''Refreshingly candid and honest without being judgmental.'' - Adventures in Storytelling Magazine ''Sobol focuses on the history of the storytelling revival in the U.S., particularly of the National Storytelling Association (aka NAPPS) from its earliest hay wagon festival days in Jonesborough TN to its apogee in the early 1990's. He analyzes the social and political forces of the 70's which made people crave traditional roots and spiritual rebirth, comparing it to earlier folk revival periods. Such scholarly stuff can't be boring when Sobol's sharp insights and vivid words keep us snapped to attention.'' - Fran Stallings, Territorial Tattler ''A fascinating view into the revitalized storytelling world... These interviews, interspersed with snippets of the stories characteristic of the tellers, provide arich insight into the individuals working to keep contemporary storytelling alive.''- Choice ''The texture and rhetoric of his ethnography are richly descriptive and unabashedly mythic, enriched with passionate personal reminiscence and lifted by leaps of critical imagination and delight in the power of stories, their tellers, and the intense shared moments of festival storytelling as performance art... This striking mix of spiritual autobiography and historical account is carefully researched and so thorough and thoughtful in its development that it stands as the definitive analysis of the storytelling revival and its place in American popular culture.'' - Thomas McGowan, Appalachian Journal ''Sobol presents a detailed, scholarly yet readable examination of the movement -from the vision and drive of Jimmy Neil Smith and a handful of fledgling tellers to the present. Dozens of interviews with storytellers give an intimate look at the personalities and issues-cohesive and/or divisive - that challenge the growing and changing National Storytelling Association. Students of culture, folklore, anthropology, and mythology will find an in-depth study of this aspect of American folk culture and performing arts.'' - Judy Sokoll, School Library Journal ''The rise of the National Storytelling Festival ... and of the first national association of storytellers ... make for a thoughtful yarn on how folkways are preserved and transformed in order to be retailed on modern stages.'' - thefolknik ADVANCE PRAISE ''Sobol is our storytelling anthropologist. His book is original, insightful, and leavened with humor and compassion. ''Sobol's writing is as imaginative as the subject itself, but solidly informative as well. This is an important resource for scholars in storytelling, folklore, popular culture, and social history.''-Betsy Hearne, author of Beauty and the Beast: Visions and Revisions of an Old Tale The brilliance of The Storytellers' Journey is that it offers at once a deep exploration of the territory we've traveled and a glimpse of future possibilities.''- Carol Birch and Melissa Heckler, editors of Who Says? Essays on Pivotal Issues in Contemporary Storytelling
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