OCTOBER 2019 64
F
or a boarder at Thomas Wolfe’s sprawling
childhood home in the early 1900s, it could
be a nightmare: a curious young boy, left to
roam freely in the oddly configured
structure, spies on life around him and later
turns his observations into a renowned novel, Look
Homeward, Angel.
The book, published in 1929, was a coming-of-age,
tell-all tale set in the western North Carolina town of
Altamont, a fictitious name given Asheville, where the
novelist grew up in the boardinghouse run by his
enterprising mother, Julia Wolfe. The domicile, known as
Old Kentucky Home and called “Dixieland” in the book,
caused a rift in the large Wolfe family. Today, it stands
amid modern city buildings as a monument that brings to
life the writer’s somewhat skewed childhood.
“As soon as the book was published, people started
showing up to see [the house]. It is a character in his
writings,” says Tom Muir, historic site manager at the
Thomas Wolfe Memorial in the heart of the bustling
mountain burg. “Look Homeward, Angel launched him onto
the American literary scene and immortalized this house.”
Almost immediately after Look Homeward, Angel’s
release, lists appeared identifying the real people in
Asheville upon whom the 200-plus characters were based.
Not all of them, including his own mother, appreciated
Thomas’s vivid and less-than-complimentary descriptions.
Some even spewed death threats. The author, avoiding the
backlash of family and hometown friends, didn’t return to
Asheville for nearly eight years, instead teaching and
writing in New York and traveling throughout the U.S. and
Europe during his self-imposed exile.
Yet the Old Kentucky Home remained a part of the family’s
fabric during his entire lifetime: Thomas’s brother Ben and
his father, W.O. Wolfe, died there; his two sisters married
there; and Thomas’s own wake was held in the parlor.
Boardinghouses were popular lodgings in the early
20th century, particularly for single women and widows on
a fixed income, families moving to the city from rural
areas, and travelers. Tom says the menagerie of tenants
gave Thomas ample fodder for his novels, plays, and