LGBTQ+ rights and creating inclusive spaces for students, especially within the context of Appalachia. He is the author of Tore All to Pieces, a fragmented novel about a small town in Appalachia and the interconnectedness of our identities, as well as Gay Poems for Red States, a bestselling collection of narrative poetry about his childhood growing up queer in Appalachia.
Carver applied the Page 69 Test to Tore All to Pieces and shared the following:
Hearing about the Page 69 Test tells me two things: (1) that I have the humour of a middle schooler, since I know that the poem “The Scientist” in my first collection begins on that page because I giggle every time I tell people to turn there, and (2) that I am not to be trusted.Visit Willie Edward Taylor Carver, Jr.'s website.
This is because when I opened Tore All to Pieces to page 69, I immediately thought, “This is one of my favorite moments.” Then I found that suspect, so I randomly tried pages 86 and 141 and had similar feelings. Still…
On page 69, Patrick, a college-aged queer hillbilly, has just spent the evening in the backseat of a car with a stranger on the strip job at a coal operation, and is now tired and also afraid to retrieve his car from the driveway of a gun-toting family that lives against a hillside. He is trying to convince his sister, Rayeanne, to take him to get it, but she is more invested in canned cheese dip and police detective television shows. She simply declares, “Fuck I will.”
This page is a true slice of the entire book—a bite of dressing with onion, turkey, and celery in it. These characters are Appalachians for Appalachia. They’re unadorned, unafraid to be messy, and unwilling to have to work to be legible outside of here. Many Appalachians know the feeling of worrying about looking serious and worthy to others. This book refuses that lens. It begins with the knowledge that these people already matter—as do their stories. Tortilla chips broken in cheese dip and lovemaking up on strip jobs?
That’s home to me.
That’s Tore All to Pieces—folks I love without wrapping paper. Hungry. Tired. Worthy.
Q&A with Willie Edward Taylor Carver, Jr.
My Book, The Movie: Tore All to Pieces.
--Marshal Zeringue













