Contract with the King
by
Book Details
About the Book
Contract with the King is a poignant novel about a group of University of Texas students who kidnap Elvis Presley in a valiant effort to save him from his poor health, destructive lifestyle, and addiction to prescription drugs. Paul Roberts and Tara Benoist, along with their close friends, hide a near comatose Elvis in the basement of an Austin, Texas rehab clinic and change his name to Aron to protect his privacy. After a short stay in rehab, they smuggle him to The Vineyard, an old, secluded ranch house nestled in the Texas Hill Country and rumored to be haunted.
After Aron agrees to a five-month stay, he is encouraged to disguise his appearance by shaving his sideburns and getting a buzz cut. In the absence of radios, televisions, and telephones, the King’s kidnappers use physically demanding hikes, spirited games of football, and porch stories to keep their patient sidetracked from the tortures inherent in withdrawal and recovery.
While falling deeply in love, Paul and Tara lead the reader through a whirlpool of ulterior motives, emotional challenges, and euphoric situational highs. As Aron recovers, he reconnects with his daughter, his music, and the most loyal of his 50 million fans.
About the Author
When Paul Pullen learned of the King’s death, he was racing through the Texas Hill Country from campus to work and suddenly found himself overcome with sadness, remorse, and guilt. He understood the sadness, Elvis was once his childhood idol, but not the other irrational feelings. He was rushing to work, however, and had little time to deal with the loss, and even less time to deal with the other strange emotions.
Thirteen years later, Paul found a little time and on a whim, picked up a piece of scratch paper and wrote about the moment he learned of the King’s death. As if hearing the news for the first time, he was instantly overcome with that same sense of sadness, remorse, and guilt. Why? Why had Elvis’ death affected him so deeply? Why, after thirteen years, was it affecting him still? And why did dealing with these strong emotions suddenly seem like such a huge undertaking? He picked up the piece of paper and continued writing until he had completed Contract with the King.