MARK PACER is an outsider from Mocking Bird, Georgia, when he arrives in Washington, D.C. for diplomatic training in 1976. His fellow Georgian, Jimmy Carter, is running for president, and the Vietnamese conflict has ended, but legacies remain from war protesters and hippies.Mark's academic credentials from a Southern university are brilliant, but he pronounces words like "my" with an accent as long as the distance from Mocking Bird to the Atlantic Ocean. Plus, in a last, angry meeting with his father, the older man berated ...
Read More
MARK PACER is an outsider from Mocking Bird, Georgia, when he arrives in Washington, D.C. for diplomatic training in 1976. His fellow Georgian, Jimmy Carter, is running for president, and the Vietnamese conflict has ended, but legacies remain from war protesters and hippies.Mark's academic credentials from a Southern university are brilliant, but he pronounces words like "my" with an accent as long as the distance from Mocking Bird to the Atlantic Ocean. Plus, in a last, angry meeting with his father, the older man berated Mark for choosing such a "highfalutin'" profession.Maybe his father is right. Not only has Mark broken with his father, but he falls in love with a woman in his Foreign Service class, Reye Quinnell, who surely has no interest in a hillbilly. If that weren't enough, Mark is the chief suspect for an act of racist vandalism against a fellow classmate. After all, he's the one with the Southern accent, right? Should he return to the place he knows best, where his ancestors have lived for generations?Mark works against time to reconcile with his father as well as find the vandalism culprit. And what about his growing friendship with Reye? Soon, training will end. Then he and his colleagues will leave for different countries to begin their careers, separated by thousands of miles.
Read Less