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In Appalachian folklore, the crows don't lie. They don't call out unless something is coming. In this episode, Annelise goes deeper into the specific folklore traditions she wove into All the River Took, as a living language that breathes, warns, and bites if you ignore it. She explores the three unwritten rules of the Appalachian wilderness, the crow as omen and messenger, and the figure of the mountain elder who holds the old knowledge the rest of the world has forgotten. Along the way, she reads directly from her novel, tracing how folklore shapes the story from the very first chapter to its darkest moments. This is Gothic fiction doing what it does best — taking the dark seriously, and trusting that the truth lives there.
By Annelise Stephenson PowellIn Appalachian folklore, the crows don't lie. They don't call out unless something is coming. In this episode, Annelise goes deeper into the specific folklore traditions she wove into All the River Took, as a living language that breathes, warns, and bites if you ignore it. She explores the three unwritten rules of the Appalachian wilderness, the crow as omen and messenger, and the figure of the mountain elder who holds the old knowledge the rest of the world has forgotten. Along the way, she reads directly from her novel, tracing how folklore shapes the story from the very first chapter to its darkest moments. This is Gothic fiction doing what it does best — taking the dark seriously, and trusting that the truth lives there.