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Outside Knoxville the Trilogy: Kaskaskia - Vine Street 1919 - The Tellico Surveillance
Contributor(s): Carter, Bob (Author)
ISBN: 1450599737     ISBN-13: 9781450599733
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $19.00  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: September 1998
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Action & Adventure
Dewey: FIC
Physical Information: 0.97" H x 5.98" W x 9.02" (1.41 lbs) 484 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Kaskaskia Parson Bains could not have imagined what was ahead of him when he boarded the Kaskaskia. He became a hero to many people because he simply did what he thought was right. He only wanted to serve his time in the Navy and get back to the real world and his true love Marci. But danger and intrigue seemed to surround him from the beginning. While trying to cope with one of the most dangerous jobs in the Navy, he had to confront stowaways, kidnapping, smuggling, a hurricane and murder. Marci was Mexican/American and drop dead beautiful. Her wealthy family in Texas was very powerful. She tried to busy herself with her studies and social activism but she is thrust into a whirl of celebrity that she did not seek. Her strongest desire is to reunite with Parson. Vine Street 1919 Sam would sneak off to practice pool. He was too young to be hanging out there but he befriended Jimmy "The Fox" Darden and a two-fingered black man named Dallas. They quickly found out that Sam was a natural at the game. His skills became legendary. But Sam would eventually have to confront the dark and ugly racial divide of his home town and his family. Roscoe Springfield was a proud black man one generation removed from slavery. Soon he would be faced with raising twin boys in a racially hostile environment. A lie set off a series of events in one of the worst race riots in American History It came to a climax on Vine Street in the Summer of 1919. The Tellico Surveillance Parson Bains had dreamed of moving his wife and daughter back to the country and becoming a gentleman farmer. Life was good until the FBI approached him. He soon discovered his seemingly friendly neighbors were not only Cocaine dealers but the leaders of one of the most insidious racial hate groups in the country. They wanted Parson to infiltrate the group.