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Rooster's Gold
Contributor(s): Isaacs, A. Alan (Author)
ISBN: 1642794945     ISBN-13: 9781642794946
Publisher: Morgan James Fiction
OUR PRICE:   $15.26  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: December 2019
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Young Adult Fiction | Historical - United States - General
- Young Adult Fiction | Biographical
- Young Adult Fiction | Family - Orphans & Foster Homes
Physical Information: 0.66" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (1.00 lbs) 294 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Re-experience historical fact as it is woven into the fictional fabric of the Hawkins family with Xander Hawkins, a wealthy man from Tennessee, who engages a lawyer from New York City to create a trust fund to provide for the continuation of his dream: the encouragement, education, and care of orphans.

A. Alan Isaacs invites readers to sit in Xander's study alongside the lawyer as he listens to stories about how the Hawkins family discovered a sympathy for orphans, and an unimaginable treasure. Over several days, we learn how more than 200 years of 'Journaling' from Xander's ancestors continues to influence his approach to life. Along the way, readers can snap pictures of QR Codes embedded throughout Rooster's Gold to effortlessly connect the written word to an internet-based resource. Readers can also fact-check Xander's stories as his relatives encounter several of history's heroes, such as Davy Crockett, Theodore Roosevelt and his Rough Riders, and many more.

After returning from the Spanish-American war, Rooster's son learns that orphaned and abandoned children are being put on trains in New York City and 'whistle-stopped' across the United States to live and work on farms to produce crops for the country's exploding population. Witness how the stories of these Orphan Train Children profoundly impact the Hawkins' family--and the New York lawyer.


Contributor Bio(s): Isaacs, A. Alan: - A. Alan Isaacs is a native of Tennessee and was born into a long-line of storytellers. With a life-long appreciation for creative and positive media, he hopes this pioneering form of entertainment celebrates and encourages orphans and their families. Alan lived in Philadelphia for twelve years and worked in Manhattan for two years before returning to Tennessee. He and his wife live just south of Nashville in Franklin, Tennessee.