You can still get lost in Ashe County, North Carolina, and
GPS won't help. Once called The Lost Province, it's a place of gravel roads,
gorgeous mountains, and the first tricklings of the New River. And, here
there are writers. In Mountain Memoirs: An Ashe County Anthology,
twenty of them craft works about their relationships with this frequently
beautiful and sometimes mysterious corner of the North Carolina high country.
They write about its mysteries, its beauty, and the people who are sometimes
lost and sometimes found in the landscapes.
Something about this particular little place--amongst the peaks and on
the riverbanks--inspires writers. They live here and visit and hideout
and work. Some are well known, like Lee Smith, Clyde Edgerton and D.G.
Martin. Some are known only locally. Like the very small towns that sparsely
dot the area, the writers in this anthology are sprinkled in the hollows
and along the river, writing stories, poems and essays about how this very
specific place has shaped, changed and informed their lives and the lives
of those around them.
Lee Smith invents a young academic from another century who is studying
the flora; Clyde Edgerton crafts poetry evocative of the sense of his corner
of the county. From editor Scot Pope, a concentration of the "Essence"
of the place is offered; others like D.G. Martin and editor Julie Townsend,
profile people whose characters shape their attachments to this place.
Each of the twenty writers brings their words to evoke the sense, and sometimes
nonsense, of this small corner of big mountains and the old New River.
--Chris Arvidson, Scot Pope & Julie E. Townsend