
Jesse Stuart Foundation – Book Store | Appalachian Literature | Gift Shop | Ashland, KY
610959617
1979
Ashland, KY 41102 United States
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News

Regional Readers The Regional Readers book discussion group meets the last Tuesday of the month from March through November. The next meeting will be on Tuesday, June 24, 2025; coffee and conversation at 2:00 pm; book discussion at 2:30 pm. The June selection is Kentucky is My Home: A Journey Into the Life of Jesse Hilton Stuart, a collection of never-before-published poetry by Jesse Stuart, compiled and edited by John W. McCauley. When we meet on Tuesday, June 24, McCauley will give an Author Talk. McCauley spent many hours searching through boxes filled with papers and notes, listening to taped interviews, and researching Stuart’s life and work. In his Introduction, McCauley describes his process to review, transcribe, and select Stuart’s works for the book. Edwina Pendarvis writes in her Foreword that this new collection is the first publication of previously unpublished poems in nearly half a century, and that it is not only important for the artfulness and impact of the poetry and as a record of the thoughts and feelings of tone of the natin’s most prolific storytellers, but also as part of literary history. The hardback, 236-page Kentucky is My Home is illustrated with black and white photos of Stuart and his family as well as facsimiles of original handwritten and typewritten documents. The book group is open to all and new members are always welcome. We encourage suggestions for the 2025 reading list. (fb)
Jenny Wiley: Frontier Heroine The following article by Jim Gifford appeared in the May 24-25, 2025, edition of Ashland, Kentucky’s The Daily Independent. Best known for his nonfiction work Night Comes to the Cumberlands, Harry M. Caudill also wrote fiction, including Dark Hills to Westward: The Saga of Jenny Wiley, first published in 1969 and reprinted in a softback edition by the Jesse Stuart Foundation in 2021. When Jenny was an old woman, a preacher sat down with her and wrote out her captivity story. Although Jenny may have embellished it many times, it is the only first-hand account we have, and it’s the primary source for Caudill’s novel. Briefly, here is her story. Thomas and Jenny Wiley had pioneered land on Walker’s Creek in Bland County, Virginia. On October 1, 1789, while Thomas was away, a small band of Indians, seeking revenge for a recent defeat at the hands of white settlers, attacked the Wiley cabin and killed and scalped Jenny’s three older children and her brother. Jenny, seven months pregnant, was taken captive along with her baby son, Adam. Then began a nightmare flight through the wilderness into the dark Kentucky hills to westward. Jenny’s only hope for survival was to keep pace with her captors. On the third day, a Cherokee Chief snatched the sick child from its horrified mother and smashed little Adam Wiley’s brains out against a tree. Evading rescue parties, the Indians moved northwest into the Big Sandy Valley of Kentucky. Unable to cross the flood-swollen Ohio River, they retreated to a series of winter camps in present-day Carter, Lawrence, and Johnson counties. With only a rock bluff for shelter, Jenny spent the winter laboring as a slave. She gave birth in a cave, but three months later the Indians killed and scalped the infant, after it failed to pass their test of courage. After almost a year in captivity, Jenny escaped, miraculously evading pursuit as she made her way to a small settlement at Harman’s Station on John’s Creek. Readers will thrill to the story of her escape and return to her husband. Immediately upon its publication in 1969, The Saga of Jenny Wiley was hailed as a significant contribution to the body of literature and lore that surrounds this frontier heroine. While reviewers praised Jenny Wiley, they also found fault with Caudill’s venture into historical fiction. Tom Bethell’s detailed and insightful review in The Mountain Eagle (Whitesburg, Kentucky) offered a middle-ground assessment: “The treatment of Indians weakens this book; but it still a first-rate piece of storytelling – occasionally in a class with Mark Twain and Kenneth Roberts and always unraveled with the kind of persistent enthusiasm that makes Harry Caudill well worth listening to, and well worth reading.” Today’s readers, be forewarned. If you are looking for a “politically correct” version of race relations, you will not find it here. Like the great fireside storytellers that Harry M. Caudill descended from and represented, he tells a searing story from the perspective of Jenny and her white contemporaries. Readers should keep in mind that Caudill did not write the book as an historian, but as a storyteller, and his goal was to tell Jenny’s story as she experienced it. This book contains descriptions of terrible violence, and I do not recommend it for children or the faint of heart. The JSF has also published a children’s version of this story. White Squaw: The True Story of Jennie Wiley by Arville Wheeler is a 163-page illustrated book for readers in grades 6-8, but high school students and adults will enjoy it, too. Dark Hills to Westward: The Saga of Jenny Wiley, White Squaw, and many other books about Kentucky’s and Appalachia’s pioneer heritage are available at the Jesse Stuart Foundation Bookstore in Ashland. For more information, contact the JSF at 606-326-1667, e-mail jsf@jsfbooks.com, or visit the website jsfbooks.com. (fb)

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About the organization
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Sorry this product is unavailable. Please choose a different combination. Born in Greenup County Kentucky in 1906 Jesse Stuart was a prolific writer who published 2000 poems 460 short stories and more than 60 books. Part of the mission of the JSF is to preserve the human and literary legacy of Stuart.
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