Life Moves On : Memoir Reflections of an Arkansas Traveler
(2026)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : BookBaby, 2026
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9798317829902 MWT19366618, 19366618
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

In Life Moves On, Gordon Shepherd offers a compelling collection of memoir stories drawn from his adult life in Arkansas as an academic sociologist with a deep affection for the state and its people. The Arkansans he encounters reflect and transcend regional stereotypes, revealing a complex and often surprising cultural landscape. His stories span unscripted religious fervor in a northern Arkansas county, the legacy of the 1919 Elaine Massacre in the Arkansas Mississippi Delta region of the state, the struggles of a Vietnam veteran returning to college, and the quiet generosity of a local pharmacist competing with corporate giants. Other vignettes explore family ties, racial reconciliation, and the enduring impact of the 1957 Little Rock Central High crisis. Baseball threads through several stories, from the formation of the Conway Hardball League to the dreams and dilemmas of young Latino players navigating immigration politics. As a bonus story, Shepherd recounts his encounters during a Road Scholar trip to Havana, Cuba, offering a cross-cultural reflection from an Arkansan's point of view. While Shepherd's stories are organized in rough chronological order, they are eclectic in their subjects and focus. Some are short while others are fairly lengthy. Independent of the stories' particular settings and contents, all are humanistically rendered. They reveal Shepherd's sympathetic curiosity for learning more about his surroundings and the normative traditions that shape other people's lives; and they reflect equally his appreciation for people's reciprocal interest in him as an Arkansas traveler, and their generosity when he encounters them in the context of their daily lives and occupations. Life Moves On will appeal to all readers of ethnographic memoir, regardless of where they themselves live or come from; and it will appeal especially to readers who are from Arkansas and claim it as their own

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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