Listen to the Obituary
Donald Ray Caudill
Known by family as Ducky and in stories and stages as Pearlie Jenkins
Some people leave behind resumes. Others leave behind echoes.
Donald “Ducky” Caudill born in the hills of Eastern Kentucky October 31st 1971 was known to many as Pearlie Jenkins—left behind a little bit of both, but mostly the kind of echo you feel more than you hear. The kind that lingers in a guitar string still humming, in a line of writing that hits harder the second time you read it, in a conversation about life that somehow never really ends.
He passed from this world on Saturday April 11th 2026 at his home in Wayne County Ky, and in doing so, left a quiet space that won’t easily be filled.
Pearlie wasn’t famous. He wasn’t rich, either. What he had was something harder to come by—a wide, restless mind and a heart that refused to stay small. He once stood shoulder to shoulder with dreamers in Nashville, with the kind of honesty most people spend a lifetime trying to learn.
He was a working man. The kind who showed up, did the job, and carried stories home with him. A Gulf War veteran, he later poured his time into working with boys at Sunrise, and then into his role with the U.S. Postal Service. But the real work—the soul work—happened in quieter places. At the kitchen table. In the cab of his truck on a lunch break. At the end of a long road where the noise of the world couldn’t quite reach him.
That’s where the songs were born. That’s where the stories lived.
Pearlie wrote music that didn’t ask for permission and didn’t try to fit neatly into what anyone else wanted. His voice carried gravel and truth in equal measure, and if you were lucky enough to hear him in a bar or a small venue where the crowd actually listened, you know it wasn’t just music—it was something closer to testimony.
And he didn’t just play—he sparked something in others. Musicians found their footing because of him. Some picked up instruments just to stand in the same current he was standing in. He never made a big deal of that either.
Because that’s who he was. A quiet force. A builder of things that don’t always get seen right away.
He was also a writer—one of those rare, self-made minds who reads deeply, thinks hard, and then turns it into something entirely his own. His novel, Poor Man’s Summer, carries the weight and beauty of a life examined closely, asking the kind of questions that don’t come with easy answers: How do we hold onto who we are in a world that tries to smooth us down or wear us out?
If you ever talked with Pearlie, you know those questions didn’t stay on paper. They lived in him. Conversations with him could wander from scripture to literature to the meaning of existence itself, and somehow still circle back to something grounded and real.
But for all that mind—for all that depth—what people will remember most is this:
He was a good man. Not the kind that announces itself. The kind you realize, slowly and surely, was rare.
He was loved deeply by those closest to him, and is survived by Michelle Caudill (sister), Lisa Williamson (sister), Brittany Caudill (sister), Carrie Dixon (sister), Caron McCarthy (Partner in Life), Pearl Caudill (father), and by many family members and others who crossed his path—whether through music, conversation, or quiet understanding. His presence left marks you don’t notice at first… until one day you do, and you realize something meaningful took root there.
It’s entirely possible, as he might say, that we’re all going to be all right. But it’s also true that we’re going to miss him.
In the songs. In the stories. In the spaces where a voice like his used to be.
There will be a celebration of Pearlie’s life on Saturday April 25th 2026 at Lucky Pint Irish Pub in Burnside Kentucky starting at 6pm EST.
“Let me flow like a memory that rides in on a song, let me roll like a river over these stones”
—Pearlie Jenkins
To my friend, Duck: reading your wonderful obituary, there is a striking sense of a man who never lost that “genius mind” that I remember from Cumberland High School in Harlan County. From a Gulf War veteran, a mentor of youth at Sunrise, and soulful novelist tells me you never stopped evolving, though you clearly kept rebellious, uncompromising edge. I realize that when we hung out as long as we did back then, your mind was already miles ahead of where the rest of us were standing. There were times that we did not get along and times we did.
Some of our friends who knew you best will agree with this comment: We saw the “genius” before the world saw the artist. I find it powerful to write in your memory that I recognized your spark before it had a stage name (Perlie Jenkins). For me, I saw the beginnings of that ‘quiet force’ back in high school, the brilliance that did not quite know where to land yet. I am truly sorry that I never told you these thoughts and shared my feelings in person.
Even though we saw each other less and less over the past 35+ years, you did leave behind an echo and also a resonance that time has not dampen. Reading about the life you built (the music, the writing, the service), it is clear you never stopped seeking the truth, even when it was hard. You truly were “Holden Caulfield” to me when we were teenagers. You grew into Perlie and I will miss you.
You were a rare soul who found ways to turn his thoughts into something beautiful. You came full circle, my friend.
Duck, I will miss you and I love you.
Willard