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A move to Louisiana during his freshman year leaves a northern boy vulnerable to the bigotry of a quaint parish chastened by a parochial judge. It was 1963 – an otherwise peaceful period for making new friends, exploring romance, and playing football; but an essential moment for addressing civil rights, classroom science, and the draft.

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New, First-edition Fiction

Yesterday’s Children, by American Novelist, Paul Bellerive, Released on Web-e-Books®

A Patrimonial Louisiana Community Erupts over Civil Rights, Evolution, and War

Yesterday’s Children, 1st edition fiction by Paul Bellerive, is being released on Web-e-Books® in support of world-wide, cross-platform distribution of his novel on 1960’s culture and politics and the combined impact on small town youth in rural Louisiana. The Tri-Screen Connection, LLC, publisher and distributor of the exclusive e-book, is providing the technology platform and online shopping website for Yesterday’s Children.

In Yesterday’s Children, novelist Paul Bellerive rolls back the clock to 1960’s Leesburg, Louisiana. It is here, and in retrospective that an older man recounts his high school years after moving from Ohio to the Deep South. Through his remembrances, he acquaints us with a community shaped from the sullied clay of an honored Confederacy.

Notable for an adherence to old-fashioned conventions, Leesburg shunned outsiders, new ideas, impoliteness, racial integration, or any other challenge to its illiberal plantation-day heritage. Indeed, people there heeded the lineal nature of its autocratic past – led by an ancestral judge whose presence alone stirred awe and effected intimidation. Only the high-minded or enraged dared defy civil protocol. When they did, the unofficial arm of straight-laced citizen convincers meted out justice through beatings, lethal force, or by organizing denizen leagues to maintain decency.

Anchored and serene as Leesburg may have tried to appear – glorified by mossy cypress groves, cool swimming holes, kingly fields of cotton, and winning high school football team – an unwanted wave of national reforms and foreign affairs swamped the community’s uprightness, providing no life boat for its distressed youth.

Web-e-Books ® Availability

Yesterday’s Children is viewable in licensed Web-e-Books® format available from The Tri-Screen Connection and is compatible with virtually all Internet browser-capable desktop, laptop, tablet, e-reader, mobile smart phone, or similarly equipped device running Apple®, Windows®, Android®, and Linux operating systems.

http://www.web-e-books.com/index.php#load?type=book&product=children

Priced at US $4.95 – read on-line or offline, no download or installation required.

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About The Tri-Screen Connection

The Tri-Screen Connection represents a launch pad for broad adoption of new-media communications services, including digital content and publishing. Our publishing strategy is to satisfy the market for exclusive contemporary and select classic literature of excellence that provides reflective insight to a wide range of human experiences.

EXCERPT: Yesterday’s Children

It had, of course, been a long time coming, and perhaps because of my concern with the upcoming trial, or perhaps because of my age, summer and the planned demonstration seemed a long way off. I was not particularly concerned with current events beyond the requirement of my U.S. History class to bring in a current event story every Friday, which I typically satisfied by picking up a discarded newspaper on my way to school and tearing out an article from the Leesburg Telegraph, a minimal effort that also satisfied my teacher Mr. Greenleaf, who was more interested in the progress of the football team than in his students’ understanding of history. But as oblivious and self-absorbed as I was, even I sensed that the rally and all that it implied had been a long time coming. News of protests, demonstrations, and confrontations reached Leesburg nearly every day. When I recall those days, I realize that world and national events were steadily becoming more and more prominent parts of life in Leesburg. The change was slow, but also inexorable. But like many teenagers absorbed in matters more mundane and solipsistic, much of what was going on simply escaped my attention.

I suppose the outside world began to noticeably intrude on our small town, or at least as far as I was concerned, when I was a freshman at Brossard High. We were sitting in our algebra class, the first class after lunch, most of us chatting or horsing around while waiting for Mr. Blanchard to finish his cigarette in the storage closet in the back of the room. Blanchard emerged in a cloud of blue smoke just as the intercom crackled to life. After a moment of silence, the principal, Mr. Maycomb relayed the incredible news: “Today the President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, was shot and killed as he rode in a motorcade through Dallas, Texas.” I remember Mr. Maycomb’s voice, unsteady and cracking; I don’t remember the rest of his announcement; and will never forget the thick, unbroken silence that engulfed our classroom and the surreal feeling that overrode everything for the remainder of that day and the three days that followed.

I didn’t realize it then, but that tragic day in November of 1963 was certainly the beginning of the end of Leesburg’s isolated, sleepy existence.

In the years following the assassination, reports of violence, protest, war, and civil unrest throughout the country interrupted the placid days in Leesburg, where these events had little observable effect; where they were absently absorbed much the same way as the meaning of a huge mural passed each day to and from work. There were bombings in Birmingham, rallies in Washington, beatings and murders in Alabama and Mississippi, federal troops supporting integration in Arkansas and Georgia, riots in Los Angeles and Newark, protests on college campuses spreading into various towns and cities across the country. Civil rights, voter rights, black power, white power, segregation, integration, the war, the draft -- all that and more trickled into Leesburg after that stunning day in 1963. In retrospect, all of it seemed to say: “It’s been a long time coming.”

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Purchase the e-book at:

http://www.web-e-books.com/index.php#load?type=book&product=children