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The mid-Eighties. No cell phones, no email, no caller ID, no GPS.
It was easier then to pass without notice, to be out of touch, to
get lost. The Berlin Wall still stood, as did the World Trade
Center, and Michael Reid embarks on what even he concedes to be a
spate of obsessive travel: Scandinavia, the Persian Gulf, South
Asia, back home to the Ozarks, then off again to Greece, Eastern
Europe and Egypt. Along the way, he writes letters about what he's
seeing and what he's thinking to three friends: Anna Browning, a
mathematician in Tallahassee, who thinks of Michael less fondly
than he thinks of her; Richard Randolph, Michael's
baseball-watching pal, who leads a comfortable-perhaps too
comfortable-life as a law professor in Albuquerque; and Marie
Cochran, a middle-school social studies teacher in rural New
Mexico, who is Michael's on-again-off-again lover. These three all
know Michael, but they don't know each other. And, against the
background of Michael's travels and his letters, their lives become
curiously, even mysteriously, intertwined, changed in ways that
Michael himself can't imagine. ROBERT LAURENCE was the Robert A.
Leflar Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Arkansas
in Fayetteville. He also taught at the University of North Dakota
and Florida State University, and at the American Indian Law Center
in Albuquerque and at the Kulkereskedelmi F iskola (College for
Foreign Trade) in Budapest. Now retired, he looks after equally
retired racehorses near Hindsville, Arkansas. This is his first
novel.
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