Huey Perry, a native of Mingo County, West Virginia, USA and the son of coal miner, was named Director, Mingo County Economic Opportunity Commission project at the age of 29. Later, he became the director of the Low-Income Housing Project for Tech Foundation of West Virginia Institute of Technology. He holds a BA from Berea College, Kentucky and an MA in Political Science from Marshall University, West Virginia and is an author, entrepreneur, teacher, student, volunteer, chairman, business owner, and farmer. Jeff Biggers is the American Book award-winning author of The United States of Appalachia, and Reckoning at Eagle Creek: The Secret Legacy of Coal in the Heartland.
"This is a wonderful account of the poverty wars of the 1960s as
they unfolded in Mingo County, West Virginia. Inspired (and funded)
by the federal war on poverty, the presumably apathetic Appalachian
poor mobilized with gusto. And so did the challenged local power
structure. Read this book to learn about this moment of American
history."
Frances Fox Piven, Professor Political Science and Sociology, City
University of New York and author of Poor People's Movements: How
They Succeed, Why They Fail"Huey Perry's account of the War on
Poverty in West Virginia is a classic. Nothing I have read gives
such an insider's account of both of the promise of LBJ's
initiative, and the way this hope was largely subverted by state
and local politicians and coal companies. The book is, as well, a
quirky, funny page-turner. I was hugely indebted to this book while
writing my novel The Unquiet Earth. WVU Press is to be commended
for keeping this important account available both to historians and
the general public."
Denise Giardina, author Storming Heaven and The Unquiet Earth
Praise for the first edition: "Perry's story, told simply and
without polemics, shows how hard it is to do something that seems
simple--get funds into the hands of the poor."
Edward Magnuson, Time magazine"This book is one of those unexpected
delights that comes along every once in a while, but not often
enough."
New Republic
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