The Boy Who Heard Too Much The Gifts and Handicaps of Super Acute Hearing
The protagonist of this unusual fantasy is handicapped and isolated from the world by hearing so acute a loud whisper is painful, a car horn can cause him traumatic shock. His sheltered childhood is cut short by tragedy. As a teenager he is forced to leave his first, and only love. Facing the world completely alone he learns to live in the quiet of forests and deserts. Isolated, lonely years pass before he finds and uses artifacts from beyond the earth. His inadvertent misuse of them makes him the primary figure in a national mystery being investigated by the FBI. In a paranoid state of near madness he runs and escapes from his world of trauma and danger to a world we would all like to find. AUTHORS BIO The weight of the responsibility of having a pregnant wife ended my college experience at the end of the first year. Education in the diversity of humankind, and how to survive it and prosper led me in and out of too many cultural milieus to list in this effort. I became addicted to the freedom and adventure that the sea and seaports provided. Commercial fishermen, yachtsmen and their crews, and mariners from most varieties of vessels have been my life teachers. The Atlantic and Pacific ports of the US, the Caribbean Islands, the South and Central American ports around the Caribbean and ports of the Mediterranean were my windows into human activities until I retired to the Virgin Islands to use my experiences as grist for my writing. I have read that good police detectives think like crooks; I would have made a great detective. That talent has brought me very close to trouble several times when it became obvious to me there was illegal activity afoot and afloat, and those involved in it saw I understood what was going on. Surprisingly, they frequently tried to recruit me because I was obviously aware but minding my own business and keeping my mouth shut. Those encounters and my very active imagination have been the source of some of the material in most of my books---and that's my story and I'm sticking to it.