Showing posts with label Lone Star Literary Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lone Star Literary Life. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Too Much the Lion ~ Lone Star Lit Book Campaign Spotlight & Giveaway!

TOO MUCH THE LION
A Novel of the Battle of Franklin
By PRESTON LEWIS

Historical Fiction / Civil War Fiction
Publisher: Bariso Press
Pages: 395
Publication Date: May 13, 2025

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SYNOPSIS

In the waning months of the American Civil War, a delusional Confederate commander makes a desperate attempt to change the course of the South’s dwindling hopes by invading middle Tennessee.  The tragic result of Lt. Gen. John Bell Hood’s misplaced hubris devastates his Army of Tennessee and alters the lives of the citizens of Franklin, Tennessee.

This historical novel Too Much the Lion follows a handful of Confederate generals, infantrymen and local residents through the five days leading up to the horrific Battle of Franklin on November 30, 1864.  The lives of soldiers ranging from Major General Patrick Cleburne to Brigadier General Hiram Granbury and from Sergeant Major Sumner Cunningham and to Corporal Sam Watkins will be forever changed by Hood’s decisions and mistakes.

Franklin civilians like apprehensive and loving mother Mary Alice McPhail and teen Hardin Figuers, desperate to serve the Confederacy but too young to enlist, are ensnared in the events that will bring death and devastation to their very doorsteps.  Devout Confederate Chaplain Charles T. Quintard must reconcile his religious beliefs with his support of slavery.  Slaves like the elder Wiley Howard and the inquisitive young Henry B. Free are trapped on the fault line between what has been and what could be.

Too Much the Lion offers an unvarnished account of the dying days of the Confederacy in a powerful and moving narrative of honor and betrayal, bravery and cowardice, death and survival.  Told with poignancy and honesty by an accomplished novelist, Too Much the Lion achieves for the Battle of Franklin what The Killer Angels did for the Battle of Gettysburg, providing a classic fictional account of one of the Civil War’s pivotal encounters.

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To learn more about the book, look for #LSLLTooMuchTheLion on your preferred social media platform.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Preston Lewis is the award-winning author of some sixty western, historical, juvenile, and nonfiction works.  In 2025 he was honored with the Will Rogers Medallion Awards’ Lifetime Achievement Award for his contributions to the literature of the American West.  The Texas Institute of Letters in 2021 elected him to membership for his literary achievements. 

Western Writers of America (WWA) has honored Lewis with three Spur Awards, one for best article, the second for best western novel and the third in 2025 for juvenile nonfiction.  He has received ten Will Rogers Medallion Awards—six gold, two silver and two bronze—for written western humor, short stories, short nonfiction, and traditional Western novel.

Lewis is a past president of WWA and the West Texas Historical Association, which named him a fellow in 2016.  He holds a bachelor’s degree from Baylor University and a master’s degree from Ohio State University, both in journalism.  Additionally, he has a second master’s degree in history from Angelo State University. 
He lives in San Angelo, Texas, with wife Harriet Kocher Lewis.  

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1st: receives signed hardcover of Too Much the Lion
2nd: receives signed paperback. .
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Friday, June 13, 2025

Higher Love ~ Lone Star Lit Campaign Book Review & Giveaway!

HIGHER LOVE
The Sequel to I'll Be Seeing You
By JOANNE KUKANZA EASLEY

Southern Fiction / Coming of Age / Family
Publisher: Red Boots Press
Pages: 380
Publication Date: May 12, 2025

Scroll down to enter the giveaway!

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SYNOPSIS
*Hall Ways thinks this description includes spoilers* Higher Love is the new release from Joanne Kukanza Easley, the multi-award-winning author of Sweet Jane, Just One Look, and I’ll Be Seeing You.

In 1986 Austin, Texas, sixteen-year-old Stephanie steps into sixty-two-year-old Lauren’s life, her uncanny resemblance cracking open a buried past.

Claiming to be the daughter of the child Lauren gave up for adoption forty-five years ago, Stephanie upends Lauren’s life—already complicated by her remarriage to Brett after thirty-three years apart. 

Stung by her adoptive grandmother’s deception, Stephanie stays, her past of tragedy and self-harm forging a fragile bond with Lauren and Brett. When Stephanie’s college dreams are crushed, Lauren sacrifices all to give her a future—only to face a bittersweet twist that echoes the past and changes everything. 

This heart-wrenching family drama delves into the enduring impact of secrets, the power of unconditional love, and the strength found in facing our pasts.

CLICK TO PURCHASE

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BOOK REVIEW
I don't spend time on plot summary, so please read the book synopsis above, but beware: there are spoilers.

HALL WAYS REVIEW: First: I knew I was going to read Higher Love by Joanne Kukanza Easley since it’s a sequel, so I didn’t read the book description before starting. But reading the description now, I feel like it has spoilers that might detract from the drama of the story. But if you can’t help yourself, and you simply must read the back cover first, know that there’s still plenty of drama to carry the Higher Love along.

I just recently finished reading I’ll Be Seeing You, the prequel to Higher Love, and I’m so glad I was able to read these books back-to-back, while everything was still fresh in my mind. Plus, readers get the full saga of Ruby Lauren Eaton Owens, from age fifteen (when she looked twenty) to age sixty-two (when she looks forty-five). And what a story it is to watch unfold. In Higher Love, Lauren is less than a year into her re-marriage to Brett who, by the way, she divorced thirty-plus years earlier, and they are celebrating Lauren’s birthday when Stephanie is suddenly dropped like a hand grenade into their lives … and readers are rewarded with a page-turner ever after.

Let’s just talk about Brett Owens for a minute (or shall we call him Saint Brett the Virtuous?) This man is amazing, not only because of how he is able to forgive Lauren (if you read I’ll Be Seeing You, you’ll know the full extent), but he’s able to look at teen Stephanie, recognize she’s in need, and then is willing to change his entire life to help her. WOW. Author Easley’s writing shines as she brings Brett to brilliant, mysterious life. I absolutely want to go to Austin and hang out with him and Lauren — but maybe when Stephanie isn’t home. Ha!

How could I be sad and mad at the same time?” 
— Stephanie, age sixteen

Now, let’s talk about Stephanie. Honestly, myself a mother of a formerly sixteen-year-old daughter, to me, Stephanie seems very reasonable and self-aware. Sure, she has her teen moments, but she typically gets herself pulled together quickly, reflects, and often processes things maturely — until she doesn’t and then she rages teen angst in an extraordinarily messy way. Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, those are the times she doesn’t reach out for help. Easley makes Stephanie’s misery tangible as its weight envelopes her, the whole household, and the readers. Where usually the saying holds that if momma ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy, when there’s a teenaged girl in the mix, it’s all about her no matter how hard for it not to be. Brett and Lauren do their best, and I loved Lauren saying, It took fewer facial muscles to smile than to frown, I reminded myself.”

Creating flesh and bone characters isn’t Easley’s only talent. She also nails putting readers right in the setting and place of Higher Love. I enjoyed the perfection and accuracy of the eighties’ teen-speak she included favorites like: ralphed, freaked out, as if, rad, grody, and barf me out. I loved all the eighties culture references to icons like Sting, Dune, and The Breakfast Club, which just came out “last year.”  Austinites will appreciate references to still-favorite eating and recreational spots and will laugh when Lauren describes Austin High School: “The big gray building was kind of ugly.” Visiting the eighties made me smile but also shake my head that somehow, it’s been almost forty years since the setting of this book (1986). I remember so much of that year like it was yesterday, and not a period that is pert near bumping into being categorized as historical fiction.

“I was thinkin’ you might could retire soon.”

Ah, there is nothing like a good West Texas accent, and Easley especially brings Brett’s to life by dropping the ‘g’ from gerunds and popping in a “might could” here and there. Even Lauren, who often sounds a bit hoity-toity, lets a Texanism slip in from time to time. Stephanie actually asks Lauren about this phenomenon towards the end of Higher Love, and gets a good explanation, which shows openness and growth in the relationship between Lauren and Stephanie, leaving readers hopeful they’ll get even closer.

One of the most raw and realistic sub-plots that runs through both books is Lauren’s alcoholism. Even after twenty-five years, when Lauren struggles, she grounds herself with AA meetings. “Newcomer meetings were a good reminder of my tortured journey to sobriety” — and a good reminder to readers that it’s a forever commitment to stay sober, and we should show those who are fighting that battle some grace.

I purchased the Kindle copy of Higher Love the day it published, but the covers of all of Easley’s books are so beautiful, I’d want them on my shelf. The story was repetitive at times, particularly in reference to Ben and Alain, and I did find more typos than I’d expect in a final copy for purchase, but none of it took me out of the story much. For me, this is an exception to the norm when I read and another marker of Easley’s skill in crafting an engaging story.

I’ll be exploring other novels by Joanne Easley while awaiting what she next writes. She’s on my author to watch list.

To learn more about the book, look for #LSLLHigherLove on your preferred social media platform.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Joanne Kukanza Easley, a retired registered nurse with experience in both the cold, clinical operating room and the highly charged world of psychiatric hospitals, lives in the Texas Hill Country, where she writes fiction about complicated, twentieth-century women. Her multi-award-winning debut, Sweet Jane, was named the adult fiction winner at the Texas Author Project and shortlisted for the Sarton Award and Eric Hoffer Award, among others. Just One Look, Joanne’s second novel, was a May 2022 Pulpwood Queen Book Club Pick. I’ll Be Seeing You, her third novel, features characters from Sweet Jane. Look for her fourth novel, Higher Love, is the sequel to her third book. Her prize-winning short stories and poetry have appeared in several anthologies.



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Tuesday, June 3, 2025

The Rise of the Mad March ~ Lone Star Lit Book Campaign Spotlight

THE RISE OF THE MAD MARCH
by Robert Espenscheid, Jr. 

New Adult / Coming of Age / Friendship
Publisher: Stoney Creek Publishing
Pages: 374
Publication Date: May 9, 2025

SYNOPSIS

This one is for all the rock bands who never headlined the big stage, who never needed protection getting to the limo, who never made any money, who never got signed, who had no answer to the cry of “why aren’t you guys famous?” It’s for those who wrote killer songs never heard on the radio, who never made a Rolling Stone cover—or even a mention inside. It’s for those whose collars were always blue, who were promised this and wound up with that, who always opened and never closed.

America, 1973. Christine on lead, Henry on rhythm, Gretchen on bass and Melissa on drums. A chaotic rise, fighting amongst themselves, battling self-destruction, finding their sound, learning to trust, finding a helping hand, overcoming convention (girls can’t play guitar) to become one band, on one tour, for one month – New York to LA and all the stories in between.

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To learn more about the book, look for #LSLLTheRiseOfTheMadMarch on your preferred social media platform.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rob Espenscheid, Jr. is a Connecticut native and a 1966 Wake Forest College graduate. After an Army RVN stint in 1969, Rob pulled up stakes and moved to the rural Midwest, settling in southern Iowa in the early 1970s. Prairie life provided a career tuning and repairing pianos from cattle country small towns to collegiate concert halls. When not tinkering on a piano, he can usually be found either on a golf course or working on a manuscript. In 1998, family connections led to a move, with his wife Sharon, to Smithville, Texas.

Friday, May 30, 2025

The Calendar ~ Lone Star Lit Campaign Book Review & Giveaway!

THE CALENDAR
By WM Gunn

Science Fiction / Speculative Fiction / End of Times
Pages: 302
Publication Date: April 3, 2025

Scroll down to win a copy in the giveaway!

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SYNOPSIS
Long-range monitors detect a massive rock plunging through space on a path toward Earth. Will it miss our planet, deliver a glancing blow, or destroy Mankind? And how will people react to an uncertain future? Or will they be told?

What if everything and everyone you cherish vanished in a heartbeat? What if you knew the very day your world would cease to exist? What if you could not save those you love? What if all your dreams and hopes of a brighter tomorrow would never be realized? How would you react if there was nothing you could do to delay it or prevent it? What would you do?

Prepare yourself for the upcoming end of all that is right and wrong. Prepare yourself for the fear and uncertainty of the unknown. Prepare to feel the tension grow and grow.
Prepare to read The Calendar.

CLICK TO PURCHASE 

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BOOK REVIEW
I don't spend time on plot summary, so please read the book synopsis above.
HALL WAYS REVIEW: In The Calendar, author WM Gunn provides readers with a fully unique spin on the end-of-days trope and leaves us digging deep and seeking our own answers to the ultimate what-if scenario.

Given the subject matter of The Calendar, and who’ll be impacted if there’s an impact by Goliath the asteroid, it makes sense that Gunn includes a huge cast of international characters, and multiple languages are sprinkled throughout the story, lending authenticity to the overall plot and premise. While there are a few main characters, including the Aggie (Gig 'em!) president of the United States who is an absolute treasure, there is a multitude of minor characters as well. Readers pop in on the lives and thoughts of all of them, and we get peeks at how all walks of life might deal with a crisis of this magnitude. Especially given the division of the times we are in now, I appreciate that the author sided with goodness and kindness as how most of us humans would ultimately react. I’d like to think that’s not fiction.

The setting seems contemporary, but in the story, they use cell phones, but emergency alerts aren’t sent out via them, and we’ve been enjoying that ten or fifteen years now. However, a song lyric from 2003 was quoted, so I’m guessing The Calendar is set somewhere in the 2000-2010 range. I would have liked this to be clearer so I didn’t have to sleuth so much to figure it out, but admittedly, I may have missed something that gave more specificity.

Most of us have surely given the end-of-times concept a thought or two, but I was impressed with the societal and logistical issues that Gunn conceived and explored. Fascinating brain fodder, which days after finishing the book, is still noodling around in there. Not only will readers find The Calendar thought-provoking, for this reader it evoked a number of feelings including some that really hurt my heart and others that made it swell with joy. I always give credit to authors who can make a reader feel, and Gunn has this gift.

The science of The Calendar – especially at the conclusion – would indicate that Gunn has done an enormous amount of research to be factual. I recognized a smattering of terms I learned over my schooling years, but whether or not the science is accurate doesn’t really matter. It is believable, it works, and honestly, that is enough for me. Similarly, the author has clearly researched world military and politics, as there is a lot of precise detail given – a little too much for my liking, and I found myself skimming when all the rankings and titles and weapons models kept popping up again and again.

Gunn adds a few touches that make this book even more appealing. The book is organized as a countdown, January to December, to the anticipated arrival of the asteroid, and each chapter has an engaging graphic of that month’s calendar. It enhances the doomsday feeling. Also, within each chapter, Gunn includes snippets of song lyrics apropos to the mood and then provides the full list and snippets again in the Musical Acknowledgments section at the end of the book. The artists range from Jim Croce to Johnny Mathis to Muse, with lyrics penned from 1931 to 2003. It’s quite an eclectic collection, and I’d love to have this playlist built on Spotify.

From an editing perspective, repetitious sections are one of more than a few issues in The Calendar. For a final copy, there are also too many typos, errors, and awkward passages for me to be able to give the book my highest rating, and I'd probably rate the book three stars on execution. If you’re a regular reader of my reviews, you’re aware that blessing or curse, my eye is drawn to errors, and I'm persnickety about that. Many readers don’t notice or care, and I want them to know The Calendar is a really good novel, but a thorough professional edit would make it a top-notch one.

Despite my desire for more editing, in The Calendar, Gunn’s writing is provocative and inventive enough that I’ll read more of his work. He is a talented writer, and I want readers to get acquainted with him – myself included. In fact, I’ve just purchased his novella, Holmes, Moriarity, and the Monkeys (KU or $3 on Kindle) to get another taste. WM Gunn is an author worth watching.

To learn more about the book, look for #LSLLTheCalendar on your preferred social media platform.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
WM Gunn is a native Texan who spent many years in the pharmaceutical industry in sales, sales management, and training and development. He is active in writing groups and volunteering with non-profit groups. He lives in his hometown with his high school sweetheart bride of many years.

To date, he has written hundreds of short stories, three novellas, and two novels. Holmes, Moriarty, and the Monkeys and Chasing the Sun are two novellas released in 2024. His debut full-length novel The Two Terrors of Tulelake was released in October 2024, as an e-book and as a paperback. The Calendar is his newest novel.

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THREE WINNERS
receive autographed copies of The Calendar!
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Friday, April 18, 2025

Under the Gulf Coast Sun ~ Lone Star Lit Book Campaign Spotlight & Giveaway!

 

UNDER THE GULF COAST SUN
By SKIP RHUDY

Romance / Coming of Age / Surfing
Publisher: Stoney Creek Publishing
Pages: 266
Publication Date: April 22, 2025

Scroll down to enter the Goodreads Giveaway!

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SYNOPSIS
This coming-of-age tale set against the sun-soaked beaches of 1970s Port Aransas, Texas, is a love letter to the people and culture of the Texas coast and the enduring allure of the Gulf of Mexico. 

Eighteen-year-old Connor O’Reilly isn’t ready to leave his beloved hometown until the tourist girl he met the previous summer, Kassie Hernandez, returns to Port Aransas for one final vacation before college. Their tumultuous summer fling is wrecked by a freak accident in which Connor is lost at sea. His long years of surfing and fishing in the Gulf, as well as Kassie’s desperation to reunite with him, are pitted against the enormity and utter indifference of the sea. 


CLICK TO PURCHASE


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Skip Rhudy grew up surfing in Port Aransas, Texas. He has translated poetry and prose from German to English, and translated Wolfgang Hilbig’s novella Die Weiber for his master’s thesis in 1990 at the University of Texas. His short stories were published in numerous small press magazines in the mid-1990s, and his novella One Punk Summer was published in 1993 and reprinted in 2021.



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Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Moonset on Desert Sands ~ Lone Star Lit Book Campaign Spotlight & Giveaway!

MOONSET ON DESERT SANDS
Murder, Tea, & Crystals Trilogy
Book Two
By Sherri L. Dodd

Paranormal Thriller / Fantasy / Magical Realism / Witch-Lit
Publisher: Black Rose Writing
Pages: 360
Publication Date: March 27, 2025

Scroll down to enter the giveaway!

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SYNOPSIS
With a traumatic year of fending off a serial killer behind her, Arista has settled contentedly into her temporary home with Auntie in Sedona, Arizona. She enjoys her new job selling all things metaphysical and even has her eye on the hot security guard, Dakota, after her recent breakup with Shane.

But a series of new fainting spells has her worried, and when Auntie witnesses one, they decide the answer lies in her home of Boulder Creek. However, returning means not only dealing with her breakup and its heartache but also the possibility of drawing her bloodthirsty Uncle Fergus to her once safe haven in the redwoods. And this time he has recruited an even more dangerous alliance.

Arista's closest bonds will be strengthened, but the mounting tension of a death in the desert, a stalker on the streets, and the relentless pursuit of Fergus puts her in dangerous territory, and escaping sorrow proves impossible.

CLICK TO PURCHASE
To learn more about the book, look for #LSLLMoonsetOnDesertSands on your preferred social media platform.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sherri L. Dodd was raised in southeast Texas. Walking barefoot most days and catching crawdads as they swam the creek beds, she had a love for all things free and natural. Her childhood ran rampant with talk of ghosts, demons, and backcountry folklore. This inspired her first story for sale, about a poisonous flower that shot toxins onto children as they smelled it. Her classmate bought it for all the change in his pocket. Shortly thereafter, her mother packed the two of them up and headed to the central coast of California. Since that time, she has worked corporate, married, raised two sons, and now writes full-time creating atmospheric paranormal fiction. Her debut novel – Murder Under Redwood Moon – shot straight to #1 on Amazon, holding firm as a Best Seller in the Occult Supernatural genre.


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TWO WINNERS
receive autographed copies of Moonset on Desert Sands
+ witchy swag including candle, crystals, and stickers!
(US only; ends midnight, CDT, 4/24/25)


Friday, April 11, 2025

Runners: The Oakley Series, Book 2 ~ Lone Star Lit Campaign & Book Review!

RUNNERS
BOOK TWO IN THE OAKLEY SERIES
By Phil Oakley

Historical Fiction / Depression Era / Family Saga
Publisher: Stoney Creek Publishing
Pages: 206
Publication Date: March 31, 2025

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SYNOPSIS
From the author of Little Hatchet, this gripping historical saga continues—a powerful story of resilience, family, and the price of ambition. Perfect for fans of epic generational tales and action-packed historical fiction.

Walter Oakley and his wife, Ada, used the westward expansion of America to establish themselves as model citizens in the town of Telegraph, Texas. Now, they watch in despair as their children lurch from one crisis to another — rum running, train-hopping outlaws, shattered dreams. With one child dead and another on the wrong side of the law, Walter and Ada struggle to keep their younger children on the straight and narrow. But trouble and temptation beckon as Prohibition and the Great Depression give way to the horrors of World War II. Will hope survive the chaos?


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REVIEW

HALL WAYS REVIEW: History, hardship, and a whole lot of heartache make Runners a riveting read. 

Runners is the second book in the Oakley series, a family saga based on  author Phil Oakley’s family history. Characters within the pages parallel the names of the author’s real family members, and the narrative is based on the stories they told over the years.  Books one and two span the Civil War, the Prohibition era, and World War II.

I knew I was jumping in on the second installment in the series, so I read the synopsis and some reviews of Little Hatchet, book one, before getting started. It helped. From that, I gathered that Walter, a primary character from book one, grows up, and he and wife Ada (the author’s actual grandparents) and their seven children are the focus of Runners.  

I recommend reading this series in order, and here’s why. Even coming in with some information from the prior story, I still struggled a bit because I didn’t truly have the big picture, know the details of what each character brought to the story, or understand the relationships. Though Walter and Ada have seven children, Runners really focuses on two of the sons, secondarily, two of the daughters, and many references to a deceased son. I was left wondering about the rarely mentioned other two daughters. Add to this the quantity of peripheral characters (including several characters with the same name), it is a lot to manage. A family tree or even a short bring-to-date placed at the beginning of the book would have been immensely helpful in keeping all the characters straight, and I think that would help all readers, not just those who missed book one.

Despite my confusion, Runners kept me deeply immersed in this family’s stories. Case in point: at one point, I had given myself an hour to read, and when I looked up, two hours had passed! And I decided to read another hour…hour-ish. Rich descriptions and factoids (Thirty-five cents for a meal?! Monthly rent for $22.75?!) will place readers right in the middle of the stories and time period, and interestingly, the narrator jumps in throughout to tell readers how things turned out. It feels very much like author Phil Oakley is telling family tales as we sit around the kitchen table together – a reminder that this is barely a fictionalized story. It is an efficient device because we want to know more, and I’d have been happy to have the author show, rather than tell, us more.  

“The behavior of their children was a persistent puzzle troubling Ada and Walter.”

Walt’s and Ada’s collective pain and helplessness are palpable as their children make one poor decision after another. Worse, even as the children grow into adults, they seem slow to understand the heartbreak they’ve inflicted on their parents. This passage was particularly poignant:

“Again, Ray missed the irony of what was going on around him. There were more rules in these camps than in his mother’s kitchen, and at her dining table. The work was harder than any Ray had ever done on his father’s farm, or at football practice. Most of the money Ray was earning wound up in someone else’s pocket. Half-a-dozen times since Ray had been riding on freight trains, he had been arrested, almost arrested, or beaten by men with clubs. This information didn’t take root in Ray’s mind. All he could see was that he was free and having a grand adventure.”

I bought the eBook so I’d have the final copy and am pleased it’s so cleanly edited, which seems to be the exception, not the rule, these days. The very few errors I noticed aren’t enough to distract most readers (in the unlikely event they'll be noticed at all). Oakley's writing is smooth and has a natural flow; he's clearly a natural storyteller.

At the book's conclusion, I was unsure of how many years had passed between the final chapter and the epilogue, and Runners ends somewhat abruptly. However, it does end with a small ray of hope (and that’s a double entendre), and the final page after the About the Author section assures us that a third book, titled Longhorn, is coming. I’ll definitely go back to Little Hatchet and read this family’s fascinating story from the beginning so I’ll be ready.

To learn more about the book, look for #LSLLRunners on your preferred social media platform.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Phil Oakley is a novelist and veteran journalist with experience in the motion picture industry. He is a retired regional executive with The Walt Disney Company (ABC News), a former director of the Louisiana Film Commission, and a retired editor with the Dallas Morning News. He covered presidents and presidential campaigns beginning with Lyndon Johnson and ending with George W. Bush. He was a television and radio anchor and reporter with national awards from Columbia University, the Radio-Television News Directors Association, and a National Headliner Award. He began work on his first novel in 1964 while a student at the University of Texas at Austin. He has written nine novels.