
Hillbilly Women
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Narrated by:
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Jennifer Van Dyck
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By:
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Skye K. Moody
About this listen
“This book tells what it means to be a woman when you are poor, when you are proud, and when you are a hillbilly.”
First published in 1973, Skye Moody’s Hillbilly Women shares the stunning and raw oral histories of 19 women in 20th-century Southern Appalachia, from their day-to-day struggles for survival to the personal triumphs of their hardscrabble existence. They are wives, widows, and daughters of coal miners; factory hands, tobacco graders, cotton mill workers, and farmers; and women who value honest labor, self-esteem, and dignity. Shining a much-needed light into a misunderstood culture and identity, the stories within reflect the universally human struggle to live meaningful and dignified lives.
©1972, Kathy Kahn (P)2014 Audible Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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What listeners say about Hillbilly Women
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Damian
- 07-08-22
Beautiful, Brilliant, Inspiring and Tragic
These are wonderful and fascinating stories of one of America's poorest regions, and the strength and resilience of the women who live there. It's got wonderful stories of resistance against the people exploiting the region.
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Overall
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Performance
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- Sue
- 07-09-14
An Enlightening, Inspiring Read
Any additional comments?
Skye Moody relays beautifully and authentically the first-person voices in this amazing record of a lost era, when women still churned their own butter, were married off in their teens, and had more children than they could feed. Moody’s women may be broke and illiterate, but they are sharp and tough as nails. These are the stories of children working in the mines and corporations extracting every drop of sweat and blood with impunity. It is to the brave protests of this generation that we owe our equitable legal system, more compassionate government agencies, and more humane regulations. An inspiring collection of interviews from a versatile author of both fiction and nonfiction. Well read too!
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5 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Lori Lorenz
- 12-24-21
excellent
as the daughter of a hillbilly woman, I thoroughly related to, and enjoyed, this book. although I got used to the readers voice, hers was not an accurate Appalachian accent, and that grated on me at first. she sounded more Southern, and there's a difference. but it doesn't cost any stars. still an important title if you are interested in Appalachian history.
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