Homer is Where the Heart Is

by John Randall Tabor


Formats

Softcover
$18.95
E-Book
$9.99
Softcover
$18.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 7/28/2011

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 228
ISBN : 9781462031597
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 228
ISBN : 9781462031603

About the Book

JOHN RANDALL TABOR grew up in north Louisiana in the town of Homer. In 1962 he earned a bachelor’s degree in English education at Louisiana Tech. In 1968 he was awarded a master’s degree in journalism from Louisiana State University. For thirty-three years he taught English composition and news writing at LSU in Shreveport, where he also was director of information services and director of alumni affairs. In addition, Tabor was president of the Ark-La-Tex chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi. From 2002–2003 he wrote a weekly column for The (Homer) Guardian-Journal newspaper and throughout his career he has published a number of feature articles, one of which won first place at the Deep South Writers Conference. He currently lives in the village of Bethany, Louisiana, where he is working on a novel, The Glorious Weight of the Noonday Sun.


About the Author

Want to go back home and re-live those nostalgic small-town memories of the forties and fifties? It’s easy. Just journey through the pages of Homer is Where the Heart Is, with its array of unique characters and adventures that you won’t soon forget: a thirteen-year-old would-be pimp, the postman who can’t read, a principal who makes an obscene gesture at his sixth and seventh grade boys, the football coach with gas, the classroom student who “hears” a kangaroo in the room, the mother who always votes against her son in singing contests. These are just a few of the people in the narrator’s life as he grows up in Homer, Louisiana, and interacts with these and other people of his hometown, all the while fighting a lifelong battle with the frustrations of a hearing loss, and trying to survive a two-year conflict with his high school football coach. Finally, in Part II of the book, he describes going into his twilight years as an insatiable reader and concludes with rankings of important books that belong on everybody’s bookshelves.