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9781607816553 Academic Inspection Copy

Chasing Good Sense

A Boy's Life on the Last Frontier
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In this creative memoir, Homer McCarty adopts the voice of seven-year-old Buck to recollect his own life growing up in rugged southern Utah Territory in the late 1800s. Although Buck's reflections are necessarily imprecise-gathered from fragments of memory and then embellished freely-the stories he tells are an honest look at life on the frontier. In the spirit of Huck Finn, Buck embarks on adventures and mischief with his loyal friend, Earl. Naive, eager, and inquisitive, he seeks to make sense of his world. McCarty's portrayal of the period is often humorous, capturing the intimacy of place and family through a young boy's eyes. McCarty completed this work in 1948. Had it not been for a series of fortuitous events and the dedication of his granddaughters, including Coralie Beyers, these pages would have been lost. Thanks to her efforts, her grandfather's lively, entertaining book is now available for readers to relish and enjoy.
Homer McCarty (1868-1954) was a schoolteacher, mineral surveyor, owner of a drugstore and mercantile, and editor of the Sevier Valley Sun. He retired in 1940 and spent the remainder of his years writing. Coralie McCarty Beyers (1926-2017), granddaughter of Homer McCarty, was an English professor at Utah State University. An author, poet, and gifted artist, she is the editor of Man Meets Grizzly, which recounts her maternal grandfather's stories of bear encounters during the settling of the western frontier.
"The creation of the sensitive, fumbling, resilient boy-narrator Buck is a remarkable achievement, and his adventures and misadventures have the ring of authenticity. McCarty's Buck is not a derivative character but a true original. The book makes a significant literary and historical contribution." -Edward Geary, author of Goodbye to Poplarhaven: Recollections of a Utah Boyhood "The author tells a good story while documenting life during a pivotal time in the history of Utah Territory. By telling this story in the voice of a seven- or eight-year-old boy, he shares a unique perspective of pioneer life, one that contributes significantly to the historical record." -Lyman Hafen, author of In the Shade of the Cottonwoods: Notes of a Small-Town Boyhood
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