Lowry Pei has placed seven novels (plus 11 short stories and several short memoir stories) up on his web site as free downloads. Of the seven posted, Family Resemblances (Random House, 1986) has been previously published. All are in PDF form, so will need conversion for the Kindle1 and Kindle2. I tested the first one on the DX (just in; I'll have pictures up soon) and it's a bit small in portrait mode (there are large margins on the printer's proof), but plenty big in landscape mode after tilting the screen.
Family Resemblances
On the hottest days, my Aunt Augusta would drive around New Franklin with the windows rolled up, so that people would think the air conditioning still worked in the Buick she had inherited along with the house. The clear plastic cornucopias on either side of the rear window, which should have poured coolness on the back of our necks, were still quite noticeably there, but the remainder of the apparatus had succumbed to a mysterious illness some time ago. Occasionally, when she got to an out-of-the-way place, she’d hit the four buttons by her left hand and all the windows would slide down at once to let in relief, but she may have done this only when I was with her, to accommodate my weakness and youth; alone, for all I know, she never let down her resolve. She almost managed not to sweat, as if a regal bearing would keep her cool. Once when we were all visiting—my parents and I—my mother, red and hot, told her to her face it was absurd. Augusta, beautiful as she was, looked stony. I could see her in profile from where I sat in the back seat, and I was glad the Buick was big and I didn’t have to be any closer to her. Whose side to be on? There was a silence for half a block, and then she finally looked at my mother and said, “What they don’t know won’t hurt me.”
Download your copies HERE.