One More River to Cross By: Allen Futsch This is a story about bullshit. Comedian George Carlin once said when youre born into this world, youre given a ticket to the freak show. If youre born in America, you get a front row seat. Eddie Brandt sits in that seat, and we see the show through his eyes. Its not a pretty picture. Eddie is born blessed, or cursed, with an internal bullshit meter; he encounters bullshit, the meter rings. The book follows him from childhood through old age, and the meter never stops ringing. Eddies story, like true life, does not flow smoothly. Its episodic, a series of vignettes, tied together with the same unifying principle: Eddie dealing with bullshit. We see him dealing with it as a child, an adolescent, and an adult. Its a story of a guy who doesnt fit in. As an old man in his sixties, he gets the final ironic touch: the government diagnoses him as having Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and awards him 100% disability. Its simple: if you cant fit in, ipso facto, you are severely disabled. No, not a pretty picture. The saving grace is humor. Again, Carlin: People who see life as anything more than pure entertainment are missing the point
Its important if you dont give a shit. It can help you a lot. And the farm boy says to the city boy, Dont eat that, son, thats bullshit. Thats the message of this story and why people should read it: Dont eat that, son.
- | Author: Allen Futsch
- | Publisher: Dorrance Publishing Co.
- | Publication Date: Apr 15, 2022
- | Number of Pages: 202 pages
- | Language: English
- | Binding: Paperback/Fiction
- | ISBN-10: 1639372164
- | ISBN-13: 9781639372164