Nancy G. (ComfyReader) reviewed I Love You, Miss Huddleston: And Other Inappropriate Longings of My Indiana Childhood on + 330 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Philip Gulley can definitely make you laugh out loud with this book. Back in the 1970s when we were free range children and allowed to have a childhood, life was much more interesting. Granted, your mom would know your indiscretions before you even hit the back door, but that was the price you paid for having fun.
Gulley tells his tales, he admits that these are the parts that he remembers and thats what he is sticking with, of living in Indiana and that it was pretty much heaven on earth even with the flannel graphs in Sunday school. Maybe that is why this good Catholic boy became a Quaker minister.
Hysterically funny from beginning to end, Gully takes us through his growing up years in short story vignettes pretty much in the same venue as Robert Fulgrum. Gully introduces us to his band of compadres who never seem to have real names, but make life all the more interesting.
And who knew that shooting a can of bug spray is pretty much the equivalent of an Indiana farms Atom Bomb.
Gulley tells his tales, he admits that these are the parts that he remembers and thats what he is sticking with, of living in Indiana and that it was pretty much heaven on earth even with the flannel graphs in Sunday school. Maybe that is why this good Catholic boy became a Quaker minister.
Hysterically funny from beginning to end, Gully takes us through his growing up years in short story vignettes pretty much in the same venue as Robert Fulgrum. Gully introduces us to his band of compadres who never seem to have real names, but make life all the more interesting.
And who knew that shooting a can of bug spray is pretty much the equivalent of an Indiana farms Atom Bomb.