Présentation de l'éditeur
In wartime Britain in 1944 in the weeks leading up to the Normandy Invasion eight year old Eddie Conner meets an unlikely mentor in the form of a young American soldier.
A twenty year old Navajo Indian named Running Horse who tells Eddie that there is an imminent Spirit of Creativity in the Universe that can touch receptive souls like his.
It is this curious seed planted within the young boy that enables him later in life to excel at any creative endeavor he partakes.
At the end of WWII Eddie returns to the tough crime filled streets of London's East End and the story moves into the 1950s when he becomes part of the first generation of post war teens.
Eddie's abusive father a heavy drinker and stereotypical broken war veteran teaches him to fight. Unfortunately he is never taught self control, and his tendency to solve his problems with his fists lands him in trouble time and time again.
Eddie finds local success as a singer/songwriter, but just as he and his band is about to gain national recognition a fight and subsequent wounding of another gets Eddie arrested.
Clearly a case of self defense, but Eddie's violent past record and damning testimony by corrupt police officers send him to prison.
From his prison cell he sees the Beatles and The Rolling Stones skyrocket to success and has to deal with the harsh reality, but for the poor choices he had made he would have been part of the exploding music scene.
At this low point in his life Eddie's creativity saves him as he takes up painting in prison and on his release he becomes an acclaimed artist and sculptor.
By the mid 1970s his career takes him to California where he goes on to be a highly successful businessman.
Although Eddie has money and material things in his life he lacks a purpose and the satisfaction that comes with it.
He eventually returns to his first love music and it is here he finds a spiritual awareness along with the success he missed in his youth.
A twenty year old Navajo Indian named Running Horse who tells Eddie that there is an imminent Spirit of Creativity in the Universe that can touch receptive souls like his.
It is this curious seed planted within the young boy that enables him later in life to excel at any creative endeavor he partakes.
At the end of WWII Eddie returns to the tough crime filled streets of London's East End and the story moves into the 1950s when he becomes part of the first generation of post war teens.
Eddie's abusive father a heavy drinker and stereotypical broken war veteran teaches him to fight. Unfortunately he is never taught self control, and his tendency to solve his problems with his fists lands him in trouble time and time again.
Eddie finds local success as a singer/songwriter, but just as he and his band is about to gain national recognition a fight and subsequent wounding of another gets Eddie arrested.
Clearly a case of self defense, but Eddie's violent past record and damning testimony by corrupt police officers send him to prison.
From his prison cell he sees the Beatles and The Rolling Stones skyrocket to success and has to deal with the harsh reality, but for the poor choices he had made he would have been part of the exploding music scene.
At this low point in his life Eddie's creativity saves him as he takes up painting in prison and on his release he becomes an acclaimed artist and sculptor.
By the mid 1970s his career takes him to California where he goes on to be a highly successful businessman.
Although Eddie has money and material things in his life he lacks a purpose and the satisfaction that comes with it.
He eventually returns to his first love music and it is here he finds a spiritual awareness along with the success he missed in his youth.
Book Description
Fact and fiction converge in this uplifting new novel which chronicles the life of English songwriter Eddie Connor. Much of the story takes place in England during the 1950s on the tough streets of London's East End, an area of high crime and police corruption. Eddie is part of the first generation of teenagers after World War II. They wanted to be heard and noticed, so they created their own fashions and took the music from America half a world away and made it their own-first jazz, then rock-n-roll and the blues. This was the generation that gave birth to the Beatles and the Rolling Stones and what was later referred to in America as the British Invasion.
Prodigal Child is the story of a talented young singer-songwriter who might have been part of the "Invasion" but for certain twists of fate in his early years. In later years, he is able to put the past behind him and become a successful artist and businessman, eventually returning to his first love: music. And to the glory that eluded him during the 1960s.
