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==Plot== Homer Macauley is a 14-year-old boy growing up fatherless in the [[San Joaquin Valley]] of California during [[World War II]]. His oldest brother, Marcus, is off fighting the war, and Homer feels he needs to be the man of the family. To make money, he takes an evening job as a telegraph boy, meaning sometimes he has to deliver the news to a family that a son has died in the war. Yet Homer keeps up his normal life, going to school, to church, and to the movies. He is encouraged by his home environment and his loving family, including a very young brother and a mother who plays the harp. His roots and an almost instinctive sense of right and wrong keep him honest and hopeful. The novel's optimistic tone came, at least in part, from starting as a screen-treatment for MGM's [[Louis B. Mayer]].<ref>Dickran Kouymjian, "Saroyan Shoots a Film" in Leon Hamalian, ed., ''William Saroyan: The Man and Writer Remembered'' (Madison NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press, 1987), 77β83. {{ISBN|9780838633083}}.</ref>
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