Good Old Days Magazine

Too Close for Comfort

October 1950 in Tennessee was the coldest one I ever remember. We were on a road trip to see the fall leaves. I rose up to look out the front window

“Please sit down,” my sister Imogene said. “You're blocking my view. If I can't see out the front window, I'll be carsick.”

Our 1948 Oldsmobile was overcrowded. Dad, Mom and Granny Fagg sat in the front seat. The back seat was jammed tight with Imogene, my brother Buddy Earl, Aunt Ruby, Cousin Nancy and me.

Buddy Earl and I were wedged

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Good Old Days Magazine

Good Old Days Magazine3 min read
A Story of Community
Based on John Burress’s book of the same name, The Missouri Traveler (1958) is a movie about a runaway teenage orphan boy named Biarn, who finds himself attached to the small town of Delphi, Mo., after some of its residents take an interest in him. T
Good Old Days Magazine2 min read
TARZAN On The Radio
In 1912, Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote his first Tarzan story, which was titled Tarzan of the Apes. His creation was among the earliest literary properties to make the transition from print to radio in the early 1930s. The story of a child raised among
Good Old Days Magazine4 min read
Celebrating The Past In The Smokies
“Move over, Bet,” my sister, Charl (short for Charlotte), said to me as we both tried to look at ourselves in the dresser mirror. At 8 and 10 years of age, we were excitedly trying on our Decoration Day dresses for the sixth time that week. We twiste

Related Books & Audiobooks