When aging, balding, copy editor Ernest "Sparky" Hemmingway (no
relation) got a call from Tenishia, the daughter of his late Vietnam
buddy George Washington (also no relation), he was faced with a choice:
head out to Minneapolis to help her out of a jam or hang up the phone.
He made the decision to help and it changed his life. Along with his old
army buddy Doc Holiday (you guessed it--no relation) Sparky faced down
the bad guys and found out who caused Washington's death.
Sparky chooses to give Tenishia a shot at a normal life and takes her
back to the little North Dakota town of Hardwoods, filled with decidedly
odd folks who just do what they have to in order to get along--a place
where everybody knows everybody's else secrets but pretends they don't.
When he begins the unenviable task of rearing an almost grown inner-city
teenager, many in the town think he's nuts. But this girl isn't just
anybody, and the bonds--and promises--made in war sometimes last even
longer than a man's life.
Just when Sparky thinks he's got the hang of his new lifestyle, he gets
roped into becoming a deputy sheriff and runs smack dab into a political
wrangle over the possible building of a major trauma center in the town.
The hospital could be just the thing to save a sleepy little hamlet that
loses farm kids every year to the big cities. But Hardwoods isn't the
only town that is vying for the honor, and where people's jobs and lives
are at stake, is there any doubt that a dead body or two will join the
party any minute?