High Water

Fiction & Literature, Classics, Historical
Cover of the book High Water by Richard Bissell, eNet Press Inc.
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Author: Richard Bissell ISBN: 9781618865663
Publisher: eNet Press Inc. Publication: September 29, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Richard Bissell
ISBN: 9781618865663
Publisher: eNet Press Inc.
Publication: September 29, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English

“A river, a very big and powerful river, is the only natural force that can wholly determine the course of human peregrination.” T. S.Eliot

Duke Snyder found his first job on “a dirty old cinder-throwing stern-wheeler” when he was sixteen years old with just sixty-five cents left in his pocket and nothing else to do. Ten years later he’s still on the river aboard an old diesel towboat hauling eight barges of coal toward the Chain of Rocks above St. Louis with all hands on deck facing the ominous rise of high water. 

As the waters of the Mississippi climb to alarming levels,  Bissell takes us aboard the steamboat with captains, Ironhat and Casey, engineer, Greasecup, and crew members, the Kid, Arkansaw,  ole Swede, One Eye, and Zero.  Embraced by rain and fog and night is as black as “ the inside of a Holstein heifer,”we learn about the crew and their losses and loves, flaws and foibles, and are caught up in the flood of their lives much like the swell of the raging river.

Bissell loved river life and spent much of his time on a towboat on the Mississippi.  An expert at finding the details that make a story exceptional, Bissell reminds us how rich and vibrant and dynamic life can be if we just open our eyes and ears and noses and take notice. They say to write about what you know.  Don’t miss this one.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

“A river, a very big and powerful river, is the only natural force that can wholly determine the course of human peregrination.” T. S.Eliot

Duke Snyder found his first job on “a dirty old cinder-throwing stern-wheeler” when he was sixteen years old with just sixty-five cents left in his pocket and nothing else to do. Ten years later he’s still on the river aboard an old diesel towboat hauling eight barges of coal toward the Chain of Rocks above St. Louis with all hands on deck facing the ominous rise of high water. 

As the waters of the Mississippi climb to alarming levels,  Bissell takes us aboard the steamboat with captains, Ironhat and Casey, engineer, Greasecup, and crew members, the Kid, Arkansaw,  ole Swede, One Eye, and Zero.  Embraced by rain and fog and night is as black as “ the inside of a Holstein heifer,”we learn about the crew and their losses and loves, flaws and foibles, and are caught up in the flood of their lives much like the swell of the raging river.

Bissell loved river life and spent much of his time on a towboat on the Mississippi.  An expert at finding the details that make a story exceptional, Bissell reminds us how rich and vibrant and dynamic life can be if we just open our eyes and ears and noses and take notice. They say to write about what you know.  Don’t miss this one.

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