Synopsis:
Luke’s life like all our lives was a series of relationships, for Luke, of all the
relationships that exist between people; a loving relationship between mates
was paramount. In his view, no man should be without the pleasure of a
woman’s lovely body; Luke even understood that a woman might feel that way
about another woman. Luke felt that a person was fortunate if they found just
one special love during their lifetime; he found more and any one of them
would have been his only had it not been for circumstances beyond his
control. Luke was fortunate and unfortunate in his experiences with love;
occasionally he was both at the same time.
Luke’s loves meandered in and out of his life, but the children they produced
remained a constant; they were there from beginning to end and were at times
the only reason for Luke to go on. As adults, Luke’s children struggled with life’
s problems; those problems weren't novel, but the way they were handled and
the results that followed were.
Luke’s rise from humble beginnings to corporate giant gives credence to the
statement that Only in America are all things possible. Having learned this
truth so well, Luke inspires and assists his children to go even farther; his
oldest is propelled toward the White House; no small feat for any man, but
especially not so for a Black man. Luke’s father, through his relationships
during post-slavery days, gives a glimpse of the evolution of the races in
America that resulted from Blacks not being able to say no to their White
masters.
Luke, like all of us, continues to deal with life’s relationships and he will do so
until the end
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