In 'The Moonshiners at Hoho-Hebee Falls,' Mary Noailles Murfree crafts a vivid and textured tableau of Southern rural life at the close of the 19th century. Her narrative transports readers to the Appalachian region, intricately portraying the clandestine activities and community dynamics surrounding the practice of moonshining. Murfree's prose is marked by its keen attention to dialect and rich d...