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If I Had a Voice Like ... Short stories about the wild times of live radio, live TV, and life in a small town.J. C. Loomis ... was WRAT's biggest star. In just three short months, he'd increased his audience and sales to record numbers. On top of his popularity, he'd been damned from the pulpit by the preacher at Westside Baptist Church. "He's lewd-uh, crewed-uh, and intent on wrecking the moral fiber of this community."... and ...Blinky Jervis crawled into the back of the mess truck .... His eye was twitching furiously as he appealed to the heavens for protection from snakes. Just in case the prayers didn't work, he planned to get enough beer in him to calm his jumpy nerves. The cooks ... began joking, "Damn, he's sending Morse Code."... and ...As the Bela Lugosi movie was reaching the place for us to ... go live in the local studio, the lady vampire walked onto the set ... wearing vampire teeth, red lipstick, a white negligee, and nothing underneath. ... the studio lights hit her, .... The camera operator says ..., "Damn! You can see clean through that thing."... and more ...
Why do false beliefs cause people to turn on one another?Who benefits from promoting them?For over a hundred years, generations of southerners passed along lies taught to them about the Civil War and race; and now it was labor unions and newspapers. By 1934, the lies galvanized into the common beliefs of whole communities.On Mildred's first day at the cotton mill, her supervisor asked if she was married. She said, "No, I'm a widow." He pulled out his pocketknife and began clicking it open and shut and stared at her bosom. She got uncomfortable and crossed her arms. He grinned at the gesture and never looked up, "So, you ain't been with a man for four months?" ...click...clickOpel, Sallie Parker's youngest, silently tallied along with the grocer. When he totaled the bill, she tugged on her mother's dress, "That ain't right momma. His answer is wrong. He's cheatin' you."Hiram Rangle was convinced the mill was making money, even if there was a Great Depression. He tied his girls to a column on his millhouse, then stepped off the porch and swung the club. "Get back Sheriff, you gonna get hurt!" he yelled - then the gun went off.An all-male jury believed Dalton Threate's "I was seduced" defense and acquits him of raping the young girl. Despite the acquittal, the mill fired Threate for sex with an employee. He blames Mildred Turnage and vows to get even."...it explains how powerful people...manipulated state politicians, banks, the sheriff etc. to maintain power and racially divide the workers...A really well researched masterpiece..." - NetGalley (Starred Review)"...what happens when people cling to misguided beliefs regarding race and the working class. Its treatments of such subjects are provocative..." - Foreword Reviews (Starred Review)"...The characters, both likable and vile leap off the pages...I recommend it highly." - Goodreads (Starred Review)"This is a great read!" - Amazon (Starred Review)
Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev og få rabatter og inspirasjon til din neste leseopplevelse.
Ved å abonnere godtar du vår personvernerklæring.