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About The Book
Description
Author
Arizona was I knew a land of cowboys and Indians and both ranked high in my esteem. It was also where our father lived and even though our mother had divorced him after he wandered off and didn’t return we knew he was somewhere in Arizona and always hoped he’d come and take us there.” So writes Don Worcester and for everyone else who ever dreamed of riding off to the West his tales will hold the poignancy and truth of that dream. Worcester his brother and sister lived most of their childhoods with their grandparents on the homestead” in the Southern California desert scraping by during the Great Depression. Some seasons they joined their mother who was creating an academic career as an astronomer. Those times with herin Berkeley Winter Park Florida or Poughkeepsiewere welcome respites in the hard routine of life. Most days though were spent on the homestead doing chores or at school. But there were horses. Some wild some tame. All teasing with a freedom and a power that kept hope alive. There were friends like A.P. Aldrich the surrogate father who told the boys they could amount to something. There were escapades with brother Harris. And there was the day their father showed up at schooldriving a powerful shiny late-model carfor a half-hour visit. With understated narrative and vivid detail Worcester spins tales of childhood and growing up between the two World Wars of the West lived as both fact and myth of family and loneliness. It is sprightly telling of a most human story a nostalgic memoir of an unusual rite of passage evoking times and places that today have reality only in the mythos of the American Dream.