The Poet, The Professor, and The Redneck Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Poet, The Professor, and The Redneck: How Men Die, How They Live The Poet, The Professor, and The Redneck: How Men Die, How They Live by Foster Kinn
1 rating, 5.00 average rating, 0 reviews
The Poet, The Professor, and The Redneck Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3
“Wyatt stopped before crossing the Mississippi River and sat next to the waters for a long while. He thought about its history and came to view it as a physical expression of the Dark Companion, bleak and inconsolable, and he wondered how many souls and dreams and passions lay inert in its depths. The mysteries hummed constant.”
Foster Kinn, The Poet, The Professor, and The Redneck: How Men Die, How They Live
“The shadows lengthened and they were like newly grown hands of the Dark Companion that grasped at his boots and jeans and vest and hair, and he rode through them and over them, and still they grew and grasped until the shadows consumed the sun as a substitute for his soul.”
Foster Kinn, The Poet, The Professor, and The Redneck: How Men Die, How They Live
“He was an outsider chasing the unknown.”
Foster Kinn, The Poet, The Professor, and The Redneck: How Men Die, How They Live