Here are a few questions to ponder while searching for the meaning of life:
How do you make peace with your wife after promising a summer fishing trip to a luxury lake resort when upon arriving you find no place to eat, no fish to catch and only deer to greet you at your doublewide trailer? Do you stay or leave?
Or when the meal you have just ordered at a popular Spanish tapas restaurant arrives at your table and you realize you and your entrée have something in common — you’re both alive. And guess what, your entrée is now wriggling across a small plate in your direction. Do you eat or run?
And what if you suddenly trip across a knee-high barrier at London’s famed National Gallery and fall headlong toward a wall of paintings. You extend your right arm and realize your hand is aimed directly at a priceless painting of the Virgin Mary. Do you pray or cry?
“More to Crow About: Stories of Humor and Hope” will answer these questions and countless others as the author introduces you to a colorful array of people, funny escapades and heartfelt moments, all of which spring to life from his four decades as a newspaper columnist.
How do you make peace with your wife after promising a summer fishing trip to a luxury lake resort when upon arriving you find no place to eat, no fish to catch and only deer to greet you at your doublewide trailer? Do you stay or leave?
Or when the meal you have just ordered at a popular Spanish tapas restaurant arrives at your table and you realize you and your entrée have something in common — you’re both alive. And guess what, your entrée is now wriggling across a small plate in your direction. Do you eat or run?
And what if you suddenly trip across a knee-high barrier at London’s famed National Gallery and fall headlong toward a wall of paintings. You extend your right arm and realize your hand is aimed directly at a priceless painting of the Virgin Mary. Do you pray or cry?
“More to Crow About: Stories of Humor and Hope” will answer these questions and countless others as the author introduces you to a colorful array of people, funny escapades and heartfelt moments, all of which spring to life from his four decades as a newspaper columnist.