The Denver Post

Dolly Parton and the women who love her

- By Sarah Smarsh ( Scribner) By John Williams

Dolly Parton’s no stranger to attention, and she’s been in the news a lot lately.

She recently released a holiday special on Netflix. She has a new book out. She … ( checks notes) … might have helped us move closer to the end of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Parton’s everywhere, and I don’t hear many people complainin­g about it.

As Sarah Smarsh writes in her own new book, “She Come by It Natural,” Parton is a “universall­y beloved icon recognized as a creative genius with a goddesssiz­ed heart.” Smarsh’s book follows Parton’s rise to iconic status through the context of the singer’s roots, and of the workingcla­ss, rural roots of many of her fans. Below, Smarsh discusses the book’s genesis in 2016, what surprised her at a concert of Parton’s that same year, an actor who has inspired her and more.

Q. When did you first get the idea to write this book?

A: During the election year of 2016, I was writing a lot of commentary, challengin­g the narrative that the white working class is somehow monolithic­ally rightwing. At that same moment, there was a lot of misogyny in the air, in part because we had a female presidenti­al candidate. I was thinking a lot about the intersecti­on of gender, class and place. Dolly Parton was doing a big arena tour for the first time in many years, and I could see that she was a unifying and universall­y beloved figure in the midst of this divisive climate.

My first book, “Heartland,” is very much about that same intersecti­on, and I guess I was shifting gears to a more journalist­ic approach to those same themes. I wasn’t a Dolly superfan and didn’t grow up that way, but country music was definitely a cultural pillar of my formative years — and still, in my life today. So Dolly felt like a very familiar figure to serve as a springboar­d for a larger discussion of society.

Q : What’s the most surprising thing you learned while writing it?

A: A pleasant research task was attending a couple of shows on the 2016 tour. I saw her in Austin and Kansas City. In the latter instance, I took along my grandmothe­r, who figures in the book as a similarly quick- witted woman who was born just a few months apart from Parton in similar circumstan­ces. She lived many of the stories Parton told in her early songwritin­g, about poor women who are vulnerable to abuse, sexism, unsupporte­d pregnancie­s.

This was the first time either of us had seen Parton live. I was surprised by the crowd at those shows; not the size, obviously, but the diversity in just about every way you can imagine. I already knew that Parton is an icon in the LGBTQ community, and within the crowd a group of Dolly drag queens were leading the audience in swaying together to some slow song. I was amazed to see, among the people swaying, old men in cowboy hats, goth- looking teenagers, some dude wearing muddy boots with a T- shirt that said “Proud Redneck.” Witnessing this in 2016 made me even more suspicious of the political tropes that are still out there today. There was something simultaneo­usly surprising and heartening: If we’re divided at the ballot box but not at a Dolly Parton concert, then maybe there’s hope if we find the right language for communicat­ing.

Q : In what way is the book you wrote different from the book you set out to write?

A: The most obvious way is that I didn’t intend for it to be a book at all. The music magazine No Depression was offering a new fellowship for a writer to basically go deep on the sociocultu­ral significan­ce of the roots music genre, and that opportunit­y lit me up because country music is rarely given considerat­ion as a sophistica­ted art form. The country music written and sung by women like Dolly was the formative feminist text of my life. So I applied and pitched

Dolly as an exemplar of an overlooked, under- articulate­d version of working- class feminism.

I wrote a four- part series over the course of 2017 — No Depression is a quarterly. It’s a great magazine, but it’s niche in its readership. And then last winter, my publisher suggested making it into a book. I wrote a foreword and lightly updated the content, but ultimately the book is a snapshot of when it was written, when the Women’s March was new and we had an opportunit­y — and I would say an imperative — to redefine feminism as a more inclusive movement.

Q : What creative person ( not a writer) has influenced you and your work?

A: It would make sense to talk about a musician, I think, and there are many that would fit the bill, but I’m actually going to say Jodie Foster. When I was a kid and a teenager, she played so many characters who I deeply identified with.

Q : Persuade someone to read “She Come by It Natural” in 50 words or less.

A: Dolly Parton, daughter of the rural white working class, is the opposite of Donald Trump.

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