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Pub date: 12/15/2026
296pp
PB 978-1-959000-97-6
$32.99
EPUB 978-1-959000-95-2
$16.47
PDF 978-1-959000-96-9
$16.47

 

 

Wide Branches, Deep Roots

How Appalachian Wisdom Can Help in the Fight for a Sustainable Future

Summary

This collection of over thirty pieces explores the connections between Appalachia’s stories, traditions, and modern events and the pathway to regional sustainability. The contributors—writers and scholars—consider what sustainability means in an Appalachian context and demonstrate how to utilize regional knowledge to achieve it, while offering specific actions for readers.

Contents

Land Acknowledgment

Preface – Jessica M. Jones

Acknowledgments

Introduction - Amanda E. Hayes

I. Roots and Brambles: The Nature of Appalachian Sustainability

  • Aunt Bett’s Beans - Ivy Brashear
  • The Walker Sisters: Preservation, Human Spectacle, and Land Use in Southern Appalachia - Nicole Drewitz-Crockett
  • Camp Elizabeth–Who I Am, Where I’m From - Liz Emmerth Rexroad
  • Dark Ecology and the Monstrous Mother in Old Gods of Appalachia - Paul Thomas
  • Misadventures with Backyard Chickens: Lessons on Heritage and Homesteading - Lockie Hunter
  • A Man Around the House: Lessons in Dumpster Diving and Sustainability - Lockie Hunter
  • Falling Rock Area - Deborah Fleming

II. Seeds and Saplings: Witness for Sustainability

    Homecoming: Love Notes on Sustainability for Appalachia - Sarah Powell
    Haunted in Place: Folktale Pedagogy - Taylor Nasim Stone
    The Witches They Could Not Burn: Writing as Resistance in Appalachia - Sarah Long
    Teaching with the Mountains: Reflections on Place and Identity in Science Education - Amanda Garner
    Loyalty and Truth: Navigating Environmental Justice Conversations as a Coal Miner’s Daughter - Kristen LeFevers
    Embodied Practices: Sustaining Students from Appalachia after Hurricane Helene - Elizabeth Weems

III. Branches and Boughs: Reaching Toward Sustainability

    Foul and Fertile Ground: The Legacy Pollution of Coal Extraction and its Implications on a Sustainable Appalachian Future - Aysha Bodenhamer and Luc Biscan-White
    Sustaining Appalachian Mobilities: Connecting Rail Trails with Local Histories in Western North Carolina - Matthew Calloway
    An Abolitionist Future for Appalachia - Meghan Moore-Hubbard
    Fractured Lives, Resistant Roots: A Braided Essay Across Three Voices - Jessica Radicic
    Residues and Regeneration in Northern Appalachia - David Blackmore
    Walking the Homeplace - Jessica Jones

IV. Growing a Forest: Taking Action

    Wisdom—Appalachia Style - Larry Smith
    Grow Porch Potatoes - Amanda Hayes
    Find Your Wild Place - Sarah Long
    Map Your Appalachian Soft Skill - Sarah Powell
    Rewild your Yard - Jessica Jones
    Read Roadside Markers - Matthew Calloway
    Help Incarcerated Folks - Meghan Moore Hubbard
    Investigate Sustainability Practices in Appalachia - Kristen LeFevers
    Hunt For Your Ancestral Stories - Elizabeth Tussey
    Be a Creek Keeper - Richard Hague
    Support Gender Identity - Barbara Marie Minney
    Cultivate an Eco-friendly Household - Patrice Stank
    Take Part in Mutual Aid - Christina Fisanick
    Walk a Haiku Path to Advocacy - Barbara Sabol
    Dance with The Ones That Came Before - Greg Bealer
    Be Our Best Selves- Kari Gunter-Seymour
    Support Sustainable Efforts Across the Region - Amanda Hayes and Jessica Jones

Bibliography

Contributors

Index

Editors

Jessica M. Jones serves as full-time faculty at Kent State University, where she teaches creative writing, Native American literature and place-based composition. She comes from a long line of makers and musicians in Northern Appalachia and prefers to live life out of doors. She holds a master’s from the University of Montana with K-12 licensure and training in Montana Indian Education for All. Her poetry and essays have been published in numerous journals and anthologies, and her chapbook, Bitterroot, can be found at Finishing Line Press.

Amanda E. Hayes teaches English and composition at Kent State University-Tuscarawas. Raised on a multigenerational family farm in Appalachian Ohio, she now researches and writes about regional traditions of literacy, storytelling, and education. Her works include The Politics of Appalachian Rhetoric and The Madison Women: Gender, Higher Education, and Literacy in Nineteenth-Century Appalachia.

Contributors: Greg Bealer, Luc Biscan-White, David Blackmore, Aysha Bodenhamer, Ivy Brashear, Matthew Calloway, Nicole Drewitz-Crockett, Christina Fisanick, Deborah Fleming, Amanda V. Garner, Karie Gunter-Seymour, Richard Hague, Amanda E. Hayes, Lockie Hunter, Jessica M. Jones, Kristen LeFevers, Sarah Long, Meghan Moore-Hubbard, Barbara Marie Minney, Jessica Radicic, Elizabeth Emmerth Rexroad, Barbara Sabol, Larry Smith, Patrice Stank, Taylor Nasim Stone, Paul Thomas, Elizabeth Tussey, and Betsy Weems.

Praise

Wide Branches, Deep Roots is a joy to anyone who has known the truth all along—that sustainability and environmental stewardship in the Appalachian region is not just a passing fad, but an inherited practice since the region’s inception. Its impact will extend beyond the classroom to local historians, community organizers, and environmental activists who will find in it a mirror for their lived experiences accompanied with strong models of sustainable, place-based advocacy.” 

–  Marti Wagnon, assistant professor of English in the School of Writing, Language, and Literature at Radford University