This book was quite meandering in its storytelling. It really needed professional editing. And some of the dates didn't line up correctly. It could have used many more maps to help illustrate the story. I did find the history interesting, yet the ending was almost anti-climactic. Only a small portion at the end of the book was about the parking lot situation. The book was primarily about the subtitle, which is the early history of Perry County. Being from Upper Arlington, and now residing in Worthington, I appreciated learning this history. I was shocked to learn about the covenants -- this was definitely not something in our awareness, growing up.
I am proud that Worthington values its pioneer history. It maintains the Orange Johnson House, a historical home from whose doorway High St. literally now is separated only by a sidewalk. Every year, the 3rd graders of Worthington experience "colonial days," where they study our pioneering history, and take a field trip to said house as well as to historic St. John's Church and adjoining graveyard, where, if memory serves me right, Ezra Griswold, James Kilbourne, and other Worthington founders are buried. These are practically household names in Worthington, and as I get older, I appreciate more and more that this history is taught and valued here.
As a chaperone on that field trip, I even learned about the origin of the saying, "Good night, sleep tight," as the mattress foundations were made of rope and had to be tightened each night. This is specifically mentioned in the book, and the Orange Johnson House still maintains just such a bed with the tightening key as depicted in the book. It really is fascinating to think of those early citizens, how much time has passed, and how everything has changed over the centuries.