Excepted from the book, Essays of a Moonshiner's Daughter
"As their voices got louder, I adjusted the volume on the radio to drown it out and continued to study. Suddenly, the door opened, and I heard Sara running down the hall screaming. I got up to open my door and as I did, I saw Junior tackle her to the floor. I ran out of my room and instantly grabbed the back of his shirt. My mother always told me that “crazy” people develop superhuman strength, I don’t know if there is any truth to that belief, but I was strong enough to pull him off of her and into the air." Excerpted from the book, Essays of a Moonshiner's Daughter
"While the rest of the nation was caught up with Watergate and trying to find out who “Deep Throat” was; Angela Davis’ trial, Jane Fonda’s tours of Vietnam, and Nixon signing Title IX ending gender discrimination in education funding by the federal government; I was a girl just trying to have fun. My days were spent in the Music Library at Wayne State University. My gay supervisor was busy trying to educate me about classical music and I in turn was educating him about Jazz and Roberta Flack. There was another student who came to the library too many times because he had a crush of me. I should have accepted his invitation to join him and his family on their weekly bowling night, but I did not like bowling and I was not mature enough to want to fuel a relationship with a genuinely nice young man who happened to use a wheelchair. Instead, I was interested in the “bad boy” and having and attending parties. The summer would not disappoint." |
Enjoy these excerpts from the book, Moonshiner's Daughter, Margaret's collection personal essays.
AuthorMargaret Brown is a three-time cancer survivor, a champion of fair housing, and a proud mother and grandmother. She lives in Southfield, Michigan. |