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Coal is still king in much of Appalachia, yet the heritage and history
of the people who enabled the United States to become an economic superpower
in the Industrial age are slipping away.
This remarkable book presents
arresting black and white photographs and powerful oral histories that
chronicle the legacy of coalmining in southern West Virginia. Ken and
Melanie Light traveled hundreds of miles through rugged, isolated terrain
recording the stories of a range of people whose lives were shaped by
coal: retired miners, men and women who have been jobless their entire
lives, a contemporary coal baron, a justice of the State Supreme Court
of West Virginia, a writer who bravely ran for governor on a third party
ticket, and people who returned to the hills when their lives failed
elsewhere.
What emerges is a complex portrait of people locked into an
intricate web of geography, history, and unfettered profiteering. In
Light's poignant images and in their own distinctive voices the residents
of Coal Hollow--a fictional composite of the communities the Lights surveyed--reveal
how the intersection of mountain culture and the greed of the coal companies
produced the most powerful economy in the world yet brought crushing
poverty to a region of once-proud people.
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