It\'s an unusually warm autumn, 1929, and O.
T. is on the brink of ending it all when he receives an odd letter.
Grieving, drinking, and careening toward homelessness, O.
T. ever held dear in one fell swoop.
Until illness and Black Tuesday take everything O.
T.
Nothing--not poverty, drought, or even the boll weevi--can spoil the idyllic life he shares with his doting wife and children and his beloved twin brother Walt.
Lawrence is about as content as a cotton farmer can be in Five Forks, Georgia.
It\'s an unusually warm autumn, 1929, and O.
T