"An exceptional writer" - Michael Blake, Dances With Wolves
"First-rate fiction that explores and contemplates modern American history, culture, politics and journalism. A rare combination of excellent fiction-writing and deep thought. Wonderful story-telling interwoven with sharp insights about our times and culture. There are so many fresh sunbursts of thought in this book that I lost count. What Brasch and his characters have to say about the intermingling of corporate and government power alone makes this book worth reading -but it is rich in illumination of many other important issues we all should be pondering. You can't put it down while reading it, and can't forget it after you've finished it." -Dan Rather
" A Beautiful-written and powerful look at humanity and the reverence of life as seen through the lives of social activists who never lost hope, and the reporter who covered her story." --> Heidi Prescott, senior vice-president, Humane Society of the United States
"A good story layered with nostalgia for the way things were and the way they are." - R. Thomas Berner, professor emeritus of journalism and American Studies, Penn State; author, The Literature of Journalism
"Walter Brasch has a winner here, with strong characters, great writing, and an engaging plot. You won't regret starting it. You'll be sad when you've finished because you'll be wanting more." -Rob Kall, editor, OpEd News
"This is an outstanding novel .The even numbered chapters are journalistic literature at its very best, as Apryl Greene, the embodiment of the hopes and dreams of the young boomers, makes her way through the second half of the twentieth century. In the odd-numbered chapters, we learn that she did not lose her way, as many did, but instead had to find a way to pursue her dream in a world that was rotating out from under her. This is a timely message of hope that many of us have almost lost. The characters are well drawn and sympathetic. Even the villains are not evil people; they are just lost; they are very real, very human, and very believable. Dr. Brasch has brought back many memories, fond and otherwise, and raised again in my mind the old question - What happened? Where did the '60s go? And why?" - Norm Phelps, author, The Longest Struggle: Animal Rights from Pythagoras to Peta and The Dominion of Love: Animal Rights According to the Bible
�Brasch is an articulate and entertaining writer, whose background and research helps establishes credibility to his story.� �Regina Huelman, editor, Liberal Opinion Week
�A very creative mind that grapples with the most basic of political problems and emerges with a feast of ideas and insight that will stay with you for a long time.�
�Joe Shea, Editor-in-Chief, The American Reporter
"Walter Brasch is the master of the literary vignette."� Dr. Donald Bird, former chair, journalism, Long Island University
�A brilliant book that touches the nerve of where political decisions intersect with the pulse of what it is to be human.� � Ron Primeau, professor of English, Central Michigan University