The complexities of life in a changing Appalachia link the 12 stories in Hampton’s impressive debut collection.
In the title story, a closeted grocery store cashier named Pretty is stuck in her small-minded mountain town. “This place is a long way from Asheville—eighty miles, and a lot of churches in between.” Her only support is friend and co-worker Jamie, who “didn’t care that [she] liked girls.” But when Jamie quits her job to move to Asheville with her boyfriend, a devastated Pretty finds an unexpected new ally. In the brutally painful “Devil,” Tech. Sgt. Boggs had enlisted in the military to escape his Cumberland, Kentucky, home, but he discovers the past is never really past when he reluctantly spends the night with his fundamentalist parents before shipping out to Afghanistan. As Carolyn and Frank, the twin protagonists of the poignant “Frogs,” embark on an evening nature walk at a mountaintop research station run by a local university, Carolyn plaintively asks her brother, “Are we rednecks?” Without the right clothes or equipment for the hike, the siblings stand out as locals, and Carolyn is further humiliated by the naturalist guide’s condescension. “He’s not even from here,” she angrily notes. The demeaning attitude of outsiders toward Appalachian people is highlighted even more notably in the dazzling “Sparkle” when a visit to Dollywood shatters a woman’s romantic illusions about her husband’s scientific research partner. In writing about an often misunderstood region, Hampton could easily have succumbed to the romanticism of Lee Smith or the negative stereotypes of J.D. Vance’s Hillbilly Elegy, but she avoids these tendencies with cleareyed honesty, humor, and compassion.
A marvelous introduction to a fresh Southern voice.