Alfie and the Moonshiners

by Henry Buchanan


Formats

Softcover
£4.95
Softcover
£4.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 01/06/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 112
ISBN : 9781588202826

About the Book

THE MOONSHINERS is an Easterday tale of high adventure, of dire threat to the lives of two little boys, Alfie and Junior, lost in the vast Burl Green Woods, and the dramatic rescue which reunites them with their anxious family.

It is a story full of both villains and heroes. The moonshiners are the villains; Papa and Mister Charles and Willie are heroes. Sandy, the mostly collie dog, is the greatest hero of them all.

Mama and Cliff and Miss Maggie are heroic too, for they wait at home, hanging between hope and despair. And Gran'ma who prays for her babies.

And the Sheriff. Surely there has never been another like him, and yet he is the classic prototype of THE LAW.

Some of these characters are real people from the author's childhood. There is no need to shield them from their rightful place in the sun by using fictional names for them. Others are fictional characters created for the purpose of making the tale more interesting. Even they are treated as well as they deserve.


About the Author

Henry Buchanan is a native Georgian. He spent his boyhood in the very region described THE MOONSHINERS. The Burl Green Woods and Tobesofkee Creek are to him like the lines in his own writing hand. His brother Junior actually did fall into the moonshiners' barrels of mash, and the boys' Papa actually did come for them. But what's the use in telling such a tale as this unless it can be made a bit more dramatic by imagination? That's the privilege that attends the writer who has outlived most of the people who were involved in the original adventure.

Buchanan is the author of AND THE GOAT CRIED, a collection of Southern Tales, THE MARRIAGE MYTH, selected tales from the most ancient of all tales, and THE TELEVANGELIST, a modern novel about a young man whose exploits can only be accounted for by the claim that "the Devil made me do it."

The author lives now in Calloway County Kentucky where he collects his tales from the deep mines of memory and shares them with his old cronies at the fictional Sunrise Café.