The Freshour Cylinders

(Winner of a 1999 American Book Award and 1999 Oklahoma Book Award finalist.)

Tom Freshour needs a vacation. It’s the dusty, hot summer of 1934, and he’d like to escape both the heat in western Arkansas and his cases at the county prosecutor’s office for the calm and solitude of a fishing trip. But his old Ford won’t start, and while it’s being repaired, an eccentric and enigmatic collector of Indian artifacts is brutally murdered.

It doesn’t help matters that the executor of the collector’s estate is Rainy Davis, a beautiful, intelligent young archaeologist who’s uncertain why she was appointed to oversee the estate of a man whom she’d met only once.

Nor does it help that the most formidable county judge has asked personally that Freshour take the case. But Freshour agrees, drawing himself into a tense and violent investigation of murder, political scandal, and some very private affairs.

In this suspenseful literary mystery, Speer Morgan takes us back to the events surrounding the discovery and destruction of the Spiro Mound, the most significant pre-Columbian temple mound ever found in North America. Weaving history with the compelling story murder, broken hearts, and greed, Morgan gives us one of the most engrossing, sexy, and suspenseful reads of the year.

“…[a] memorable, riveting read.”
— Wally Lamb

“Morgan’s narrative has a taste of hard-boiled detective flavor and is enlivened with chase scenes and revenge, secret passages and steamy romance. Its campy setting is richly portrayed and its sleazy politics are sadly familiar…. Both ambitious and canny, Morgan’s book is also good old-fashioned fun.”
— Irene Wanner, The Seattle Times

“Morgan is a good writer, a seasoned writer, and this is a novel with a nice combination of suspense, history, intelligence — and even a little social commentary about American Indians. It deserved attention — maybe yours.”
— G. William Gray, The Tampa Tribune

“…unlike a simple whodunit, the mysteries at the heart of Morgan’s story run far deeper. They’ll leave you pondering this taut, haunting, unique novel long after the last page is turned.”
— Steven Hill

“The sense of place envelops and immerses the reader, creating a verisimilitude that is honest, appealing and original. Morgan also peoples this intense landscape with some of the most well defined, realistic and memorable characters that I have come across in recent years.”
— James Filkins, ForeWord

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The Freshour Cylinders

(Winner of a 1999 American Book Award and 1999 Oklahoma Book Award finalist.)

Tom Freshour needs a vacation. It’s the dusty, hot summer of 1934, and he’d like to escape both the heat in western Arkansas and his cases at the county prosecutor’s office for the calm and solitude of a fishing trip. But his old Ford won’t start, and while it’s being repaired, an eccentric and enigmatic collector of Indian artifacts is brutally murdered.

It doesn’t help matters that the executor of the collector’s estate is Rainy Davis, a beautiful, intelligent young archaeologist who’s uncertain why she was appointed to oversee the estate of a man whom she’d met only once.

Nor does it help that the most formidable county judge has asked personally that Freshour take the case. But Freshour agrees, drawing himself into a tense and violent investigation of murder, political scandal, and some very private affairs.

In this suspenseful literary mystery, Speer Morgan takes us back to the events surrounding the discovery and destruction of the Spiro Mound, the most significant pre-Columbian temple mound ever found in North America. Weaving history with the compelling story murder, broken hearts, and greed, Morgan gives us one of the most engrossing, sexy, and suspenseful reads of the year.

“…[a] memorable, riveting read.”
— Wally Lamb

“Morgan’s narrative has a taste of hard-boiled detective flavor and is enlivened with chase scenes and revenge, secret passages and steamy romance. Its campy setting is richly portrayed and its sleazy politics are sadly familiar…. Both ambitious and canny, Morgan’s book is also good old-fashioned fun.”
— Irene Wanner, The Seattle Times

“Morgan is a good writer, a seasoned writer, and this is a novel with a nice combination of suspense, history, intelligence — and even a little social commentary about American Indians. It deserved attention — maybe yours.”
— G. William Gray, The Tampa Tribune

“…unlike a simple whodunit, the mysteries at the heart of Morgan’s story run far deeper. They’ll leave you pondering this taut, haunting, unique novel long after the last page is turned.”
— Steven Hill

“The sense of place envelops and immerses the reader, creating a verisimilitude that is honest, appealing and original. Morgan also peoples this intense landscape with some of the most well defined, realistic and memorable characters that I have come across in recent years.”
— James Filkins, ForeWord

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The Freshour Cylinders

The Freshour Cylinders

by Speer Morgan
The Freshour Cylinders

The Freshour Cylinders

by Speer Morgan

eBook

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Overview

(Winner of a 1999 American Book Award and 1999 Oklahoma Book Award finalist.)

Tom Freshour needs a vacation. It’s the dusty, hot summer of 1934, and he’d like to escape both the heat in western Arkansas and his cases at the county prosecutor’s office for the calm and solitude of a fishing trip. But his old Ford won’t start, and while it’s being repaired, an eccentric and enigmatic collector of Indian artifacts is brutally murdered.

It doesn’t help matters that the executor of the collector’s estate is Rainy Davis, a beautiful, intelligent young archaeologist who’s uncertain why she was appointed to oversee the estate of a man whom she’d met only once.

Nor does it help that the most formidable county judge has asked personally that Freshour take the case. But Freshour agrees, drawing himself into a tense and violent investigation of murder, political scandal, and some very private affairs.

In this suspenseful literary mystery, Speer Morgan takes us back to the events surrounding the discovery and destruction of the Spiro Mound, the most significant pre-Columbian temple mound ever found in North America. Weaving history with the compelling story murder, broken hearts, and greed, Morgan gives us one of the most engrossing, sexy, and suspenseful reads of the year.

“…[a] memorable, riveting read.”
— Wally Lamb

“Morgan’s narrative has a taste of hard-boiled detective flavor and is enlivened with chase scenes and revenge, secret passages and steamy romance. Its campy setting is richly portrayed and its sleazy politics are sadly familiar…. Both ambitious and canny, Morgan’s book is also good old-fashioned fun.”
— Irene Wanner, The Seattle Times

“Morgan is a good writer, a seasoned writer, and this is a novel with a nice combination of suspense, history, intelligence — and even a little social commentary about American Indians. It deserved attention — maybe yours.”
— G. William Gray, The Tampa Tribune

“…unlike a simple whodunit, the mysteries at the heart of Morgan’s story run far deeper. They’ll leave you pondering this taut, haunting, unique novel long after the last page is turned.”
— Steven Hill

“The sense of place envelops and immerses the reader, creating a verisimilitude that is honest, appealing and original. Morgan also peoples this intense landscape with some of the most well defined, realistic and memorable characters that I have come across in recent years.”
— James Filkins, ForeWord


Product Details

BN ID: 2940000834374
Publisher: Speer Morgan
Publication date: 03/11/2010
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 834,873
File size: 407 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Born and raised in Fort Smith, Arkansas, Speer Morgan is the author of five books. His first novel, published in 1979, was set in Arkansas and the Indian Territory during the late 1800s. Among his other four novels, three have been set in Arkansas and Oklahoma - one in 1894, another in 1934, and another in the 1980s."The Whipping Boy" (1994)was aided by an NEA Individual Fellowship in fiction. His latest novel, "The Freshour Cylinders"(1998), won Foreword Magazine's Silver Award for the best book of the year. It also won an American Book Award in 1999. Morgan teaches in the English Department at the University of Missouri where he has edited The Missouri Review for 30 years.

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