Country Miles Are Longer Than City Miles

An Important Document in the Art and Social History of Americana

Nonfiction, History
Cover of the book Country Miles Are Longer Than City Miles by Craig Evan Royce, AuthorHouse
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Author: Craig Evan Royce ISBN: 9781467063272
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publication: December 20, 2006
Imprint: AuthorHouse Language: English
Author: Craig Evan Royce
ISBN: 9781467063272
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication: December 20, 2006
Imprint: AuthorHouse
Language: English

Unplug the clock.Turn off the television.Put a stack of John Hartford albums on the stereo.Sit back and take a trip to the hills of eastern Kentucky.

Come meet other real people among the hills, but dont expect to see any stereotypes of hillbillies or moonshine stills.

His tribute to these gentle people is, in the best sense, poetic.His writing flows like a creek running down the piney mountains.

Royce has given the world an impressive record of one of the last remnants of American culture still uncontaminated by a plastic mentality.It is hoped this warm and beautiful book will not be an epitaph to the mountain culture, but the start of the renaissance of their natural lifestyle.

-Greg Bailey, Columbia Missourian

Country Miles are Longer than City Miles, a sort of Kentucky Foxfire that examines with reverence about 20 of the states artisans and their work.

Royces book is a genuine artcraft of its own kind, a lovingly carved little piece of work that exudes vibrant enthusiasm from every page.

It is good to see ourselves as others see us.In this case, it can bring us back to some sense of ourselves.

Commitment to excellence is a rare enough quality in most any human undertaking, and it is this quality that Craig Evan Royce is concerned with in Country Miles are Longer than City Miles.

-Review by Don Edwards

Herald-Leader Literary Columnist

The Lexington Herald-Leader

This is a craft book of a different genre.

It is the story of the inseparable love that the true craftsman has for his work - and his respect for nature.

Each chapter opens with a sepia photo - and every priceless photo tells a story.Interviews with the individual craft folk are written in dialect - and the first-hand mountain memoirs are indeed moving and enlightening simultaneously.

Author Royce has compiled a unique and inspiring glimpse into the art of the southern highlands from which all who read, be they craftsmen or not, can benefit.

-edited by Susan Bruno, The NEWPORT NEWS DAILY PRESS

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Unplug the clock.Turn off the television.Put a stack of John Hartford albums on the stereo.Sit back and take a trip to the hills of eastern Kentucky.

Come meet other real people among the hills, but dont expect to see any stereotypes of hillbillies or moonshine stills.

His tribute to these gentle people is, in the best sense, poetic.His writing flows like a creek running down the piney mountains.

Royce has given the world an impressive record of one of the last remnants of American culture still uncontaminated by a plastic mentality.It is hoped this warm and beautiful book will not be an epitaph to the mountain culture, but the start of the renaissance of their natural lifestyle.

-Greg Bailey, Columbia Missourian

Country Miles are Longer than City Miles, a sort of Kentucky Foxfire that examines with reverence about 20 of the states artisans and their work.

Royces book is a genuine artcraft of its own kind, a lovingly carved little piece of work that exudes vibrant enthusiasm from every page.

It is good to see ourselves as others see us.In this case, it can bring us back to some sense of ourselves.

Commitment to excellence is a rare enough quality in most any human undertaking, and it is this quality that Craig Evan Royce is concerned with in Country Miles are Longer than City Miles.

-Review by Don Edwards

Herald-Leader Literary Columnist

The Lexington Herald-Leader

This is a craft book of a different genre.

It is the story of the inseparable love that the true craftsman has for his work - and his respect for nature.

Each chapter opens with a sepia photo - and every priceless photo tells a story.Interviews with the individual craft folk are written in dialect - and the first-hand mountain memoirs are indeed moving and enlightening simultaneously.

Author Royce has compiled a unique and inspiring glimpse into the art of the southern highlands from which all who read, be they craftsmen or not, can benefit.

-edited by Susan Bruno, The NEWPORT NEWS DAILY PRESS

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