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Strange Yesterday
- Narrated by: Christopher Kipiniak
- Length: 10 hrs and 2 mins
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Summary
Five generations of Preswicks, living, loving, fighting, laughing, and dying in a surge of limitless power that paralleled the course of America. A full tale of a family that grew with America, of an Aristocracy that gained everything but reason to live. Two women bore John Preswick two children - one the daughter of a southern innkeeper, who nursed a broken Revolutionary soldier back to health, the other a girl in New York, who waited seven years for her lover to return from the war. From these children grew the two branches of the Preswick family, a strange tangle of incestuous love and restless longing, that stretches over one hundred and fifty years, to the World War and the South of today, living in the glory of its past.
All America walks past in Strange Yesterday. Old New York, shaking loose from the British occupation, privateers snapping at Britain's rule of the sea, preying free as pirates, men losing their bodies and souls in a mad dash for California and gold, men piling up fortunes in fantastic booms and ventures, men off to fight a war in France, returning lost and broken. Here is an original, thrilling tale of the love of a brother for his sister, of men for gold and death. It is a pageant, simply and powerfully told.
Editor reviews
From the start of this ambitious story, narrator Christopher Kipiniak creates a sense of foreboding that hints at the upheavals to follow. Revolutionary War soldier John Preswick falls in love with the innkeeper's daughter who nurses him back to health even as his wife waits for him in New York. The two women bear John children, and Kipiniak vividly describes the lives of five generations of Preswicks as they are swept along the trajectory of American history. Kipiniak gives their stories the feel of a grand epic, and listeners will be fascinated by the depiction of important events such as the Civil War and the Gold Rush through the experiences of an American family.