Buy a single from your favorite or get all six novellas AND poetry by D. Jonathon Brudie. Previously released as singles, in Fish Tales 1, find all six of the original novellas by C. A. Clark, P. A. Copeland, Sharon Higa, Tabitha Baumander, Pete Clark, and Keith Milstead published by J Ellington Ashton Press. All original covers are here. Included are scary fish poetry by D. Jonathan Brudie, released for the first time. These novellas cover fish (and humans) behaving badly in a world of water; beware of the water as monsters from the deep swim through these pages. Catch the big one at your own risk in “Fishy Tales”; find out the deadly secret that lives in “The Pond”; discover revenge and regret with “I See Monsters”. Pete Clark, noted for humor, dares the reader in “To Fish Oar Not to Fish”; we find there is indeed a “Fish to Die For”, and the reader is cautioned about swimming at “The Dam”. Six creepy stories from six expert horror writers plus a set of poems that will leave you chilled are here, if you dare to swim in the deep waters with Fish Tales 1. For all fans of horrific sea creatures and people who push the limits.
Football tradition at the University of Oklahoma still runs strong, as does the record of forty-seven consecutive victories that legendary coach Bud Wilkinson and his players set in the 1950s. Approached but never equaled by teams such as Washington, Miami, and Texas, the streak contributed to the acclaim Wilkinson garnered by amassing an impressive three national championships (1950, 1955, and 1956), twelve consecutive conference titles, twenty-three straight wins on opposing fields, Top Ten rankings for eleven successive years, and a thirty-one game winning streak before the unforgettable “forty-seven straight.” Forty-seven Straight details how the record grew, season by season, as told by sixty-one of Wilkinson’s players during interviews with Harold Keith, the university’s sports publicist who witnessed all 178 football games during the Wilkinson era at OU. The players recall Wilkinson’s and his staff’s style, methods, and strategies while vividly recalling their most dramatic games. The scholastic integrity of Wilkinson’s program, which included high academic standards and graduation rates, produced a successful group of career-minded players.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.