Cornbread Nation will take you on a search for pawpaws on the Appalachian Trail, educate you on the 'origin' of corn, and teach you about a family's tradition of boiling cane syrup. . . . The book also reminds you of the heart of Southern life-connections between people, family and friends-while also jumpstarting your appetite.--
Spartanburg Herald-Journal By the time you've gotten a third of the way through the book, you've sampled all types of flavors, from green bean stories to Native American fables about corn. . . . And the anecdotes keep coming, with every writer bringing something good to the table. By the time you get up, you have that satisfied feeling that you can only get from a good meal. It leaves a wonderful taste in your mouth.--
Blue Ridge Country Poetry, stories and essays breathe life and energy into Appalachia, the Arkansas Ozarks and Louisiana Bayous. . . . This is a fine read and a great stocking stuffer.--
Denver Post This continuing series only gets better with each volume, incorporating vivid prose and poetry, journalism with reportage, and joy with anguish in the ways food is so central to the human experience, in this case the food culture of Appalachia and the Ozarks.--
Mariani's Virtual Gourmet [An] eclectic collection.--
Mountain Xpress Two-hundred and fifty-eight pages bursting with flavor makes
Cornbread Nation 3: Foods of the Mountain South absolutely delectable. For Southern Foodies, it, and its companion [volumes], are essential for the cooking library.--
Oxford Public Leader Convincing and captivating. . . . [A] wonderful companion piece for general delightful and informative reading or for use in the classroom in any number of disciplines.--
Journal of Appalachian Studies Put a pot of beans on to simmer and a skillet full of cornmeal in the oven. Sit a spell, and fill up on this book.--
Gannett News Service [The
Cornbread Nation] series only gets better with each volume, incorporating vivid prose and poetry, journalism with reportage, and joy with anguish in the ways food is so central to the human experience, in this case the food culture of Appalachia and the Ozarks.--
Mariani's Virtual Gourmet This volume includes an eclectic mixture of poetry, essays and stories by a 'who's who' in Appalachian and Ozark writing, past and present.--
Appalachian Heritage
Focusses on the connections through food in Appalachia and beyond. The stories, poems, and essays gathered in "Cornbread Nation 3: Foods of the Mountain South" were born along the winding roads of Appalachia, in the vales of the Ozarks, and in the flatlands beyond, where mountain people traveled in the hillbilly diaspora. Here, wisdom is gleaned in coal-mining camps, at roadside vegetable stands, at dinners on church grounds, and on shady front porches. In these tantalizing pieces, leather britches are set to dry in a classic rite, the sweetness of corn approaches the divine, a bean without strings brooks no flavor, and the arrival of autumn brings the heady scent of the ripe and secretive pawpaw. The volume's contributors include trailblazing writers from the past and present - Tony Earley, Michael McFee, Marilou Awiakta, Frank X Walker, and Jean Ritchie - who demonstrate the power of connectedness among families and neighbors and remind us that earth's greatest treasures grow from welltended seeds.
As a special bonus, this edition of the "Southern Foodways Alliance" annual anthology contains lyrics to the Cornbread Nation anthem by acclaimed West Virginia singer/songwriter Tim O'Brien.