000. “The Molly Maguires in the Valley of Fear” [screenplay (1970) and novel (1915)]. In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 155-165. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Morsi, Pamela. 1999. Sweetwood Bride [historical romance; Tenn.]. New York: Harper Choice. 406 pp.
Murray, Thomas E., and Beth Lee Simon. 2002. “At the Intersection of Regional and Social Dialects: The Case of Like + Past Participle in American English.” American Speech 77 (Spring): 32-69.
Murrey, Loretta Martin. 2002. “Mary Lee Settle.” In The History of Southern Women’s Literature, eds. C. Perry and M. Weaks, 503-507. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Murrey, Loretta. 1996. "Dispossession and Regeneration in Mary Lee Settle's Beulah Quintet" [Edenic garden vs. machine]. Special issue, “The Garden South”, Southern Quarterly 35 (Fall): 62-68.
Nahai, Gina B. 2001. Sunday’s Silence [fiction; East Tenn.; snakebite death; Kurdish Jew character; Iranian author]. New York: Harcourt. 309 pp.
Nance, Kevin. 1996. "The Kentucky Cycle in Athens." [Schenkkan's play as Greek tragedy] Appalachian Heritage 24 (Spring): 26-29.
Nantahala: A Review of Writing and Photography in Appalachia , fall 2001– [2003 winner of ASA's e-Appalachia Award]. Quarterly electronic journal hosted by the Appalachian College Association. Online link http://www.nantahalareview.org/.
Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds. 1998. Sang Spell [young adult fiction; Melungeons]. New York: Atheneum. 192 pp.
Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds. 2002 [1971]. Wrestle the Mountain [adolescent fiction; W.Va. 11-year-old dreams of being a woodcarver, not a coal miner]. Reprint, with a foreword and afterword by Margaret Kimmel. Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press. 194 pp. Originally published, Chicago: Follett.
Neikirk, Gregg. 2001. “The Great Miltonic Meadow: Elizabeth Madox Roberts at Paradise Lost” [compares Roberts’ The Great Meadow (1930) with John Milton’s epic poem]. Appalachian Heritage 29 (Summer): 34-42.
Neufeld, Rob. 2001. “Olive Tilford Dargan: Writer and Social Critic 1869-1968” [pseud. Fielding Burke]. In May We All Remember Well: A Journal of the History & Cultures of Western North Carolina, Vol. 2, ed. R. S. Brunk, 267-287. Asheville, N.C.: Robert S. Brunk Auction Services, Inc.
Nicholson, Scott. 2002. The Red Church [first novel; horror genre; N.C.]. New York: Pinnacle. 352 pp.
Nieman, Valerie. 2000. Survivors [fiction; W.Va.]. Midlothian, Va.: Van Neste Books. 272 pp.
Nieman, Valerie. 2004. Fidelities: Short Stories [18 stories]. Morgantown, W.Va.: Vandalia Press. 150 pp.
Norman, Gurney. 1997. “Death in Lexington” [obituary; humor]. Iron Mountain Review 13 (Spring): 4.
Norman, Gurney. 1997. “The Turning of the Year (Part I of a Novella)” [excerpt]. Iron Mountain Review 13 (Spring): 5-7
Norman, Gurney. 1997. “Time on the River” [excerpts]. Iron Mountain Review 13 (Spring): 8-11.
Norman, Gurney. 2002. “Remembering James Still” [1906-2001]. Appalachian Journal 29 (Fall 2001-Winter 2002): 6-9.
Nostrandt, Jeanne R. 2000. “A Modern Parable: Sowing and Reaping in Furors Die” [Hoffman’s tenth novel, 1990]. In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 133-145. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Nostrandt, Jeanne R. 2000. “Bibliography” [89 entries, primary and secondary]. In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 147-151. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine Poetry Competition Winners [judged by Fred Chappell]. 1998. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 15 (Summer): 3-7.
O’Dell, Tawni. 2000. Back Roads [fiction; western Pa.]. New York: Viking. 352 pp.
O’Dell, Tawni. 2004. Coal Run: A Novel [Western Pa. mining town; by author of Back Roads (1999)]. New York: Viking. 354 pp.
Oder, Norman. 1998. “Denise Giardina: Mining History in W.Va. & WWII” [PW interview]. Publishers Weekly, 9 February, 69-70.
Offutt, Chris. 1997. The Good Brother [fiction; set in Ky. and Mont.]. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Offutt, Chris. 1998. “Chris Offutt Comes Home” [Ky. author of The Good Brother (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1997)]. Interview by Louis H. Palmer III. Appalachian Journal 26 (Fall): 22-31.
Offutt, Chris. 1999. Out of the Woods: Stories [fiction]. New York: Simon & Schuster. 172 pp.
Offutt, Chris. 2002. “Chris Offutt: Iowa, October, 2000.” Interview by Charles May. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Winter): 4-17.
Olson, Ted. 1995. "'This Mighty River of Earth': Reclaiming James Still's Appalachian Masterpiece." Journal of Appalachian Studies 1 (Fall): 87-98.
Olson, Ted. 2001. “Appreciating James Still” [d. April 28, 2001]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Summer): 2.
Olson, Ted. 2004. “Literature” [brief historic survey]. In High Mountains Rising: Appalachia in Time and Place, eds. R. Straw and H. Blethen, 165-178. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
Ostwalt, Conrad. 1998. “Witches and Jesus: Lee Smith’s Appalachian Religion.” Southern Literary Journal 31 (Fall): 98-118.
Owens, James. 2002. “‘A Man’s Shagbark Sound’: The Poetry of James Still” [review essay of From the Mountain, From the Valley: New and Collected Poems, by James Still, edited by Ted Olson, University Press of Kentucky, 2001]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 19 (Winter): 37-39.
Pack, Linda Hager. 2002. A Is for Appalachia! The Alphabet Book of Appalachian Heritage [children’s picture book; watercolors]. Illustrated by Pat Banks. Louisville, Ky.: Harmony House. 64 pp.
Palencia, Elaine Fowler. 2000. Brier Country: Stories from Blue Valley [fiction; Ky.]. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. 215 pp.
Palmer, Michael. 2002. Fatal [mass market fiction; medical suspense; W.Va. coal country]. New York: Bantam. 352 pp.
Pancake, Ann. 2001. Given Ground [short stories; W.Va.; Bakeless Prize winner in fiction]. Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England. 152 pp.
Pancake, Breece D’J. 2002 [1983]. The Stories of Breece D’J Pancake [1952-1979; W.Va.]. Reprint, with a new afterword by Andre Dubus III. Boston: Back Bay Books. 186 pp. Originally published, Boston: Little, Brown.
Parrish, Nancy C. 1998. Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 234 pp.
Parrish, Nancy. 2002. “Lee Smith.” In The History of Southern Women’s Literature, eds. C. Perry and M. Weaks, 575-578. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Parrish, Tim. 2002. “The Killer Wears the Halo: Cormac McCarthy, Flannery O’Connor, and the American Religion.” In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 35-50. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Patterson, Laura S. 2001. “Ellipsis, Ritual, and ‘Real Time’: Rethinking the Rape Complex in Southern Novels” [includes discussion of Bastard Out of Carolina (1992) by Dorothy Allison]. Mississippi Quarterly 54 (Winter): 37-58.
Pearson, T. R. 2000. Blue Ridge [fiction; Va.]. New York: Viking. 243 pp.
Pearson, T. R. 2002. Polar [fiction; Va. Blue Ridge]. New York: Viking. 243 pp.
Pearson, T. R. 2003. True Cross [fiction; backroads Va. characters]. New York: Viking. 255 pp.
Peerler, Tim. 2004. “Resting on the Gift of Their Labors: The Poetry of Ron Rash.” Iron Mountain Review 20 (Spring): 7-12.
Pendarvis, Edwina D., and James M. Gifford, eds. 2001. Appalachian Love Stories. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 207 pp. [includes stories by: Jesse Stuart, Ancella R. Bickley, James M. Gifford, Jimmy Lowe, James B. Goode, Edwina Pendarvis, Laura Treacy Bentley, Bruce Radford Richey, Ina Everman, Danny Fulks, Loyal Jones, Billy C. Clark, Linda Scott DeRosier, Christina St. Clair, Alexandra Combs Hudson, Kate Larken, Barbara Smith, and Carol Van Meter].
Pendarvis, Edwina. 2003. Like the Mountains of China [poems]. Ashland, Ky.: Blair Mountain Press. 78 pp.
Pennington, Vince. 1996. "Interview with Wendell Berry." Kentucky Review 13 (Spring): 57-70.
Perez, Norah A. 2002 [1988]. Breaker: A Boy’s Story of the 1902 Pennsylvania Coal Miners’ Strike [young adult fiction]. Foreword and afterword by Margaret Mary Kimmel. Reprint. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 203 pp. Originally published, Boston: Houghton, Mifflin.
Perkins, James A. 1996. "Hallucination, Allusions and Illusions in The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed." Southern Quarterly 34 (Winter): 81-86.
Phillips, Jayne Anne. 1994. "Jayne Anne Phillips." Interview by Thomas E. Douglass. Appalachian Journal 21 (Winter): 182-189.
Phillips, Jayne Anne. 1994. Shelter. Boston: Houghton Mifflin/ Seymour Lawrence. 279 pp.
Phillips, Jayne Anne. 2000. Motherkind [fiction]. New York: Knopf. 304 pp.
Piacentino, Ed. 2000. “Contesting the Boundaries of Race and Gender in Old Southwestern Humor” [Taliaferro, Simms, Harris, and others]. Southern Literary Journal 32 (Spring): 116-140.
Piacentino, Ed. 2002. “Searching for Home: Cross-Racial Bonding in Charles Frazier’s Cold Mountain” [Atlantic Monthly Press, 1997]. Mississippi Quarterly 55 (Winter 2002-2003): 97-116.
Portelli, Alessandro. 2000. “The Many Autobiographies of a Coal Miner’s Daughter” [Loretta Lynn]. In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 244-254. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Poulsen, Kathleen Phillips. 2002. Apple Doll [children’s picture book; includes instructions on how to make an apple doll]. Johnson City, Tenn.: Overmountain Press. 32 pp., unnumbered.
Powell, Mark. 2003. Prodigals: A Novel [1944-45 N.C.; logging camps]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 193 pp.
Poyer, David. 1999. Thunder on the Mountain [fiction; 1936 labor strike; Pa. oil fields]. New York: Forge. 382 pp.
Prajznerova, Katerina. 2003. Cultural Intermarriage in Southern Appalachia: Cherokee Elements in Four Selected Novels by Lee Smith [The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed; Black Mountain Breakdown; Oral History; Fair and Tender Ladies; based on the author’s 2001 dissertation of the same title; Appendix: “An Interview with Lee Smith,” p. 103-124]. Indigenous Peoples and Politics. New York: Routledge. 161 pp.
Prather, William. 2002. “Absurd Reasoning in an Existential World: A Consideration of Cormac McCarthy’s Suttree” [1979; Albert Camus]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 139-151. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Price, Charles F. 1999. Freedom’s Altar [fiction; Civil War N.C.; sequel to Hiwassee (1996)]. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair. 304 pp.
Price, Charles F. 2000. The Cock’s Spur [fiction; N.C.; 1880; third novel in a trilogy]. Winston-Salem, N.C.: John F. Blair. 311 pp.
Price, Charles F. 2003. Where the Water Dogs Laughed: The Story of the Great Bear [historical fiction; 19 th-century Western N.C.; racial identity]. Boone, N.C.: High Country Publishers. 298 pp.
Pryse, Marjorie. 2000. “Exploring Contact: Regionalism and the ‘Outsider’ Standpoint in Mary Noialles Murfree’s Appalachia.” Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers 17 (no. 2): 199-212.
Puckett, Anita. 1995. “Speech Acts and Cultural Resistance in a Rural Eastern Kentucky Community.” In Appalachia and the Politics of Culture, ed. E. C. Fine. Journal of the Appalachian Studies Association 7: 111-120. Johnson City: East Tennessee State University, Center for Appalachian Studies and Services.
Puckett, Anita. 2000. “On the Pronunciation of Appalachia” [dialect; linguistic history]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 17 (Summer): 25-29.
Puckett, Anita. 2003. “The ‘Value’ of Dialect as Object: The Case of Appalachian English.” Pragmatics: Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association 13 (September-December): 539-549.
Puckett, Anita. 2004. “ Identity, Hybridity, and Linguistic Ideologies of Racial Language in the Upper South” [Melungeons and Scotch Irish]. In Linguistic Diversity in the South: Changing Codes, Practices and Ideologies, ed. M. Bender, 120-137. Southern Anthropological Society Proceedings, no. 37. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
Pyle, Jack R. 1998. The Sound of Distant Thunder: An Appalachian Novel [mystery; 1999 Book of the Year winner, Appalachian Writers Association]. Micaville, N.C.: Aacorn Books. 228 pp.
Pyle, Jack R. 2000. After Many a Summer: An Autumn Love Story [fiction; N.C.]. Micaville, N.C.: Aacorn Books. 245 pp.
Quillen, Rita S. 2003. “Ten Life Lessons in the Poetry of Michael McFee.” Iron Mountain Review 19 (Spring): 23-28.
Quillen, Rita Sims. 2003. “Good Ol’ Fred Wrestles His Anima: Women in the Poetry of Fred Chappell.” Appalachian Heritage 31 (Summer): 43-47.
Rash, Ron. 1998. Eureka Mill [40 poems; textile mill village life, Chester, S.C., 1915-1950s]. Corvallis, Ore.: The Bench Press.
Rash, Ron. 2000. Among the Believers [N.C.; narrative, ancestral poetry cycle]. Oak Ridge, Tenn.: Iris Press. 71 pp.
Rash, Ron. 2000. Casualties: Stories. Beaufort, S.C.: Bench Press. 151 pp.
Rash, Ron. 2002. One Foot in EdEN [first novel; Jocassee Valley, S.C.; Novello Literary Award]. Winston-Salem, N.C.: Novello Festival Press. 214 pp.
Rash, Ron. 2002. Raising the Dead [poems; Jocassee Valley, S.C.]. Oak Ridge, Tenn.: Iris Press. 75 pp.
Rash, Ron. 2004. “The Power of Blood-Memory: A Conversation (recorded at the Ron Rash Literary Festival, Emory & Henry College, October 24, 2003).” Interview by Joyce Compton Brown. Iron Mountain Review 20 (Spring): 26-35.
Rash, Ron. 2004. Saints at the River: A Novel [Oconee Co., S.C., river drowning victim; Weatherford Award winner for fiction]. New York: Henry Holt. 239 pp.
Ravenel, Shannon. 2003. “Reunion” [Lee Smith briefly featured]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Winter): 24-26.
Ray, Delia. 2003. Ghost Girl: A Blue Ridge Mountain Story [adolescent fiction; 1930 Madison Co., Va.; schools/teachers/grief]. New York: Clarion Books. 216 pp.
Reactions to Chris Offutt’s No Heroes [2002 memoir (New York: Simon & Schuster)]. 2002. By Garry Barker, et al. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Fall): 92-97.
Rebecca Harding Davis, 1831-1910 [W.Va. author; Life in the Iron Mills (1861)]. 2000. In Short Story Criticism, vol. 38, ed. A. Barnard, 94-154. Detroit: Gale Group.
Reece, Byron Herbert. 1994 [1955]. The Hawk and the Sun. Reprint, with a foreword by Hugh Ruppersburg. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 192 pp.
Reece, Byron Herbert. 2002. Fable in the Blood: The Selected Poems of Byron Herbert Reece [1917-1958; Ga.]. Edited by Jim Clark. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 185 pp.
Richman, Ann F. 2002. “Singing Our Hearts Away: The Poetry of Kathryn Stripling Byer.” In Her Words: Diverse Voices in Contemporary Appalachian Women's Poetry, ed. Felicia Mitchell, 38-48. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Richman, Ann F., ed. 1996. The Plow Reader: Selections from an Appalachian Alternative Newsmagazine of the Late 1970s. Abingdon, Va.: Sow's Ear Press. 312 pp.
Rickey, Melissa J., and Darcey H. Bradley. 2000. “Appalachian Writers and Writing” [rich body of children’s literature resulting from oral tradition]. Book Links 9 (July): 13-18.
Riehle, Mary Ann McCabe. 2004. M Is for Mountain State: A West Virginia Alphabet [ages 9-12]. Illustrated by Laura J. Bryant. Chelsea, Mich.: Sleeping Bear Press. 40 pp.
Rinaldi, Ann. 1999. The Coffin Quilt: The Feud Between the Hatfields and the McCoys [adolescent fiction; 1880s W.Va., Ky.]. Great Episodes series. San Diego: Harcourt Brace. 228 pp.
Robbins, Dorothy Dodge. 1997. “Personal and Cultural Transformation: Letter Writing in Lee Smith’s Fair and Tender Ladies.” Critique (Atlanta, Ga.) 38 (Winter): 135-144.
Roberts, Elizabeth Madox. 2000 [1926]. The Time of Man [fiction; Ky.]. Reprint, with an introduction by Wade Hall. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 395 pp. Originally published, New York: Viking Press.
Roberts, Terry. 1999. “Within the Green Bowl: Community in the Mountain Fiction of John Ehle.” Pembroke Magazine 31: 90-98.
Roberts, Terry. 1999. “Within the Green Bowl: Community in the Mountain Fiction of John Ehle.” Pembroke Magazine 31: 90-98.
Roberts, Terry. 2000. “Resurrecting Thomas Wolfe” [post-Look Homeward, Angel (1929)]. Southern Literary Journal 38 (Fall): 27-41.
Roberts, Terry. 2002. “O Lost: A Family History” [Thomas Wolfe]. Mississippi Quarterly 55 (Winter 2002-2003): 63-73.
Robertson, Sarah. 2002. “The Secret Country: Prohibited Desire and Social Change in Jane Anne Phillips’ ‘Bess’” [short story; Fast Lanes (1984)]. European Journal of American Culture 21 (no. 3): 121-132.
Robertson, Sarah. 2004. “Dislocations: Retracing the Erased in Jayne Anne Phillips’s Shelter [her second novel (1994)]. Mississippi Quarterly 57 (Spring): 289-311.
Robinson, Ella. 1998. A Guide to Literary Sites of the South [13 states; 26 authors]. Northport, Ala.: Vision Press.
Rochelle, Warren. 2004. “The Flashing Phantasmagoria of Rational Life: The Platonic Borderlands of Fred Chappell’s Forever Tetralogy.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 186-203. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Romine, Scott. 2003. “The Capital Comedy of William Gilmore Simms’s ‘Sharp Snaffles’” [1870; Western N.C. stereotypes]. Southern Quarterly 41 (Winter): 11-22.
Ron Rash Bibliography [11 entries]. 2004. Iron Mountain Review 20 (Spring): 36.
Ron Rash Issue. 2004. Special issue, Iron Mountain Review 20 (Spring): 1-36.
Ross, Charlotte. 2004. “Sister Sharyn” [Sharyn McCrumb]. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Fall): 27-29.
Rubin, Rachel Lee. 1998. “‘My Country Is Kentucky’: Leaving Appalachia in Harriette Arnow’s The Dollmaker.” In Women, America, and Movement: Narratives of Relocation, ed. S. Roberson, 176-189. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Rubio, Gwyn Hyman. 1998. Icy Sparks [fiction; 1950s-60s Ky.; orphaned heroine copes with Tourette’s syndrome.]. New York: Viking. 308 pp.
Rudes, Blair A. 2004. “Multilingualism in the South: A Carolinas Case Study” [history]. In Linguistic Diversity in the South: Changing Codes, Practices, and Ideology, ed. M. Bender, 37-49. Southern Anthropological Society Proceedings, no. 37. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
Rueda-Ramos, Carmen. 2003. “The Figure of the Marginal Male” [outsider male characters in Lee Smith’s fiction]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Winter): 27-35.
Ruppersburg, Hugh. 2003. “Poet of North Georgia” [Bryon Herbert Reece]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Spring): 64-66.
Rye, Edgar. [1909] 1995. Colleen, The Mountain Maid: A Story of War and Feud in Kentucky. Edited by Charles E. Linck, Jr. Commerce, Tex.: Cow Hill Press. 287 pp.
Rylant, Cynthia, and Chris K. Soentpiet, illustrator. 1997. Silver Packages: An Appalachian Christmas Story [children’s literature]. New York: Orchard Books.
Rylant, Cynthia, and Ellen Beier, illustrator. 1997. The Blue Hill Meadows [children’s fiction; Va.]. New York: Harcourt Brace. 43 pp.
Rylant, Cynthia. 2001 [1985]. A Blue Eyed Daisy [W.Va. coal camp; juvenile fiction]. Reprint. New York: Aladdin Paperbacks. 99 pp. Originally published, New York: Bradbury Press.
Rylant, Cynthia. 2002. Christmas in the Country [children’s story]. Illustrations by Diana Goode. New York: Blue Sky Press/Scholastic. 32 unnumbered pages.
Sandell, Jillian. 1997. “Telling Stories of ‘Queer White Trash’: Race, Class, and Sexuality in the Work of Dorothy Allison.” In White Trash: Race and Class in America, eds. Matt Wray and Annalee Newitz, 211-230. New York: Routledge.
Scalf, Laurene. 1998. “Rhymes & Reasons” [Athens Co., Ohio; Rural Action poetry endeavor]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 15 (Summer): 30-33.
Scarbrough, George. 2000 [1949]. Tellico Blue [poems]. Reprint. Oak Ridge, Tenn.: Iris Press. 128 pp. Originally published, New York: E. P. Dutton.
Scarbrough, George. Interview by Jerry Williamson. 2000. “The Country and Beyond: A Conversation (Recorded at Appalachian State University, November 18, 1999).” Iron Mountain Review 16 (Spring): 31-38.
Schafer, William J. 1995. "The Bridges of Fenton Johnson." Appalachian Journal 22 (Winter): 154-159.
Schneider, Edgar W. 2003. “Shakespeare in the Coves and Hollows? Toward a History of Southern English.” In English in the Southern United States, eds. S. Nagle, and S. Sanders, 17-35. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
Sebok, Scott J. 2002. “Wilma Dykeman: A Bibliography” [approx. 600 items, primary and secondary]. Appalachian Journal 29 (Summer): 460-492.
Secreast, Donald. 1996. "Donald Secreast." Interview by Tal Stanley. Appalachian Journal 24 (Fall): 52-72.
Sellers, Bettie. 2002. “Dr. Bettie Sellers: Professor and Poet” [biography; Ga. Poet Laureate; Young Harris, Ga.]. Student interview by Lacey Watkins. Foxfire Magazine 36 (Spring/Summer): 44-57.
Settle, Mary Lee. 1995. Choices. New York: Doubleday. 384 pp.
Shade, Eric. 2003. Eyesores: Stories [Western Pa.; winner of Flannery O’Connor Award for Short Fiction]. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 205 pp.
Shannon, Jeanne. 2002. Stars Scattered Like Seeds [poems and short story memoirs of Southwestern Va., 1936-56]. Albuquerque, N.M.: Wildflower Press. 176 pp.
Sharyn McCrumb Bibliography [38 entries]. 2004. Appalachian Heritage 32 (Fall): 16-18.
Shelby, Anne. 2003. “Remembering Lee Howard (1952-2003)” [includes tribute by George Ella Lyon, and Howard’s poem “Momma’s Letter”]. Appalachian Journal 31 (Fall): 4-9.
Shipley, Vivian. 2002. When There Is No Shore [poems; Ky.]. Cincinnati, Ohio: Word Press. 101 pp.
Shipley, Vivian. 2003. Gleanings: Old Poems, New Poems [Hardin Co., Ky., native]. Hammond, La.: Louisiana Literary Press. 187 pp.
Shippen, Jane R. 2003. “Dirt and Sin in the Poetry of Michael McFee: A Sermon.” Iron Mountain Review 19 (Spring): 9-14.
Simms, Dianna. 1998. Obscene Notions [mystery; W.Va.]. Huntington, W.Va.: University Editions. 163 pp.
Simms, William Gilmore. 2001. The Simms Reader: Selections from the Writings of William Gilmore Simms [1806-1870]. Edited by John Caldwell Guilds. Publications of the Southern Texts Society. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. 412 pp.
Simpson, Nancy, and Shirley Uphouse, eds. 2003. Lights in the Mountains: Stories, Essays and Poems by Writers Living in and Inspired by the Southern Appalachian Mountains. Introduction by Fred Chappell. Hayesville, N.C.: Winding Path. 132 pp.
Sites, James N. 1998. America: The Search and the Secret: A Novel [autobiographical; Depression-era Ohio River Valley]. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 256 pp.
Sloan, Bob. 2003. Bearskin to Holly Fork: Stories from Appalachia [true stories of Midland, Ky., characters by a sometime Public Radio commentator]. Introduction by Lee Smith. Lexington, Ky.: Wind Publications. 135 pp.
Sloan, Bob. 2004. Home Call [fiction; Ky.; drug traffic]. Nicholasville, Ky.: Wind Publications. 205 pp.
Slone, Verna Mae. 1994. Rennie's Way. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 232 pp.
Smith, Barbara, and Kirk Judd, eds. 2000. Wild Sweet Notes: Fifty Years of West Virginia Poetry, 1950-1999 [anthology; 132 poets]. Huntington, W.Va.: Publishers Place. 432 pp.
Smith, Barbara. 2001. The Circumstance of Death [fiction]. Charleston, W.Va.: Mountain State Press. 212 pp.
Smith, Barbara. 2003. “In Memoriam: Al Stewart, Poet of Yellow Mountain” [1914-2001; Knott Co., Ky.; founder and editor of Appalachian Heritage]. Appalachian Journal 30 (Winter-Spring): 136-141.
Smith, Barbara. 2003. “In Retrospect—Albert Stewart.” Journal of Appalachian Studies 9 (Fall): 399-405.
Smith, Daniel, Edwina Pendarvis, and Philip St. Clair. 1997. Human Landscapes: Three Books of Poems [Home Land, by Daniel Smith; Joy Ride, by Edwina Pendarvis; Acid Creek, by Philip St. Clair]. Working Lives Series. Huron, Oh.: Bottom Dog Press. 184 pp.
Smith, Deborah. 2001. On Bear Mountain: A Novel [north Ga.; romance]. Boston: Little, Brown. 342 pp.
Smith, Katherine. 2003. Argument by Design [poems]. Washington, D.C.: Washington Writers’ Publishing House. 57 pp.
Smith, Lee, and Kathryn Stripling Byer. 2002. “Singing the Mountains: A Conversation” [interview recorded at the Kathryn Stripling Byer Literary Festival, Emory & Henry College, Oct. 19, 2001]. Iron Mountain Review 18 (Spring): 30-38.
Smith, Lee. 1994 [1968]. The Last Day the Dogbushes Bloomed. Reprint. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 180 pp.
Smith, Lee. 1995. Saving Grace. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. 273 pp.
Smith, Lee. 1997. News of the Spirit [six stories; previously published]. New York: Putnam. 320 pp.
Smith, Lee. 1997. The Christmas Letters: A Novella. New York: Algonquin. 128 pp.
Smith, Lee. 2001. Conversations With Lee Smith [transcripts of 14 interviews, 1983-1997]. Edited by Linda Tate. Literary Conversation Series. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. 195 pp.
Smith, Lee. 2002. “Confessions of a Stay Moron” [in praise of Ozark novelist Donald Harington]. Southern Quarterly 40 (Winter): 20-22.
Smith, Lee. 2002. The Last Girls: A Novel [former college roommates reunite on a trip down the Mississippi]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. 384 pp.
Smith, Lee. 2003. “Big Girl” [beginning portion of a previously unpublished novella]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Winter): 36-43.
Smith, Lee. 2004. “Return to Ship Island” [influence of writer Elizabeth Spencer]. Southern Review 40 (Winter): 153-157.
Smith, Lee. Papers of Lee Marshall Smith. Manuscript Collection No. 203. Special Collections Department, North Carolina State University Libraries, Raleigh. Accessed 12 Oct. 2001. Online at http://www.lib.ncsu.edu: 80/archives/collections/html/smith.html [28 pp].
Smith, Newton. 2004. “Words to Raise the Dead: The Poetry of Ron Rash.” Iron Mountain Review 20 (Spring): 13-20.
Smith, R. T. 2003. The Hollow Log Lounge: Poems [Opelika, Ala., community portrait through bar patrons’ voices]. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. 68 pp.
Smith, R. T. 2004. Brightwood: Poems. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 64 pp.
Smith, Rebecca. 2000. “Country Music Battles Religion in Lee Smith’s The Devil’s Dream” [1992 novel]. In Country Music Annual 2000, eds. C. Wolfe and J. Akenson, 57-74. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
Smith, Rebecca. 2004. “The Search for Moral Order in Moments of Light” [New York: New South Co., 1980]. In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 119-131. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Smylie, James. 1999. “King Coal, King Jesus, and Moonshine: Faith and Life in Appalachian Fiction” [reviews, with an eye to religious life: The Circuit Rider (1873), by Edward Eggleston; The Prophet of the Great Smoky Mountains (1885), by Charles Egbert Craddock (i.e., Mary Murfree); The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1908), by John Fox; The Needle’s Eye (1924), by Arthur Train; Storming Heaven (1987), by Denise Giardina; and The Dollmaker (1954), by Harriette Arnow; with an overview of The Great Appalachian Sperm Bank and Other Writings (1986), by Bill Best]. Theology Today 56 (July): 235-244.
Sparks, Betty J. 2004. Poets Laureate of Kentucky [brief biography, photo, poetry sample of 21 poets, 1921-2003, including Jesse Stuart, Lillie Chaffin, Lee Pennington, Paul Salyers, Jim Wayne Miller, James Still, Richard Taylor, and James Baker Hall]. Nicholasville, Ky.: Wind Publications. 108 pp.
Spencer, John S. 1998. “Dorothy Allison: A Bibliography” [150 entries; primary and secondary]. Bulletin of Bibliography 55 (December): 217-221.
Spencer, William C. 1997. “Altered States of Consciousness in Sutree [by novelist Cormac McCarthy]. The Southern Quarterly 35 (Winter): 87-92.
Spencer, William C. 2002. “Cormac McCarthy’s Unholy Trinity: Biblical Parody in Outer Dark” [1968]. In Sacred Violence, I: Cormac McCarthy’s Appalachian Works, eds. W. Hall and R. Wallach, 83-91. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Stanfill, Jess. 2003. “The Indelible Impact of James B. Goode” [profile of the Ky. writer, b. 1948]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Spring): 24-30.
Stanley, Tal. 1996. "Changing Places: Reading Justice from McDowell." [McDowell County, W.Va., and Denise Giardina's The Unquiet Earth]Journal of Appalachian Studies 2 (Spring): 69-76.
Stanley, Tal. 1996. “Making That New Place: Blair Morgan’s Coming of Age and Meredith Sue Willis’ Social Vision” [Higher Ground (1981); Only Great Changes (1985)]. Iron Mountain Review 12 (Spring): 19-25.
Staudt, David. 2001. The Gifts and Thefts [poems; northeastern Pa., Allegheny Mts.]. Omaha, Nebr.: Backwaters Press. 101 pp.
Stein, Daniel T. 2003. “‘I ain't never seen a nigger’: The Discourse of Denial in Lee Smith’s The Devil’s Dream” [“investigates the marginalization of African American musical culture” in this 1992 novel]. European Journal of American Culture 22 (no. 2): 139-157.
Stephens, Mariflo. 1996. "Mary Lee Settle: The Lioness in Winter." [interview] Virginia Quarterly Review 72 (Autumn): 581-588.
Stephenson, Shelby. 2004. “Chappell’s Women: Models from the Early Novels.” In More Lights Than One: On the Fiction of Fred Chappell, ed. P. Bizarro, 51-71. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Stewart, Kevin. 2001. “How to Write West Virginian” [biographical satire from an award-winning W.Va. writer]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Summer): 12-15.
Stewart, Kevin. 2001. Margot [mystery; Ozarks]. Huntsville, Tex.: Texas Review Press. 48 pp.
Still, James, with illustrations by Paul Brett Johnson. 1998. An Appalachian Mother Goose [juvenile literature]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 55 pp.
Still, James, with illustrations by Paul Brett Johnson. 1999 [1977]. Sporty Creek [young adult fiction]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 119 pp. Originally published, New York: Putnam, with illustrations by Janet McCaffery.
Still, James. 1999. “Correspondence from James Still to Dayton Kohler (1940-59): A Research Note” [critic]. Edited by Edward L. Tucker. Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 97 (Winter): 113-122.
Still, James. 2001 [1976]. Pattern of a Man and Other Stories. Reprint. Lexington, Ky.: Gnomon Press. 121 pp.
Still, James. 2001. From the Mountain, From the Valley: New and Collected Poems [1906-2001; incl. autobiographical essay; selected as 2002 Appalachian Book of the Year by the
Appalachian Writers Association]. Edited by Ted Olson. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 144 pp.
Straka, Andy. 2003. Cold Quarry [mass market P.I. mystery set in W.Va.]. New York: Signet. 288 pp.
Strange, George. 2002. Generations: Stories [ten short stories]. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press. 159 pp.
Strunk, Frank. 1996. Throwback. [fiction] New York: HarperCollins.
Stuart, Dabney. 2000. “Mary Poppin’s Mouth” [A Death of Dreams (1973)]. In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 98-120. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
Stuart, Dianne Watkins. 1998. Janice Holt Giles: A Writer’s Life. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 280 pp.
Stuart, Jesse. 1994 [1965]. Daughter of the Legend. Reprint, edited and with a preface by John H. Spurlock, introduction by Wilma Dykeman, and afterword by N. Brent Kennedy, Ashland, KY: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 242 pp.
Stuart, Jesse. 1997 [1946, 1974]. Tales from the Plum Grove Hills. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. Previously published, New York: E. P. Dutton; Atlanta: Mockingbird Books.
Stuart, Jesse. 1998 [1930]. Harvest of Youth [his first published book; includes essay Honest Confession of a Literary Sin (1977)]. Reprint. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 128 pp.
Stuart, Jesse. 1999 [1967]. Mr. Gallion’s School. Reprint. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 351 pp. Originally published, New York: McGraw-Hill.
Stuart, Jesse. 2000 [1982]. Best-Loved Short Stories of Jesse Stuart. Compiled by Harold Edward Richardson. Reprint. Ashland, Ky.: Jesse Stuart Foundation. 406 pp. Originally published, New York: McGraw-Hill.
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Swanson, Eric. 1999. The Boy in the Lake [fiction; Ohio; gay coming of age]. New York: St. Martins Press. 197 pp.
Taylor, Henry. 2001. “‘All Goes Back to the Earth’: The Poetry of Wendell Berry.” Southern Cultures 7 (Fall): 31-48.
Thomas, Anabel. 2002. Stone Man Mountain: A Novel [Ohio; migration; multi-generational saga]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 480 pp.
Thomas, Annabel. 1998. Blood Feud [fiction; Ohio]. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. 208 pp.
Tickle, Phyllis and Alice Swanson, eds. 1996. Homeworks: A Book of Tennessee Writers [anthology: 108 poets, essayists, fiction writers]. Knoxville: Tennessee Arts Commission and The University of Tennessee Press. 490 pp.
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Trigiani, Adriana. 2002. Milk Glass Moon: A Big Stone Gap Novel [last of a trilogy set in Wise Co., Va.]. New York: Random House. 272 pp.
Trigiani, Adriana. 2004. The Queen of the Big Time [fiction; Italian immigrant family; 1920s small-town, Pa.]. New York: Random House. 261pp.
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Van Ness, Gordon. 2000. “The American Adam in the Southern Wasteland: William Hoffman’s Follow Me Home and the Ethics of Redemption” [1994, short stories]. In The Fictional World of William Hoffman, ed. W. L. Frank, 24-43. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
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Vande Brake, Katherine. 2004. “Appalachian Echoes in the Novels of Lisa Alther.” Appalachian Heritage 32 (Winter): 27-30.
Villatoro, Marcos McPeek. 1999. The Holy Spirit of My Uncle’s Cojones [fiction; Appalachian/Latino teenager; Knoxville, Tenn.]. Houston, Tex.: Arte Publico Press. 272 pp.
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West, Don. 2004. No Lonesome Road: Selected Prose and Poems [1906-1992; 21 prose pieces; 83 poems; biographical essays]. Edited by Jeff Biggers and George Brosi. Introduction by Jeff Biggers; Afterword by George Brosi. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. 227 pp.
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West, Robert M. 2002. “‘That Has a Ring to It’: Song in the Poetry of Kathryn Stripling Byer. Iron Mountain Review 18 (Spring): 16-23.
West, Robert M. 2003. “‘To Make You See’: Michael McFee’s Poems About Photographs.” Iron Mountain Review 19 (Spring): 15-22.
Wheeler, Billy Edd. 2003. Star of Appalachia [author’s first novel; country music industry]. Haverford, Pa.: Infinity Publishing. 269 pp.
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Wilding, Glenna Whiteaker. 2002. Tales of a Ridgerunner: The Adventures of a Young Family Growing Up in the East Tennessee Mountains, 1890s-1920s [stories]. Prospect, Ky.: Harmony House. 157 pp.
Williams, William G. 2002. The Coal King’s Slaves: A Coal Miner’s Story: A Historical Novel [trapped miner; 19 th century anthracite mine]. Shippensburg, Pa.: Burd Street Press. 238 pp.
Williamson, J. W. 1996. "'Go Ahead On': An Interview with Gurney Norman." Southern Quarterly 34 (Spring): 8-20.
Williamson, J. W. 2002. “Notes on The Architecture of the Arkansas Ozarks” [novel by Donald Harington (Little, Brown, 1975)]. Southern Quarterly 40 (Winter): 66-68.
Willis, Meredith Sue. 1994. "Barbara Kingsolver, Moving On." Appalachian Journal 22 (Fall): 78-87.
Willis, Meredith Sue. 1994. In the Mountains of America. San Francisco: Mercury House. 171 pp.
Willis, Meredith Sue. 1996. "Witness in the Nightmare Country: Jayne Anne Phillips." Appalachian Journal 24 (Fall): 44-51.
Willis, Meredith Sue. 1997. Trespassers [third novel in Blair Morgan trilogy]. Maplewood, N.J.: Hamilton Stone Editions. 274 pp.
Willis, Meredith Sue. 1998. “The Ballads of Sharyn McCrumb” [If Ever I Return, Pretty Peggy-O (1990); The Hangman’s Beautiful Daughter (1992); She Walks These Hills (1995); The Rosewood Casket (1996)]. Appalachian Journal 25 (Spring): 320-329.
Willis, Meredith Sue. 2000. “A Book with a View: Between the Flowers Opens a Window to Appalachian Writing” [Harriette Simpson Arnow’s 1930s novel, published 1999]. Southern Exposure 28 (Spring/Summer): 60-61.
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Willis, Meredith Sue. 2004. “Keith Maillard: Five Novels of Raysburg, West Virginia” [i.e., Wheeling; review essay of Alex Driving South (1980), Light in the Company of Women (1993), Hazard Zones (1995), Gloria (1999), The Clarinet Polka (2002)]. Appalachian Journal 31 (Spring/Summer): 358-366.
Willis, Meredith Sue. 2004. Dwight’s House and Other Stories [five stories]. Maplewood, N.J.: Hamilton Stone Editions. 189 pp.
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Wilson, Woody. 2003. “Tradition and Travesty in JT LeRoy’s Sarah and The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things” [New York: Bloomsbury, 2000 and 2001]. Journal of Appalachian Studies 9 (Fall): 415-432.
Winter, Dennis C. 2002. “Stones in My Passway: Ellen Chesser’s Country Blues and the Stone Imagery in The Time of Man [by Elizabeth Madox Roberts (New York: Viking, 1926)]. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Summer): 41-45.
Wisler, G. Clifton. 2002. King’s Mountain [1780 battle, N.C./S.C.; young adult fiction; coming-of-age]. New York: HarperCollins Children’s Books. 160 pp.
Witt, Lana. 1996. Slow Dancing on Dinosaur Bones. [fiction] New York: Scribner. 416 pp.
Wolfe, Thomas, and Maxwell E. Perkins. 2000. To Loot My Life Clean: The Thomas Wolfe-Maxwell Perkins Correspondence [251 letters]. Edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli and Park Bucker. Columbia: University of South Carolina. 512 pp.
Wolfe, Thomas. 2000 [1941]. The Hills Beyond. Reprint. Voices of the South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 368 pp. Originally published, New York: Harper & Brothers.
Wolfe, Thomas. 2000. O Lost: A Story of the Buried Life [the original unabridged version of Look Homeward, Angel (1929)]. Text established by Arlyn and Matthew J. Bruccoli. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. 694 pp.
Wolfe, Thomas. 2004. The Autobiographical Outline for Look Homeward, Angel [b. 1900, d. 1938]. Edited, with and introduction, by Lucy Conniff and Richard S. Kennedy. Southern Literary Studies. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. 99 pp.
Wolfram, Walt. 2003. “Enclave Dialect Communities in the South” [Appalachia, N.C., Chesapeake Bay]. In English in the Southern United States, eds. S. Nagle, and S. Sanders, 141-158. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
Wolfram, Walt. 2003. “Reexamining the Development of African American English: Evidence from Isolated Communities” [coastal and Appalachian N.C. vernacular]. Language 79 (June): 282-316.
Wolfshohl, Clarence. 2000. “Multinarratives and Multiculture in Appalachia: Denise Giardina’s Storming Heaven and the West Virginia Mine War of 1920-1921.” In Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film, ed. W. Thesing, 235-243. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
Woodrell, Daniel. 2001. The Death of Sweet Mister: A Novel [Ozarks setting]. New York: Putnam’s. 196 pp.
Woodside, Jane Harris. 2001. “Balancing Act: An Interview with Silas House” [author of Clay’s Quilt (2001); sidebar book review by Genie Jacobson]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 18 (Summer): 22-26.
Woodson, Jacqueline. 1999. Lena [young adult fiction; Ohio, Ky.; sequel to I Hadn’t Meant to Tell You This (1994)]. New York: Delacorte Press.
Woolsey, Linda Mills. 2003. “‘Serpentine Chain’: Love, Loss, and Remembrance in She Walks These Hills” [1994]. In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 23-32. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Woolsey, Linda Mills. 2003. “The Songcatcher: ‘Cosmic Possums’ on the Appalachian Song Path” [c. 2001]. In From a Race of Storytellers: Essays on the Ballad Novels of Sharyn McCrumb, ed. K. Holloway, 169-178. Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
Worthington, Marianne. 2000. Review essay of Brier Country: Stories from Blue Valley, by Elaine Fowler Palencia (Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2000). Appalachian Heritage 28 (Spring): 66-70.
Worthington, Marianne. 2002. “Nothing Must Be Lost: Regional Identity and Dialogue in the Works of Edwina Pendarvis and Llewellyn McKernan” [W.Va. poets]. Appalachian Heritage 30 (Spring): 7-19.
Worthington, Marianne. 2003. “A Selected Bibliography” [of Jeff Daniel Marion; 60 entries, primary and secondary]. Appalachian Heritage 31 (Fall): 42-45.
Worthington, Marianne. 2003. “Epistolary Exchanges: The Personal and Poetic Journey of Jeff Daniel Marion in Letters Home” [Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press, 2001]. Journal of Appalachian Studies 9 (Fall): 406-414.
Worthington, Marianne. 2003. “Jeff Daniel Marion’s ‘Homestead’: Where All Our Words Grow Warm.” Appalachian Heritage 31 (Fall): 16-20.
Worthington, Marianne. 2003. “Reaching Kids Where They Live: Appalachian Artist and Storyteller Paul Brett Johnson” [Ky. author of Old Dry Frye (1999) and Jack Outwits the Giants (2002)]. Now and Then: The Appalachian Magazine 20 (Spring): 31-34.
Worthington, Marianne. 2004. “‘Pleasure Out of Telling’: Voice Poems in George Ella Lyon’s Fiction for Adults” [narrative technique; Choices: Stories for Adult New Readers (1989); With a Hammer for My Heart (1997)]. Appalachian Journal 32 (Fall): 100-113.
Wright, Charles. 1998. Appalachia [poems]. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux. 67 pp.
Wright, Charles. 2000. “An Interview with Charles Wright.” By Ted Genoways. Southern Review 36 (Spring): 442-452.
Wright, Charles. 2002. A Short History of the Shadow [36 poems]. New York: Farrar Straus Giroux. 79 pp.
Wright, Charles. 2004. Buffalo Yoga [poems]. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 76 pp.
Wrigley, Robert, introd. 2000. “Buck & Wing: Southern Poetry at 2000.” Special issue, Shenandoah: The Washington and Lee University Review 50 (Spring): 1-232. Afterword by R. T. Smith. [poems contributed by 67 poets including Wendell Berry, Kathryn Stripling Byer, Fred Chappell, Nikki Giovanni, Robert Morgan, George Scarbrough, and Charles Wright].
York, Bill. 2003. John Fox, Jr.: Appalachian Author [1863-1919; scholarly biography]. Contributions to Southern Appalachian Studies, no. 6. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. 316 pp.
Youmans, Marly. 2003. The Curse of the Raven Mocker [adolescent fiction; fantasy based on Cherokee mythology; Great Smoky Mountains]. New York: Farrar Straus & Giroux. 279 pp.
Young, Stephen Flinn. 1996. Review essay of The Plow Reader: Selections from an Appalachian Alternative Newsmagazine of the Late 1970's, ed. Ann F. Richman (Abingdon, Va.: Sow’s Ear Press). In Appalachian Journal 24 (Fall): 106-109.
Zuber, Isabel. 2002. Salt [first novel; 1877-1932 Western N.C.]. New York: Picador. 349 pp.