Ballad of Little River
A Tale of Race and Unrest in the Rural South
More than an anatomy of a church arson, The Ballad of Little River is a poignant but hard-hitting biography of one of the poorest areas in the United States--where deer outnumber people. A cauldron of unresolved racial and familial conflict, of heat, boredom, gossip, and grudges, Little River, Alabama, gained notoriety in 1997 as the site of the U.S. government's first conviction under a new hate-crimes law intended to stop a rash of fires set at black churches around the country.
When journalist Paul Hemphill, son of an Alabama truck driver and veteran writer on the blue-collar South, moved into the area, he discovered a world that time had virtually forgotten--an obscure, isolated community in the swampy woodlands far from the mainstream of American life, a forlorn cluster of poverty and ignorance and dead-end jobs. He met a stew of heroes and villains right out of fiction--"Peanut" Ferguson, "Doll" Boone, "Hoss" Mack, Joe Dees, Murray January, a Klansman named "Brother
Phil," and his stripper wife known as "Wild Child"--all swirling in a maelstrom of history and heat.
Originally published in cloth by Free Press, The Ballad of Little River is Hemphill's gripping look at the southern backwoods, a chilling cautionary tale filled with both kindness and cruelty, told in the steady voice of a master storyteller and one who knows the
human heart.
‘Hemphill's instructive and finely tuned portrait . . . serves as a reminder that the world of Agee, Evans, and Faulkner is not entirely behind us.’
—New York Times
‘Skillfully researched and written with a novelist's sure touch.’
—Publishers Weekly
Paul Hemphill is a prolific journalist, sportswriter, and author of 10 books, including Leaving Birmingham: Notes of a Native Son.