Likened by critics to Garrison Keillor only more deliberate and
elegiac Jim May writes the stories of his youth, growing up in the
rural Midwest between the Truman and the JFK eras, where trading
stories was as common as trading horses, and frequently required
the same skills. Neighboring, as his mother called it, was part of
the social fabric. These 18 poignant and humorous stories of life's
joys and trials told with the freshness of youth, yet tempered with
the wisdom of age evoke a simpler time in our nation's history
without romanticizing its inherent hardships.
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