Before Linton Fisker died, however, Marty, Nora's mother, and Lillian, Nora's grandmother, convinced "Papa" to change his will and not leave the farm to Nora but rather to her younger brother Ricky Fletcher, who showed no passion for horses. Like his mother Marty, Ricky was more interested in Republican politics, and to please his mother, Ricky married into a staunchly Republican family. As Republican politics turned more strident, combative, and exclusive, Lintie Fletcher, Ricky's son, became enamored with his grandmother's adoration of Donald Trump and a brand of Republicanism filled with extremist rhetoric and hatred.
Although denied ownership of her grandfather's horse farm, Nora Fletcher never blamed her grandfather. Instead, she revered her memories of him, memories which helped her regain a sense of personal worth and dignity. Yet she still faced a family which valued status and money more than they valued her.
245 pages
Stephen R. Rascher teaches theater at the University of Hartford, West Hartford, Connecticut, USA.
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