Wanderer Springs: A Novel

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Texas A&M University Press, Jan 1, 1987 - Fiction - 340 pages
Wanderer Springs is a dying town in Northwest Texas, one of that string of dusty towns left to wither away when the highway from Fort Worth to Amarillo bypassed them. For travelers on that highway, the harsh and unforgiving countryside passes as no more than a blur. For Will Callaghan, that country and the town of Wanderer Springs are carved into memory, indelible in their clarity.

Called home from San Antonio by a funeral, Will begins a journey, both physical and imaginative, that crosses not only geographic and cultural boundaries but darts back and forth in time, mixing stories of the town's frontier past with episodes of Will's high school days. In sometimes hilarious and sometimes painful detail, Will relives the football game where he dropped the pass that lost the championship for Wanderer Springs forever, the time he got his gum stuck in his girlfriend's hair, the strangely distant but close relationship of a motherless boy and his taciturn father. Equally clear are the tales from the past--the Turrill family's desperate wagon ride to find a doctor for their daughter, dying of appendicitus, or Lulu Byars who danced and danced in town and caught pneumonia riding back to her dugout in a norther. Wanderer Springs said she died of frivolity.

Through it all, the clear voice of Will Callaghan, a good old boy grown into an intellectual, gives meaning to the chaos, seeks sense out of the past, recognizes our inextricable link to the past.

Wanderer Springs is a wonderfully witty, sensitive novel that will stand out as one of the more serious, thoughtful, and memorable novels to come out of recent Texas writing.
 

Contents

County Names
San Antonio
The Road to Red River
Center Point
The Corner
Lost Lake Farms
Copyright

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About the author (1987)

Robert Flynn, an accomplished author of novels and short stories, is a native of Chillicothe, Texas, the inspiration of his fictional Wanderer Springs.

He is the author of three novels--In the House of the Lord, The Signs of Rescue, the Signs of Hope, and North to Yesterday--and many short stories, the best of which are included in a collection entitled Seasonal Rain and Other Stories. Flynn's writing has won him awards and recognition from the Texas Institute of Letters, the NEA/Pen Syndicated Fiction Project, the Theater of Nations in Paris, and the National Cowboy Hall of Fame.

Like Will Callaghan of Wanderer Springs, Flynn left the small towns of rural Texas to make his home, with his wife, in San Antonio where he is novelist-in-residence at Trinity University.

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