For Whom the Book Tells (Four Fathers) George Pritchard Harris (Author), Ingrid Firchow (Illustrator) Original Publication Date: October 5, 2012
Huckleberry Friend (Four Fathers) George Pritchard Harris (Author), Ingrid Firchow (Illustrator) Original Publication Date: November November 4, 2012
Lad on a Softened Stoop (Four Fathers) George Pritchard Harris (Author), Ingrid Firchow (Illustrator) Original Publication Date: February 27, 2013
Synopsis
For Whom the Book Tells
Four Fathers is everyone’s tale even as it is unique to its characters. The bygone past is traveled without benefit of GPS. “Four Gigs” has an entirely different meaning in what is now virtual antiquity. The four fellow travelers stumble upon the raw and the cooked. The pages of the book of life form their dreams as their dreams form them. Missteps mark the way; but, after all, that is what the ride is all about.
Synopsis
Huckleberry Friend
August 30, 1965 came early that year but the next two years lasted longer than expected. Joe Cebellum, Fred Etheridge, Tommy Wanderby, and Sam Thorn shamble from sweet innocence recently lost into the full blown tramp of the new found Summer of Love. They miss nary a beat, a frug or a twist as the travels continue from Barrington, Illinois to the Rio Grande to Montreal Expo. The times they are achangin’ as the pitter patter of little feats go boom into that good night. Juices flow and wild rides follow. It’s not over ’til they say it’s over…
Synopsis
Lad on a Softened Stoop
Lad on a Softened Stoop Stands Large. The Bildungsroman has come of age. This is a Roman a Clef that sings in the right key. Four Fathers is filled with memoirs of the imagination….All things mussed up….The characters have found their stride. This is it. This is a book. This is the trip. This is the best part of the trip.
Purchase: Amazon
About the Author
The Four Fathers octology project was conceived in a hammock in Costa Rica in 2011. The Princeton Alumnus and retired trial lawyer has finished the first 3 books in the series. Author Harris remains quizzical, studied, and metaphysical while trying to adhere to his meek conception of fiction in the literary tradition. Four lifelong friends prance and stumble amidst a backdrop where Mance Lipscomb, Marcel Proust, Bull Durham, Bob Dylan, Heraclitus, and Jean Harlow all swirl in some fanciful mélange.
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