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Wednesday, July 31, 2024

"The Play Pretty Book" by the Kentucky Youth Research Center & Illustrated by Tom Whitaker

 

The title of this book uses an old Appalachian expression for children's toys, Play Pretty, and was produced by the Kentucky Youth Research Center and illustrated by the renowned Kentucky artist Tom Whitaker of Magoffin County who also taught art at what is now known as the Big Sandy Community and Technical College for many years.  It is subtitled, and further described on the flyleaf as "An Appalachian Curriculum Handbook for Teachers of Preschool Children".  It is an interesting piece of work and in some ways difficult to describe in a few words. It was produced by a committee of at least 8 or 9 people from the counties of Breathitt, Clay, Elliott, Floyd, Jackson, Knott, Lee, Leslie, Letcher, Magoffin, Morgan, Owsley, Perry, and Wolfe.  The book was funded by a "special grant from the Kentucky Social Welfare Foundation."  I have extensive experience in nearly all of the 14 counties from which the committee was selected from professionals working with preschool children.  For the first 6 years of my life, I lived in Floyd County within a mile of one of the hundreds of Appalachian coal camp towns, Wayland, which is still today one of the most physically intact of such towns.  For the next 14 years of my life, I lived and was educated in Knott County but still only three miles from the Floyd County line and the town of Wayland where on August 31, 2024, I will be attending the Wayland Homecoming.  I was actually born just across the county line in Lackey, Kentucky, in Knott County; and, ever since at least 1790 my extended family and ancestors have lived in Knott and Floyd counties.  For the past 32 years, I have lived in Morgan County.  I have also worked as a social worker, mental health and substance abuse therapist in Magoffin, Breathitt, Jackson, and Wolfe counties.  I have worked as an auctioneer holding both estate and consignment auctions in Floyd, Letcher, Johnson, Magoffin, and Morgan counties. At the risk of appearing a bit overly impressed with my own resume, I believe I can state that I am an expert on Appalachian Culture.  I believe that I can state unequivocally that I am qualified to discuss the many aspects of culture, education, mental health, and most other aspects of life in any of these counties on that list of 14 since I have also spent large amounts of time in all the other counties on the list. I have also coauthored two articles about culturally appropriate human services and culturally apprroprate supervision of counselors in Appalachia which are on the permanent data base for counseling professionals of The American Counseling Association  Therefore, I am proud to say that this is a book which was and still is well suited to be used in early childhood education for the children of Appalachia.  Admittedly, the book is a bit aged, having been published in 1975, but it contains a small fortune of great cultural information which deserves to be preserved and passed on to the children whose predecessors have lived it.  

 

The book is described in the introduction in this manner:

"We sent a call out over the mountains and into the hollers.  "Tell us about your Play Pretties, the ones you make and do at home with your children and grandchildren, and those you make and do at the centers where you teach."  Mountain Folk took time to remember Play Pretties made for them when they were children, Play Pretties they make right now...It was our great, great grandparents who came to the mountains...They didn't have toy stores in those days to buy us toys so they made Play Pretties out of what was at hand, corn stalks, buttons saved from the store bought clothes, leaves, twigs, seeds, and nuts." 

The book is spiral bound, 8 1/2 x 11 inches, and 96 pages broken into six sections entitled, "Introduction, Play Pretties, Let's Go Play, Fixin' Vittles, Jist Lookin', and Frolickin'." It is illustrated throughout with black and white line drawings by Tom Whitaker who is best known for his many paintings and prints of life in Appalachia during both his own lifetime  from 1945 to 2020, and the Appalachia of his ancestors who lived in the region for several generations before he was born.  The various sections address numerous kinds of Appalachian Play Pretties, how they are made complete with instructions, how they are utilized, and also includes some recipes and songs from the region.  I had strayed into a few apparently unused copies of the book in a sizeable purchase of books from the estate of a former Morgan County principal and teacher.  If you teach young children in Appalachia or are simply committed to the preservation of Appalachian Culture and can find a copy of the book it is well worth buying and utilizing either in a preschool classroom or with your own young children and grandchildren.  It's a fun and truly unique little book. 


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