Following my earlier review, I am so deeply pleased to shared with you today this review in the Fall 2019 issue of Still: The Journal.
Matthew Ferrence’s Appalachia North is both memoir and outward-looking examination of place: what it means to be from somewhere, how our relationship to home can change, and the complicated and too-often negative role Appalachia plays in the national imagination, and in its own.
Ferrence was forty when he received a life-changing diagnosis…
Please click over to read the full review. Look for my interview with Matt on Friday. And many thanks again to the Editors at Still for considering and accepting my work.
Filed under: book reviews | Tagged: Appalachia, creative nonfiction, family, health/hospitals, memoir, nonfiction, sense of place, Still: the Journal |
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