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Autumn Bends the Rebel Tree
 
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Autumn Bends the Rebel Tree
A Novel
Carolyn Guy

Canterbury House Publishing
978-0-9825396-9-9
$16.95 paperback
6 x 9 
264 pages
May 2011
Fiction

Autumn Bends the Rebel Tree is a family saga set in the 1930s and ’40s in the mountains of northwest North Carolina that will appeal to fans of Olive Ann Burns and Lee Smith—anyone who enjoys strong female characters, Southern literature, and a great sense of place.

After her husband dies at the young age of 42, Clarinda’s strong character and deep love for her children manifest as she fights for her family's survival. Of the 17 children she bore, 11 still live at home, ranging in age from 11 months to 17 years. In order to survive, Clarinda battles the grim reaper when the cabin catches fire at midnight during a blizzard;she hooks rag rugs and trades them for children's secondhand clothes;she works the harvest fields, accepting corn as payment for her labor;she's a washer-woman for the well-off.

After five years of widowhood, Clarinda marries a prosperous older man with a large farm. Instead of a providing a good home for her and her children, the marriage drives her family apart. During this time, she loses a son in World War II. Hard labor, a grouchy husband, and the unhappiness of her children lay heavy on her heart. She turns her face homeward—toward her cabin on Levi's Mountain, and she and her children walk off the farm with nothing but the clothes on their backs.

At once, the entire family gathers for a homecoming get-together. Happiness and joy abound for the moment, but winter is nigh at hand and they have nothing to sustain them. Soon, Clarinda's husband shows up weeping. She refuses to return to his farm but has a plan for reconciliation. He must provide half of all living expenses for the family. At first, he balks, but considering his lonely plight of gnawing on last year’s corn cobs by a cold hearthstone, he accepts her proposal.

Clarinda’s sacrifices are praiseworthy and her heart-warming family stories, some funny, some poignant, must be told. 

Praise for Autumn Bends the Rebel Tree

"One of the most authentic portrayals of 1930s and 1940s Appalachian mountain life I've read. Carolyn Guy weaves a tapestry of family stories of courage, love and survival, which ring true. With rich landscape and cultural details, this novel gives the reader a true view of historical Appalachian life in northwestern North Carolina."
—Donna Akers (Warmuth), author of regional historical non-fiction and Legends, Stories and Ghostly Tales of Abingdon and Washington County, VA