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written by Iris Lee Underwood

Eighteen-year-old Henry Blankenship dreams of building a house for his childhood sweetheart, Annie Dill, and his mother Gertie, known by their hill folk as the “woman with a shovel.” Annie dreams of six children and a room of her own to pen the unsung legacies of Appalachian women—yet Annie’s mother, Margaret Dill, President of Matewan Garden Club, has other, bigger plans for her only child. Unwittingly, Russian refugees Natalia Semenov and her son Olaf, Henry’s employers at Hunt’s Feed & Seed, come to Henry and Annie’s rescue. 
    Matewan Garden Club spans three generations and a multitude of dreams amongst the tight-knit immigrant coal camps and struggling towns along Tug Fork: Williamson, Blackberry City, Red Jacket, Thacker Holler, and countless hollers in between. Like the river’s many tributaries, these communities converge in Depression-era Matewan, West Virginia, to build enduring love amid the business of native flora and fauna—seedlings of a post-WWI Europe in chaos, the Bolshevik Revolution—and a brand new America.

 

Eighteen-year-old Henry Blankenship dreams of building a house for his childhood sweetheart, Annie Dill, and his mother Gertie, known by their hill folk as the “woman with a shovel.” Annie dreams of having six children and a room of her own in which to pen the unsung legacies of Appalachian women–yet Annie’s mother, Margaret Dill, President of the Matewan Garden Club, has other, bigger plans for her only child. Unwittingly, Russian refugees Natalia Semenov and her son Olaf, Henry’s employers at Hunt’s Feed & Seed, come to Henry and Annie’s rescue. ‘Matewan Garden Club’ spans three generations and a multitude of dreams amongst the tight-knit immigrant coal camps and struggling towns along Tug Fork: Williamson, Blackberry City, Red Jacket, Thacker Holler, and countless hollers in between. Like the river’s many tributaries, these communities converge in Depression-era Matewan, West Virginia to build enduring love amid the business of native flora and fauna–seedlings of a post-WWI Europe in chaos, the Bolshevik Revolution–and a brand-new America.

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Meet the Author

Kentucky-born Iris Lee Underwood is a Michigan-based journalist, poet, author, past president of Detroit Working Writers, and former writer in residence at the Troy Public Library. She writes an award-winning weekly column, “Honest Living,” for the Tri-City Times (Imlay City), and her bylines have appeared in the MacGuffin, Farming Magazine, Michigan Gardener, edibleWOW, Michigan History, and many metro Detroit and Kentucky- area newspapers. Iris has published three books: Encouraging Words for All Seasons (2001), “Growing Lavender” and Other Poems (2007), and The Mantle (2018), her first award-winning novel.

Iris enjoys advocating for wholesome husbandry and encouraging people to write their own story and leave their own legacy. She lives in north Oakland County with her husband, two cats, hens, and honeybees.

Kentucky-born Iris Lee Underwood is a Michigan-based journalist, poet, author, past president of Detroit Working Writers, and former writer in residence at the Troy Public Library. She writes an award-winning weekly column, “Honest Living,” for the ‘Tri-City Times’ (Imlay City), and her bylines have appeared in the ‘MacGuffin,’ ‘Farming Magazine,’ ‘Michigan Gardener,’ ‘edibleWOW,’ ‘Michigan History,’ and many metro Detroit and Kentucky-area newspapers. Iris has published three books: ‘Encouraging Words for All Seasons’ (2001); ‘“Growing Lavender” and Other Poems’ (2007); and ‘The Mantle’ (2018), her first award-winning novel. Iris enjoys advocating for wholesome husbandry and encouraging people to write their own story and leave their own legacy. She lives in north Oakland County with her husband, two cats, hens, and honeybees.

Press Kit

Details

Formats: Hardcover, Paperback, E-book

Pages: 254

ISBN HC: 978-1-958754-26-9

ISBN PB: 978-1-958754-27-6

ISBN EB: 978-1-958754-28-3

Release Date: 7/5/2023

Endorsements

“Iris Underwood takes readers on a journey through life in the Appalachians. It’s as if you are sitting on the porch with them, listening to their stories, and sharing their struggles. A must-read.”
– Randy Jorgensen, Page One Corp., Imlay City, Michigan

“A wonderfully written story of vivid, endearing characters who depict life in the early 1900s within a small West Virginia coal-mining town—an unforgettable picture of immigrants and refugees building lifelong friendships by trials and triumphs, a brighter future for generations to come.”
  – Kathi Sherril, librarian, Matewan, West Virginia

“Family. Friends. Faith. Iris Underwood takes her reader on a flower-strewn, multicultural-generational saga through and around the Appalachian town of Matewan. My book club and my garden club will love this book.”
  – Catherine Baurhenn, Port Sanilac Book Club, Port Sanilac Garden Club

“In Matewan Garden Club, Iris Underwood takes the reader on a meandering journey through some of the most complex and beautiful landscape in the Eastern United States. Built around the central thread of horticulture, the metanarrative is one of growth in, through, and in spite of all the challenges thrown into the lives of her central characters. It is imaginative, poetic, and symbolic while still being as true to the story as any book dares to get.”
  – Burton Webb, president, University of Pikeville, Kentucky

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