I certainly found it challenging to read of someone doing the same job that I’m doing just over 100 years later and seeing the impact that he had on this town. And surely there’s a challenge for us all in terms of how people will remember us once we’re gone. As the Bible tells us, ‘the memory of the just is blessed’. (Proverbs 10:7).
I also found the book to be another reminder that though times change, human nature doesn’t. Although she was brought up a century ago, June shared many of the hopes, dreams and fears that we do. The memoir is also a cure for nostalgia for a simpler time. Although the book is beautifully written, some of it is hard to read, particularly when it details the abuse that June faced from members of her extended family. A simpler time it may have been, but the human heart was still ‘desperately sick’ (Jeremiah 17:9).
All in all, the book gives us a vivid picture of Stranraer as it once was and will be of interest to many Free Press readers.
The book is available to buy on Amazon, or direct from the publisher, Cinnamon Press.
Published in the Stranraer & Wigtownshire Free Press, 1st July 2021
NB: Copies of the book are available to purchase directly from the author for £10, including postage. Contact us for details.
For more info on Wesley Rodger, see our previous post.