“You Couldn’t Help But Like Bob” — historical short story

Today I am introducing you to the main character in “You Couldn’t Help But Like Bob,” the second story in my new book, Traveling Through History: A Collection of Historical Short Stories.

Photo of the front cover of Traveling Through History: A Collection of Historical Short Stories, by Janet Morrison

Genealogy has been a hobby of mine since I was a young adult. Robert Dooling is the most colorful of my ancestors that I have found so far. He immigrated from Ireland to America in the early 1700s and settled in Virginia.

Some people would be embarrassed at discovering one of their great-great-great-great-great-grandfathers was on the wrong side of the law in Colonial Virginia, but that just made Robert Dooling that much more interesting to me. To my way of thinking, that’s a lot better than just knowing an ancestor’s birth and death dates.

I devoured the colonial court records, eagerly searching for every tidbit or reference to Robert. As far as I know, he never did anything too serious. Perhaps his worst offence was “abusing” a Justice of the Peace. (I’m not clear on what constituted “abusing” a Justice of the Peace in Tappahannock, Virginia in the early 18th century.

I had fun creating a fictional story about this man I only know on paper, but his blood runs through my veins and I’m grateful to know more about him than just his name.

Here are the opening lines in the story:

“You couldn’t help but like Bob. Unless he owed you money. Unless you were a Justice of the Peace in Essex County, Virginia in the early 1700s.

“Even so, you just couldn’t help but like Bob.

“To say Bob was irritating would be an understatement, but you couldn’t stay made at him for long. Unless he owned you money or tobacco. Unless you were a Justice of the Peace, tired of seeing him dragged into your court room.”

I hope you will enjoy reading the story as much as I enjoyed writing it.

After you read “You Couldn’t Help But Like Bob” in Traveling Through History: A Collection of Historical Short Stories, you’ll know more about him. I hope you will like him, too!

I case you missed my November 24, 2025, blog post about the first story in my new book, here’s the link: “The Tailor’s Shears” – Historical Short Story.

Where you can find my new book

Traveling Through History: A Collection of Historical Short Stories is available on Amazon, or ask for it at your favorite independent bookstore.

For my readers in North Carolina, the book is now available at Second Look Books in Harrisburg.

Thank you for supporting my writing! If you enjoy my book, a rating or review on Amazon or Goodreads would be greatly appreciated.

Janet

Traveling Through History is released today!

I am excited to tell you that my new book, Traveling Through History: A Collection of Historical Short Stories, will be released today as an e-book on Amazon! I thought the paperback would be released today, but there have been some bumps in the road over the last several days. I hope the paperback will be available in a few days.

Photo of the cover of Traveling Through History: A Collection of Historical Short Stories, by Janet Morrison
Traveling Through History: A Collection of Historical Short Stories, by Janet Morrison

In a week or two, look for it at your favorite independent bookstore, such as Second Look Books in Harrisburg, NC. I will give shout-outs to other bookstores as they let me know they’ve ordered the book.

Here’s a list of the stories in Traveling Through History:

The Tailor’s Shears – A 1600s Scottish Story;

You Couldn’t Help But Like Bob – A Colonial Virginia Short Story;

To Run or Not to Run – George’s Story;

Making the Best of a Tragedy – Elizabeth Steele’s Story;

From Scotland to America – A 1762 Immigration Story;

Whom Can We Trust? – A Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence Short Story;

Go fight, Johnny! – A Story of a Battle of King’s Mountain Veteran;

A Letter from Sharpsburg – An American Civil War Letter;

Slip Sliding Away – A Southern Appalachian Short Story;

A Plott Hound Called Buddy – A Great Depression Era Southern Appalachian Short Story;

Secrets of a Foster Child – Dignity in a Simple Suitcase;

Ghost of the Battle of Guilford Courthouse – An American Revolutionary War Ghost Story; and

If This House Could Talk – Recollections of an Old Farmhouse.

Do some of these story titles pique your interest? I certainly hope they do!

Each story is followed by Author’s Notes that give you such information as background information, what inspired the story, and what’s truth and what’s fiction.

Traveling Through History: A Collection of Historical Short Stories is available for your Kindle from Amazon.

Thank you for supporting my writing!

Janet