The Foxfire book of simple living Celebrating fifty years of listenin', laughin', and learnin'
Book - 2016
"First published in 1972, The Foxfire book was a surprise bestseller that brought Appalachia's philosophy of simple living to hundreds of thousands of readers. Whether you wanted to hunt game, bake the old-fashioned way, or learn the art of successful moonshining, The Foxfire Museum and Heritage Center had a contact who could teach you how with ... step-by-step instructions. Today, Foxfire's mission remains the same, and [this book] is both a ... look back at five decades of collected wisdom, as well as [a] ... look forward at the artists and craftsman who are working to preserve the Appalachian tradition for future generations"--Amazon.com.
- Subjects
- Published
-
New York :
Anchor Books, a divison of Penguin Random House LLC
[2016]
- Language
- English
- Item Description
- "Some of the material in this work was originally published in slightly different form in The Foxfire Magazine"--Verso of title page.
- Physical Description
- xxxi, 555 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- ISBN
- 9780804173100
- Acknowledgments
- Fifty Years and Counting: A Note from Ann Moore, Foxfire President and Executive Director Emeritus
- Making Real Human Connections: A Note from Our Editors
- Wisdom of Our Elders: Livin' High on the Hog
- How to Enjoy a Simple Life
- The Vanishing Arts
- Community and Gratitude
- The Art of Making Cornshuck Dolls and Real Connections
- An interview with Beth Kelley Zorhanos
- Mountain Folk Art at Its Peak
- An interview with local folk artist Eric Legge
- Mother Vine and King Kudzu
- An interview with Kudzu artists Joleen Oh and Cleve Phillips
- Making What We Need By Hand
- Making Soap, Living Clean, and Giving Thanks
- A day of crafting with jenny, T. J., Briar, and Moses Stevens
- How to Make Rope the Old-Timey Way
- Kermit Rood teaches students to make old-fashioned rope
- The Point of Life!
- Joe Williams tells of his experience making bark berry buckets
- The "Gourd" Life
- An interview with gourd artist Priscilla Wilson
- The Art of Making Furniture by Hand
- John Roper shares his love for wood, tools, and a vanishing art
- Storytelling
- Tiger Mountain's Storyteller
- An interview with renowned local storyteller Janie P. Taylor
- Legends That Will Never Die
- Storyteller Davy Arch shares Cherokee legends
- The Oral Tradition: Preserving Tales That Shaped a Nation
- Jerry Wolfe shares stories of the Cherokee
- Mawmaw's Stones
- Mountain tales told by Ronnie Shirley
- Blacksmithing
- The Hammer and the Forge
- An interview with Dan Maxwell
- David Burress: The Makings of a True Appalachian Blacksmith
- An interview with a John C. Campbell Folk School ferrier
- Hunting and Protecting
- The Art of Making Turkey Calls
- An interview with Dale Holland, North Carolina turkey-call maker
- Traditional Weaponry
- William Swimmer demonstrates construction of primitive weaponry
- Wisdom of Our Elders: Virtuous Living
- How to Live an Honorable Life
- The World is Watching
- Hollywood Comes a-Calling
- The Great Locomotive Chase
- Local residents on the production of the 1956 film
- "He Shouted Loud, 'Hosanna, DELIVERANCE Will Come'"
- A community responds to the 1972 film
- "I Never Expected the Novel Would Be Published"
- An interview with North Georgia native Olive Ann Burns
- The Making of the Foxfire Play and Movie
- Foxfire students' experiences
- "Appalachia Goodbye"
- Laura Monk and High Cotton create a video at the Foxfire Heritage Center
- Wisdom of Our Elders: Making do with What We Have
- How to Be Resourceful
- Pickin' and Grinnin'
- In Harmony
- Oliver Rice and Curtis Blackwell
- Two old-time musicians reminisce
- The Blackwell Tradition
- An interview with second-generation bluegrass musician Shane Blackwell
- "I've Been Everywhere, Man"
- An interview with traditional bluegrass musician Rodney Worley
- The Art of a Luthier: Making the Lord's Trees Sing
- An interview with Danny White
- Wisdom of Our Elders: My Most Valuable Possession
- Old-timers Share What Is Near and Dear to Them
- Remembering when the World was Black-And-White: Stories from a Simpler Time
- "I've Traveled a Bit, Yet I Keep Coming Back Like Iron Filings to a Magnet"
- An interview with James Still
- The Big Cat
- Baseball star Johnny Mize recalls his raising in the Appalachian foothills
- Sock Suppers, Cakewaiks, Cotton Pickin', and a Water Lily Quilt
- Frances Harbin shares her memories
- Front Porch Stories
- An interview with Edgar Owens
- Hearts Touched and Healed
- An interview with Lois and Clarence Martin
- A Self-Proclaimed "Black Sheep"
- Mischievous antics with Malcolm Dillard
- "It Has Been Wonderful, Really!"
- The unique life of Beanie Barney
- "Everywhere That I Have Been, I Was Always on My Way Back Home"
- An interview with the Honorable Zell Miller and Mrs. Shirley Miller
- "A Little Good in Everybody"
- An abundance of love from Susie Hembree Dockins
- Wisdom of Our Elders: Women and Children
- "Train Up a Child in the Way He Should Go"
- Advice on child-rearing
- Women of Appalachia
- Thoughts on their changing roles
- What We Have Learned
- Student Spotlight
- From Pencils to PCs
- Former student Laurie Brunson Altieri discusses changes in the magazine
- Highlighting a Former Student
- An interview with Foxfire alumna Allison Adams
- Words of Wisdom from Students, Parents, Community Members, and Readers
- Removing Negative Stereotypes
- Documenting the Culture and Heritage
- Remembering the Past
- Helping Generations Relate
- Understanding What Foxfire Means
- Encouraging Readers and Students to Go Beyond
- Inspiring and Learning
- Making Community Connections
- Looking to the Future
- Experiencing Arts and Crafts
- Southeastern Folk Art and Craft Festivals
- Contributors
- Editors and Staff