A Klansman's 50 Year Search for Redemption Comes to a Stunning End

Former Klansman and Selma, Alabama native David Earl Applewhite’s journey begins in an Alabama courtroom, during the 1969 trial of black Vietnam Vet, Henry Lee Davis. It ends decades later with an unimaginable lesson in love and forgiveness.
By: Falconcreek Books
 
 
The Water Line
The Water Line
PASADENA, Calif. - July 12, 2015 - PRLog -- It came in a dream: this fictional story, The Water Line, which you will swear is a real-life biography. We know it's a bold statement but it's true. Pulitzer-nominated author of ten books and former Oprah guest, Gene Cartwright, was inspired to write this remarkable short story more than two years ago, after a dream that practically revealed it intact. He finally penned it a month ago.

The lives of two 13 year-old boys: David Earl Applewhite, white, and Henry Lee Davis, black, dramatically intersect during a holiday celebration near Selma, Alabama in 1953. You know the era, the times, the state of black and white in this country. Each lived in worlds separate and unequal, privileged and denied. David's father, who was one of the policemen on The Edmund Pettus Bridge in 1965, inducted his son into the Klan at age of nine.

Emblems and symbols of a racist past and present were freely flaunted, and offered little reason for hope for a different future in Alabama or elsewhere in the Deep South. Yet Henry, his family and others clung defiantly to hope, risked life and limb to act, and pressed on.

What happened that hot July day joined Henry and David forever, without need for permission from either or blessings from others. They were bonded for life, yet never spoke a single word to each other then or until 17 years later.

In 1968, after both had served in Vietnam, the country erupted following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.. This was five years after the slaying of Medgar Evers and four years after the murders of Shwerner, Chaney and Goodman in Philadelphia, Mississippi—

Ronald Reagan's first campaign stop following his GOP nomination in 1980.

In 1970, the lives of David and Henry came together in a way no one expected, and one that brought suffering on both sides of the color line that lasted fifty years, until the year 2020.

Yes, 'The Water Line' takes us forward, both chronologically and hopefully morally. Central to the story is the undimished love of soft-spoken but steel-spirited Sarah Davis for a husband she could not touch or hold in her arms.

The ending no one will see coming is elevated and illuminated with an example of love and forgiveness no one could have dared imagine.

Get Your Free copy of The Water Line. It is available as an eBook in all formats.See Smashwords: http://smashwords.com and use SW100 Discount at checkout, or Amazon: http://amazon.com. Be sure and visit the author's web site at: http://GeneCartwright.com

To Mr. Robert Duvall and Ms. Cicely Tyson. Gene expresses deep thanks and appreciation. Your immeasurable award-winning talent, and personal attributes served as templates for the The Water Line's principal characters, both in the short story and the completed short film script.

Thanks! Falcon Creek Books/iFOGO

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