Breaking into Sunlight

Breaking into Sunlight

by John Cochran
Breaking into Sunlight

Breaking into Sunlight

by John Cochran

Hardcover

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Overview

This powerful and compassionate book follows a family’s journey through the turbulence of parental addiction—and the moments of connection and healing that break through the dark days. 
  Reese is a seventh-grader in rural North Carolina who loves drawing, basketball, his hardworking mom, and his charming, charismatic dad. But then one day, he comes home to his worst nightmare – his dad on the floor, lips turning blue, overdosed. Again. Reese calls 911 and gets his dad out of danger, and he expects to go on as before. But for his mom, this is the breaking point, and she declares that she and Reese are leaving until Reese’s dad gets real help with his addiction. They move to a rundown trailer outside of town, where Reese is furious with his mom, scared for his dad, and terrified his friends will find out.
 
Then he meets Meg and Charlie, who have likewise been stranded by circumstances beyond their control. As the trio explores the blackwater river that runs nearby, Reese discovers new beauty and joy in nature and these fresh connections. His dad is also doing better, holding things together, and talking to his mom again. But how long can the good times last? And what will Reese do if — when — they end?

In the United States today, an estimated one in eight kids live with a parent with a substance-abuse problem. Written with bracing honesty, deep sympathy, and tenderness for all its characters, Breaking into Sunlight offers readers a powerful affirmation that no one is alone. 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781523527298
Publisher: Workman Publishing Company
Publication date: 06/18/2024
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 190,278
Product dimensions: 5.80(w) x 8.60(h) x (d)
Age Range: 10 - 13 Years

About the Author

John Cochran grew up in Kansas City and studied journalism at the University of Missouri-Columbia. He worked as a reporter and editor at daily newspapers in Missouri, Virginia, Tennessee, and North Carolina before moving to Washington, D.C., to cover Congress for Congressional Quarterly. The National Press Foundation recognized his work with its Everett McKinley Dirksen Award for Distinguished Reporting of Congress. He now lives on Capitol Hill with his wife and children. Breaking into Sunlight is his first novel. Visit his website at www.johncochranauthor.com. 

 

Read an Excerpt

His dad turned to look at him. “I probably shouldn’t tell you this story because I don’t want to scare you on your first time out, but this one time early on, I took your mom roller skating . . .”
Reese’s mom laughed. “This was one of our first dates, your dad and me.”
“It was our third date, actually,” his dad said. “I took her to a rink in Goldsville. She’d never seen me skate, and I really wanted to impress her, so I was showing off, weaving in and out. And then I turned to skate backward, and I—”
“Wait a minute,” Reese said. “You can skate backward?” He hadn’t even known his dad could skate forward, and here he was talking about practically doing stunts.
“I can. Or I used to be able to, on a good day. So I turned, so smooth. I mean it was perfect, and I waved at your mom like, ‘Check me out!’ And then, bam! I hit the low wall around the rink and flipped. I actually flipped head over heels, right out of the rink.”
Reese’s mom laughed again. “He was waving at me like a fool, and then he hit that wall and went over. People screamed. Oh, the look on his face: total shock. I’ll never forget it.”
“Okay, that is funny,” Reese said. “I would totally pay to see that.”
“Right?” said his mom.
“I broke my wrist,” his dad said.
“And we spent the rest of the date at the emergency room,” his mom said. “The end.”
“Not the end,” his dad said. “Just the beginning!”
“My smooth operator.” She leaned over to his dad, put one hand on his chin to turn his face to her, and kissed him.
It was honestly a little gross, but his dad, so healthy then, really at his best, had broken through. And just like that, they were a family again, like any other. Reese was not going to be the one who screwed that up, after everything they had gone through, after all the fights and the crying: He would go skating, if it could work this kind of magic. Or he would try.
He just hoped—Please, God—that there was no one he knew inside.
 

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