Valley Girl: Appalachia’s Future Poet Laureate Takes on Mountaintop Removal
In the big hard region known as Appalachia, routinely maligned or mythologized as some single vision backwater in the American Dream, a long line of acclaimed poets has regularly astonished a national readership by drawing on the rich cultural treasury and diverse bevy of voices that transcend any map or media images.
Nonetheless, it takes a dazzling new chapbook of poetry, every now and then, to remind us that the extraordinary fountain of Appalachian letters continues to churn out some of the most original, innovative and downright fearless voices today.
Crystal Good’s debut collection of poetry, Valley Girl, marks the entry of such an astonishing new voice into the national poetry circuit. Capturing the conflicts and ambitions of a generation seemingly adrift and deeply rooted at the same time, Good unflinchingly casts her poetic spell on the “quantum phases” of “things that matter” in her native West Virginia, from mountaintop removal mining in the coalfields to the NASCAR-Talladega Speedway to “rabbit holes” in Affrilachia where “the rainbow ends,” with the masterful ease of Appalachia’s future poet laureate.

In the book’s title poem, “Valley Girl,” Good intermittently chides and consoles a friend’s teetering aspirations in Appalachia’s changing times, “tangling and twisting all that good hair”:
‘Cause we ain’t got no choice no time to wait for the next industry. Damn didn’t we get degrees?Coal miner’s daughter is now chemical plant step kid.
Dear Mamma’s gettin’ divorced again. Pharmaceuticalpesticide love child — downsized without support. Gone
are brand new cars, money to spend on hotel rooms, Nike shoes.Cross the county it’s true. Stability’s leaving town like rolling coal
all we can do is stay — shelter in place.
With an unblinking eye on her state’s humanitarian crisis of mountaintop removal mining, a process of literally blowing up mountains and leaving the neighboring waterways and communities in ruin, Good courageously blends gender issues with West Virginia’s mountains and mining horrors in a brilliant juxtaposition of stripping:
“A concubine of wild mountain orchids
grooming landing strip — for them hometown
millionaires to fly in — then sell — them out
always reminding them, they really not worth much.”
A frequent performer of her work, check out Good reading from “Boom Boom” on mountaintop removal..






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