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                   The Fleetwood Half-Orphan Asylum
                   by Don Nordberg
                   
                    268 pages
                    
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                    It's 1927. Brothers Amos and Horace enter an orphanage for a short stay. It turns into years. One runs away. They meet again three decades later, and fight. Some 30-odd years later, Horace's son gets a chance to learn of their secrets.                    
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           Category: Fiction:Literary
          
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           About the Book
          
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             The novel explores the relationship of two brothers, Amos and Horace, in the late 1920s, who find themselves living in an orphanage in a fictional town, Middleton, somewhere in the American Midwest. Their mother has died – or disappeared. Their father, Aloysius, won’t talk about it. He can’t cope, has lost his steady work and can’t pay the mortgage. Their house is repossessed. He seeks the charity of the German-Lutheran Fleetwood Foundation, which runs the orphanage. Its director reluctantly accepts these children of a non-conformist, non-German, non-entity. In the orphanage, the two boys barely speak to each other. The younger, Horace, aged 10, strikes up a friendship with another boy, the lone Negro living at the half-orphan asylum, a bright kid of 11, and another outcast. Amos, 12, also a loner, is fiercely intelligent and with a chip on his shoulder that other boys want to knock off. Their planned six-month stay turns into years. The Wall Street Crash sets off the Great Depression. Then one day, Amos, now 15, disappears. He will not see his father or brother again for more than 30 years. 
 
The book starts in 1996, in Charleston, South Carolina, where Christine, a woman of 80+ years, has just received a diagnosis of a terminal disease. She lives in an elegant house overlooking the harbor. Amos bought that house in 1951 but has never lived in it. Amos was a merchant seaman, based nowhere in particular, who has saved his pay by always staying on board ships, until he died, some 30 years ago. Christine is the keeper of Amos’s secrets. She has also kept both the house and Amos’s car, a 1941 Buick Roadmaster convertible, in tip-top condition from the money she has earned teaching school. Now, facing her own death, she sends a letter, a photograph, and a notebook to Amos’s only surviving family member, a nephew, Nate. Christine suggests he comes to visit her, where she plans to reveal Amos’s secrets.            
              
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        Reviews
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       “A rare and rich family history, filled with local detail and bottled-up emotions in this saga of two motherless boys left by their father to grow up in an orphanage – and the consequences decades later.”
         - Jan van Straatan 
         
       
       “A compelling tale of sibling tensions and long-hidden family secrets. The narrative's time shifts skilfully enhance our engagement with Don Nordberg's range of subtly drawn characters.”
         - Gerald Killingworth, novelist, playwright and prize-winning poet 
         
       
       “A powerful and compelling account of two brothers estranged since childhood. Amos becomes a merchant seaman gathering a host of secrets on his travels. Beautifully written with a vivid sense of place, this book captures emotional struggles from the Depression to the late 1990s.”
         - Valerie French, author of The White Feather 
         
          
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          | About the Author | 
         
        
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           Born in Chicago, Don Nordberg has been a journalist and editorial executive living in four countries and reporting news and analysis on assignment in a few dozen more. Now living in England, he is the author of two works of non-fiction and writes two Substacks: Don Nordberg (is/on) writing, and How to govern [not like that].           | 
         
       
        
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