In Search of Small-Town America: Volume 14
In Search of Small-Town America: Volume 14
Alabama, Tennessee and Kentucky
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- 219 Pages
- 247 Photographs
- 24,500 Words approx.
- 42.1 MB PDF Download
Cover: Shelbyville – Tennessee. 2007

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Content
Chapter 39 - Alabama: The very middle of, the middle of, nowhere. Rural simplicity, soybeans, cotton and corn. The epicentre of the struggle for Civil Rights, and a proper introduction to the best Country Music. Gun stores and pawn shops, ‘steel-belted radials’ – and Doris.
Chapter 40 - Tennessee: The problem with Wal*Mart, the Jack Daniel’s distillery tour, ‘Happy Days’, and wedding chapels. A small-town tourist-trap, the very Buckle on the Bible Belt, and 'High Boy' frosty malts.
Chapter 41 - Kentucky: The astounding confusion of 'Dry County' culture, walking the tracks, and just so many green steel bridges. A vacuum haircut, the truth about the 'Novelty Store', and the Barlow City jail.
Digital Downloads
‘In Search of Small-Town America’ is available as a series of digital files – downloaded in PDF format – to your desktop computer, tablet, or mobile device. For each new transaction, an email with the download link, and an order confirmation will be sent to your email address. Please make sure to also check your spam folder.
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What Readers are Saying…
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Wayne Jackman
The work is a unique and innovative mix of superb photographs, and an eloquent but quirky, daily diary – as the author voyages on a daunting solo trip through every State in America – in one year!
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Susan Toft
Read moreThis is unlike anything I've ever read before, with an intriguing combination of pictures and prose, interwoven in such a perceptive, and imaginative way. This is 'Click-Lit' – and I'm coining the phrase.
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Michael Hearn
Read moreI was captivated by this work, and the ambitious intention, but the methodical way in which the author has carried it out in such wonderful detail of words and images, is nothing short of astonishing.
His aim is to discover and document the small town ethos that was once all pervasive in this wonderful Country, but is now sadly, in slow but steady decline. It needed to be documented. And this is it! Add to this mix some fascinating facts, and often biting observations, and you have a gripping account of one man's quest to record the hidden and fading treasures that constitute 'Small-Town America'. The sole drawback is – America has only fifty States. I wanted more.
Wayne Jackman – Award-winning scriptwriter and author
This is 'Click-Lit' – and I'm coining the phrase.
I entered a truly special world when I opened this book. It felt that I travelled every mile, along with the author. The triumphant highs, the stoic lows – joy, tears and laughter. Absolutely beautiful photography, amusing but insightful words, and with a generous helping of social history thrown in. I have been educated and very thoroughly entertained.
Susan Toft – Retired Publican and consummate reader
The reader will be struck by how well the diary entries are linked with the photographs, with either leading the eye to the other. As with every honest diarist, from Pepys onward – his disappointments, his successes, the expletives, the arguments – and so we read on, to find out 'what happened next'. And not only are we treated to a rich and intelligent narrative, and a collection of thought-provoking pictures, we are also learning something about the Country, as the journey progresses.
Michael Hearn – Retired Librarian and book collector