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William Loizeaux : Shooting of Rabbit Wells: An American Tragedy
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Author: William Loizeaux
Title: Shooting of Rabbit Wells: An American Tragedy
Moochable copies: No copies available
Topics:
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Published in: English
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Date: 1997-12-01
ISBN: 1559703806
Publisher: Arcade Publishing
Weight: 1.32 pounds
Size: 6.44 x 9.54 x 1.02 inches
Edition: 1st
Amazon prices:
$0.01used
$9.98new
Wishlists:
1Carol (USA: NY).
Description: Product Description
Bill Loizeaux grew up in a pleasant little town in semirural New Jersey, in idyllic, gently rolling foothills. For Loizeaux, though, the communities of Bernardsville and Basking Ridge will always be remembered as the place where, in 1973, a shockingly bright and well-liked high school classmate named Rabbit Wells was shot to death by a policeman outside a bar where Wells was trying to help break up a fight. It is a simple, forgotten incident, only one of thousands upon thousands of senseless killings before and since. Yet for Loizeaux, it remains the turning point of his life."I am haunted by the hills of my youth," Loizeaux writes, "by what was right and what was wrong in the gentle lives we led there." He puts himself in Rabbit's head and retraces decades-old footsteps, imagining an older Rabbit, an upright pillar of the community; he invents situations that Wells could have lived and acts out the roles of the participants.Interviewing the man who killed Rabbit Wells, still a Bernardsville policeman, Loizeaux hopes that the cop will share his fervent belief that a full accounting of the incident, a "setting straight," is the only way to bury Rabbit properly and move on. This is a first-rate fiction built on a bedrock of fact, in which Loizeaux takes a simple story and asks us to believe and care about a young man whom no one ever got to know. --Tjames Madison


Amazon.com Review
Bill Loizeaux grew up in a pleasant little town in semirural New Jersey, in idyllic, gently rolling foothills. For Loizeaux, though, the communities of Bernardsville and Basking Ridge will always be remembered as the place where, in 1973, a shockingly bright and well-liked high school classmate named Rabbit Wells was shot to death by a policeman outside a bar where Wells was trying to help break up a fight. It is a simple, forgotten incident, only one of thousands upon thousands of senseless killings before and since. Yet for Loizeaux, it remains the turning point of his life.

"I am haunted by the hills of my youth," Loizeaux writes, "by what was right and what was wrong in the gentle lives we led there." He puts himself in Rabbit's head and retraces decades-old footsteps, imagining an older Rabbit, an upright pillar of the community; he invents situations that Wells could have lived and acts out the roles of the participants. Interviewing the man who killed Rabbit Wells, still a Bernardsville policeman, Loizeaux hopes that the cop will share his fervent belief that a full accounting of the incident, a "setting straight," is the only way to bury Rabbit properly and move on. This is a first-rate fiction built on a bedrock of fact, in which Loizeaux takes a simple story and asks us to believe and care about a young man whom no one ever got to know. --Tjames Madison

URL: http://bookmooch.com/1559703806
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