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Brookville, Pennsylvania, is a quaint little town with a definite Gilded Age charm about it. But back in 1844, Brookville was on the edge of civilisation - beyond lay the Far West. Its infrastructure was rude, and the locals were ruder. Wolves could be heard howling in the woods at night. Irishmen could be heard howling in the taverns, of which there were a surprising number. Monongahela whiskey was the tipple of choice, at three cents the glass, and even the Presbyterians drank it. Hogs roamed free, and cows were milked at the front door come daybreak. The place was wild and woolly, and the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Brookville, Pennsylvania, is a quaint little town with a definite Gilded Age charm about it. But back in 1844, Brookville was on the edge of civilisation - beyond lay the Far West. Its infrastructure was rude, and the locals were ruder. Wolves could be heard howling in the woods at night. Irishmen could be heard howling in the taverns, of which there were a surprising number. Monongahela whiskey was the tipple of choice, at three cents the glass, and even the Presbyterians drank it. Hogs roamed free, and cows were milked at the front door come daybreak. The place was wild and woolly, and the call of the wild turkey could be heard in the land. The world passed through Brookville, in the form of 'emigrant trains' headed into the Great Unknown (Ohio), stages with four-horse teams, freight hauled by oxen and sixteen-foot Conestoga wagons (the original long-haul truckers), and horse- and foot-traffic of all kinds. People stayed informed: politics was unusually divisive in 1844, which was a presidential election year. Pretend you don't know who's going to win - you do, right? - and enjoy the fussing between Whigs and Democrats along with the rest of the town. From timber rafting to militia training, there is a lot to see as Jim Tanner and Brookville come of age
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Autorenporträt
Every November, contributors to the h2g2.com Post get together and write serial stories, a chapter a day. One year, we all composed a tale together, which became 30 Hours in Hooverville. Last year, we took on the theme of 'Holes in History', resulting in a lot of fun and my book Coming of Age in Brookville. This year, I told them, the theme would be 'Twice-Told Tales': grab something from the folklore index. Retell your favourite fairy tale with a new twist. Do what the scriptwriters call a 'haircut' on an old theme. The results were highly satisfying, although one avid reader remarked that some of the 'haircuts' were more like decapitations. My personal effort involves a 'haircut' of The Fugitive, a 1960s tv series that was itself a 'haircut' of Les Miserables. Ultimately, though, it's the old motif of the falsely accused hero on a dangerous mission.