The Feud
The Hatfields and McCoys
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
March 4, 2013
The late 19th-century feud between two families in southern Appalachia has taken on near-mythic proportions—it’s spawned numerous TV shows and films, it’s been immortalized in song by Waylon Jennings, and the phrase “fighting like the Hatfields and McCoys” has become common. In this fast-paced tale, journalist King (Skeletons on the Zahara) draws on previously unseen materials to recreate the fascinating and lurid tale (“squirrel meat and white lightning” are traded at least once for sex) of the star-crossed families and their colorful patriarchs, Devil Anse Hatfield, who kept bears as pets, and Randall McCoy. Antebellum relations between the clans were harmonious, but the declaration of Civil War loyalties set the scythe swinging. King points out that many factors likely contributed to the feud, among them a Hatfield killing young Harmon McCoy near the war’s end, the accusation of hog theft leveled at a Hatfield by Randall, and Devil Anse’s son Johnse’s romance with Roseanna McCoy. Ultimately, the dispute would claim a dozen lives—the last a result of a Supreme Court decision that led to the execution of Ellison “Cotton Top” Mounts for his role in the murder of Alifair McCoy several years prior. King’s entertaining chronicle sheds new light on a legendary chapter in American history. 20 b&w photos, 1 map. Agent: Jody Rein, Jody Rein Books.
Narrator Dan Woren affects a credible Southern voice in delivering this story of the legendary bloody feud between the Hatfields and McCoys. King's work presents the stark details of this inter-family war, which had its origins in the Civil War and its aftermath. The mountains of Appalachia often saw neighbor against neighbor during the war, and the violence carried on afterwards between the generally Confederate-sympathizing Hatfields in what is now West Virginia and their generally Union-sympathizing McCoy neighbors, across the Tug River in Kentucky. The violence seems to take on a life of its own, and while it makes for great stories, the reality is all too tragic. Woren's Southern accent adds to the presentation, making it seem as if he actually witnessed the events he recounts. M.T.F. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine
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