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Tender, Unforgiving Appalachia In 'F*ckface: And Other Stories'

In her debut collection, author Leah Hampton intimately portrays the ways that humans and land affect one another. She places that tense relationship at the core of Appalachian identity.
In her debut collection, author Leah Hampton intimately portrays the ways that humans and land affect one another. She places that tense relationship at the core of Appalachian identity.
In her debut collection, author Leah Hampton intimately portrays the ways that humans and land affect one another. She places that tense relationship at the core of Appalachian identity.
Credit Henry Holt & Co
In her debut collection, author Leah Hampton intimately portrays the ways that humans and land affect one another. She places that tense relationship at the core of Appalachian identity.

Forest fires, a rotting bear carcass, polluted water and industrial farming are both the settings and the main characters in "F*ckface: And Other Stories" (Henry Holt & Co/2020). Leah Hampton’s new collection is a kaleidoscope picture of the many ways land is expressed through human stories. Host Frank Stasio talks with Leah Hampton about her new collection of Appalachian short stories.

The short stories show tenuous social bonds and human life cycles set in contrast to the stubborn landscape. In "Boomer," a park ranger fights a wildfire as his wife pilfers the home. "Meat" casts the memory of a slaughterhouse burning down within a sickening frame narrative of a family funeral prior to cremation. While the people’s livelihoods scar the Appalachian Mountains, Hampton wants readers to know that the people are equally scarred by the land.

The blood bond between people and place is a familiar theme in regional literature, however in "F*ckface," the Appalachian author insists that even transient residents are subject. Hampton sets aside the romance of multi-generational farming families to focus on millennial gig workers, students and the like. They too are pulled by the seasonal rhythms and geologic truths of the region.

The mountainous landscape expresses itself in culturally distinct notions of gender, sexuality and race that hold no regard for coastal stereotypes. Host Frank Stasio asks Hampton how to collaborate with the land and what it would take to heal the trauma of Appalachia.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2QiJu2iYJI

 

Copyright 2020 North Carolina Public Radio

Longtime NPR correspondent Frank Stasio was named permanent host of The State of Things in June 2006. A native of Buffalo, Frank has been in radio since the age of 19. He began his public radio career at WOI in Ames, Iowa, where he was a magazine show anchor and the station's News Director.
Grant Holub-Moorman is a producer for The State of Things, WUNC's daily, live talk show that features the issues, personalities and places of North Carolina.