Howard Ellman's Farewell by Ernest Hebert (UPNE, 2014)
"Suppose all a man has left is his imagination. Then what? Part
Falstaff, part King Lear, but all American, Howard Elman was a
fifty-something workingman when he burst onto the literary scene in The Dogs of March,
the first novel of the Darby Chronicles. Now in this, its seventh
installment, the Darby constable is an eighty-something widower who
wants to do “a great thing” before he motors off into the sunset. Maybe
Howard achieves this goal, but he manages it in strange, wonderful, and
dangerous ways. On his quest he’s aided, abetted, hindered, and
befuddled by his middle-aged children, his hundred-year-old hermit
friend Cooty Patterson, a voice in his head, and the person he loves
most, his grandson, Birch Latour. At 24, Birch has returned to Darby
with his friends to take over the stewardship of the Salmon Trust and to
launch a video game, Darby Doomsday. At stake is the fate of Darby. And
the world? Maybe. Howard Elman’s Farewell begins
as a coming of (old) age story, morphs into a murder mystery, expands
into a family saga, and in the end might just follow Howard Elman into
the spirit world. This is a novel for people who like New England fiction with humor, pathos, and just a touch of magical realism." --Publisher's blurb
NH author Ernest Hebert will be visiting local booksellers this week to talk about this last volume in the Darby Chronicles.
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