The mill was here before the automobile, before the flying machine, and they served it even as it filled their lungs with lint and shortened their lives.
In return, it let them live in stiff-necked dignity in the hills of their fathers. So, when death did come, no one had to ship their bodies home on a train.
This is a mill story; not of bricks, steel, and cotton, but of the people who suffered it to live.
In spring 2001, a community of people in the Appalachian foothills had come to the edge of all they had ever been. Now they stood looking down, bitter, angry, afraid. Across the South, padlocks and logging chains bound the doors of silent mills, and it seemed a miracle to blue-collar people in Jacksonville, Alabama, that their mill still bit, shook, and roared.
The century-old hardwood floors still trembled under whirling steel, and people worked on, in a mist of white air. The mill had become almost a living thing, rewarding the hard-working and careful with the best payday they ever had, but punishing the careless and clumsy, taking a finger, a hand, more.
Rick Bragg is the author of five books including the best sellers All Over but the Shoutin', Ava's Man, and The Prince of Frogtown. He was born and raised on the outskirts of Jacksonville, the mill town that is the subject of this book. A newspaper and magazine writer who was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1996, Bragg is currently a professor of writing at the University of Alabama
“It is hard to think of a writer who reminds us more forcefully and
wonderfully of what people and families are all about.
”
— , New York Times Book Review
Publication Date: October 1, 2009
Hardcover
$23.00
156 pages
ISBN 9781596923614
trim size: 5 x 8