Carter Taylor Seaton is the author of two novels, Father's Troubles and amo, amas, amat . . . an unconventional love story, numerous magazine articles, and several essays and short stories. She has directed a rural craft cooperative, was nominated for the Ladies Home Journal ""Women of the Year 1975"" Award, and ran three marathons - Atlanta, New York City, and Marine Corps - after she was fifty. A ceramic sculptor living in Huntington, West Virginia, she is one of three 2013 winners of the Tamarack Fellowhip awards, being recognized for sculpture and writing.
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Description
"Outstanding. This story has come nowhere near being told with such depth and breadth until now." Paul Salstrom, author of Appalachia's Path to Dependency: Rethinking a Region's Economic History, 1730-1940 "This book was waiting to be written and perhaps only Ms. Seaton could have written it. Her clear, direct prose is, perhaps, the only prose that is appropriate for this story. Her own creative background and her historian's grasp and presentation of the details, moods and unrest of the times take the book far beyond a mere description of arts and crafts, providing a marvelous addition to the understanding of what makes West Virginians the people they really are. Ms. Seaton's writing, like these people, is a treasure." Lee Maynard, author of the Crum Trilogy: Crum, Screaming with the Cannibals, and The Scummers and The Pale Light of Sunset. "A distinctive story. Engaging. Fascinating." Dona Brown, Professor of History, University of Vermont

