
BLURB
"Unsettled conditions anywhere give rise to fear,” Old Ted remarks. “Fear finds scapegoats and easy solutions.”
In 1924, Marie walks
through the Waverly Baby Home and chooses Teddy because he looks like
the child she deserves...but the boy has hidden defects. Five years
later, against a backdrop of financial ruin, KKK resurgence, hangings
and arson, Marie's husband, Merle, struggles to succeed, Marie loses
her way, and troubled seven year-old Teddy begins to see what he and
his family are missing.
CELEBRATE THE SINNER
unfolds with the onset of The Great Depression after Teddy’s father
buys a bankrupt sawmill and moves his small family to an isolated
Oregon mill town. Merle feeds his hunger with logs and production,
while his young wife feels like rough-cut lumber, unworthy of paint
and without a future. When a conspiracy threatens the mill, Merle
adds the powerful KKK to his business network. Untended, Teddy strays
as he searches for a connection outside himself. He loves the
machines that take the trees, but he also worships his new, young
teacher. He discovers the Bucket of Blood Roadhouse and begins
spending his Saturday nights peering through its windows, gaining an
unlikely mentor: Wattie Blue, an ancient, Black musician from
Missouri, by way of Chicago, plays the lip harp and calls out square
dances. When Wattie faces the Klan and his past, Teddy and his family
are confronted with equally difficult choices.
Framed by solitary,
narcissistic, ninety-year-old Ted, this story of desperate people
contains humor, grit, mystery and an ending that surprises, even
stuns. "Spines and bellies soften and round off with the
years," Old Ted muses. "Thoughts, too, lose their edge, but
secrets scream for revelation. Perfect people, after all, don't hold
a monopoly on the right to tell their stories."
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

He later returned to
Oregon to pursue undergraduate studies at Linfield College. Along the
way, he has studied economics, biology, French and medicine. He
attended medical school in Colorado, undertook surgical training at
the University of Utah and completed his cancer training at the Mayo
Clinic in Minnesota. He and his family now live in Salt Lake City in
the warm company of Saints and sinners. He is a practicing
orthopedist and cancer surgeon.
REVIEW
Historical fiction is a tricky beast. An author must weave an engaging story while maintaining historical accuracy, an accuracy that shifts as each successive generation sees past events through eyes shaped by different, more recent events. How many times have each of us heard and uttered the phrase "if only I knew now what I knew then"?