Bootlegger


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Bootlegger’s Errand


Bootlegger’s Errand

Author: Nathan Van McKinney II

language: en

Publisher: LifeRich Publishing

Release Date: 2026-04-15


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William Sadler, seated in his car outside the courthouse, is fueling a slow burn. “I have become a puppet. But she’s just flat-out wrong, and I will not sit still and hear another word. This is my life and my home and she won’t impose her will this time!” What Sadler cannot see - and could not possibly foresee - are the myriad puppet strings soon to pull and tug and restrain him as he embarks on the Bootlegger’s Errand.

The Bootlegger's Dance


The Bootlegger's Dance

Author: Rosemary Jones

language: en

Publisher: Simon and Schuster

Release Date: 2023-11-21


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Christmas comes to Arkham Horror in this action-packed eldritch adventure full of secret whispers, haunted streets, and a lost actor falling through time Raquel Malone Gutierrez is running away, although she won’t admit that to herself. Suffering from hearing loss after an illness, the former music teacher wants to find a way to retain her independence, but only a wealthy relative offers any hope of that. Put to work in her aunt Nova’s Kingsport dance hall, Raquel stumbles upon a mystery when her new hearing aids begin picking up conversations that no one else can hear. As Christmas draws closer, Raquel realizes the voice comes from a hunted man lost in time. Now she must do everything she can to free him before the monsters chasing him can catch up and break through.

The Bootlegger's Other Daughter


The Bootlegger's Other Daughter

Author: Mary Cimarolli

language: en

Publisher: Texas A&M University Press

Release Date: 2004-12-06


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The generation that toiled through the Great Depression and won the Second World War has become known as “the greatest generation.” But not all of them qualified for that exaggerated epithet in the eyes of their own children. In this tender but unsparing memoir, Mary Cimarolli remembers a world in which the family home was lost to foreclosure, her father made his way by bootlegging, and school was a haven to hide from her brother’s teasing. Her stories are about struggle and survival, making do and overcoming, and, ultimately, reconciliation. From her perspective as a child, she describes the cotton stamps and other programs of the New Deal, the yellow-dog Democrat politics and racism of East Texas, and the religious revivals and Old Settlers reunions that gave a break from working in the cotton patch. The colorful colloquialisms of rural East Texas that dot the manuscript help express both the traditionalism of the region and its changes under the impact of modernization, electrification, and the coming of war. Along with these regional and national trends, Cimarolli skillfully interweaves the personal: conflict between her parents, the death of her brother a few days before his sixteenth birthday, and her own inner tensions.