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Elizabeth Burgess

    Life And History Of Betty Bolaine, Interspersed With Original Poetry [by E. Burgess]
    Life & History Of Betty Bolaine, Late Of Canterbury: A Well Known Character For Parsimony And Vice, Scarcely Equalled In The Annals Of Avarice And Dep
    Prison Camp Road
    • Prison Camp Road

      • 136 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      "Prison Camp Road" is a novella set in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains near the cotton mill village of Hildreth, North Carolina in Coldwell County. The time frame is mainly during the late 40's, 50's and early 60's. All the main characters are from three families who live on Prison Camp Road. Cassie Miller is the plain talking mother of four girls and much of the story is told through her wit, humor, the anguish of losing a baby to the polio epidemic and her Fuller Brush selling husband to "the hell horse." Cletus, Junior lives across the road from Cassie and has visions of the Sunbeam girl all grown up and pythons and redwood trees. After an accident in his dads pick-up Cletus describes his face as "sore as 10 boils on the butt." When Sam Collins, the new mill superintendent, and his family move in it changes Cassie's life forever. Her world is bordered by Mother Nature's Bounty of Queen Anne's Lace, fragrant mimosa trees and wild lilies as well as the clanging of the bell from the prison camp- just across the valley where. cook smoke rises.

      Prison Camp Road
    • Written by Betty Bolaine in the early 18th century and published posthumously, this memoir provides a unique window into the life and times of a woman who lived on the margins of society. Bolaine was a laborer, a servant, and a wanderer, and her account is filled with vivid descriptions of the people, places, and experiences that shaped her life. Interspersed with her own poetry, this book is a moving testament to the resilience and creativity of an ordinary woman.

      Life And History Of Betty Bolaine, Interspersed With Original Poetry [by E. Burgess]