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Eureka Mill

af Ron Rash

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473544,918 (4.2)9
20th Anniversary Edition of this classic poetry collection, with a foreword by New York TImes Bestselling author, Robert Morgan and a new preface by the author. First published in 1998,Eureka Mill is Ron Rash's seminal collection of poetry. It introduced the world to an often overlooked Appalachian region and cemented Rash's name as synonymous with Southern writing. Eureka Mill presents a lyrical portrait of the migration of poor North Carolina farmers to Chester, South Carolina to work in the Eureka Cotton Mill in the years before the Great Depression. Drawing on his family history in the region that stretches back three hundred years, Rash assembles a nuanced tapestry of mill village life, from the foremen in their offices to the men and women at the looms toiling in the often inhumane conditions of the mills. Rash's poetry elevates the people and landscapes of rural Appalachia to incandescent heights, garnering comparisons to the work of Seamus Heaney and Robert Frost. Still one of Rash's finest works to date,Eureka Mill is a vital record of one of the South's most important historic shifts, offering readers at once intimacy and perspective, heart and understanding.… (mere)
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My grandparents were millworkers. I liked these poems for the memories they brought me of my grandparents in the mill. Rash's poems show a harshness that was worse than what I heard from my folks though. ( )
  JRobinW | Jan 20, 2023 |
This thematic poetry volume from Ron Rash, a well-regarded writer of Appalachian fiction, honors the Chester County, South Carolina mill where his family worked to provide steady income when farm income depended on varying factors. In the poems farm life and mill life and the contrasts between them are seen. We see many of the problems associated with mills, such as child labor, unpaid medical leave, and germ spread. (During this time of COVID-19 where food production plants seem to be hot-beds for spreading the virus, it appears managers learned little from the past.) I picked this up when I vacationed in the Outer Banks. I sought a volume of Outer Banks poetry, but after reading a few lines in the only volume available, I began looking for a North Carolina author instead. I picked up Rash's volume, not realizing at the time the South Carolina setting. I'm glad I picked it up. I truly enjoyed the poems which shared a common theme. ( )
  thornton37814 | May 13, 2020 |
There is quite a lengthy forward preceeding these poems. A very informative forward chronicling how Mills and mill towns came to the South, leaving their farms where they were at the mercy of so many things out of their control. Those in the Appalachian mountains came down for the steady pay. Life was not easy, the job hard, child labor prevalent, disease rampant. The onslaught of Unions, and Ella Mae Wiggins is mentioned, a fictional book I read earlier in the year featured her story. Ron Rashes mother is featured in the poem, July 1949, who left her farm to work in a cotton mill.

Only recently did I become aware that Rash, whose books I loved, wrote poetry. This short book of porms, likened to Spoon River Anthology, in that the characters tell their own story. Through them, and the many different types of poems within, we get a picture of life on the farm and in the mill. Some are harrowing, some desperate, some sad, but some are joyful, all quite expressive and well done.

ARC from Edelweiss. ( )
  Beamis12 | Jul 18, 2018 |
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20th Anniversary Edition of this classic poetry collection, with a foreword by New York TImes Bestselling author, Robert Morgan and a new preface by the author. First published in 1998,Eureka Mill is Ron Rash's seminal collection of poetry. It introduced the world to an often overlooked Appalachian region and cemented Rash's name as synonymous with Southern writing. Eureka Mill presents a lyrical portrait of the migration of poor North Carolina farmers to Chester, South Carolina to work in the Eureka Cotton Mill in the years before the Great Depression. Drawing on his family history in the region that stretches back three hundred years, Rash assembles a nuanced tapestry of mill village life, from the foremen in their offices to the men and women at the looms toiling in the often inhumane conditions of the mills. Rash's poetry elevates the people and landscapes of rural Appalachia to incandescent heights, garnering comparisons to the work of Seamus Heaney and Robert Frost. Still one of Rash's finest works to date,Eureka Mill is a vital record of one of the South's most important historic shifts, offering readers at once intimacy and perspective, heart and understanding.

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