Ghosts Along Cumberland: Deathlore Kentucky Foothills

Ghosts Along Cumberland: Deathlore Kentucky Foothills

by WilliamLynwoodMontell (Author)

Synopsis


A fascinating collection of ghost stories, tales of the supernatural, death beliefs and death sayings that remain as a vestige of the part in south central Kentucky's Pennyrile region.

This unique and extremely valuable book adds considerably to the area of folklore studies in the United States. The material which Montell obtained in his field work is superb.
--Don Yoder.

This book is to be recommended to both folklorists and those non-folklorists who read folklore for enjoyment alone. It makes an important contribution to the study of deathlore and, it is to be hoped, will draw added attention to this multi-generic subject area.
--David J. Hufford, Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin.

Professor Montell's book can well be viewed as a standard of excellence: a direct, articulate and cataloged approach for future study and implementation in the fields of folklore and oral history.
--Joan Perkal, Oral History Association Newsletter.

The book gives fascinating accounts of death beliefs, death omens, folk beliefs associated with the dead, and in the major section, ghosts narratives. A fine combination of scholarship and chilling narration to be relished by firelight in an old deserted house in the hills.
--Book Forum.

Professor Montell has arranged beliefs and experiences about death of a particular group of people in such a way that a whole new aspect of the people's lives comes to focus.
--Loyal Jones, The Filson Club HIstory Quarterly.

$38.50

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 272
Publisher: University of Tennessee Press
Published: 23 Jun 1987

ISBN 10: 0870495356
ISBN 13: 9780870495359

Author Bio
William Lynwood Montell is emeritus professor of folk studies at Western Kentucky University. A distinguished interpreter of the folk customs in the Upper Cumberland, his many books include Ghosts Along the Cumberland: Deathlore in the Kentucky Foothills; A Study in Oral History; and Don't Go Up Kettle Creek: Verbal Legacy of the Upper Cumberland.