A Blimp that saves souls.
And he had a knack for saying so with wit, charm, and a healthy dose of good humor..
Joe just saw people the way they were and loved them enough to say so.
Satirists needn\'t always be scoffers or cynics.
Not that Joe was mean.
And, really, if you\'re not looking in the mirror you\'re missing the point.
The kind you might find on the Other side of a mirror.
In Other words, they are stories about normal, everyday people.
These are stories about sinners, bumblers, fools, and hypocrites.
Here in one collection are Joe\'s wisest and funniest stories.
And, as it turns out, he did a pretty good job at it.
How did he do it? He wrote parables--or, as Joe put it, stories on target.
Beginning in the late 1950s, Joe Bayly made it his business to expose the blind spots of American Christianity.
A mysterious stranger at a corporate Christmas party who turns water into wine.
A conflicted southern preacher in the wake of a local lynching.
A college student who flies.
A Blimp that saves souls