EBOOK

About
Don't be affeared of what you're about to read: Fiddler's Ghost, voted one of the "Best Books of 2007" by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and "Gold Medal Winner" by the 2008 Independent Publisher's Association, comes highly acclaimed. Mitch Jayne, though born elsewhere, felt the pull of the Ozarks the first time he laid eyes on them. This immediate and abiding affection for his adopted region kindled such a sense of place that he subsequently devoted his teaching, writing, radio gigs, and musical career to highlighting the Ozark Mountains and the people – and their stories – who inhabit them. Fiddler's Ghost, a highly authentic and readable first-person narrative, begins in 1951, when Steve Clark accepts a teaching job in a one-room school in the Missouri Ozarks and moves with his pregnant wife Lacey to the backwoods community of Indian Glade. Surrounded by Ozark characters who remain absorbed with old customs and beliefs and schoolchildren who still speak Elizabethan English, the Clarks move into what they consider an ideal home, though they are forewarned by locals that "The last folks lived there claimed it weren't natural…" Upon encountering their unnatural cohabitant, Steve and Lacey begin to unravel the mystery of the fiddler's ghost. As the novel unfolds and Hiram becomes ever more lifelike, the time-travel connection to music becomes ever more real…