Harold Clarke does more than remind the reader of a bygone age; he takes us back in time with him to the rural South between the World Wars. Whether exploring themes of community or the hydra of the Ku Klux Klan, whether telling of a favorite fishing spot on the Ogeechee River or of the death of a childhood friend, Clarke is a master storyteller whose stories never fail to invoke the complexity and the richness of life itself.
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