BLURB:
In
defending his life-long friendship with Charlie, Will may have
inadvertently had a hand in the growing chaos that leads to the
horrifying night when his familiar world is shattered.
When Will Wright, the eighteen year old son of a small-town Arkansas sheep herder in 1905, begins reading his mother’s journal, he is inspired by its startling content to start putting his own experiences to paper for posterity. An unsophisticated but principled young man, Will is becoming increasingly aware of the hatred that exists in the world. When he begins his own journal, Will can’t know what events are to take place in the next five years – from his mother’s battle with a life threatening illness, to his embarrassments of learning how to be in love for the first time, to witnessing Charlie’s fate at the hands of the bigoted townspeople. While part of him wishes the pain in those pages didn’t exist, he knows that the original purpose for keeping the journal has been realized - to show his kin how he became the man he is. He will probably never go back through and read again the pages he’s written, but someday, someone will, and they will see that along with the hurt, Will’s life had been one that knew true joy, absolute love, and undying friendship.
When Will Wright, the eighteen year old son of a small-town Arkansas sheep herder in 1905, begins reading his mother’s journal, he is inspired by its startling content to start putting his own experiences to paper for posterity. An unsophisticated but principled young man, Will is becoming increasingly aware of the hatred that exists in the world. When he begins his own journal, Will can’t know what events are to take place in the next five years – from his mother’s battle with a life threatening illness, to his embarrassments of learning how to be in love for the first time, to witnessing Charlie’s fate at the hands of the bigoted townspeople. While part of him wishes the pain in those pages didn’t exist, he knows that the original purpose for keeping the journal has been realized - to show his kin how he became the man he is. He will probably never go back through and read again the pages he’s written, but someday, someone will, and they will see that along with the hurt, Will’s life had been one that knew true joy, absolute love, and undying friendship.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt:
I’ve
only been in this cell for three days, but it feels like a might lot
longer than that. I know what I did wasn’t considered proper by
most folks down here in the South, but I don’t regret doin’ it.
And I’d do it again, if I had the chance. Charlie never did
anything wrong. He’s just colored. Not much he can do about that,
and even if he could, I suppose he wouldn’t want to anyhow. I
didn’t feel it right that Charlie be ignored when all he came to do
was buy feed and tools like the rest of us. So when Eli Carver said
he don’t take no “colored” money, I thought it best to point
out that he must be blind as a bat since Charlie’s dollar and my
dollar are both the same shade of green. And when I held the two
right in front of Mr. Carver’s face and politely asked him to show
me the difference, he later told Sheriff Coleman I was threatenin’
and causin’ a disturbance. When I heard that, it just made my blood
boil, and I decided Eli Carver needed to be taught a lesson. I went
back to that store, although Charlie tried to get me to leave it be,
but the next thing I knew, I was holdin’ Eli a foot off the ground
against the door to his very own supply store. If Sheriff Coleman
hadn’t been right there, I might have been able to argue my side,
but there’s no point arguin’ against proof and common sense.
Besides that, Sherriff Coleman is known for his feelin’s about
colored people, so I knew I was beat before I started. I suppose I
just didn’t care.
AUTHOR
Bio and Links:
Shelly
Brimley was born in Flagstaff, AZ, where she lived most of her life
until moving to Mexico to study abroad. After graduation, Shelly did
some volunteer work in Africa and completed her graduate degree while
working in an adolescent drug treatment center. After acquiring her
Master’s degree, she worked as a counselor at a residential shelter
for children who had been smuggled and trafficked into the USA from
different countries around the world. She also taught English to
adult refugees before resigning to raise her children. Shelly wanted
to use her experience working with others as a source of inspiration
in her writing, offering a voice for those who are not typically
heard or considered.
Website
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