Echoes from the Hills of Idaho

Echoes from the Hills of Idaho

Author: Ruth Butler

Publisher: CreateSpace

Published: 2014-03-28

Total Pages: 162

ISBN-13: 9781496117519

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Echoes from the Hills of Idaho describes humorous, tragic and folksy memories of Ruth, a girl who lived the first few years of her life on a thousand acre dry farm. The farm was near the Grand Teton Range of the Rocky Mountains and Yellowstone Park was only a few miles away. Grandeur, beauty and love surrounded her and were implanted in her soul. Ruth also lived in several other western states as a child where experiencing different cultures, lifestyles and new adventures gave her a variety of things to write about. Her heartfelt stories are memoirs of growing up during the twenties and thirties. Ruth is an excellent storyteller and her unique style captivates readers of all ages.


Echoes from Idaho's Snake River Valley

Echoes from Idaho's Snake River Valley

Author: Ruth Butler

Publisher: CreateSpace

Published: 2015-10-21

Total Pages: 188

ISBN-13: 9781517603120

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Ruth's second book is a collection of true story memories of her teenage years during the Great Depression and her life as a young bride and mother before, during and after World War II. It authentically describes life's struggles and joys during hard times and war times by someone who has been there and done that. Echoes from Idaho's Snake River Valley takes place in the beautiful Pacific Northwest states of Idaho, Oregon and Montana where the author lived during the formative years of her life. Ruth's extraordinary life experiences are told with a special warmth, wit and charm that we find only in the elderly. Her subtle humor is laugh-out-loud funny and people of any generation will enjoy these vividly told heartfelt stories of life during a bygone era.


Echo of Distant Water

Echo of Distant Water

Author: J B Fisher

Publisher: TrineDay

Published: 2019-08-05

Total Pages: 320

ISBN-13: 1634242416

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In December 1958, Ken Martin, his wife Barbara, and their three young daughters left their home in Northeast Portland to search for Christmas greens in the Columbia River Gorge—and never returned. The Martins' disappearance spurred the largest missing persons search in Oregon history and the mystery has remained perplexingly unsolved to this day. For the past six years, JB Fisher (Portland on the Take) has pored over the case after finding in his garage a stack of old Oregon Journal newspaper articles about the story. Through a series of serendipitous encounters, Fisher obtained a wealth of first-hand and never-before publicized information about the case including police reports from several agencies, materials and photos belonging to the Martin family, and the personal notebooks and papers of Multnomah County Sheriff's Detective Walter E. Graven, who was always convinced the case was a homicide and worked tirelessly to prove it. Graven, however, faced real resistance from his superiors to bring his findings to light. Used as a trail left behind after his 1988 death to guide future researchers, Graven's personal documents provide fascinating insight into the question of what happened to the Martins—a path leading to abduction and murder, an intimate family secret, and civic corruption going all the way to the Kennedys in Washington, DC.


African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia

African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia

Author: Cecelia Conway

Publisher: Univ. of Tennessee Press

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 428

ISBN-13: 9780870498930

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Throughout the Upland South, the banjo has become an emblem of white mountain folk, who are generally credited with creating the short-thumb-string banjo, developing its downstroking playing styles and repertory, and spreading its influence to the national consciousness. In this groundbreaking study, however, Cecelia Conway demonstrates that these European Americans borrowed the banjo from African Americans and adapted it to their own musical culture. Like many aspects of the African-American tradition, the influence of black banjo music has been largely unrecorded and nearly forgotten--until now. Drawing in part on interviews with elderly African-American banjo players from the Piedmont--among the last American representatives of an African banjo-playing tradition that spans several centuries--Conway reaches beyond the written records to reveal the similarity of pre-blues black banjo lyric patterns, improvisational playing styles, and the accompanying singing and dance movements to traditional West African music performances. The author then shows how Africans had, by the mid-eighteenth century, transformed the lyrical music of the gourd banjo as they dealt with the experience of slavery in America. By the mid-nineteenth century, white southern musicians were learning the banjo playing styles of their African-American mentors and had soon created or popularized a five-string, wooden-rim banjo. Some of these white banjo players remained in the mountain hollows, but others dispersed banjo music to distant musicians and the American public through popular minstrel shows. By the turn of the century, traditional black and white musicians still shared banjo playing, and Conway shows that this exchange gave rise to a distinct and complex new genre--the banjo song. Soon, however, black banjo players put down their banjos, set their songs with increasingly assertive commentary to the guitar, and left the banjo and its story to white musicians. But the banjo still echoed at the crossroads between the West African griots, the traveling country guitar bluesmen, the banjo players of the old-time southern string bands, and eventually the bluegrass bands. The Author: Cecelia Conway is associate professor of English at Appalachian State University. She is a folklorist who teaches twentieth-century literature, including cultural perspectives, southern literature, and film.