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Harmony's Song and Other Stories

Carl Wooton

I first came across Carl Wooton's writings when he submitted a story to Blue Lake Review. The story, "A Wide Day," which is included in this collection, is a multilayered story of family relations and generations that is both sad and enlightening, and reflective of life, universally relatable, highlighting family dissonance, strife, and dysfunction. Beautifully written, sad, and begging reflection of one's own life at the same time.


The collection has a number of stories following the protagonist, Mark Rambler, from childhood to adulthood, and shows the changing family relationships.


This is an undiscovered gem of a book and one you should check out.

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Once I started reading the book I was saddened to find out that Mr. Wooton  passed away in 2019. So, we've lost a great storyteller. It's time to rediscover his words.

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Here's the link to his book on Amazon

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Poor Advice and Other Stories

Lou Gaglia

In Poor Advice and Other Stories, Lou Gaglia puts the entertainment back in literary fiction. Many of his characters seem laughable and misguided in their fumbling ways, but the reader will come to love them for their heart-warming innocence. You will laugh, you will cry, but mostly you will go away remembering his vivid characters, his spot on dialogue, and his varying modes of conveying the stories in this unique collection, all of which reflect the talents of an outstanding fiction writer. Lou is another writer who has contributed to Blue Lake Review and we were happy to feature his work. Here's the link for his book on Amazon. And check out his other great story collection, Sure Things and Last Chances.

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Dust in the Wind

Tom Morrow

Dave White is a seventeen-year-old boy in a small town in Oklahoma where nothing much happens. It’s the summer of 1960. The country’s in a recession, and, at the beginning of the novel, Dave loses his summer job to a man with a family. He’s had his eye on a car, his dream, and now that he’s lost his job, the dream is gone. The car is soon sold and despite the support of his family and friends, he gets the wanderlust. There isn’t a job to be found in town. His girlfriend, Gayle, doesn’t understand him. He wants adventure, so when another boy suggests that they go on the wheat cutting circuit for work, he soon warms to the idea. Then, in a search for adventure, and a way out of his small town (and for work), he goes in search of work on the wheat cutting circuit as a "wheatie." He soon finds out that the world is much harder away from his little town and little life, is exposed to the prejudices piled up on "wheat tramps" and gains a new sensitivity for prejudices he and others around him have long held.

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He meets up with a wheatie named Frank who gives Dave a job as a driver even though he doesn’t even know how to drive, and before long Dave is on his way, learning the wheat cutting trade. He learns the prejudices the wheaties must endure from townsfolk, the horrors that occur to some workers, the losses of love, the alcoholism, and, of course, the hard but unappreciated work that is involved in cutting wheat for farmers and for consumers. It’s a hard life full of long hours, heavy drinking, and enduring the heat, dust, dirt, and prejudice, but it’s a life, at least for the summer, that leads Dave on the road to becoming a man. He travels with the group from place to place, learning the trade, observing various personal horrors, as we follow the characters, who are as lifelike and colorful as can be. Dave and Frank become close; Frank serves almost as an older brother or father-figure to Dave, teaching him what it takes to become a wheatie and, most of all, a man in the world.

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Dave meets a girl, too, in Colorado, and instantly falls in love with her, and she with him. And after that, the story becomes one of whether, when Dave returns to the wheat cutting trail, he will return to his love, and whether they have a chance together, these two young people, on the edge of innocence and from very different backgrounds and worlds.


This is an exceptional book, one that takes the reader along with him. The narration is a personal one, written in the first person. We’re with Dave all the way, as he treks out into the world, rooting for him. It is very realistic, with a cast of fully realized, colorful characters that we come to love. The story is well paced and exhibits the writer’s great skill as a storyteller.


Although at times he tells a little bit too much about the technical aspects of the wheat cutting business, at least for this reader, it does make the story a fully realistic one. By the time Dave falls for Mary Anne in Colorado, in less than two days, and leaves to go back on the wheat circuit, the seed of her love locked in his heart, it’s difficult to put this book down, eager as we were to find out what will happen with Dave. Will he get back with Mary Anne, his first true love? Will he return to his hometown, Crane, Oklahoma, and get back together with Gayle or even the pretty eighteen-year-old waitress, Sara, who works with Dave’s mother, has already been married and apparently divorced, and has treated Dave like a younger brother?

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In short, this is a wonderful story about a subject that few are very familiar with. In addition to its educational value, it offers much more than a coming of age novel about a young man in search for his place in the world, but shows a strong young man who faces his fears and dreams on his way down the road to becoming a man. Check it out at Amazon.

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