THE WATER AND THE WINE
by
Book Details
About the Book
It is the story of a wealthy, greedy landowner named
Matthew Allison and his family. Allison
a handsome, middle-aged widower with five, beautiful daughters is obsessed with
desire for a son, at any cost. After
the birth of two illegitimate daughters, (one of whom is colored), Allison
hears a sermon by an itinerant preacher about the Biblical characters, LOT and
his daughters, and he decides to seduce one of his own. After careful deliberation, during which
time the “chosen” one has a tragic love affair with a Kentucky sawyer; Allison
gets her drunk and rapes her. She has a
son. She dies at his birth, never having
known the man who wooed her was her father.
Allison adopts the boy to cover his sin and also adopts the colored
illegitimate daughter.
Abner, the son, grows into an honorable, handsome
man, who is unhappy because of the stigma on his name but unaware that his
grandfather is actually his father.
Slavery and race prejudice enter into the story and are carried
throughout from the view point of the Ohio folk who had a terrific part in the
operation of the “Underground Railway.”
There is a brief portion regarding the political
campaign of 1860, the controversy and the election of Mr. Lincoln and an off
the scene summary of the first part of the war when the call for volunteers
causes Abner to announce his intentions of joining the Union forces.
About the Author
She had 15 years in newspapers in Ohio, Colorado and
Wyoming. She was Society Editor, Church
Editor, News Reporter, Feature Writer and Magazine Editor in those years. She had been AP and INS Stringer. She also published poetry in several
newspapers and magazines in this country, also poetry and features in the
“People’s Journal” in Dundee, Scotland.
She was past president of the “Wyoming Press Women”
and regional director of the “National Federation of Press Women.” In 1957 she was named Wyoming’s first “Press
Woman of Achievement.” She won 27
awards in the annual writer’s contest of National Press Women.
She had 5 years in radio as continuity and commercial
writing. Also was News Director, News
Reporter and worked in news and commercial broadcasting and programming.
For 1 year she wrote, produced and broadcast a daily
15 minute program called “Women in the News in 1958 on radio KVWO in Cheyenne,
Wyoming.
The story takes place in her hometown of Nashport,
Ohio, which no longer exists. The
village and surrounding area is now a part of the Dillon Reservoir behind
Dillon Dam on the Licking River just above Zanesville, Ohio. This area is now covered with water.
In 1960 she moved back to Ohio, to Youngstown. Two years later she moved to a place out in
the countryside west of Zanesville, not to far from where this story took
place. She lived there until she died
Aug. 23, 1966.