Testament: A Rural Anthology gathers the voices of 84 writers from 30 states, each holding a place for their communities and in the wider landscape of rural America. These poems, essays, and stories bear witness to what endures despite erasure, isolation, and the narratives that seek to divide us: the bonds between neighbors, the inheritance of memory, the stubborn beauty of ordinary lives, and a quiet wisdom that outlives storms and stacked decks alike.Spanning hollers and prairies, desert towns and coastal backroads, these pieces reach across regions, histories, and identities to capture the multiple intersecting truths of rural life-Black, Brown, Indigenous, LGBTQIA+, immigrant, working-class, disabled, Southern, Midwestern, Appalachian, and far beyond. Testament offers a counter-narrative to the flattening stereotypes often imposed on small towns, illuminating instead the complexity, humor, grief, tenderness, and grit found in the places many call home.Across its pages, readers will find stories of labor and lineage, of the landscapes that formed us, and of shifting definitions of family, identity, and community. The writers gathered here explore what it means to stay, to leave, to return, and to walk on land that remembers everything-soil shaped by generations of hands and histories, including those the United States has tried hardest to bury. Many pieces navigate the intersection of the personal and the political, grounding social realities in lived experience and in the language of kitchens, fields, churches, union halls, and long stretches of road.With urgency and heart, Testament creates a space to listen to one another across distance and difference. It asks what we owe to the places that shaped us. It asks, too, what we owe to the people who continue to build a future there. More than an anthology, this book is a record of inheritance and imagination-an offering of connection in a time that asks us to remember who we are to each other.