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Memory Cards

Memory Cards in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $13.95
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"Michael Brantley has the eyes of a camera and the soul of a poet. His memoir "Memory Cards" is a gentle and memory-jogging visit to a time and a place just down the road that is fading all too quickly." -Dennis Rogers, columnist and author of
Second Harvest
"Michael Brantley is that rare thing these days, a writer with a true vocation. He's a born storyteller."
-Emily Fox Gordon, author of
Book of Days
Memory Cards
is a journey down a dusty rural road, but also back in time to where as late as the 1980s, neighbors still used mules for transportation and outhouses for other necessities. There is plenty to see, hear and smell, from the oppressive heat and pungent smell of row upon row of tobacco, to the mobile library that brought air conditioning and the aroma of paper, glue and binding each week of the summer. The author grew up in a functional family, but with different interests than his siblings, particularly ones that offered unknown prospects.
As the road from the farm widens, readers encounter firebrand preachers, snake-handling churches, guns, baseball, Baptists, Coca-Cola, Elvis, suicides, mysterious deaths, PTSD, houses inhabited by haints, pork barbecue, tea cookies, cornbread, fishing, arrowheads, ice hockey and basketball.
Second Harvest
"Michael Brantley is that rare thing these days, a writer with a true vocation. He's a born storyteller."
-Emily Fox Gordon, author of
Book of Days
Memory Cards
is a journey down a dusty rural road, but also back in time to where as late as the 1980s, neighbors still used mules for transportation and outhouses for other necessities. There is plenty to see, hear and smell, from the oppressive heat and pungent smell of row upon row of tobacco, to the mobile library that brought air conditioning and the aroma of paper, glue and binding each week of the summer. The author grew up in a functional family, but with different interests than his siblings, particularly ones that offered unknown prospects.
As the road from the farm widens, readers encounter firebrand preachers, snake-handling churches, guns, baseball, Baptists, Coca-Cola, Elvis, suicides, mysterious deaths, PTSD, houses inhabited by haints, pork barbecue, tea cookies, cornbread, fishing, arrowheads, ice hockey and basketball.