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The Prodigal Village

Published
Feb 2014
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Pages
184

About This Book

The day that Henry Smix met and embraced Gasoline Power and went up Main Street hand in hand with it is not yet forgotten. It was a hasty marriage, so to speak, and the results of it were truly deplorable. Their little journey produced an effect on the nerves and the remote future history of Bingville. They rushed at a group of citizens who were watching them, scattered it hither and thither, broke down a section of Mrs. Risley's picket fence and ran over a small boy. At the end of their brief misalliance, Gasoline Power seemed to express its opinion of Mr. Smix by hurling him against a telegraph pole and running wild in the park until it cooled its passion in the fountain pool. In the language of Hiram Blenkinsop, the place was badly "smixed up." Yet Mr. Smix was the object of unmerited criticism. He was like many other men in that quiet village-slow, deliberate, harmless and good-natured. The action of his intellect was not at all like that of a gasoline engine. Between the swiftness of the one and the slowness of the other, there was a wide zone full of possibilities. The engine had accomplished many things while Mr. Smix's intellect was getting ready to begin to act.

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Paperback

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Oct 2008 Bronson Press ISBN 1443745138
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Trade Paperback
Sep 2014 Createspace ISBN 1502384140
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Paperback
Oct 2014 Createspace ISBN 1502559374
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eBook

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First Edition Feb 2014 Lost Leaf Publications
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May 2014 Transcript ISBN B00KL9THPY
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