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D.E. Miller

3.8/5 ( ratings)
D. E. Miller was born at Camp Atterbury near Franklin, Indiana, but soon afterward, his family moved from Indiana and he spent most of his boyhood in Arizona and Nebraska. At age seventeen, after being expelled from high school, he found intermittent work as a day laborer and in various other manual labor jobs, which were often abruptly interrupted by his hitchhiking journeys born of his spirit of restlessness and were usually minimally planned, unfunded, and with disaster avoided only through luck, the kindness of strangers, and an overworked guardian angel.
In his mid twenties he became a truck driver, hauling freight throughout the lower forty-eight states. This work, too, had its interruptions as he moved to other states where he lived for varying lengths of time until some circumstance or another would lead to his return to Nebraska. During those years, he often tried his hand at other fields of work, but ultimately he always returned to truck driving, and at the time of this writing, he drives a rock and gravel truck in his local area.
Frequently through it all, he wrote, and continues to write, prose and poetry in an attempt to discover, capture, and understand something of the spirit and value in the experiences of life and living, for as Socrates is often quoted as saying, “The unexamined life isn’t worth living.”

D.E. Miller

3.8/5 ( ratings)
D. E. Miller was born at Camp Atterbury near Franklin, Indiana, but soon afterward, his family moved from Indiana and he spent most of his boyhood in Arizona and Nebraska. At age seventeen, after being expelled from high school, he found intermittent work as a day laborer and in various other manual labor jobs, which were often abruptly interrupted by his hitchhiking journeys born of his spirit of restlessness and were usually minimally planned, unfunded, and with disaster avoided only through luck, the kindness of strangers, and an overworked guardian angel.
In his mid twenties he became a truck driver, hauling freight throughout the lower forty-eight states. This work, too, had its interruptions as he moved to other states where he lived for varying lengths of time until some circumstance or another would lead to his return to Nebraska. During those years, he often tried his hand at other fields of work, but ultimately he always returned to truck driving, and at the time of this writing, he drives a rock and gravel truck in his local area.
Frequently through it all, he wrote, and continues to write, prose and poetry in an attempt to discover, capture, and understand something of the spirit and value in the experiences of life and living, for as Socrates is often quoted as saying, “The unexamined life isn’t worth living.”

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