NOTE: THIS WEBSITE IS A WORK IN PROGRESS. RESOURCES AND DATA ARE ADDED DAILY.

IMPORTANT: We are in urgent need of funding to keep this project alive and ensure its future. If you’re enjoying the site and see our vision for the project, please consider contributing to the Melungeon Roots crowdfunding campaign today. It is only with your help that we can continue this work.   MORE INFO / DONATE

Thanks so much for your support!   –   Jes

Loading

0

Kinfolks: Falling Off the Family Tree

Resource ID: 1463
Type: non-fiction, book

share:

Some buttons on this page link to external websites. If you visit one of our affiliate sites and make a purchase, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you.  More info

author:

Lisa Alther

editor:

n/a

publisher:

date:

3.1.2012

ISBN:

9781611451764

pages:

288

notes:

. . .

contents:

description:

Most of us grow up knowing who we are and where we come from. Lisa Alther’s mother hailed from New York, her father from Virginia. One day a babysitter told Lisa about the Melungeons: six-fingered child-snatchers who hid in caves. Forgetting about these creepy kidnappers until she had a daughter of her own, Lisa learned they were actually an isolated group of dark-skinned people—often with extra thumbs—living in East Tennessee. But who were they? Descendants of Sir Walter Raleigh’s Lost Colony? Kin of shipwrecked Portuguese or Turkish sailors? Or were they the children of frontiersman, or displaced Native Americans? Part sidesplitting travelogue, part how (and how not) to climb your family tree, Alther’s Kinfolks casts light on a little-known part of America’s contentious racial history; it shimmers with wicked humor, dazzles with wit, and demonstrates just how wacky and wonderful our human family truly is.

ancestors:

surnames:

events:

CMOS:

Lisa Alther. Kinfolks: Falling Off the Family Tree. 1st ed. New York, NY: Arcade Publishing, 2012.

MLA:

New Report

Close