Written in Robert Leeper’s student days at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and later at Columbia University, The Brindle Mule is a book of stories and poems emphasizing a childhood spent in the mountain country of Western North Carolina. Leeper grew up near Alexander County where his father was a physician and highly involved in the local community. Inspired by the cultural heritage of the region, Leeper decided to write down the stories and poems he heard gathered around the fireside, at picnics, in church, and at friends and family’s homes. Published in 1983, this book is a testament to the local lore of the Western Mountain region of North Carolina
A stingy man “won’t drink branch water till there’s a flood,” and it is “a mighty triflin’ sort o’ m...
By William R. Ferris, foreword by Eudora Welty University Press of Mississippi (Paperback, $16.00, I...
Along the isolated headwaters of the Kentucky River—Cutshin and Greasy creeks—folklorist Leonard Rob...
Bascom Lamar Lunsford, dubbed the Minstrel of the Appalachians and famed for founding the Mountain D...
This paper explores the ballad singing tradition of the Southern Appalachian mountains, with a parti...
In the fall of 1936, novelist Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings came to Banner Elk, North Carolina, to find p...
In 1908, Olive Dame Campbell, young bride of John C. Campbell, the new Director of the Southern High...
The people of the Kentucky mountains and the southern Appalachians preserved a language alive with c...
Originally published in 1926, Twenty Years Hunting and Fishing in the Great Smoky Mountains is a viv...
Published in 1983, Recollections of the Catawba Valley is a selection of family stories, local histo...
Horace Kephart (1862-1931) was a noted naturalist, woodsman, journalist, and author. In 1904, he lef...
After keeping school for six years at the forks of Troublesome Creek in the Kentucky hills, James St...
Mountaineers refer to anyone who collects songs as a “songcatcher.” But Olive Dame Campbell was also...
This thesis examines musical community in southwestern North Carolina and seeks to establish the reg...
This 1973 list of books relating to the Great Smoky Mountains is an inventory of books in Horace Kep...
A stingy man “won’t drink branch water till there’s a flood,” and it is “a mighty triflin’ sort o’ m...
By William R. Ferris, foreword by Eudora Welty University Press of Mississippi (Paperback, $16.00, I...
Along the isolated headwaters of the Kentucky River—Cutshin and Greasy creeks—folklorist Leonard Rob...
Bascom Lamar Lunsford, dubbed the Minstrel of the Appalachians and famed for founding the Mountain D...
This paper explores the ballad singing tradition of the Southern Appalachian mountains, with a parti...
In the fall of 1936, novelist Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings came to Banner Elk, North Carolina, to find p...
In 1908, Olive Dame Campbell, young bride of John C. Campbell, the new Director of the Southern High...
The people of the Kentucky mountains and the southern Appalachians preserved a language alive with c...
Originally published in 1926, Twenty Years Hunting and Fishing in the Great Smoky Mountains is a viv...
Published in 1983, Recollections of the Catawba Valley is a selection of family stories, local histo...
Horace Kephart (1862-1931) was a noted naturalist, woodsman, journalist, and author. In 1904, he lef...
After keeping school for six years at the forks of Troublesome Creek in the Kentucky hills, James St...
Mountaineers refer to anyone who collects songs as a “songcatcher.” But Olive Dame Campbell was also...
This thesis examines musical community in southwestern North Carolina and seeks to establish the reg...
This 1973 list of books relating to the Great Smoky Mountains is an inventory of books in Horace Kep...
A stingy man “won’t drink branch water till there’s a flood,” and it is “a mighty triflin’ sort o’ m...
By William R. Ferris, foreword by Eudora Welty University Press of Mississippi (Paperback, $16.00, I...
Along the isolated headwaters of the Kentucky River—Cutshin and Greasy creeks—folklorist Leonard Rob...