Playing On Railroad Tracks

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Self Help, Addiction, Substance Abuse, Family & Relationships, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Playing On Railroad Tracks by Lee Ann Ropes, Chelsea N. Ropes, Lee  Ann Ropes
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Author: Lee Ann Ropes, Chelsea N. Ropes ISBN: 9781535607711
Publisher: Lee Ann Ropes Publication: December 21, 2018
Imprint: Lee Ann Ropes Language: English
Author: Lee Ann Ropes, Chelsea N. Ropes
ISBN: 9781535607711
Publisher: Lee Ann Ropes
Publication: December 21, 2018
Imprint: Lee Ann Ropes
Language: English

She could hear her dad’s words. “If you’re so bored, why don’t you just go play on the railroad
tracks.”

Going back home is never easy especially when you’re making the trip because a parent is ill. And so the journey begins for this daughter who has packed up everything she owns, except her two young daughters and her sanity, to race back to Indiana.

Her mission. To rescue her parents.

The problem. They didn’t ask her to come and they have no desire to be
rescued.

With a plan as flawed as the forty-year-old, green shag carpeting in her parents’ living room, every step Annie takes brings back a childhood memory. Making mud pies, chasing fireflies, Sunday trips with Dad to the bootlegger, and the explosive father/daughter relationship that promises to reignite at any moment.

Coming face to face with the brevity of human life, and the value of a good sense of humor, proves to this stubborn daughter that the character defects we see in others are the very ones we own ourselves, and that trying to redecorate the past is, in her dad’s words – ‘like pissing in the wind.’

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

She could hear her dad’s words. “If you’re so bored, why don’t you just go play on the railroad
tracks.”

Going back home is never easy especially when you’re making the trip because a parent is ill. And so the journey begins for this daughter who has packed up everything she owns, except her two young daughters and her sanity, to race back to Indiana.

Her mission. To rescue her parents.

The problem. They didn’t ask her to come and they have no desire to be
rescued.

With a plan as flawed as the forty-year-old, green shag carpeting in her parents’ living room, every step Annie takes brings back a childhood memory. Making mud pies, chasing fireflies, Sunday trips with Dad to the bootlegger, and the explosive father/daughter relationship that promises to reignite at any moment.

Coming face to face with the brevity of human life, and the value of a good sense of humor, proves to this stubborn daughter that the character defects we see in others are the very ones we own ourselves, and that trying to redecorate the past is, in her dad’s words – ‘like pissing in the wind.’

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