The Great Gaelic Cross
by
Book Details
About the Book
Set along a mythical seashore village in Scotland in the 1700's, the story deals with a young man who has continuing dreams of a Gaelic Cross that seems to portend doom for the villagers. He spends his time helping the people with their daily routines after maraunders have laid waste to their homes over an extended period of years and suddenly the town is restored to its original form after the death of his mother in the final debacle. The mystery of the dream permeates the entire story amid the re-appearance of his mother in a ghostly form with messages to the townspeople on the significance of the Cross in each of their lives
About the Author
Philip Christman (Scanlin) was born in Carthage, New York on August 29, 1930. Enlisted in the U.S. Air Force in June, 1949 - discharged as a weather observer in December, 1952, spent 17 years in El Paso, Texas, earning a B.A. Degree in History/Spanish from the University of Texas at El Paso in 1966 - taught Spanish for four years and worked for the New York State Department of Labor for 18 years, retiring in 1966.