Floyd Loves Barbara Kingsolver
“Having something to say is more important than guessing what people want to hear.” ~ Barbara Kingsolver, spoken at the Floyd County High School auditorium, September 16, 2006
The line of people waiting to meet the acclaimed author, Barbara Kingsolver, wound from the high school library table where she was signing books, out through the library door, into the hall, up the stairs, and into the school lobby. At the close of her talk, I rushed from my seat like a single woman determined to catch the bouquet at a wedding and discovered the fast track to her table. It involved a first stop at a book sale table, set up by the owners of Floyd’s independent bookstore, noteBooks. After purchasing a copy of “Small Wonders,” I was ushered into a much smaller line that dovetailed with the longer one.
I’m happy with my personally signed copy of a book written by Barbara Kingsolver, but the book I really wanted wasn’t for sale. The one I’m most interested in is the non-fiction one that she read from that evening, called “Animal, Vegetable, and Magical,” due out in May.
Barbara, who grew up in rural Kentucky, was recently living with her family in Tucson, Arizona, but living in Tucson – which she referred to as a “space station” – made her nervous. Everything that sustains life has to be flown or trucked in, she told us. She estimated that each item on her family’s dinner table that wasn’t grown in their garden probably traveled “Fifteen hundred miles” to get there. The water in Tucson, brought in from other places, is called “borrowed water.” “Like a keenex,” she joked, “do you really want to give it back?”
So, what does a person do when they know the oil companies are at the Arctic Preserve door with drills, and that the food on their family dinner table is part of the reason why? With a degree in biology, a history of environmental activism, and a background in journalism and science writing, Barbara decided that the subject of her next book would revolve around an experiment, one that would involve her whole family. They would get all their food from local sources. In order to pursue what she called “food choices with family values,” she and her family set about to move to a farm in Southwest Virginia, which is how her new book begins.
As a speaker, Barbara is engaging, articulate, and comfortable in her own skin. She’s also funny, so much so that my husband referred to her talk as stand-up comedy! I don’t think anyone in the audience that night will forget the scene Barbara read, the one about the family-farm turkey that came-on to her husband. The hilarity of the “turkey hokey pokey” story was preceded by an account of the state of commercial turkey production, in which commercially raised turkeys not only can not reproduce on their own, but because they are bred to produce the maximum amount of meat and are top-heavy, they can’t even walk without tipping over. Barbara’s reading illustrated one of her strongest strengths as writer. She knows how to take a disturbing situation and educate her readers about it in a humorous or otherwise entertaining way. In the case of using local food, there’s nothing to protest or boycott, “doing the right thing is fun!” Barbara said.
In telling the story of her family’s experience living on local food, Barbara’s youngest daughter Lilly figured in. Lilly has an egg business, and because she was the subject of some of the passages read, towards the end of her talk, Barbara invited Lilly on stage. The audience cheered Lilly on, as though they had a vested interest in the success of her egg business, a business that Lilly hoped would eventually allow her to make enough money to buy a horse. “Did you get your horse?” one woman asked during the question and answer period. “Not yet,” Lilly answered.
A lot of us in the audience understood the experiment that Barbara and her family had taken on, either because we were from a local farming tradition, or because we moved to Floyd years ago for the same reason Barbara and her family had moved. Since the back-to-the-land movement of my generation, which started in the late 70s and brought so many of us to Floyd, interest in the sustainability of using local food has grown. As I looked around the auditorium, I saw the familiar faces of neighbors, homesteaders, market gardeners, wild-craft herbalists, and those involved any one of the several Community Supported Agriculture Farms in Floyd. I couldn’t help but smile as I imagined our collective chickens, gardens, and goats.
It turns out that Floyd and Barbara Kingsolver have a lot in common. The Harvest Moon, which started as a small health food coop over 20 years ago and is now a large two story building on a sprawling lot, was hosting a major event on the day of the evening that Barbara spoke. It was a Slow Foods Event, called “A Taste of Floyd,” where an array of locally raised and grown foods could be sampled and purchased under a canopy of colorful tents. It was not a coincidence that Barbara’s appearance was scheduled on the same day as “A Taste of Floyd,” and, in fact, Harvest Moon staff members have reported that Barbara did indeed attend. She may have also attended Floyd’s first Country Fair, part of an annual Homecoming and Harvest Festival in recognition of the county’s 175th year anniversary, where homegrown fruits and vegetables, canned goods, baked goods, jams, jellies, and pickles were featured and competed for blue ribbons.
Apparently, Barbara liked what she saw (and tasted) in Floyd. She began her talk that evening by announcing to the crowd, “I really love Floyd.” Considering the filled auditorium and the reception the audience gave her, it was obvious that Floyd loves Barbara right back.
Post Note: The donated proceeds from “An Evening with Barbara Kingsolver” are earmarked for the expansion of the Floyd Jessie Peterman Library. Special thanks go to Floyd’s “Friends of the Library,” and in particular Mary Stratton, for inviting Barbara to Floyd, and to Barbara for loving libraries enough to accept the invitation. Read more about Barbara’s trip to Floyd at this Loose Leaf post entitled “Advice from Barbara Kingsolver.”
October 1st, 2006 11:57 pm
As I am sure you know, Cayce said many years ago that we should all eat foods produced within 15-20 miles of where we live, otherwise it is not beneficial to our bodies. You and Barbara have the right idea!
October 2nd, 2006 9:41 am
How inspiring….I can’t wait to read her new book.
I was thinking about this as I ate some yummy raspberries this weekend. I should have been eating the apples we picked!
October 2nd, 2006 10:04 am
What a great experience to meet such a gifted writer in person. I have read Poisonwood Bible and The Bean Tree. Didn’t realize she had a new one coming out, I’ll be watching for it. What can be said about The Harvest Moon, wish we had something like that in Westcliffe.
October 2nd, 2006 10:43 am
Your town sounds like a very cool place to live. Simplistic, healthy and cultured. It’s what we all want. How far is it to the next really big town? It’s nice to be independent and away from the big city influence.
I just bought another copy of Barbara’s ,”The Poisonwood Bible” at a used bookstore just because I loved it and want to pass it on to someone who hasn’t read it.
She’s quite an eclectic writer. I’ll have to put 2 more of hers on my lst to read. I’m an extremely slow reader for some reason (maybe something to do with Chronic Fatigue and concentration etc.)and don’t actually read a great many books so I want them to be excellent!)
October 2nd, 2006 11:32 am
We’re an hour from Roanoke, a small big city, and only about 30 minutes from the big strip mall in Christiansburg where you can get anything you want or don’t. From taking Floyd’s historic Walking Tour recently and writing about it, I learned that since at least the mid 1800s Floyd has had a mix of traditional mountain culture with a shot of new infiltration.
I’ve been reading “Word Freak,” the book about Scrabble tournaments all summer!
October 2nd, 2006 11:58 am
Really enjoyed reading all of this and I must say, I think you’ve gotten me enticed with Barbara as an author….Still have a stack of books to read, but the Bean Trees is next on my list. I heard it’s exceptional and I admit to never having read one of her books. So many books….and so little time!
October 2nd, 2006 12:11 pm
Sounds like a skilled speaker. I’ve been leaning more towards guessing what people want to hear. But just speaking is less tiring.
October 2nd, 2006 3:24 pm
Makes me wish I could have been at the event – you may want to check the “Mary” name – I think it would be Stratton
October 2nd, 2006 4:42 pm
Thanks, Kate. I fixed it!
October 2nd, 2006 7:25 pm
Mentioning again just one more time about her beautiful name. But this time with a mention of Kingsolver’s daughters name – Lilly! (look at all those L’s)
Perhaps I feel a post bubbling regarding such names.
Also, I recently read (sorry I can’t find it) that those who are well rounded spiritually are almost always humerous as well.
Barbara Kingsolver seems to fit the bill.
The book coming in May sounds great.
October 2nd, 2006 10:19 pm
The evening with Barbara sounds very entertaining and enlightening. I would enjoy her new book and will have to make a note to look for it in the spring.
That is one reason I am determined to learn to better ride my horse. I very well may need him to get around anywhere in the future, maybe very near future!!! lol.
October 2nd, 2006 11:42 pm
Why does everything good happen in Floyd? Sounds like an amazing and inspiring evening–and I definitely will be looking for her new book.
October 3rd, 2006 12:45 am
Hey there – what a lucky visit that is. Another great moment in Floyd history.
You better watch out or we’re all going to move to Floyd to be with you and those cool Floydians. You might have to start a secret blog and to code name Floyd so you can keep things underground and prevent the starbuckserts and the barnes and nobblers from taking over. Or are they there already???
October 3rd, 2006 2:00 am
One of the highlights of my Brooklyn childhood was when I grew too old for our back yard swing set and my parents converted the yard into a vegetable garden. Valuable lessons there! Great entry.
October 3rd, 2006 10:00 am
Congrats on being featured on that website! That’s great! This is a neat post! No wonder why it was chosen! Your area sounds so…so…so nifty! That’s great that there has been a Health Foods or COOP in your area for 20 years! I wish we had one here but I have to travel over an hour and a half to get to one!
October 28th, 2007 9:01 am
I am reviewing “Animal, Vegetable and Mineral” for my book group in Connecticut in November 2007. This web site will be of incredible help with the review. Thanks.
July 5th, 2009 1:23 pm
I am trying to find local providers of herbs. My cousin Jo has interstitial cystitis and is trying to find relief.