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An Afternoon in Waterloo Park

Gerald Dumas
An Afternoon in Waterloo Park evokes feelings, sights, and textures of experience of a bygone period. Prompted by the emotional strain of his mother's death in 1968, Gerald Dumas contemplates three generations of his family and lyrically records impressions of life on Dickerson Avenue in Detroit.
This is a complex family story, recollected from the surface of childhood and pondered from the depths of mature experience. Dumas' poetic form allows for closely packed images not possible in prose. What Our Town did in its attempt to find a value for the smallest events of everyday life in early twentieth-century New England, An Afternoon in Waterloo Park achieves for midcentury mid-America—a real and honest evocation of going home.
"This uniquely American memoir hits a universal nerve."—Helen DelMonte, McCall's
 
Great Lakes Books Series

$17.95l paper / 0-8143-2039-2

140 pages / 5.25 x 8
13 illustrations

1988
(1972 Houghton Mifflin)