Good overview, great read.Reviewed by Michael F. Kennedy, 2005-10-10
I feel like I'm cheating the writer by giving it only four stars,
because this book's great strength is its biggest flaw: It's a very
good read. This is a broad outline of West Virginia history with
some of the more important events colored in a bit. It's a bit over
200 pages and reads a like a novel.
I wish this had been the text we used in West Virginia history
class back in junior high in the instead of that dreadful,
trivia-laden textbook.
It's divided into chapters named after some of West Virginia places
where major events in state history took place, (Point Pleasant,
Harpers Ferry, Droop Mountain, Tug Fork, Paint Creek, Hawks Nest,
Buffalo Creek) but the chapters cover far more in geography and
time than the events that made the places famous. The Droop
Mountain chapter, for instance covers not only that battle, but
most of the Civil War and statehood period.
So it's not all-inclusive (Jim Comstock tried to do that with his
West Virginia encyclopedia), but that's what makes it a pleasure to
read and not a chore. One night when I couldn't sleep I picked up
Williams' book and started in the middle, in the Paint Creek
chapter. I was more than 30 pages into the book and into the next
chapter before I could sleep.
The Story of the Mountain StateReviewed by James Gallen, 2002-07-06
"West Virginia" is a fast reading introduction to the history of the Mountain State. Beginning with a brief section on the region from Revolutionary times, the book quickly moves on to the Civil War era which gave birth to West Virginia statehood.
The Unionist sentiment in the Western part of Virginia resulted, in 1863, in the only case of succession of a portion of one state from another in American history. The Civil War in West Virginia is portrayed both in its military and political aspects.
Williams tells the story of the evolution of West Virginia from the political, economic and social perspectives. The fabled Hatfield-MCcoy feud is given ample attention, as is the Hatfield who served his state as governor and United States Senator.
In a state with an undistinguished political history, Williams introduces the reader to a series of governors, senators and political bosses who struggled with absentee landowners, rail and coal concerns and labor leaders to lead West Virginia through the 19th and 20th centuries.
The story of West Virginia is a story of hope and despair, promise and danger, fulfillment and disappointment. Through it all Williams presents its story as a drama, partly heroic and partly tragic. Not a partisan Mountaineer booster, Williams tells the good with the bad. For anyone wishing to know the history of our country, state by state, this book fills in one piece of the American mosaic in a most pleasant fashion.