Harry M. Caudill
Born
in Whitesburg, Kentucky, The United States
May 03, 1922
Died
November 29, 1990
Genre
|
Night Comes to the Cumberlands: A Biography of a Depressed Area
—
published
1963
—
28 editions
|
|
|
Dark Hills to Westward: The Saga of Jenny Wiley
by
—
published
1994
—
10 editions
|
|
|
The mountain, the miner, and the Lord, and other tales from a country law office
—
published
1980
—
8 editions
|
|
|
Slender Is The Thread: Tales from a Country Law Office
—
published
1986
—
7 editions
|
|
|
Theirs Be The Power
—
published
1983
—
3 editions
|
|
|
The Senator from Slaughter County
—
published
1973
—
2 editions
|
|
|
The watches of the night
—
published
2010
—
3 editions
|
|
|
My Land is Dying
—
published
1985
—
3 editions
|
|
|
A Darkness at Dawn: Appalachian Kentucky and the Future
—
published
1976
—
3 editions
|
|
|
Harry Caudill's Kentucky
—
published
1997
|
|
“Kentucky as a whole has lagged behind the rest of the nation in almost every field of government and public service, primarily because the fiercely independent and uncooperative mentality of the frontier hunter-farmer has remained so deeply and tenaciously embedded in the mass psyche.”
― Night Comes to the Cumberlands
― Night Comes to the Cumberlands
“What I have written is drawn from experience — from seeing, hearing and working with mountaineers. In a land with few books and pens many tales are transmitted from father and mother to son and daughter.”
― Night Comes to the Cumberlands
― Night Comes to the Cumberlands
“The tragedy of Central Appalachia is that it is becoming more marginalized in American life just when the country needs more than ever what it has to offer. At a time when the bonds of community and family are visibly failing and people feel more alone than ever, and as they are bombarded from all sides with more demands, and with more "data" that they can possibly digest, Appalachia offers a model for a less frenetic and more measured way of life. People of Appalachian descent elsewhere in the nation-and they number many millions-still feel deep ties to some Appalachian hamlet or hollow as to an ancestral homeland, though they may never have even visited it. As they make their way in the big world of getting and spending they know that something valuable has been lost for all they may have gained. That less frenetic way of life is deeply embedded in Appalachian culture, which has proved incredibly tough and enduring. Yet Appalachia has now been so thoroughly bypassed and forgotten that it cannot give, because the rest of America will not take, what could be it's greatest gift.”
― Night Comes to the Cumberlands: A Biography of a Depressed Area
― Night Comes to the Cumberlands: A Biography of a Depressed Area
Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Around the World ...: Kentucky | 9 | 336 | Oct 04, 2019 06:20AM | |
| Green Group: Wendell Berry's latest Our Only World - and reason to have hope | 41 | 55 | Mar 13, 2020 12:13PM | |
| Gigi's Company: The Last Letter Game (Book Titles) | 4842 | 939 | Jul 08, 2023 03:29PM | |
| Never too Late to...: Title Game: Second Edition | 8393 | 664 | 39 minutes ago |












