Books

Tar Hollow Trans: Essays.

cover of the book Tar Hollow Trans: Essays by Stacy Jane Grover. The cover of the book features a water color burning barn surrounded in a square shape by the book title. 2024 Lambda Literary Award Transgender Nonfiction Finalist. 2024 Weatherford Award in Appalachian Nonfiction Finalist

“I’ve lived a completely ordinary life, so much that I don’t know how to write a transgender or queer or Appalachian story, because I don’t feel like I’ve lived one…. Though, in searching for ways to write myself in my stories, maybe I can find power in this ordinariness.”

Raised in southeast Ohio, Stacy Jane Grover would not describe her upbringing as “Appalachian.” Appalachia existed farther afield—more rural, more country than the landscape of her hometown.

Grover returned to the places of her childhood to reconcile her identity and experience with the regional culture and with the people who had raised her. She began to reflect on her memories and discovered that group identities like Appalachian and transgender are linked by more than just the stinging brand of social otherness.

In Tar Hollow Trans, Grover explores her transgender experience through common Appalachian cultural traditions. In “Dead Furrows,” a death vigil and funeral leads to an investigation of Appalachian funerary rituals and their failure to help Grover cope with the grief of being denied her transness. “Homeplace” threads family interactions with farm animals and Grover’s coming out journey, illuminating the disturbing parallels between the American Veterinary Association’s guidelines for ethical euthanasia and the World Professional Association for Transgender Health’s guidelines for transgender care.

Together, her essays write transgender experience into broader cultural narratives beyond transition and interrogate the failures of concepts such as memory, metaphor, heritage, and tradition. Tar Hollow Trans investigates how the labels of transgender and Appalachian have been created and understood and reckons with the ways the ever-becoming transgender self, like a stigmatized region, can find new spaces of growth.

 

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Praise for Tar Hollow Trans

Publisher’s Weekly “A unique, fascinating collection”

Foreward Reviews Tar Hollow Trans…makes the ordinary nowhere of Grover’s experiences into a place worthy of habitation.

The Progressive Magazine “Tar Hollow Trans is “filled with challenging history and identity politics, to be meditated upon as a prompt for self-reflection on one’s own personal narrative.”

Still: The Journal: “The appearance of Grover’s voice in Appalachian literature cannot be overstated.”

Southern Review of Books:Beautifully Goth and Full of Appalachian Queerness”

Lambda Literary Most Anticipated Books of June 2023

Autostraddle 81 Queer and Feminist Books of Summer 2023

Southern Review of Books “Books to Celebrate Pride June 2023”

Kenyon Review Summer 2023 Reading Recommendations

Book Riot 9 of the Best Nonfiction Books of June

Book Riot Most Anticipated Books of 2023

LGBTQ Reads Most Anticipated Nonfiction of Jan-Jun ’23

Deep South Magazine Pride Month Reading List

EBSCO “Digital Readings Picks to Celebrate Pride Month”

Appalachian Learning Initiative Pride 2023 Recommended Reading

Bookriot 11 of the Best Memoirs by Transgender and Nonbinary Authors

Bookriot The Complexity of Race and Gender in Appalachia

Excerpts

LitHub “The Rituals of Death and Dying in Central Appalachia. Stacy Jane Grover on the Quiet Shuffle of a Death Vigil”

Belt Magazine “They Shrink from Hard Work”

Press

Poets & Writers “10 Questions for Stacy Jane Grover”

Belt Magazine “Any Power that Holds: An Interview with Stacy Jane Grover”

Read Appalachia Podcast What is Appalachian Literature PIII

TransLash “In Community and at Home as a Trans Person in Rural Appalachia

LargeHeartedBoy Tar Hollow Trans Playlist

 

 

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