Pages

7/11/25

 


My Facebook account for Neil Crabtree has been shutdown. I have no idea what happens to my pages or my shared posts.

My new Facebook is Neil Thomas. I'm not being allowed to send Friend Requests, a window pops up and says 'I may not know these people' even when it's family or friends I've known forever. 

Neil Thomas

The Matrix is hard to understand. Instead of proving I'm human, I think if I could prove I was a robot, I'd get better results.

My short story "Life During Wartime" appears in the current issue of Real South/West magazine, along with excellent articles and essays and poems, and a terrific photo essay of old ranches.

Life During Wartime Click this link

IM me if you see something weird, like someone else using my Neil Crabtree account to lie and steal.





3/8/25

New stories, new music 


Three stories complete. Two more in the works. Two more drafted.


My next story will be Before I Go, rooted in the Christopher Cross song that expresses so much about aging, love and hope. click to listen.

Before I Go Christopher Cross



Add this great Reggae

Fire on Babylon


And Lyle Lovett

Bears

3/2/25

Writers4Relief Update


    Before the election went haywire, I had a vision of getting writers together to submit stories that would go into eBooks, get sold on Amazon and Draft2Digital, and half the money would go to relief groups like Feed America or Hurricane Response. Noble idea, anyway.

    But now, we're not worried about hurricanes. We're worried about the overthrow of the American Republic by the current administration. I have a different vision for what writers could do, but I don't want to manage a website or launch a marketing campaign or do anything that sucks me and my friends any further into The Matrix. I'm writing a series of tell-me-what-I see stories under the book title Life During Wartime. I don't want to talk about how to market it. I want to write 20 good stories and then poke my head up for air and see what's going on in the wasteland.

    I will not be marketing shirts and cups and hoodies. I don't have the energy. I will be writing my Grapes of Wrath stories until someone says, you know, I'd like to read that. Each story is based in a rock song I admire. All the stories will be like that. Hippie rock and black rhythm and blues let real voices be heard. Now with hip-hop and reborn jazz, more chances to express the universal world view are everywhere. We will not be denied. I got your WOKE right here, buddy. 

These are the featured songs so far. You can also look for Neil's Faves in YouTube.


Life During Wartime

That's All You Need

The Ghost of Tom Joad

The stories are in final draft, well received so far. Knowing the song will help you catch on.

2/13/25

 Waiting in the Weeds          An American metaphor


"...I don't know when I realized the dream was overWell, there was no particular hour, no given dayYou know it didn't go down in flameThere was no final scene, no frozen frameI just watched it slowly fade away..."


Music by the Eagles

Song by S. Smith and D.Henley


YouTube   Click to listen



1/23/25

 This John Prine song will help you understand what My Darling Boy by John Dufresne is all about.


Summer's End



1/20/25

 Book launch Saturday January 25 at Books&Books Coral Gables  5PM

Books&Books Click here for info

My review sent to WW Norton:



My Darling Boy by John Dufresne

 

John Dufresne’s latest novel tells a story of love and loss, a father trying to find and rehabilitate his opioid-addicted son when the son does not want to be found or rehabilitated. Olney, the father, has been straight his whole life, never addicted or incarcerated or homeless. His son Cully becomes addicted to pain medications young and soon becomes all those things and begins lying to his parents and stealing from their home to support his habit. He morphs into a stranger his parents can’t understand or reach out to in their desperation to bring back the darling boy they raised. Reminiscent of American Pastoral by Phillip Roth, My Darling Boy deals with the terrible estrangement that shocks so many families around the world: the good life sometimes is not good enough. Junky love is not the same as family love, Olney learns the hard way. His wife leaves him, not able to handle the stress of Cully’s metamorphosis into a strange young man without feelings for those who care the most for his well-being. He finds his son and loses him time after time. Olney’s search leads him to extraordinary and decent people pushed to the edge of our white bread world, each with their own story of loss and survival.

Told through Olney’s point of view, we learn through the fascinating characters he encounters that love is indeed hard to find and hard to keep for most good-hearted people. The happy past Olney remembers with Cully is denied by the young man as an illusion. The addicted Cully can remember his supply chain but not his own childhood. Olney’s heartbreak is the reader’s heartbreak. Having love turned away is an undercurrent in the lives of every single character in the story, just as it is in real life. That is what makes Olney’s hope and courage stand out to the reader: there is hope. There is love. There is the chance of a better future despite all the despair, but only if he continues his quest and does not give up. Olney is a hero for our times.

 

Neil Crabtree

Author of Smuggler’s Return

 

 

12/13/24


 If you are interested in the craft of writing, Steve Almond's book is a must-have. Written with sincerity and verve and a sense of humor, Truth Is The Arrow is also a memoir of Steve's writing career including time spent at Florida International University and in John Dufresne's Friday Night Writers. Steve Almond is the author of a dozen books of fiction and nonfiction, including All The Secrets of the World and Candyfreak. This current book is a masterpiece of shared insights from thirty years of writing, teaching and workshop mentoring. Buy it    HERE at Amazon or here at Books&Books. Clicking either link takes you to the site. The chapter on rendering the inner life stands out:

From page 183: "To focus on the inner life today--to read books, to imaging with no ulterior agenda, to reflect on painful or confusing experiences--is to defy the clamoring edicts of our age, the buy messages, the endless pleas for followers and likes.

Writers have to find a different way of being in the world. The making of literature is the manner by which we come to understand our inner lives, by which we travel in difficult truth toward elusive mercy, and thereby reaffirm the bonds of human kindness.

I am speaking here of something that goes beyond the fate of our work, or the brief span of our lives. I am speaking of the man, or the woman, who stands in silence at the top of the stairs, just a few seconds longer, feeling the ghost of his beloved mother in his arms, rocking her back and forth, back and forth."

12/1/24

 Relief update:



Now that we're moving into the Winter of our Discontent, I find that what will be needed in the coming months is not hurricane relief,  though that is a major concern for me and all my friends and family. The various agencies helping are getting support and help from millions around the country. But what I see is the danger of an anti-Woke government encouraging prejudice against Art and Artists. You know the new Administration is going to be trying to defund the arts, public broadcasting, libraries, subversive literature as they will define it, and the teaching of classic liberal values. Banning books has already demonstrated that Freedom of Expression is now under fire. Why keep kids from reading the world's greatest literature?

I'm such a sucker for good causes. I do want to Save the World. I want to feed the hungry, house the homeless, heal the sick, clothe the naked, rebuild all the broken homes and businesses. I still buy Biggie Bags from Wendy's for the bums on US 1.  That's a personal thing.

Dedicating a website is a different story. I'm a writer, not a millionaire. I'm a reader, not a politician. What I've learned over these last years is that there is a community of writers and readers who sincerely want to help. Now I see that community is about to be attacked. There will be closings of Liberal Arts programs in every university in America. There will be dedicated teachers and professors fired for teaching the vision of America they grew up with. The networks will be loaded with MAGA propaganda as anyone who opposes that dark vision is prosecuted and harassed. Free elections will cease as we know them, replaced by restricted voting for friends of the Man Who Would Be King. Public health will be at risk for millions of Americans as Anti-vaxxers and conspiracy theorists take charge of agencies once meant to help. The rich will get richer. By the time the middle class figure out their 401Ks are about to collapse, it will be too late. The people who brought our grandparents the first Great Depression will bring the next. War will be seen as a financial decision, good for the Economy. But will we have any allies?

Of course, I could be wrong. We might be heading into the next Golden Era. America will be great again. 

We'll see. Meanwhile, I will build a website for writers to share with readers, students, teachers and all the artists, all the musicians, all the people who care. Writers4Relief just WOKE up.



11/25/24


 The 40th Miami Book Fair ended Sunday evening, after thousands of visitors from around the world came and enjoyed beautiful weather, great music, exhibits of every cool thing on this planet, and readings by authors we all know and love. I worked our booth, the South Florida Writers Association, with displays of over 50 books written by our members, including Sea of Tranquility: A Literary Anthology compiled from contributions of poetry and short pieces members contributed for a trip to the Moon as part of the Lunar Codex. It was fun working with Don Daniels setting up the booth, and sharing space with Gladys Barrios, C.V. Shaw, Regine Fisher, Anita Mitchell, Ramesh Nyberg, and others to promote their books and encourage new membership.

And you know what? There was no Protest Against Books organized by those who prefer Banning Books to reading them. They would have been overwhelmed by the outpouring of support for literacy over ignorance. You don't see Ugly People standing outside Beauty Pageants complaining. Same here.

11/20/24


 The Miami Book Fair is open at the Miami Dade College Wolfson campus. Thursday I will be helping Don Daniels set up the South Florida Writers Association booth. We will have books from members on display and a Featured Writer table going Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Stop by and visit. I'll be there as much as I can. There are several writers I will be looking for and will attend readings whenever I can.

The Street Fair should enjoy wonderful weather, cool and sunny and comfortable for walking around.

See you there!

11/13/24

 Writers4Relief update:

Writers4relief

I owe everyone an update on my project. Right now, the website has 3 pages up and by the end of the day I expect to have integrated my Shopify store into the website, with a current list of my books and prices showing. I have enabled PayPal Business for merchant services. As it grows, the website will feature authors who have provided support by sending stories, poems and essays to use to raise funds for the relief agencies. 

Which is another to-do: I must prepare a letter to send to interested writers outlining why we're doing this and how it will work. Basically, in exchange for something that we can publish or something published that we can sell, writers will receive marketing support that might otherwise cost quite a bit of money, including Biographies, web-links, blog backstories, excerpts from upcoming works, and Buy Now links to their existing books and publisher pages. And of course, they will be provided an accounting of sales and donations, and be publicly thanked for doing something to help ease the suffering of disaster victims. A heroes list, kind of. 

In addition, I am having made T-shirts and coffee mugs and stickers for all purposes. While learning how to synch a Shopify card reader, for onsite sales at book fairs and charity events, I am doing things I wished I had learned 15 years ago. 

I will be applying for a Kickstarter grant once the business plan and resources are completed. If you think you would like to support this Kickstarter project, let me know at ncrab4you@gmail.com. It will be necessary to fund the project and its marketing campaign for several months to get it to support itself. People can't help if they don't know what you're doing. And at a certain point, I need the project to be self-sufficient so I can get back to writing. I need it to be something that can be run at a very high standard by people younger than me with the same driving interest: Let's Do Something.



11/6/24

 

I enjoyed working with the team at South Florida Writers Association to create this literary anthology. What sets this book apart is its ultimate destination: THE MOON. 

"Would you like to send a poem or a short story to the moon? That was the question delivered to over one hundred South Florida Writers Association creatives-and the race was on to craft and deliver.

The result is this anthology, on which pages you find thoughtful poetry and prose written with a love for what connects us to our moon. We hope you enjoy reading it as much as we enjoyed compiling this collection that will journey to the moon as part of the Lunar Codex Project.

This project began on July 30th of 2024 when Dr. Samuel Peralta, founder of the Lunar Codex, a stunning collection of the works of contemporary writers, artists, musicians, and filmmakers from all over the world, contacted poet Howard Camner and asked him to put together an anthology for the Polaris Collection of the Codex that would be launched to the moon and remain there in perpetuity. Camner contacted Mort Laitner, President of the SFWA to come aboard as co-editor. The best of the best was compiled, and the rest, quite literally, is history. As Dr. Peralta has stated: "The Sea of Tranquility Anthology brings together the voices of scores of poets and authors in tribute to humanity and its yearnings, to look upward, outward, to imagine, to dream."




This is a terrific collection of poetry and short pieces from SFWA creators. I'm proud to have my poem


"The Moon And I Walk The Dog" included, and to have worked with the team to compile the over 100


 works---all with the moon as theme---into a vibrant and exciting collection. 


The man in the moon is going to be very happy.


Buy at Amazon

11/3/24

Helping Others



You can click the above link to see what I'm working on. I'd like to finish the website this week.

My idea is simple: We're all writers, we're all readers. Books, poems, Facebook posts, song lyrics, emails, postcards, news reports, menus, street signs, graffiti. We buy paperbacks, hard covers and eBooks at our favorite places. We look for good deals, writers we like, stories that interest us, inform us, help us decide what we must do to get on with our lives. 

Suppose in addition to that, suppose every time we bought what we'd like to read, part of the money we spent went to Feeding America, or Doctors Without Borders, or the American Red Cross?

And suppose the writers and musicians and artists we love supplied their short works to make it all work, a functioning partnership between writers and readers to DO SOMETHING to help victims of disasters get food and clothes and medicine. Not just Facebook posts, but writers and readers sharing their time and experiences to let those unfortunate ones know, we care. Here, take what we can give. Tell us how we can do more. 

I think this can work. I'm risking money I don't have and time that is getting short to create a mechanism that receives and delivers help. Everyone I have talked to about this wants in. My faith in humanity has grown quite a bit just hearing good things we can do. I'll keep you posted.

10/28/24

Scary Halloween Treat Now At Amazon. 



Get Halloween Horror for $1.99 at Amazon starting 10/28. Click

and get an eBook (Kindle) you can send to trick-or treaters or

just get a kick yourself. 



 


10/22/24

Jonathan Escoffery Reads at FIU Writers on the Bay OCTOBER 24 2024


 This is an event to mark on your calendar. Jonathan Escoffery at FIU-North is a kind of homecoming. The young man actually slept in his car while taking MFA classes there, and went on to have his first book, If I Survive You, nominated for one of Literature's highest honors, the Booker Prize. I'll see you there!

From Bookshop.org    If I Survive You

                         


10/18/24

New eBook      Click to buy



My latest is a short bio eBook now available at Amazon. It is part of a series, Part 1 in fact, that will let me reach out beyond what fiction offers. So many of us are dealing with disasters and disease and the downward trend life takes as we move on. But don't despair. If we weren't all crazy we would go insane.

10/14/24

 

10 Questions for Tom Fillion





Buy here from Amazon

 

1.      It seems like you have been writing and self-publishing for years now. I started around the same time, when you had to use CreateSpace to make a print book and cover. Tell us about your first efforts with Amazon and Smashwords.

 Yes, I’ve published 7 books on Amazon now called Kindle Direct Publishing or KDP. I’ve done 5 novels and two collections of poems. I’m old school as far as the goes and was primarily interested in print books, but all my stuff is available as an e-book also.

 2.      You are republishing The Dream Mechanic with a hot-looking new cover. Will you renew other titles as well?

I’d give myself an F+ in marketing so I’m trying to improve on that.  New book covers are part of that. When I originally did the books I used Amazon’s cover creator, but let’s face it, readers do judge a book by its cover. That’s why I’ve used a professional designer for a new cover on THE DREAM MECHANIC.

 3.      Have you always been a writer? What jobs have you worked, especially any that contributed to your storytelling?

I started writing in second grade inspired by The Call of the Wild by Jack London, The Hardy Boy novels by Franklin W. Dixon, Beautiful Joe by Margaret Saunders, and Misty of Chincoteague by Marguerite Henry. I still have my copies of Beautiful Joe and Misty of Chincoteague!

I’ve had many jobs and that’s probably contributed to my writing being very eclectic. The most notable are from 16 – 20 in the summers I worked at Mt. Washington Cog Railroad in New Hampshire.  My grandfather had worked there for 30 years as an engineer so even though I lived in Tampa at 16 my brother and I and a friend rode a Greyhound up the east coast to Mt. Washington. During the 4 summers that I worked there I washed dishes, base clean up crew, switchman at Waumbek, brakeman and fireman on the trains. As a fireman I shoveled a ton of coal to get up Mt. Washington. Truly a unique experience and I keep in touch with some of those friends from that period.

After graduating from the University of South Florida with a degree in English, I was kind of burned out and directionless which resulted in a few flunky jobs one of which was a waterbed setup man and that is the basis of THE DREAM MECHANIC oddly enough. Some of my friends went to graduate school, but I didn’t.  I’ve always said this job was my graduate school because I dealt with people from all levels of American society. Besides that, it was fun getting stoned and drunk with some of the customers!

In 1980, I began teaching at Hillsborough County Adult High School in Tampa. I got married that same year to June who was from New York City and she had gone to Manhattan School of Music as a voice major. I was certified in English, Mathematics 6-12, and Gifted, so I taught various classes at the Adult High School: Math, Computer Applications, and English as a Second Language. There was a huge program there for foreign students to learn English. Wherever there were trouble spots in the world and refugees, some would end up at the Adult High School.

And that’s how I ended up in Saudi Arabia in 1991. I took a job with Lear Seigler Inc, a defense contractor, as an English Language Trainer for the Royal Saudi Air Force in Taif, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. My experience there is the basis of my novel, HUBBLY BUBBLY. I lived on a US Airforce compound out in the high desert about 50 kilometers from Mecca. There were F-16 and U2 pilots, British Air, and McDonnell Douglass personnel on the compound. We all traveled to King Fahd Royal Saudi Air Force base every day. My wife and daughter flew met me in Frankfurt that summer and we drove up to Norway where she had relatives. June’s father grew up in Norway.

. I was with Hillsborough County Schools from then until I retired in 2019.  I taught various levels of Mathematics and coached track, golf, and tennis during that time period.  In the mornings before school, I wrote and self- published 5 novels and 2 collections of poetry. Now that I’m retired, I’m focusing on growing an audience for my writing!    


4.      Has Tampa always been your home? Tell us about yourself.

For the most part, I’ve lived in Tampa.

I went to Catholic and public schools here in Tampa grades 1 – 12. My novel, GIUSEPPE’S AWARD, is about Catholic school and the Florida State Fair!

Before I graduated from USF in 1975, I split in my 1962 VW bug and went to Vermont and lived in the woods where I made fiberglass canoes.  I brought a bunch of philosophy books with me to read. Of course, I didn’t read any of them, but I did watch most of the Watergate hearings!

1991, the year I spent in Saudi Arabia is the only other time I haven’t lived in Tampa.

 

5.      You write poetry as well as fiction. Are your poems collected or more random events?

 

The poems are very eclectic and cover a range of thoughts, observations, and subjects, some serious, some funny, and some satiric and sardonic.

 

The cover of ARCHIPELAGO OF MYSELF is a picture of Slieve League in Donegal, Ireland that I took in 2007 when my wife and I visited Ireland.

 

The cover of THE SKY’S THE LIMIT is a picture I took in Albuquerque, New Mexico where my daughter lives.

 

I have enough poems for another collection. I just haven’t put it together yet.

 

6.      I found seven titles available. Are any of the books related by character or settings? Tell us about each title.

 

The Dream Mechanic is a Southern Gothic journey back to the Me Decade of the 1970s when credit card debt was tax deductible and businesses that lost money were profitable. After graduating from the University of Urban Failures (UUF), Wilbur Dobbs takes a job as a dream mechanic setting up waterbeds at Wetbedders, a small business and tax write-off for Dave and Margo Hamilton, so that he can pay back his National Defense Student Loan from UUF and the Record Club of America for three hundred copies of In The Court of The Crimson King, his favorite album. Wilbur is fed, clothed, liquored, stoned, entertained, loved, hated, and abused by a variety of people from the Me Decade as he enters the inner sanctums of their bedrooms for several hours that make indelible impressions on his overactive mind. The reader is in for a real treat as Dobbs meets weird and wonderful characters from up and down the social ladder reminiscent of John Kennedy Toole's, A CONFEDERACY OF DUNCES, and James Purdy's, MALCOLM.

 

Giuseppe’s Award: He’s Robinson Crusoe. He’s an imaginary cowboy. He’s a cigar-smoking paperboy of the month. He’s friends with Clarence, Graveyard, and Chipper. He and his brother, Frankie, have a go-cart with no brakes. He has a dog named Ginger and a duck named Elroy. He’s out of uniform at a funeral mass. He’s friends with Agar the Giant, Baby Flo the Fat Lady, and Cash McCain star of the Florida State Fair. He’s Giuseppe Fieri, a fourth grader at Our Lady of Perpetual Hell and sits in the fourth row, fourth seat according to his GPA. Nobody past the first row ever wins the community improvement essay contest, but he does.

 

When The Moon Is In The Seventh House: Billy narrates the story of his best friend, Flint Dupree, and Ellie Windows who met in a Sex and Violence in Southern Literature class that also describes their relationship. Join Billy's wild ride through astrology's seventh house associated with friendship, partnership, competitors, enemies, and marriage. Billy gets through his own 'midlife crisis' with a little help from his friends at St. Christopher's Crazy Eights Factory, including his own personal gynecologist.

 

New England Book of the Dead: In New England Book of the Dead, Robert Fortier escorts his legally blind, eighty-eight year old father, Roland, from Florida to Vermont to see his father's sister, Alma, before she dies in the hospital. It's the longest time he has spent with his father since growing up and traveling the world.

 

Hubbly Bubbly: For months Jim Tierney sent out his resume with no results. An economic recession in 1990 raged. A home addition he started languishes from lack of funds. His self- esteem is in the crapper. One day he receives an unexpected phone call offering him a job that comes with a villa and a houseboy. What? He accepts the job immediately because he’s lost and has to find his way in the world again. He accepts the job before telling his wife and daughter that the job is in Saudi Arabia and there’s a war right around the corner.

 

Archipelago of Myself: Archipelago of Myself is a collection of whimsical and eclectic poems. The topics and titles include a kaleidoscope of modern life: Slow Dancing In Hell, Hunger Games In Texas, I want To Be a Kardashian, Twerking In The New Year, Orchestra Seats At Armageddon, Chapel of Continuing Basketball Re-Education Camp, Dreaming In Swahili, Get Your Sorry Ass Up And Go To Work, etc.

 

The Sky’s the Limit:  This collection of 121 eclectic poems from 2015-2018 covers a range of topics and absurdities of modern life. These are some of the topics and subjects in this new collection that are sure to entertain, enlighten, anger, and amuse.

 

 

7.      What are your marketing plans now and how are they different from when you started writing? 

 

I queried agents and got read by some top agents which considering the publishing landscape was a plus. I’ve even had an agent, but nothing ever happened. That’s when I started self-publishing my writing, but not really promoting it.  Now that I’m retired from the teaching profession and the emotional baggage that carries, I am more willing to work on the back end of the self-publishing enterprise. Answering these 10 questions is a big step in that direction! 

 

8.      What writers influenced your thinking and style? Have you always loved books of a certain time or place?

Lots of writers!

Seeing this is primarily about The Dream Mechanic, there are two writers that I kept in mind while writing this novel. One was Sherwood Anderson who wrote Winesburg, Ohio, a collection of interlocking stories. The other writer is James Purdy who wrote novels, plays, and short stories. Malcolm is my favorite novel of his.  Gore Vidal called him “an authentic American genius.” I was fortunate to have known James for many years through a friend of my wife’s from New York City. I included his comments about The Dream Mechanic on the back cover.

 

9.      Do you attend any writers groups or seminars?

Yes, I recently joined Tampa Writers Alliance.

I’ve attended a couple conferences with agents and authors. One was some years ago at the Algonquin Hotel in NYC. The other one was recently 2024 Florida Writing Workshop here in Tampa.

 

10.  Are you writing something new? Tell us about your latest projects.

 

As I mentioned earlier I have enough poems for another collection. On the fiction side, I have two novels that are basically finished.  Spirit Week deals with homecoming at a high school and a secret of a powerful political family.   The other novel is The Year of Broken Glass dealing with the Covid pandemic. Also, I’ve been writing a free-for-all that I call Bayshore Chronicles about my bike travels along Tampa’s Bayshore Boulevard and  other things that come up.

 

Email: TomFillion@gmail.com

X: @dreamechanic

FB: dreammechanic

http://dreammechanic.blogspot.com/

 

 

 

10/9/24

 Feeding America drive is now on!


I've joined Team Feed to help end hunger in America. No one should go without a meal, yet more than 47 million people in America face hunger. I created this fundraiser to help provide these much needed meals to our neighbors through the Feeding America network of food banks and I'm asking you to join my in my cause. 

Every $1 donated helps provide at least 10 meals. It only takes a little to make a big difference. Will you help in my fight to end hunger?

I will be donating funds from book sales by sharing funds through Writers4Relief, my new organization to help writers make meaningful contributions to help those hit by hurricanes this year. Team Feed is the first charity I've chosen, because of its great reputation for getting things done.

Contact me at neilcrabtree7@gmail.com to help. And donate here as well.

Click on the Donate button above and let's end hunger together!


Join in and donate here:


Feeding America

9/28/24

My review of John Dufresne's My Darling Boy at Goodreads

"I received from WW Norton an Advanced Reading Copy of this incredible book. We read about opioid addiction every day. In this novel, John Dufresne takes it down to the personal level. Olney is a modern-day father whose son Cully becomes addicted after an injury. Cully likes being addicted, something that's hard for his family, indeed, for any straight people to understand. The numbness of the drugs can actually seem an improvement to the numbness and despair of living in these troubled times. Read Burrough's book JUNKY to see this from another angle. Olney struggles to save his son, now grown and on his own going from one fix to another. Olney's quest is America's quest, to rescue our children from the turning away of love and understanding. In the wonderful Dufresne fashion, we encounter normal environments full of crazy people, often hilarious, sad, and endearing. Treat yourself to a novel you'll always remember. Available in January 2025. Pre-order now."



 

  My Facebook account for Neil Crabtree has been shutdown. I have no idea what happens to my pages or my shared posts. My new Facebook is Ne...