Searching For Virginia Dare

Searching For Virginia Dare
By Marjorie Hudson
Press 53, Lewisville, NC

Reviewed by Keith Jones

The nearly four hundred fifty years since her birth have yielded few additional clues to the ultimate fate of Virginia Dare. That has not stopped New World history scholars as well as North Carolinians in general from being fascinated by this mass disappearance. Virginia Dare was born in 1587 on Roanoke Island in what is now Manteo, North Carolina, making her the first English child born in what was to be become the American colonies. Disease, hunger and other serious shortages caused by their isolation forced the colony to send back to England for help. Upon the return, the colonists were gone with few traces of their existence remaining. As any North Carolinian worth his or her salt knows, one word was carved on a tree, “Croatoan.” The story of Virginia Dare is the story of America’s earliest colony. When Virginia Dare disappeared, all of her neighbors went with her.

In this book, Marjorie Hudson, traces her quest across North Carolina to discover for herself what may have become of the nearly mythical first born of America. But Virginia Dare was not a myth, she was a real person. One who likely had a very short life… or did she? Many theories abound about what became of the “Lost Colony.” Were they slaughtered by the local Indians? Did they move inland to healthier areas that were less disease prone and better suited to raising food crops? If so, did they survive this move and if so, what became of them? These are all questions that Hudson explores in this book.

If you are looking for a dry, “hard hitting” history to help you fall asleep at night this is not it. You see, this is as much a story of a modern woman’s journey of self discovery as it is of her scholarly and journalistic findings. This is a very well written and enjoyable book and from the first chapter, I knew I was in for something good. I wasn’t disappointed.

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Death Comes to Redhawk

Death Comes to Redhawk
By R. G. Yoho
White Feather Press, Hamilton, MI

Reviewed by Keith Jones

“Death Comes to Redhawk” is the first book in the Kellen Malone adventure series. In this book, like the second, Yoho crafts a thrilling Western like those many of us grew up with. The colorful characters and the vivid settings add to a fast paced and well crafted story.

Kellen Malone has just been released from the Yuma prison out in Arizona where he had spent seven years for a stage coach robbery he didn’t commit. He journeys to a home and a son that have been taken over by his worst enemy. Malone’s wife had died while he was in prison and renegade Apaches want to make certain that he doesn’t make it home alive. In the desert he meets Joe Clements, a famed gunman who bears the nickname, Skull. Malone and his new friend traverse a web of intrigue to unravel the mysteries of who set him up and why.

“Death Comes to Redhawk” gallops through the Arizona territory and is a joy to read.

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Death Rides the Rails

Death Rides the Rails
By R. G. Yoho
White Feather Press, Hamilton, MI

Reviewed by Keith Jones

“Death Rides the Rails” is a Western of the old style like Louis L’Amour and Zane Grey once wrote. Yoho’s style and storytelling will transport you to an earlier time when Westerns were fun to read; a time before Western novels and movies became laboratories for social experiment and change full of apologies for the American way and sexually confused cowboys.

This book, the second in the Kellen Malone Adventure series, takes us on an exciting train trip across the country with Malone who has been recruited by his old army commander Jerome Langston who is now a presidential aide to protect President Grover Cleveland. Recent Cleveland policies threaten the fortunes of powerful men who wish to protect lands they acquired through questionable means. These individuals are not going to allow this without a fight. The fight they plan is a literal one in which they hatch a conspiracy against Cleveland’s life.

Malone assembles a team of colorful characters from his past. Gunfighter Joe “Skull” Clements and lawman Gain Carson fight by Malone’s side through attempt after attempt as they head westward across the plains.

If you are looking for a good old fashioned John Wayne styled Western, R. G. Yoho’s “Death Rides the Rails” is sure to entertain you.

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The Life and Times of Ray Hicks, Keeper of the Jack Tales

The Life and Times of Ray Hicks, Keeper of the Jack Tales

By Lynn Salsi
University of Tennessee Press

Reviewed by Keith Jones

Those who are not students of Appalachian history or folklore would likely not pick this book up. They would be missing out on something special…

From the start this is not just another dry non-fiction about what life was like up in “them thar hills!” Rather it is an experience of seeing life in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina through the eyes of one of its preeminent story tellers. Prepare to be transported to the parlor of the Hicks home to sit on the simple wood floor and warm yourself before the woodstove as you listen to Ray spin the greatest yarn of all for you; the one of his own life. You will climb the mountains, learn to make do with what is available and yes, you will sit on his grandfather’s lap and learn the great stories that had been handed down through the generations. In short, in a few pages you will look up and realize that the mountains have just been delivered to your living room.

In the first few pages you see a barely grown Ray standing at the top of a ridge. On one side lies the rest of the world, with all of its opportunity and advantages, along with its faster pace and accompanying rat race. Ray has reached that point so many others had; he planned to leave the hills and go forth to put his mark on the world. Leave the poverty and hardscrabble existence he had always known behind and make his fortune. He looked back to where his mother stood at the foot of the other side of the ridge. There he saw the love, warmth and acceptance of everything he had always known in that simple way of life. Summed up neatly; there he saw home. So Ray turned around and went back.

Ray never made a fortune, but he did place his mark on the world, in fact the world often showed up at his front door begging for it. For those not familiar, Ray Hicks was known the world over as the last great Appalachian story teller; the keeper of the Jack Tales. The stories Ray kept alive have obvious common roots with other Anglo-Celtic stories usually involving a boy named “Jack,” such as “Jack in the Beanstalk.” These stories are ancient tales of a poor boy on fantastic adventures using his greatest resource to save the day—that resource, of course, being his sharp mind and vast ingenuity. In each culture these tales have grown and adapted with countless retellings to take on their own special flavors. This is quite true of the Appalachian Jack Tales that Ray Hicks became renowned for. References to these Jack Tales are peppered throughout this book.

Along this journey through Ray’s life he shares many interesting tidbits and humorous stories. From Appalachian medicine to making dulcimers and banjos out of trees and animal hides. The secret, according to Ray, is picking the right tree – you have to thump the tree to see if it resonates. You stroll along as Ray’s father, Nathan, goes on a wild hunt for a drunken bear. Witness Ray encounter a witch on a dark mountainside late one night while he and his father are out picking “galack” leaves to sell to florists so his mother will have money to buy some cooking supplies. Finally—like with most great journeys—you end up where you began, on the ridge overlooking the house where Ray spent his life. Ray, no longer able to walk to the top as he had so many times, allows his son to drive him up in his four wheel drive. There he looks down and recalls the times he has spent there and the people he shared them with. Some were joyful and some were sad, but you will have no doubt they were hard times in a life well lived. You will set the book down feeling as if you have traveled Old Mountain Road beside the Hicks home for a lifetime, along with Ray.

This book is a biography told in the manner of an auto-biography; first person through the eyes of the man whose life is being shared. Author Lynn Salsi excels in this format and takes what could have been mundane biography and turns it into an experience of sight, sound and smell. She has knocked this one out of the park. You will walk away feeling you knew Ray Hicks and lived his life with him.

Whether you are an avid Appalachian scholar or your only experience with the mountains is from the side of a ski slope, you are bound to find the experience of life through the eyes of one who lived and loved the mountains and never really wished to be elsewhere to be a treasure worth keeping.

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Enemies Foreign and Domestic (Trilogy)

Enemies Foreign and Domestic (Trilogy)

By Matthew Bracken
Steelcutter Publishing
Reviewed by Keith Jones

This trilogy – beginning with “Enemies Foreign and Domestic” followed by “Domestic Enemies” and concluded with “Foreign Enemies and Traitors” – begins in the not too distant future. A mass shooting opens the door to unprecedented new gun restrictions, but all is not as it seems. The event had been staged by federal agents seeking greater control over the population and exponential increases in funding. They will get everything they seek. As civil unrest sets in a small band if patriots led by Brad Fallon, Phil Carson and Ranya Bardiwell set out to discover the truth. The web of deception grows thicker as they go.

The second book, “Domestic Enemies: The Reconquista” carries you further along into the American South West as it disintegrates into the “Aztlan” which has been largely reclaimed by Central and South American para military groups. Once again Ranya Bardiwell has, against the advice of Phil Carson, returned to her home country and finds herself embroiled in the morass of America’s downfall. Imprisoned then on the run, she must recover her son who has been taken by the government and adopted out to federal officials.

The third book, “Foreign Enemies and Traitors” paints an even bleaker picture of our future as Phil Carson can no longer hide from the realities of the lost freedom of his homeland. On a smuggling run, Carson is shipwrecked along the Southern Gulf coast with no means of retreating back to the relative safety and anonymity of the Caribbean where he had been hiding. He joins up with a group of freedom fighters led by a former Special Forces soldier who could not carry out the illegal orders he was given by his government so he deserts and establishes himself in the woods of his native Tennessee. A chance discovery offers proof of unbelievable war crimes against civilians and threatens to blow the fragile government apart.

This trilogy of books takes you into a frightening future that you will very much hope stays fictional. On the whole, Bracken has created a series of books that are bound to go down as classics in this thought provoking genre.

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Short story today – Dew on the Kudzu

A short story I wrote appears today in the webzine, Dew on the Kudzu. “Bushwhacker Blues: A Long Crawl Over the Hills” is a dramatic rendering of real events that happened in the North Carolina mountains in October in 1863. It recreates the Battle of Warm Springs between the forces commanded by Col. Lawrence Allen and Maj. John Woodfin and unionist bushwhackers. Then follows Allen as he spends the night on the mountain after being separated from his men. This story is an excerpt of a planned longer historical novel. Enjoy, it’s free!

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Boys of Diamond Hill #67 Amazon Letters & Correspondence

“The Boys of Diamond Hill” broke into another ranking today. Number 67 in the Amazon Bestsellers in Letters & Correspondence, just ahead of “Letters To Penthouse XXV: She’s Mine, She’s Yours, She’s Wild!”… Not too shabby!

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Albemarle Tonight

Tonight I will be the speaker at the Sons of Confederate Veterans meeting in Albemarle, NC. I will be speaking — of course — on the Boys of Diamond Hill at 7:00 pm at Jay’s Seafood Restaurant.

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Duke University RBMSCL Guest Column

I was asked recently by the people at the Duke special collections to write a short essay about my experiences researching for the “Boys of Diamond Hill” at the Duke University Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library.

My entry appears to day as a guest column entitled “Letters to Diamond Hill.” It begins like this:

“When I first began investigating the Robert Boyd Family Papers at Duke’s Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library, I expected to find something that would appeal to genealogists of this family and those researching the history of Abbeville County, South Carolina. I didn’t know that I would discover a rich story about the triumphs of love and the tragedies of war…”
Read the full article…

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Company Shops Living History Weekend

Posing with Stan Clardy - muscian and author.

Keith with Stan Clardy


I was at the Company Shops Living History this weekend in downtown Burlington, NC. Sold several copies of “In Due Time” and “Boys of Diamond Hill” while commemorating the Sesquicentennial of when the troops gathered at the train depot to depart for service in the War Between the States. While there, I was able to steal a few minutes time with Stan Clardy, renowned Southern musician and author of a time travel novel of his own — “TimeLight.”

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