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As recounted in Appalachian Justice, Jessie is an adult survivor of
horrendous childhood abuse. At the age of thirteen, she was rescued
by reclusive mountain woman Billy May Platte. Now forty-seven,
Jessie is outwardly successful but inwardly struggles to reconcile
the broken pieces of her past. In honor of Billy May, Jessie has
offered Crutcher Mountain as a location to build the Platte Lodge
for Children, a wilderness retreat and respite program designed for
children with disabilities. Everything comes together beautifully
until a series of strange events threatens to shut down the
retreat. To save the lodge, Jessie must open her heart to the
truths she discovers and place her trust in a lonely little boy.
Beth Sloan has spent the majority of her life trying to escape the
memories of a difficult childhood. Born into the infamous Pritchett
family of Cedar Hollow, West Virginia, she grew up hard, surrounded
not only by homemade stills and corn liquor, but by an impoverished
family that more often than not preferred life on the wrong side of
the law. After the mysterious death of her brother Luke at the age
of thirteen, seventeen year old Beth and her younger sister Naomi
ran away from home, never to return. As the years passed, Beth
suppressed the painful memories and managed to create a
comfortable, if troubled, life with her husband Mark and their two
children in an upscale suburb outside of Memphis, Tennessee. But
the arrival of an unwelcome letter threatens to change all that.
Against her better judgment, and at the urging of her sister Naomi,
Beth agrees to return to Cedar Hollow, to the memories she's worked
so hard to forget. When old resentments and family secrets are
awakened, Beth must risk everything to face the truth about what
really happened to Luke that long ago summer night.
Billy May Platte is a half Irish, half Cherokee Appalachian woman
who learned the hard way that 1940s West Virginia was no place to
be different. As Billy May explains, "We was sheltered in them
hills. We didn't know much of nothin' about life outside of them
mountains. I did not know the word lesbian; to us, gay meant havin'
fun and queer meant somethin' strange." In 1945, when Billy May was
fourteen years old and orphaned, three local boys witnessed an
incident in which Billy May's sexuality was called into question.
Determined to teach her a lesson she would never forget, they
orchestrated a brutal attack that changed the dynamics of the tiny
coal mining village of Cedar Hollow, West Virginia forever. Global
Ebook Gold Winner in 2013, a finalist for the University of North
Carolina-Wilmington's Synergy Program in 2013, and voted Sapphic
Readers Book Club Book of the Year in 2011 (under a different
imprint), Appalachian Justice is a work of southern fiction that
delves into social issues such as poverty, domestic violence,
misogyny, and sexual orientation. Ultimately, however, Appalachian
Justice delivers a message of hope.
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