Since their mothers sudden death, sixteen-year-old Carly and her eleven-year-old sister, Jen, have been walking and hitchhiking across the Southwest trying to find Teddy, the closest thing they have to a family. Carly desperately hopes Teddy will take them in and save them from going into foster car
Walk Me Home
β Scribed by Hyde, Catherine Ryan
- Book ID
- 107787604
- Publisher
- Lake Union Publishing
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 221 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781611097979
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Since their motherβs sudden death, sixteen-year-old Carly and her eleven-year-old sister, Jen, have been walking and hitchhiking across the Southwest trying to find Teddy, the closest thing they have to a family. Carly desperately hopes Teddy will take them in and save them from going into foster careβand forgive them for the lies told by their mother.
But when the starving girls get caught stealing food on a Native American reservation, their journey gets put on hold. While the girls work off their debt, Carly becomes determined to travel onwardβuntil Jen confesses a terrible secret that leaves both sisters wondering if they can ever trust again.
Set against the backdrop of the American Southwest, Walk Me Home and its resilient heroines will inspire readers and renew their faith in recovery and redemption.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
**A feel-good, funny second chance romance proves it's never too late for love in the small Texas ranch town of Silverlake.** Firefighter Jake Braddock is used to fixing things, and he's never met a problem he couldn't solve--except for his sweet ex-girlfriend Charlotte Nash. Charlie Nash has b
Can Jade overcome the hurt from her past for the one man she now sees as more than a friend, the man who makes her pulse race? Bentley: They may be friends, but she has no idea that heβs been mesmerized by her over the last few years. The way she moves on the dance floorβ¦ her graceβ¦ her beauty.
As an Arab Christian pilot for a relief organization, Paul Farid feels called to bring supplies to his war-torn countrymen in southern Sudan. But with constant attacks from Khartoum's Islamic government, the villagers have plenty of reasons to distrust Paul, and he wonders if the risks he's taking a