The Shitty 1872 Candidacies of David Davis (Illinois), Joel Parker (New Jersey), and Charles O’Conor (New York), Labor Reform Party. Sorta.
Quick Bios: Really quick cuz there’s three of them: David Davis was a fairly enormous man, a lawyer, and a bodyguard for Lincoln during the Civil War. Coincidentally, Lincoln nominated Davis for the Supreme Court, where he served until being elected Senator of Illinois (one of only a few folk to quit the SCOTUS and work for another branch). Joel Parker, a hairy gent lacking only a mustache, was a lawyer and got elected twice as Governor of New Jersey, including the months leading up to the 1872 Presidential Election. Charles O’Conor, a grim neck-bearded fellow, was a South-sympathizer during the Civil War. He was, you guessed it, a lawyer; among his many famous cases was his turn as Jefferson Davis’ senior counsel during the Confederate leader’s indictment for treason.
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The Shitty 1852 Candidacy of Daniel Webster, Know-Nothing Party, Massachusetts.
Quick Bio: Born a British subject in the New Hampshire colony in 1772, Daniel Webster was a lifelong American statesman. Like many politicians (and over half of U.S. Presidents), he was a lawyer, arguing cases as high as the Supreme Court. He negotiated the treaty that established the border between the USA and Canada, and served in both houses of Congress (representing, at various times, New Hampshire and Massachusetts). He was Secretary of State under three Presidents (Harrison, Tyler, and Fillmore) and ran for the White House three times himself. The first two times, he even knew about it.
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The Shitty 1912 Candidacy of William Howard Taft, R., OH.
Quick Bio: The 27th President, 1909-13, and later Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Taft is the only POTUS to have also filled a role on the SCOTUS. He also filled some large clothes as the heaviest President (he maxed at 335 lbs.). A Cincinnati native, a Yale legacy, and a Skull and Bones member, Taft studied law and managed to be appointed as a Superior Court judge by age 29. He was later Governor-General of the Philippines and repeatedly turned down nominations for the Supreme Court (until finally accepting the Chief Justice position in his autumn years). Taft is the only incumbent President whose reelection bid resulted in finishing not first, or second, but third. William met his future wife Helen at a bobsledding party, because don’t we all, and enjoyed a 46-year marriage with three children.
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I'll be doing a Dracula book soon. I can say little more than that. The project excites me tremendously.
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Starting Wednesday 9/14, Striking Out goes on sale across all formats! The signed paperbacks and audiobook download codes will be $13 here on ChristopherMorlock.com, while the Kindle edition will be just 99¢ on Amazon! The sale's final day is 9/21, and thanks in advance for all the support!
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Three new books have had their release dates set in stone.*
- Foul Territory, the second volume in the Chronicle of Calvin Connor, will be out in paperback on 10-24-16 and for Kindle on 12-21-16.
- The Photography of Dale Morlock, a limited edition biography of my late father replete with hundreds of his inspiring photos, will be released on 1-7-17 in physical form.
- The Melancholic Seven, a reboot of my 1997 novella of the same name and the first story in the new "Everything, Including ..." Mythos, will be released in paperback on 7-7-17 (a date totally chosen at random) with the Kindle edition following on 9-17-17.
* - when I say stone, I mean more a sort of soft liquidy clay that can be reshaped into different dates.
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