
Author of "The Call of the Cumberlands," etc.
Illustrations by GEORGE W. GAGE
WHEN 'BEAR CAT' WENT DRY
A weather‑worn homestead clings to the craggy ridges of the Appalachian wilderness, where the clang of loose boards and the echo of a father's booming call cut through the pine‑scented air. Loneliness and hard labor have etched deep lines on his wife’s face, and the sight of sprouting corn left unharvested threatens both their livelihood and the watchful eye of the authorities. Their tension crackles as the patriarch worries that a missed deadline could bring legal trouble, while his wife tries to soothe the mounting anxiety with quiet reassurances.
Just then, a tall, lanky youth named Turner—known to the locals as “Bear Cat”—descends the slope, his stride as sure as the mountain streams. He carries a battered volume of Lincoln’s speeches, its pages thumbed and worn, hinting at a mind restless for ideas beyond the daily grind. The father’s stern stare meets the boy’s indifferent nod, setting the stage for a clash between generations, duty, and the yearning for a different kind of freedom.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (554K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Garcia and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Kentuckiana Digital Library)
Release date
2010-10-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1879–1957
A Kentucky-born novelist of the early 20th century, he became known for dramatic stories set in the Appalachian mountains and for books that were popular enough to reach both the stage and silent film. His fiction often blends romance, adventure, and regional atmosphere in a way that still feels vivid and fast-moving.
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