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Tales of
Hartwell House
is a series of fictional short stories by John W. Pritchett about an
eclectic family in rural Virginia during the mid-twentieth
century. The primary characters are Jerry, the proprietor of the estate,
and his dependable butler, James. |
No murders, no vampires, no dragons, nothing profane. But plenty of predicaments.
Most stories have James — the highly competent valet ‘Jeeves’ to Jerry’s
wealthy ‘Bertie Wooster’ — resolving a crisis such as a mysterious
threat, missing securities, the potential exposure of a family secret, a
battered woman, a delinquent nephew, legal scheming to take a Black
family's farm, an attempt to scam a senior, or the discovery of a child’s grave
in a neglected rose garden. |
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As with P.G. Wodehouse's Bertie & Jeeves stories, Tales of Hartwell House are light and entertaining with upbeat endings.
Whereas Bertie narrates the Wodehouse stories, Hartwell House tales are
in the third person. For purists, valet Jeeves is a personal attendant, whereas butler James
oversees the entire Hartwell House household. |
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Primary Characters |
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Bachelor Jeremiah (“Jerry”) Abbott Hartwell resides near the Town of
Berkeley, Virginia, at Hartwell House, a former grand mansion on a large, farmed homestead, served by: |
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James Biddlecomb, the highly competent butler, chauffer, golf caddie, and
vegetable gardener.
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Minerva Overton, the forgetful, cantankerous
housekeeper.
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Cornelia Sadler, the bright, dependable cook.
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Jerry is often found at the Hackberry Hills Country Club golf course or
its Oakwood Room bar, where members seek him out to share the gossip of
the day or regale him with tiresome stories to which no one else will
listen. |
He is joined by niece Lavinia Masen Graydon, newly wed to Tolliver Graydon, a
traveling salesman for a Richmond and D.C. ready-to-wear wholesaler.. |
Lavinia’s mother, Agnes Masen (Jerry’s sister), and husband Michael
Masen live in Washington, D.C. with teenage sons Timmy and Tommy. |
Iris Clement, a cousin of Jerry and Agnes, and her husband David Clement
are in Richmond. |
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Hartwell House |
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As described in Chapter I: |
Three gray stone chimneys watched over Hartwell House, a two-story white
frame farmhouse with front and rear airy verandas and a red tin roof. An
ancient, vigilant weathervane in the form of a rooster creaked with each
change in the wind. |
The idle tobacco curing barn, stables, rose garden, and corn crib had
fallen into disrepair from neglect. The carriage house garaged the
maroon-colored Packard, while the henhouse still retained its function
of producing eggs for the kitchen. |
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The Town of Berkeley |
Carolina Avenue in the nearby fictional town of Berkeley, Virginia, is the locale
of various scenes: an Esso station, Lil’s Diner, LeBlanc’s dry goods
emporium, Berkeley Bank & Trust, Jennings Funeral Parlour, an A&P,
Berkeley Public Library, Hardaway’s Billiard Parlour, Lawson's Garage, and
a Western Union
Office. |
|
The Tales |
These are the stories composed to-date and the approximate number of words.
|
|
VOLUME 1 |
|
| I. |
James to
the Rescue |
6,200 |
Jerry’s niece
Lavinia comes to live at Hartwell House and is pursued by a
smooth-talking traveling salesman |
| II. |
Tolliver Joins the Family |
6,800 |
Jerry
promises to invest in a fund managed by a scoundrel |
| III. |
Willow Arrives |
3,900 |
A cocker spaniel, grieving
his mate, disrupts the household |
|
IV. |
Timmy Comes to Visit |
6,300 |
When Jerry’s juvenile
delinquent nephew arrives at Hartwell House |
| V. |
Tim Returns Home |
6,000 |
… he learns some
surprising lessons |
| VI. |
Jerry and the Widow |
8,400 |
The household is in turmoil
when a widow expresses a romantic interest in Jerry |
| VII. |
Lavinia Receives a Letter |
6,000 |
The sender of an anonymous letter threatens
to expose a Hartwell family secret |
| VIII. |
The Rose Garden |
8,200 |
Finding an infant's grave in
the rose garden from forty years earlier sends Jerry and James
on a search |
|
IX. |
The High School Reunion |
3,400 |
Jerry's sister fears a nosey
classmate gathering information for a high school reunion
publication might
dig too deep |
| |
Total |
55,200 |
|
|
| |
VOLUME 2 |
|
|
| X. |
Jerry's Birthday Party |
7,700 |
While preparations for
Jerry's birthday progress, he and James search for the mystery
of missing stock certificates. |
| XI. |
Lavinia Goes to Bat for Iris |
5,000 |
James pursues the truth about
Jerry's cousin who admits to Lavinia that her husband battered her |
|
XII. |
Uncle Joseph Calls for
Help |
6,000 |
After a prominent family
discovers its patriarch's second will, they pursue legal action to
take a Black
family's land |
| XIII. |
A Damsel in Distress |
6,700 |
A woman masquerading as a
caregiver aims to swindle an elderly man |
| XIV. |
A Hartwell House
Christmas |
6,700 |
Alone at Hartwell House over
Christmas, Jerry and Minerva experience unexpected adventures |
| XV. |
The Matter of
Miss Haizlip |
5,700 |
A woman seduces married
members of Jerry's club for the purpose of blackmail |
|
XVI. |
Hope Comes
to Hartwell House |
7,000 |
The arrival of a precocious
child brings joy and distress to the residents of Hartwell House |
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|
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|
|
|
| |
Total |
44,800 |
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What Readers Are Saying |
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The voice, tone, and pacing are all wonderfully done. I felt
like I was reading a Wodehouse piece. My favorite strengths are
that the dialogue has such subtle turns and a gentle wittiness. And of course I
love a story with a tidy and happy ending
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They are original, charming, clever and sure to be publishable.
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Absolutely delightful and I thoroughly enjoyed them. |
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Really charming with fun characters. I can hear the way
they talk in my head. Very well written. It really takes the
reader to another time and place. |
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The ending was clever and cute. It was a quick read, didn’t
drag, and you painted a vivid picture of the characters whom I
could easily visualize.
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Such wonderful characters and interesting plots |
Loved the story |
Fun to read
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I enjoyed the characters and storyline. There was a fun use of
language and phrasing. And who doesn’t love a happy ending?! |
Very cute and clever
Well constructed |
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So cute and your imagery does not fail. |
You really get a feel for the place and time |
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Well developed characters and plots. The stories are enriched with good descriptions,
conversations, and details about your characters’ lives as they
live them. |
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Bio |
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Mr. Pritchett, a graduate of Rice University and the Tepper School of
Business, pursued two interests after a successful business career. A
noted Virginia genealogist, he authored the 4,000-page Southside
Virginia Genealogies, a top selling publication of Genealogical
Publishing Company. As a voice actor, he produced 100+ programs of “An
Hour of Short Stories” for North Texas Radio for the Blind, voicing many
of the stories. |
Retiring a second time after a career as a
top-producing residential real estate agent, he turned to his genuine interest — fiction. |
A son and grandson
of Virginians, he spent summers among the state's small towns
and farms, and thus his choice for the stories' locale. |
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Info |
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Linkedin |
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JPritchett@msn.com |