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The King of Highbanks Road: Rediscovering Dad, Rural America, and Learning to Love Home Again
Indigo
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The King of Highbanks Road: Rediscovering Dad, Rural America, and Learning to Love Home Again
By None
Current price: $22.99


By None
The King of Highbanks Road: Rediscovering Dad, Rural America, and Learning to Love Home Again
Current price: $22.99
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Size: Paperback
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
What is a normal life, anyway?
Perfect parents, who never argued or made a mistake? Some 2.2 perfectly behaved children who magically morphed into honor students, then doctors and lawyers with no problems, or nary a regret? All this, evolving from the safety of some picket fence inside the boundaries of which never a harsh word was spoken?
How far back must you go in your family before hitting grief or hurt?
Steve Watkins never knew what to call it, but he knew something about growing up on a small rural farm in the 1980s felt different. Something strange and out of the ordinary.
Somewhere along the way, someone called it the U.S. Farm Crisis, and the label stuck. One psychologist who counseled widow after grieving widow called it a wrecking ball that blindsided rural America. Another academic described it simply as "ungodly hell."
Watkins called it childhood.
For anyone who ever had a difficult relationship with a parent,
For anyone who couldn't get away from home fast enough to start their own life,
For anyone who ever wondered why they are the way they are ...
Watkins infuses humor with transparency and a delightful tale of rural America as he recounts a quest for self-discovery, purpose, and the surprise reward of learning to love home again.
What is a normal life, anyway?
Perfect parents, who never argued or made a mistake? Some 2.2 perfectly behaved children who magically morphed into honor students, then doctors and lawyers with no problems, or nary a regret? All this, evolving from the safety of some picket fence inside the boundaries of which never a harsh word was spoken?
How far back must you go in your family before hitting grief or hurt?
Steve Watkins never knew what to call it, but he knew something about growing up on a small rural farm in the 1980s felt different. Something strange and out of the ordinary.
Somewhere along the way, someone called it the U.S. Farm Crisis, and the label stuck. One psychologist who counseled widow after grieving widow called it a wrecking ball that blindsided rural America. Another academic described it simply as "ungodly hell."
Watkins called it childhood.
For anyone who ever had a difficult relationship with a parent,
For anyone who couldn't get away from home fast enough to start their own life,
For anyone who ever wondered why they are the way they are ...
Watkins infuses humor with transparency and a delightful tale of rural America as he recounts a quest for self-discovery, purpose, and the surprise reward of learning to love home again.


















