Elder Mountain Press, and what comes next? (via Yarnspinner Press)

Sorting through some things.
-m

I'd originally composed this blog as a requiem for a publishing effort I thought had died with one of the creators of Elder Mountain Press. In fact, I bequeathed the name "Elder Mountain" to the journal of folklore studies at Missouri State University – West Plains, and gave up the notion of publishing my own works under that imprint, and on publishing in general. It turns out I have failed in that attempt. I just keep writing things, and I belie … Read More

via Yarnspinner Press

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Light in the Attic said they’re shipping CDs to me on Oct. 13!

WOOHOO!!

Yes, the big woohoo! is finally here, or just about. Light in the Attic, the record label for the Winter’s Bone soundtrack CD, said they’re shipping CDs to me on Oct. 13 —Finally!

The production and manufacture of this collection of songs has had its challenges and delays, but it’s on its way now, and will be in our hands very soon, nearly two weeks before it appears in stores or is available online. And I hafta say, even though it’s a good bit mine, it’s absolutely delicious. Like the upcoming DVD of the movie, it contains not just the songs that actually made it into the film, but all the songs that were made ready but didn’t make the final cut. It was never a matter of quality. The film simply wasn’t long enough to contain everything. Now you get to hear it all, including written about, and inspired by the film’s one invisible character, Jessup Dolly. There’s “Bred and Buttered,” a charming ballad by John “Teardrop” Hawkes, “Man on the Run”, a powerful piece by fiddler Billy Ward, and my own “Ballad of Jessup Dolly.” And more, much more. If you want to hear what the Ozarks sounds like, it’s all here. Enjoy.


 

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KBIA Interview

Check out the KBIA interview with Marideth!

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Citizen Jane Film Festival

Check out the Citizen Jane Film Festival or visit the CJFF blog.

“Citizen Jane Film Festival 2010 Opening Film is “Tiny Furniture”, written and directed by 23-year old Lena Dunham and showing Friday night, October 15th at the Missouri Theater. Passes on sale at http://www.citizenjanefilm or at the Box Office at RagTag.”

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The Longest Night, an excerpt from my book, “These Ozark Hills”

You know, Ever since we first began to walk on our hind legs, humans have pondered the behavior of this strange wobbly planet that wanders its tipsy way across space. Rolling and weaving like a top, it gives us summer and winter, the seasons, the solstices and the holidays that have gathered around them, particularly at the passing of the longest night, and how that darkness generates the hope of the light to come. What an incredible metaphor and how deeply it speaks to us. It’s given us traditions that go back thousands of years … from the Ramaden of the Muslims, the Hannukah of the Jews, to the many and varied Celebrations of Christmas, and more.

Oh, we may huff and puff over what a Christmas tree means, and whether it’s a Christian symbol or a pagan one. But whether a Christmas tree, the menorah’s candles or the glow of the Yule log, they all bring light to the long winter’s night.

Down here in the Ozarks, most of us have come to that long winter’s night with a good helping of memories of seasons and holidays and loved ones present and past, stories to share by the fire and warm our hearts while the cider and good company take care of the rest. Here’s one to add to that batch.

When I was just a little bitty kid, I was very worried about Christmas, and I thought Santa wouldn’t be able to come and see me at all. I had been fretting about it fr some time, because we were living in this big, drafty old house that had been the town hotel in Butterfield, Missouri, and we were living in just the rooms that we could heat in the winter with an old wood stove, and there was no fireplace. And I could see that the chimney was just up on the wall there with just a little bitty hole for the stovepipe, and how in the world would Santa get down out of there. Well, he couldn’t.

Well, Christmas eve came, and there I was, fretting about Santa, and all of a sudden, I hear this big Hohoho, and the front door opens … by golly, in walks Santa Claus… tall, and all in red, and with the white beard and everything. I had never seen anyone so tall except Leonard, my aunt Juanita’s new husband, and he was gone to town somewhere. Well, Santa comes in and sets me up on his knee and reaches in his sack and pulls out these very cool toy telephones that really ring and talk to each other, and these little cars and trucks and candy, and, well, I just don’t know what all, I could hardly look at the toys, because, I mean, there he was, big as life. Bigger.

And then Santa Claus explained that, what with the chimney problem and all, he couldn’t land on the roof, he had to land in the yard, which was tricky, and he didn’t want to be seen by anybody, so he really had to get going. So he sat me down, stood up, and off down the hall and out the front door he went. Well, hey, I was nobody’s fool. If Santa Claus was parked in the yard, and if I hurried, I could see me some reindeer. So I was off down the hall like a shot, right behind him, with my mom and dad and Aunt Juanita calling after me. Well, I guess Santa realized I was on his heels, ’cause he made a left turn at the front door and tore off around the side of the house at a dead run. Well, I don’t know where he put his sleigh, but I do know that’s where we had put the woodpile.

Now I don’t really remember this part of the story, but they tell me that when I came back to the kitchen, my eyes full of wonder, I said:

“You know, when Santa Clause cusses, he sounds just like Uncle Leonard.”

I swear they told that story on me every Christmas until I was the only one of them left, and now I tell it on myself. It’s what we do on the long winter nights to warm our hearts and make the winter go quicker and bring back the light. And I guess this old wobbly planet listens, because it’s already leaning back toward the sun, and mornings are getting a little longer by a minute every day. Whatever your tradition, it’s easy to see that when we went looking for a holy season, this was a good place to put it. May this holiday season find you well and happy, your days lengthening and the light in your life strengthening. This is Marideth Sisco for These Ozarks Hills.

Order  These Ozark Hills or contact me for copies.

Order your pre-release copies of Winter’s Bone soundtrack.



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From Uncut

“The world described by Winter’s Bone is a place of woe, where when things aren’t bad they’re worse. It’s remote, inhospitable, out there on the very edge of things, impoverished, populated by brooding malcontents, linked by blood, suspicion and ill-feeling and otherwise known as the Ozarks of southern Missouri.

Daniel Woodrell, who wrote the 2006 novel that Debra Granik’s film is based so faithfully on, grew up here and it’s where his best books – among them The Death Of Sweet Mister and Tomato Red – are based. Woodrell knows this world well and the kind of people who live there even better and through his writing we can lay a small claim to also knowing them, although we can’t as wholly understand them as Woodrell does. For the outsider, these Ozarks are an alien tract. It is in many senses a land that time seems to have forgotten, passed over and left to rot. The small ruined communities scattered through this bleak outback are fiercely territorial, secret places almost, bound by ancient ties, one family linked to another in a chain of suffering, violence and a forbidding insularity. Life here is conspicuously hard, the people even harder. They live by unforgiving rules, nothing written down but understood by everyone, no-one here who doesn’t know that harsh things happen to anyone who breaks them.

In bygone times of meagre income, livings were made by the brewing and sale of moonshine whiskey, the hills and hollers littered with illegal stills. Now it’s methamphetamine modern bootleggers are cooking in ramshackle backwoods labs, the bulk of them evidently high on their own supply, which leads in turn to a certain itchy tetchiness and the constant promise of someone or other flying off the proverbial handle with the usually dire consequences that attach themselves to people with guns who are fucked up on drugs, especially when there’s money involved.

Jessup Dolly is one such crank chef, recently busted by the law and looking at serious jail time. When the film opens, he’s gone missing. The local sheriff’s convinced the notoriously irresponsible Jessup’s skipped bail, which is bad news for his family – his 17-year-old daughter Ree (Jennifer Lawrence), her younger siblings and their mother, whose mind has long-since “scattered to the high weeds”, as Woodrell puts it. Jessup’s put up their home as part of his bail bond. If he doesn’t show up the next week for his court hearing, the house and the land it stands on will be forfeit and the family evicted into a world more hostile than the one they already know.

Ree doesn’t believe that Jessup, dog that he is, would have merely run away and left them to potential destitution. Which means, she begins to reckon, that he’s dead, killed she comes to believe by even more aberrant members of the Dolly clan, the really scary ones who frighten even each other, perhaps the bunch over in nearby Hawkfall, where murderous patriarch and meth-lab king Blond Milton holds fearsome sway. Jessup has been seen recently in their creepy company and has perhaps been in criminal cahoots with them, an alliance in the wake of his arrest that’s gone sour. Ree can see how the deeply suspicious Miltons might easily have convinced themselves that Jessup has sold them out to save himself, which of course means curtains for Jessup, according to what Woodrell calls the “remorseless blood-soaked commandments” that govern the lives of this otherwise lawless brood.

If Jessup’s been killed to keep him from talking, Ree will have to prove to the law that he’s dead, which means she’ll have to find his body. There are people in these hollers and townships who might know where her pa is, and she’s related to most of them.

Her kin are everywhere, but no-one is inclined to help her or even talk about what might have occurred to her father. Whenever she tells anyone about the terrible pinch she’s in and why she’s desperate to find Jessup, everyone retreats into an ominous silence.

This includes his brother, Ree’s uncle, the satanic Teardrop (John Hawke), a man feared by men who would otherwise describe themselves as fearless. Teardrop seems at first to be the worst of his kind, everything bad about him made even more dreadful by his addiction to the crank he’s been cooking up for years, most of which by the dank deranged look of him he’s ended up snorting himself. He has the look of someone who’s spent time in hell and liked it there. As Ree’s search for Jessup and the truth of what happened to him brings her dangerously close to Blond Milton and his thuggish tribe, Teardrop, however, becomes her one ally, no-one but Teardrop with so little thought for his own life that he might easily give it up if it comes to a reckoning with Blond and his
gap-toothed minions.

Granik has directed only one other film (2004’s Down To The Bone), but she brings an astonishing authority to Winter’s Bone, which the more you watch it seems a masterpiece of storytelling, lean and uncluttered, subtle and urgent. It’s a film full of mounting tensions and an atmosphere of dread and incipient terror that will make you uncomfortably familiar with the edge of your seat, which is where you’ll mostly watch it from.

Winter’s Bone looks terrific, too. Michael McDonough’s cameras capture the cold hard beauty of the Ozark locations with an almost documentary sense of place. At times we could be watching an ethnographic portrait of a remote rural society. But the film works, too, as an intense and gripping thriller and is further distinguished by its performances, particularly by the two leads. Newcomer Lawrence is breathtakingly good as Ree and an Oscar nomination surely will be forthcoming. Hawkes as Teardrop, meanwhile, is a searing presence, malign, heroic and unforgettable in the best American film since The Hurt Locker.”

Allan Jones

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Comment via E mail

I just love this; getting comments about Winter’s Bone in my E mail box.

Hello Marideth
The film just arrived at our local cinema in the South of England, and (I) saw it with my wife as an anniversary present to ourselves (sneaked along there during the afternoon, the kids at school!). Marvellous film, very atmospheric, music/songs great, looking for the soundtrack now!?
Very well done (does the sun ever shine in the Ozarks?).
M.

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