Pig Boy's Wicked Bird

A Memoir

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Pig Boy's Wicked Bird by Doug Crandell, Chicago Review Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Doug Crandell ISBN: 9781556529887
Publisher: Chicago Review Press Publication: September 1, 2004
Imprint: Chicago Review Press Language: English
Author: Doug Crandell
ISBN: 9781556529887
Publisher: Chicago Review Press
Publication: September 1, 2004
Imprint: Chicago Review Press
Language: English

This gritty tragicomic memoir is set in one memorable year—1976, the Bicentennial, when Jimmy Carter ran for president and seven-year-old Doug Crandell lost two fingers in a farming accident. More than anything, Doug wants to shed his nickname, Pig Boy, and grow up to be a hog man like his father. His older brother Derrick reads pulp novels to him each night as he soaks his remaining fingers in Epsom salts. His brothers urge him to "flip the Wicked Bird" any time another child makes fun of his "lobster-red hand." Doug shares his summer of healing in Wabash, Indiana, with humans and animals who've suffered life-changing traumas: a brutal grandfather gentled by stroke, a deaf dog with a deadly taste for pig's ears, a tough-love mother coping with depression, a bevy of runt piglets saved from extermination. This is a story of love, loss, healing, and a family's relation with the land they love and know that they will lose.

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

This gritty tragicomic memoir is set in one memorable year—1976, the Bicentennial, when Jimmy Carter ran for president and seven-year-old Doug Crandell lost two fingers in a farming accident. More than anything, Doug wants to shed his nickname, Pig Boy, and grow up to be a hog man like his father. His older brother Derrick reads pulp novels to him each night as he soaks his remaining fingers in Epsom salts. His brothers urge him to "flip the Wicked Bird" any time another child makes fun of his "lobster-red hand." Doug shares his summer of healing in Wabash, Indiana, with humans and animals who've suffered life-changing traumas: a brutal grandfather gentled by stroke, a deaf dog with a deadly taste for pig's ears, a tough-love mother coping with depression, a bevy of runt piglets saved from extermination. This is a story of love, loss, healing, and a family's relation with the land they love and know that they will lose.

More books from Chicago Review Press

Cover of the book Love Becomes a Funeral Pyre by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book The Making of The Wizard of Oz by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Freedom Song by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Zoology for Kids by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Seventeen Fathoms Deep by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Courageous Women of the Vietnam War by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Leone Leoni by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Weather Projects for Young Scientists by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book They Dare to Speak Out by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book The Hot Air Balloon Book by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Rainbow Warrior by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Off the Beaten Page by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Country Music Changed My Life by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book Before and After Zachariah by Doug Crandell
Cover of the book The American Revolution for Kids by Doug Crandell
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy