Fun piece of trivia (or at least a rumor we’ve heard) about our first Thomas Wolfe Memorial Award Winner - when “The French Broad” was published in 1955 many people thought it was a romance novel about a French woman... ;) . In reality, this wonderful book is about our river: “In 1955, seven years before the publication of Rachel Carson’s famed Silent Spring, another woman fought to issue her own groundbreaking analysis of environmental concerns. Wilma Dykeman spent years studying the rivers of western North Carolina, but after she wrote her book The French Broad, her publishers tried to remove the chapters on pollution. However, Dykeman prevailed, and in addition to bringing river contamination to the nation’s attention, won the Thomas Wolfe Memorial Trophy, and inclusion in the Rivers of America series. The river itself became an important aspect of Dykeman’s work, as she focused much of her life and writing in the mountains of western North Carolina and east Tennessee.” . . . #frenchbroadriver #wilmadykeman #frenchbroad #wnchistory #exploreasheville #readlocal #avlhistory #museumfromhome #read #bookstagram (at French Broad River) https://www.instagram.com/p/B_EEUzKBp9G/?igshid=1ouwzl6udcwj3