The Rail

A Novel

Fiction & Literature, Family Life, Literary
Cover of the book The Rail by Howard Owen, The Permanent Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Howard Owen ISBN: 9781504012119
Publisher: The Permanent Press Publication: June 9, 2015
Imprint: The Permanent Press Language: English
Author: Howard Owen
ISBN: 9781504012119
Publisher: The Permanent Press
Publication: June 9, 2015
Imprint: The Permanent Press
Language: English

Before he let his life fall apart, James “Neil” Beauchamp was special. He lived and flourished in the world of privilege, adored and accommodated. Then, before he truly learned to appreciate it, the one talent that lifted him from a small life in a small town was gone. The only thing worse than spending your life earthbound, Neil would learn, is landing hard and knowing you’ll never fly again.

Born in Penns Castle, in the castle itself, he was a prince of sorts. But when his mother left the castle with him in tow, he lost everything, even his name. He seemed destined for a life as a shopkeeper’s barely tolerated stepson.

That’s when baseball presented itself and saved him. For what Neil could do was hit. Through some combination of reflexes, vision, and coordination, the lean and supple Virginia Rail turned the game of his childhood into the driving force of his life. Before he was through, he would win batting championships and be elected to the Hall of Fame.

Yet before his talent failed, he already was failing those closest to him. His wife and son suffered from being outside his field of vision too much of the time. Then, with his career over well before his 40th birthday, everything collapsed. The final crash, with his half-sister Blanchard beside him in the car, the crash that sent him to prison, was seen by most who knew him as the inevitable landing at the end of a very long fall.

On the day he was paroled, he was met at the prison gates by his son David, the last person Neil expected to see, and returned to the castle from which he was banished as a child and to Blanchard, a woman of tenuous mental balance.

Neil is looking for some way to make amends. And his son, who will learn things about Neil he never would have guessed, still wants to salvage something out of their mutual wreckage.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Before he let his life fall apart, James “Neil” Beauchamp was special. He lived and flourished in the world of privilege, adored and accommodated. Then, before he truly learned to appreciate it, the one talent that lifted him from a small life in a small town was gone. The only thing worse than spending your life earthbound, Neil would learn, is landing hard and knowing you’ll never fly again.

Born in Penns Castle, in the castle itself, he was a prince of sorts. But when his mother left the castle with him in tow, he lost everything, even his name. He seemed destined for a life as a shopkeeper’s barely tolerated stepson.

That’s when baseball presented itself and saved him. For what Neil could do was hit. Through some combination of reflexes, vision, and coordination, the lean and supple Virginia Rail turned the game of his childhood into the driving force of his life. Before he was through, he would win batting championships and be elected to the Hall of Fame.

Yet before his talent failed, he already was failing those closest to him. His wife and son suffered from being outside his field of vision too much of the time. Then, with his career over well before his 40th birthday, everything collapsed. The final crash, with his half-sister Blanchard beside him in the car, the crash that sent him to prison, was seen by most who knew him as the inevitable landing at the end of a very long fall.

On the day he was paroled, he was met at the prison gates by his son David, the last person Neil expected to see, and returned to the castle from which he was banished as a child and to Blanchard, a woman of tenuous mental balance.

Neil is looking for some way to make amends. And his son, who will learn things about Neil he never would have guessed, still wants to salvage something out of their mutual wreckage.

More books from The Permanent Press

Cover of the book The Philadelphia Quarry by Howard Owen
Cover of the book The Discoveries of Mrs. Christopher Columbus by Howard Owen
Cover of the book Dakota by Howard Owen
Cover of the book The Collected Poems by Howard Owen
Cover of the book The Bookman's Tale by Howard Owen
Cover of the book No Good Deed by Howard Owen
Cover of the book Turning Japanese by Howard Owen
Cover of the book Mr. Porter and the Brothers Jones by Howard Owen
Cover of the book Milk by Howard Owen
Cover of the book Dead Anyway by Howard Owen
Cover of the book The Winter Rider by Howard Owen
Cover of the book Marginalia by Howard Owen
Cover of the book The Rain and the Fire and the Will of God by Howard Owen
Cover of the book Manifesto for the Dead by Howard Owen
Cover of the book Serendipity Green by Howard Owen
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy