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Tale of the Tow-Path

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'A Tale of the Tow-Path' by American author Homer Greene, is a short story which follows the exploits of the young son of a farmer, Joe Gaston.

Following a disagreement with his father Joe runs away from home, leaving his mother and sister heartbroken.

Unbeknownst to him, a horse thief stole into the family stable and took a horse the same night Joe made his escape.

Now suspected of stealing the horse too, will Joe and his family ever be able to reconcile?

Homer Greene (1853-1940) was an American author and lawyer from Pennsylvania.

Greene began his literary career while still a student at college and wrote both stories and poetry.

He wrote for the New York Evening Post, the Albany Evening Journal and the Albany Argus.

Greene completed his well-known verse, 'What My Lover Said' whilst in his senior year at college.

He went on to author a number of novels including 'Burnham Breaker', 'Riverpark Rebellion' and 'Pickett's Gap'.

His most well-known story is 'The Blind Brother: A Story of the Pennsylvania Coal Mines'.

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£41.18
Product Details
SAGA Egmont
872655254X / 9788726552546
eBook (EPUB)
08/06/2021
English
68 pages
Copy: 40%; print: 40%