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The
Inner Islands
by
Bland Simpson
photography by
Ann Cary Simpson
Down
East Rambler
Bland Simpson captures the vanishing heritage of the
sound country
by Kirk Ross, (Durham) Independent Weekly
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Bland Simpson
didn't start out to write a series of books on the life and
history of North Carolina's sound country; it just sort of happened
that way.
Simpson,
a literary professor at UNC, Red Clay Rambler, playwright, songwriter
and storyteller, began wandering again the northeastern coastal lands
of his childhood in the mid-1980s. The Elizabeth City native started
out with a book about the Dismal Swamp, then in 1997 produced Into
the Sound Country: A Carolinian's Coastal Plain. He kidded himself
about empire building: "I grabbed one swamp and then wanted them
all." He recognized, though, that he was among a group of writers
filling in the blanks about coastal North Carolina history and culture.
"There are all sorts of books about Western North Carolina and
the mountains," he says, but except for the work of a handful of
writers like David Stick, there was not a lot of work being done to
capture the fleeting history and culture on the other end of the state.
In Simpson's
latest, The Inner Islands: A Carolinian's Sound Country Chronicle,
he traveled the band of islands along the state's sounds and rivers:
some of them turned by time and tide to shoals or piles of oyster shells,
most of them baring some kind of indication of habitation and abandonment.
They are often eerie places, a fact brought home by Simpson's wife,
Ann Cary Simpson, through her photos of hunt clubs, forts and fish camps
in ruin amid a landscape of moss-draped yaupon and live oak.
Each island,
Simpson says, has its own story, and the book moves from his recollections
to historical accounts and oral histories. There's Shell Castle Island--barely
more than an oyster shell reef near Ocracoke--whose docks once
dominated maritime commerce in the late 1700s; and the marshes of the
Curritucks where the great hunt clubs flourished. There are plenty of
stories and legends, but Inner Islands is a personal chronicle
of Simpson's marvel at the unique inner shoreline of the state.
The stories
and songs that come out of his travels to the sound country are part
of the work, he says. But so is conveying a message about the intricate
ecosystems in and around the islands. And like the wildlife, he notes
that long-held ways of life are threatened as well, as the state's inner
coast makes way for baby boomers retiring to the water. The loss of
fish houses and docks to condos, he says, is "busting up the fabric
of the commercial fishing business."
But the
islands, most of them anyway, are still hard to get to, still a world
away from the mainland. "When you're out there, you're out there."
And while it's hard to escape that sense of desolation, there's also
what he calls a "kinship with the ephemeral"--a knowledge
that the island itself is as temporary as those who inhabit it.
"Even
in the dead of winter," he says. "It's a beautiful place to
be."
Bland Simpson
will host a launch party for The Inner Islands: A Carolinian's Sound
Country Chronicle this Thursday, Oct. 26, at 7 p.m. at Market Street
Books & Maps in Chapel Hill.
back
to Bland Simpson's book page
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