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Summer Girl

Summer Girl Anne Billson Appalachian Heritage, Volume 18, Number 3, Summer 1990, pp. 24-27 (Article) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.1990.0056 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/438290/summary Access provided at 19 Feb 2020 21:34 GMT from JHU Libraries Summer Girl 24 by Anne Billson Ellamae lived on the side of a moun- knobby root and paint a face on the cloth with a piece of charcoal from the cook- tain. There were two steps leading to the porch from the bare dirt of her front ing stove. It made a fine looking doll yard, but the back of the house was with the long green skirt slowly drying propped up on stilts with stairs leading and fading to brown with the long green down to the patch of greens and sweet days of summer. potatoes. Underneath the kitchen was a Ellamae and Coon spent most of the time under the back of the house, listen- shadowy open space that smelled of dark earth hidden from light and the flow of ing to the footsteps of her mother as she time, holding its deep secret treasures moved through the two rooms above unknown to anyone but Ellamae http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Appalachian Review University of North Carolina Press

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright © Berea College
ISSN
2692-9244
eISSN
2692-9287

Abstract

Anne Billson Appalachian Heritage, Volume 18, Number 3, Summer 1990, pp. 24-27 (Article) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.1990.0056 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/438290/summary Access provided at 19 Feb 2020 21:34 GMT from JHU Libraries Summer Girl 24 by Anne Billson Ellamae lived on the side of a moun- knobby root and paint a face on the cloth with a piece of charcoal from the cook- tain. There were two steps leading to the porch from the bare dirt of her front ing stove. It made a fine looking doll yard, but the back of the house was with the long green skirt slowly drying propped up on stilts with stairs leading and fading to brown with the long green down to the patch of greens and sweet days of summer. potatoes. Underneath the kitchen was a Ellamae and Coon spent most of the time under the back of the house, listen- shadowy open space that smelled of dark earth hidden from light and the flow of ing to the footsteps of her mother as she time, holding its deep secret treasures moved through the two rooms above unknown to anyone but Ellamae

Journal

Appalachian ReviewUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Jan 8, 2014

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