
The Moral Imagination
Ep. 46 Bill Rivers: Last Summer Boys A Novel about Family, Honor, and the Power of Community
peak with Bill Rivers about this novel, Last Summer Boys. The novel is about a rural Pennsylvania family and the adventures of three boys and a cousin and set in the tumultuous summer of 1968 with the Vietnam war, the assignations of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King.
“Summer 1968. When thirteen-year-old Jack Elliot overhears the barbershop men grousing, he devises a secret plan to keep his oldest brother, Pete, from the draft. If famous boys don’t go to war, he’ll make his brother their small town’s biggest celebrity. Jack gets unexpected help when his book-smart cousin Frankie arrives in their rural Pennsylvania town for the summer. Together, they convince Jack’s brothers to lead an expedition to find a fighter jet that crashed many winters ago―the perfect adventure to make Pete a hero.”
We discuss a number of themes including
-
Family
-
Justice
-
Honor
-
Civil Society
-
Principle of Subsidiarity
-
Anger
-
Tensions between economic progress and family and social stability
-
Tensions between rural and urban communities
-
Writing and story development
-
Moral imagination
-
1968 Cultural and Sexual Revolutions
-
Alexis de Tocqueville
-
Robert Nisbet
-
Louis L’amour
-
Property
-
Crony capitalism, eminent domain and more
Resources
Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal
Related Podcasts
Carlo Lancelotti on Augusto Del Noce —Shift from Christian Bourgeois to Pure Bourgeois
Get full access to The Moral Imagination - Michael Matheson Miller at www.themoralimagination.com/subscribe