It takes the average reader 4 hours and 42 minutes to read Bonnie & Clyde by Gaylon Barrow
Assuming a reading speed of 250 words per minute. Learn more
Chapter One Bonnie & Clyde's early history. "I am Clyde Chestnut Barrow, born the fifth child of Henry Belson and Cumie Walker Barrow, March 24, 1909, in Trumbull, Texas that everyone concluded to be certain was, Telico, Texas where we lived. Not so, it was a fact we lived in Trumbull, Texas a part of Ellis Country." Note Census taken in 1910;" 910 Ellis County, Texas Census, ED 126, Sheet 4B, enumerated 11 Apr 1910 "Trumbull, Texas (note it is not Telico!) This census shows we are renting this farm. Henry and Cumie have been married for 17 years. Cumie is the mother of 5 children all of whom are living at the time of this census. It has been said over and over again that Henry lived in Telico, TX in 1910. This census was enumerated in TRUMBULL, TX dispelling that fact." The house Clyde was born, in Trumbull, TX Trumbull Baptist Church where Cumie insisted we all attended every Sunday. "I did attend the Telico school located nearby. They were claimed to have had seven children, but again not true. They did raise seven children, but after Marie was born this was to be all the children born to Cumie. Dave, who was counted as the seventh child came to live with us when he was sixteen years old. He was a Cousin to Henry my father. The other children were in order of their birth, Artie W. Barrow, born, March 1894, Texas." "Elvin W. born, June 1899, Texas; Nellie M. born 1904, Hughes Springs, Texas; Ivan Marvin (Buck) born, March 14, 1903, Hughes Springs, Texas." "L.C. Barrow born in 1915, Trumbull, Texas; and then Marie Barrow, was born in, 1919, Trumbull, Texas." "Trumbull like Telico was a very small Community Town just east of Waxahachie and south of Dallas. I was the fifth of six children of Henry Belson Barrow (1874-1957) and Cumie T. Walker (1874-1943), a poor farming family that emigrated, to Dallas in 1922 as part of a wave of resettlement from the impoverished nearby farms to the urban slum known as West Dallas. We Barrows spent our first months in West Dallas living under our wagon. When father Henry used some of his inheritance money to buy a tent, it was a major step up for the rest of us." Henry, Elvin and Cumie Barrow Old girlfriend Annie, Clyde, sisters, Artie and Nell "I met Anne whose last name I will not give to the public to protect her family by her association with me. I truly loved this girl enough I had her name tattooed on my left arm. She wasn't the only girl I had marked on my arms. I also had Grace on my right arm. A heart & Dagger with the initials "EBW," outer right arm. This was for a girl named Eleanor B. Williams who I stayed with for a while. I had sex with all of them and what lies they claimed about me was truly false about being homosexual. I guess this story originated for the rape I endured while at Eastman Prison. A rose & leaves on my left shoulder, a shield & anchor for my love for the navy. If only I had kept my record clean it would have changed my short life's history. For I wished to enlist, but was turned down for the felony charges I had accumulated. Anyhow I got, "USN" tattooed on my left arm and a girl's face under this on my forearm." "Anne had left Dallas and returned to her home outside Hillsboro, Texas. This is what later would prove my first conflict with the law." "Bonnie has a tattoo above her right knee on her thigh, of double hearts and arrow which contained the names "Bonnie & Roy." I told her she ought to get then removed. But, she said, "I need to get the money to pay for a divorce first. Then I will have it removed as soon as you remove those slut's names on you." "Clyde took a puff on a Camel then flipped it away. As if in afterthought he said, you know I damn came close to dying twice when I was a child. When I was a baby Nell squeezed me so hard she squeezed all the air out of me.
Bonnie & Clyde by Gaylon Barrow is 276 pages long, and a total of 70,656 words.
This makes it 93% the length of the average book. It also has 86% more words than the average book.
The average oral reading speed is 183 words per minute. This means it takes 6 hours and 26 minutes to read Bonnie & Clyde aloud.
Bonnie & Clyde is suitable for students ages 12 and up.
Note that there may be other factors that effect this rating besides length that are not factored in on this page. This may include things like complex language or sensitive topics not suitable for students of certain ages.
When deciding what to show young students always use your best judgement and consult a professional.
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