About This Book
When Edward, a very ordinary man that designs machinery to wrap and box products, visits the Chocolate Factory by default, after he gets a flat tyre, something unexpected happens to him after he has eaten a hand full of coffee fondant creams.
On the walk back to his car, he sees an old fashioned fair taking place in the empty field that he'd walked across earlier. This puzzles him, so he goes into the coffee shop to regain his composure. He asks the waitress if a fair has ever been held there, and she directs him to four old sepia photographs that she says have been on the wall for ages. He notices that the photographer is an Edward P. Gallow, which is his name and when he tells her this, she says he obviously has not seen the local newspaper, which is asking for relatives of the photographer to contact the local lawyer, in order to claim their inheritance, which includes both the field and the Chocolate factory.
On further investigation, Edward discovers some information about his mother and his family that he previously knew nothing about. What Edward discovers certainly explains his father's harsh attitude towards him and also why he never spoke to his brother and it might even explain his own fondness for coffee fondant creams.