Gulledge’s trilogy takes readers from mountains to the sea

Jim Gulledge, author of “A Poor Man’s Supper,” calls the novella “a mountain ballad in prose” that unfolds in the rugged North Carolina mountains of Appalachia during the 1880s.

Jim Gulledge

The 2017 book, which Gulledge viewed as the first installment in a three-part work which he has now completed, carries readers through a love triangle and a love gone wrong.

Main character Vancie Keller is a young woman who is trying to survive on her mother’s failing farm. She finds the course of her life is altered after two men, Josiah Buckland and Jagger Hill, settle in a nearby town. The lives of Keller, Buckland and Hill collide in climactic encounters in a multi-layered tale that is influenced by Roman and Greek mythology and by the theology of Gulledge’s Christian faith.

“A Poor Man’s Supper” received good reviews and also landed in two collections aimed at preserving literary and other aspects of North Carolina’s heritage: the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection of Appalachian State University and the North Carolina Collection of UNC Chapel Hill.

Writing “A Poor Man’s Supper” “was satisfying,” said Gulledge, who retired after 36 years as Pfeiffer University’s director of academic support services and as an assistant professor of development studies. “I never saw it as anything more than a hobby, but it’s been a fulfilling hobby.”

And it has been a hobby that keeps on giving. Gulledge has since completed “Peachland,” the second installment in the longer three-part book.

“Peachland” is set from the 1910s through the 1930s in the Anson County town of the same name, in an area where many of Gulledge’s ancestors settled and lived for generations.

Once completed, “Peachland” was combined with “A Poor Man’s Supper” in a book titled “Green Forest, Red Earth.” Gulledge expects that the experience of reading these two installments in succession will be a bit disorienting: “Where did all of those people from ‘A Poor Man’s Supper’ go and who are these new people in ‘Peachland?’ ”
He stressed that there are connections between the two installments, but that it takes some time for them to come into focus.

“I’m playing with the concept of memory,” he said. “I believe that most Americans know very little about their heritage. I also believe that we are influenced by things in the past, that the table was set for us in the past, often in ways that we may not consciously understand.”

A case in point is the brother of Gulledge’s maternal grandmother. He returned home from World War I, jumped in a pond to swim and drowned. It wasn’t until Gulledge was 40 that he understood why both his grandmother and his mother recoiled in terror whenever they came near water where he and his friends might swim.

In “Peachland,” Gulledge reimagines a similar story that does not result in the drowning of a principal character but in a happier, more redemptive ending for him following a violent and dark journey.

“I found it to be so inconceivably wrong that somebody would survive mustard gas, trench warfare, disease and transatlantic passages and then come home and drown in a pond,” Gulledge said.

“So, I created a story in which, ultimately, things turn out differently.”

A third installment recently emerged set during the 1970s in North Carolina’s coastal region, and has been connected to the installments that preceded it. It rounds out a book now titled “Green Forest, Red Earth, Blue Sea,” which is scheduled for release from Koehler Books on July 19 and is now available for pre-order through major outlets.

“What I’m doing is trying to go from the mountains to the sea,” Gulledge said. “That’s a big thing for North Carolinians. We see our state as three zones: mountains, Piedmont, and coastal plain. My hope is that the final novel will drive that idea home in a memorable fashion.”

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