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In late 1941,Mary Margaret Mellon's weapon of choice is a cornbread skillet., which she uses without hestitation. The fiesty 17-year-old daughter of sharecroppers, has just buried her mother. She travels by bus to Bluff Springs to get a job and a place to live. She finds both, plus murder, mayhem, racism, bigotry, arson, KKK, WWII, vandalism, some humor, and perhaps a little romance...that's just about everything but the kitchen sink. She meets a wide assortment of interesting people as she slowly sheds her country ways, very slowly...
A deadly arson and racial issues are just two of the problems Mary Margaret Mellon must face in Book Two of the trilogy. Death, destruction, espionage, WWII, and an almost fatal shooting impede the heroine's path to maturity, success and romance in 1942 in the southeast United States. Written with a darker tone than Book One of the trilogy, Mary Margaret must face her own demons before she can find happiness.
"This index contains an alphabetical listing of brides and grooms from three sources of information: Marriage & bond books #1-14 of Probate records of Mobile County; Index to marriages, 1813-1855, direct and indirect; Appendix Z-1, Peter J. Hamilton, Colonial Mobile (1910 ed.)."--Foreword.
Lawyer, judge, banker, classics professor, and councilman, Thomas Mellon greatly influenced the fortunes of his hometown, Pittsburgh, throughout the nineteenth century. In the process, he became one of the city's most important business leaders, and he laid the foundation for a family that would contribute considerably to the city's growth and welfare for much of the next hundred years, becoming one of the world's most recognizable names in industry, innovation, and philanthropy. Through his in-depth examination of the extensive Mellon family archives, in "The Judge "James Mellon--a direct descendent of Thomas Mellon--has fashioned an incisive portrait of the elder Mellon that presents the man in full. Offering a singular and insightful characterization of the Scotch-Irish value system that governed the patriarch's work and life, James Mellon captures the judge's complexities and contradictions, revealing him as a truly human figure. Among the recent biographies of Pittsburgh's famous businessmen, "The Judge" stands apart from the pack because of the author's unique perspective and his objective and scholarly approach to his subject.
Includes "Dilatory domiciles."