SPREADING WING READER REVIEWS on Amazon.com.
This is a story that could be anyone's Life. As most Southerner's lived! Beautiful work and great read! Please write more! - Linda Smith
I loved this book. Pat is an awesome author. He needs to write more books. I would read all his books.
Niki
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Sport protected his girls from the ugly things in life. But his
only son, J.D., was right in the middle of everything with him. And, J.D.
carries his genes. He's a lot like him. Once, Sport had loaned Albert, his
nephew, his shotgun to hunt with. He handed Sport his gun back just as a Game
Warden pulled into the yard behind him. He started ragging Sport pretty good
about loaning his gun to that kid. Sport had enough. “Did he hurt anybody with
it? Did he damage anyone's property with it?” “No, but - “ “Then get in your
truck and get off my property.” The shotgun, still in Sport's hands, added
emphasis. He left. Barbara, as a little girl, witnessed this exchange, a rare event.
She was scared they were just going to come and arrest the lot of them.
Sport would just not allow any man to take anything from him. Or push
him. If you pushed Sport, there would only be a small number of possible
outcomes. Sport would get hurt, you would get hurt, or he would stop you. And
Sport always handled that option in such a way that it never happened again.
The humiliation prevented that..That is best illustrated by this little
example----
Once, a very cranky old neighbor had two large dogs. They were very bad
at chasing and killing livestock. They struck Sport's livestock, and Sport went
to visit the man. “That has to stop.” The old man said, “You mess with my dogs,
and there will be some killing going on.”
A
few days later, they struck again. Sport had J.D. bring the gun. Sport gave the
word as the dog ran by, chasing a calf. J.D., a dead shot like his father, took
him out. Soon the other was dead too. Sport loaded them up, and they went to
visit the neighbor. Sport threw both the dogs up on the porch, and pounded on
the porch with his shotgun. When the old man emerged, saying, “What's going on
here?” Sport said, “You told me, if I messed with your dogs, there would be
some killin'. I'm here to start it.”
Well, the old man wilted. “Now, don't you worry none about those dogs!” They
left. J.D. was puzzled. “Why did we not just take the dogs down and throw them
in the Bayou? He would never have found them.” Sport answered, “ If we had done
that, that old man would have been bad mouthing us all over the country. This
way, there will never be another word said about it.” And there wasn't.
One
of Sport's cows wandered off into a neighbor's pasture. He sent J.D., a young
boy, to get it. The neighbor man told J.D., “It's in my pasture now. It's
mine.” When J.D. told Sport, Sport said, “Let's go get it.” Sport started up
toward the man's house. J.D. said, “We could cut the fence in the back and get
it out.” Sport shook his head. “I'll get it.”. He walked up by his front door,
into the pasture, got behind it, and drove it through the man's front yard.
Nothing was ever said.
The
road grader man started making his turn through Sport's bean field, taking out
more and more of Sport's beans. Sport stopped the man, told him to stop doing that.
Well, before long, he did it again. Sport ran him off, this time with a
shotgun. A short while later, the County Judge found the road grader man a new
place to turn around.
A
rich, big landowner bought up some land next to Sport. Told Sport, “The old
survey is wrong. You'll have to move your fence back 50 feet.” Sport
replied, “That fence has been there
since 1927.
It stays there.”
Well, a while later a couple of surveyors showed up, started setting up
their equipment. Sport and J.D. walked down. Sport: “Nothing is going to be
changed down here..” The surveyor started explaining, “We're doing the job we
were hired to do, check these old lines.” Sport said, “I've got a shotgun here
that says you're not going to survey anything here.” The younger man wanted to
get bad, but JD stopped him. “You just really don't understand the situation.
If that old man says you don't, you don't. For your own sake, you best go
home.” The older man toned the younger one down, and they went home. They never
came back.
The
girls, for the most part, never knew about any of this. Their sweet Daddy could
just never have said any of those words. And that fits right in with my
daughter Kinley's memories of sitting in his lap, putting rollers in his hair,
and painting his fingernails. But in the “wild west” of the early Delta
country, a man had to stand his ground or just move. Sport never moved. I fully
believe all of this for two very good reasons. First, J.D. is just like him.
Second, I've seen those strong genes of Sport's in every one of those girls,
cropping up from time to time. They call it “Dunnahoe Nerve.” They are all very
strong women, always ready to stand up to whatever life throws at them. All us
in-laws were very fortunate to find a member of this family to scoop up and
marry. Sport just had that unique
ability to be a fun loving, lovable person, always loved dearly by all those
around him. But he had rather die than allow himself to be pushed. If Sport
Dunnahoe had been my father, I could never have loved or respected him more. When I fished with Sport's
grandsons, and great grandsons, I came to realize, some of them only know Sport
Dunnahoe by his name. I hope, in writing this, they will come to realize what a
great man he was. On my “Great men I have known” list, Sport Dunnahoe stands
right up there with the best of em'. An ancestor to be proud of.
Later in life, Sport was diagnosed with dementia, but he never lost his
sense of humor. A doctor was interviewing him in his office to determine the extent.
“Mr. Dunnahoe, what is today's date?” “Thursday, August 4.” Very good, Mr.
Dunnahoe. How did you do that so easily?” With a little grin on his lips, Sport
replied. “Its on the calendar, right behind you.” Another time, he was in
another doctor's office with a daughter. The doctor came in. She immediately
started giving instructions to the daughter, ignoring him. She was saying,
“Take one tablet, four times a day, and-” Sport was pulling on the daughter's
sleeve, with that little grin.. “What is it, Mr. Dunnahoe?” “Well, that just
looks like it would be sorta hard – taking the same pill, 4 times a day.”
“Point well taken, Mr. Dunnahoe. The next time I will talk to YOU about your
medicine.” Barbara was taking Sport home from the Hospital. At the door, she
instructed, “Stay right here while I go get the car. Don't move.” Sport was
getting around pretty slow by now, and said, “I could start right now and not
get outta' sight by the time you get back.”
Sport left us all with a vast array of
“Sport-isms.”. My favorite is, “Being right won't help yore' old haid'
none.”
After Verla Mae died, Sport just couldn't go on without her. He gently
explained to all his girls, “I just can't live without her.” Just a few months
later, Phyllis found him dead in his bed one morning. The paramedics said it
must have been a heart attack, there was a blue spot on his chest. But we all
knew. A broken heart is just one kind of heart attack. Verla Mae's death had
pushed Sport to the point of no tomorrow.
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Every post on my blog, up to this point, has been more or less completely true, give or take a little, depending upon how my memory is holding up that day. At this point, I'm going to start throwing in a little historical fiction in some posts. Historical fiction, as you know, must have at least a grain of truth. See if you can pick it out! Thanks for your time, and your attention!
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Every post on my blog, up to this point, has been more or less completely true, give or take a little, depending upon how my memory is holding up that day. At this point, I'm going to start throwing in a little historical fiction in some posts. Historical fiction, as you know, must have at least a grain of truth. See if you can pick it out! Thanks for your time, and your attention!
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