Bootlegger's Daughter

Bootlegger's Daughter
Author: Margaret Maron
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Total Pages: 282
Release: 1992-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780892964451

This smart, sassy series introduces Deborah Knott, candidate for district judge--and daughter of an infamous bootlegger. Deborah's campaigning is interrupted when disturbing new evidence surrrounding a murder that has never been solved surfaces and she is implored to investigate.

Memoirs of a Bootlegger’S Daughter

Memoirs of a Bootlegger’S Daughter
Author: Renee' Carter Tench
Publisher: LifeRich Publishing
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2016-10-11
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 1489709797

For author Renee Carter Tench, April 17, 2008, was the first day of the rest of her life. It was the day she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Tench spent more and more time reflecting on her past experiences and examining her life. In Memoirs of a Bootleggers Daughter, she tries to understand the reason and purpose behind all of the chaos in growing up the child of alcoholic parents. The lone survivor of the Carter family who lived at the end of the dirt road in Hickory, North Carolina, Tench shares the stories of her tumultuous childhood. She tells how, by the grace of God and taking advantage of the opportunities He provided, she broke the cycle of alcoholism in her family, a cycle that began even before her grandfather and father became bootleggers. She often felt looked down on because of the spectacle she and her family often made. Memoirs of a Bootleggers Daughter narrates how Tench started out at the end of one dirt road and ended up at the end of another and the wild journey in between, a journey she would be happy to take again.

Bootlegger's Other Daughter

Bootlegger's Other Daughter
Author: Mary Cimarolli
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2004
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1603445730

The generation that toiled through the Great Depression and won the Second World War has become known as -the greatest generation.- But not all of them qualified for that exaggerated epithet in the eyes of their own children. In this tender but unsparing memoir, Mary Cimarolli remembers a world in which the family home was lost to foreclosure, her father made his way by bootlegging, and school was a haven to hide from her brother's teasing. Her stories are about struggle and survival, making do and overcoming, and, ultimately, reconciliation. From her perspective as a child, she describes the cotton stamps and other programs of the New Deal, the yellow-dog Democrat politics and racism of East Texas, and the religious revivals and Old Settlers reunions that gave a break from working in the cotton patch. The colorful colloquialisms of rural East Texas that dot the manuscript help express both the traditionalism of the region and its changes under the impact of modernization, electrification, and the coming of war. Along with these regional and national trends, Cimarolli skillfully interweaves the personal: conflict between her parents, the death of her brother a few days before his sixteenth birthday, and her own inner tensions.

Bootlegger's Cove

Bootlegger's Cove
Author: Rob Tillitz
Publisher: Booksurge Publishing
Total Pages: 620
Release: 2009-04
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781439224557

When a freak weather pattern warmed the North Pacific Ocean for several years, driving away all the fish, a California fisherman turned to smuggling in order to make ends meet.

The Pilot's Radio Communications Handbook

The Pilot's Radio Communications Handbook
Author: Paul E. Illman
Publisher: McGraw Hill Professional
Total Pages: 289
Release: 1998-04-22
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0071638768

Featuring the newest VFR -- as well as IFR -- regulations and procedures, this new edition includes the most current information needed to become proficient in the area of radio communications.

Son of a Bootlegger

Son of a Bootlegger
Author: Cathy Smith
Publisher:
Total Pages: 124
Release: 2021-07-15
Genre:
ISBN:

From childhood to adulthood Charles (Hardrock) Smith has never met a stranger and never will. Folks are drawn to his friendliness and sense of humor. He loves the Lord and is a most loving husband, father, and grandfather. He is a remarkable man who overcame a difficult childhood, being raised in a bootlegger's home. The family endured hardships such as running from the law, living in shacks, plus enduring mental and physical abuse. Hardrock and his two sisters could never have friends over to spend the night and were taught to lie and, at times, steal corn for their daddy's still. His daddy made moonshine, and his mother sold it in their kitchen, nightly, by the glass. Hardrock and his mother were physically abused by his father. Through it all, though, he never lost his sense of humor which helped his mother and sisters get through tough times. So, in these little pages are memories of his life, living with a bootlegger. Some memories, sealed forever in his mind, are difficult to say the least; some, for a child's recollection, are great memories of family and friends who made this journey joyful and good and helped shape the man Hardrock became, hoping to help others with their journey, adding laughter along the way...grow old, just never grow up!

Prohibition in South Dakota

Prohibition in South Dakota
Author: Chuck Cecil
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2016-09-12
Genre: History
ISBN: 1439657793

South Dakota has always had an intermittent relationship with prohibition. Constantly changing legislation kept citizens, saloonkeepers, bootleggers and other scofflaws on tenterhooks, wondering what might come next. The scandalous indiscretions of the lethal Verne Miller and the contributions of "agents of change" like Senators Norbeck and Senn kept ne'er-do-wells on edge. In 1927, the double murder of prohibition officers near Redfield dominated headlines. From the Black Hills stills of Bert Miller to the Sioux Falls moonshine outfit buried under Lon Vaught's chicken house, uncork these oft-overlooked and tumultuous eighteen years in state history. In the first book of its kind, award-winning journalist Chuck Cecil delivers the boisterous details of an intoxicating era.

The Ku Klux Klan in South Dakota

The Ku Klux Klan in South Dakota
Author: Arley Kenneth Fadness
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2024-03-18
Genre: True Crime
ISBN: 1540260135

A startling rise and retreat In the 1920s, a reborn Ku Klux Klan slithered into South Dakota. Bold at times, the group intimidated citizens in every county. KKK anti-Catholicism sentiment resulted in the murder of Father Arthur Belknap of Lead. Idealized Gutzon Borglum, sculptor of Mount Rushmore, operated as a white supremacist and KKK leader. In 1925, animosity between the KKK and Fort Meade soldiers came to a clash one night in Sturgis. The clatter of two borrowed .30 caliber Browning cooled machine guns split the air over the heads of a Klan gathering across the valley. Author Arley Fadness follows the Klan's trail throughout the Rushmore state.