You know this city like the back of your hand, but deep roots are holding me down
According to the checkout card tucked into its back cover, the black-boarded, jacketless first edition of Millard Lampell's The Hero (1949) which I just collected this afternoon through interlibrary loan came originally from the Hatfield branch of the now-dissolved Western Massachusetts Regional Library System, whose bookmobile
spatch remembers vividly because it was not the library across the street from one of his childhood homes but the one about a mile up the road. The dates on the card are well within the span of his family's residency. It would be nice to imagine that one of his parents took it out, or at least browsed through it, sometime. The punch line of discovering Lampell as an author is that while I did not in the least recognize his name, I would recognize his voice because along with Pete Seeger, Lee Hays, and Woody Guthrie, he formed the Almanac Singers. It was only later in his career as a screenwriter that he was blacklisted.

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I suppose there would indeed only be one.
T and I were just having the "who would we cast as Lee Hays in a movie" conversation again so I am the audience for this post.
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He saw her multiple times as a school-visiting author!
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The same! He can write, too. I spent two and a half hours on hold this afternoon trying to pay my utility bills (there's a talking blues for you) and his novel was a sanity-saver, although not very much of an incitement against burning capitalism down.
T and I were just having the "who would we cast as Lee Hays in a movie" conversation again so I am the audience for this post.
I am delighted to hear it! (Who would you cast?)
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I love your telescoped endings.
For eighty years the View Royal area ran a wholly independent lending library, preƫxisting and then co-existing with the local library system.
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Thank you!
For eighty years the View Royal area ran a wholly independent lending library, preƫxisting and then co-existing with the local library system.
I am so sorry that it is now in the past tense.