Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Between Two Trailers

Rate this book
An unforgettable memoir about a girl who escapes her childhood as a preschool drug dealer to earn a divinity degree from Duke University—and then realizes she must confront her past to truly find her way home

“Home, it turns out, is where the war is. It’s also where the healing begins.”

Born to drug-dealing parents in rural Indiana, Dana Trent is a preschooler the first time she uses a razor blade to cut up weed and fill dime bags for her schizophrenic father, King. While King struggles with his unmedicated psychosis, Dana’s mother, the Lady, a cold and self-absorbed woman whose personality disorders rule the home, guards large bricks of drugs from the safety of their squalid trailer, where she watches TV evangelist Tammy Faye on repeat. Growing up, Dana tries to be the daughter each of her parents wanted: a drug lord’s heir and a debutante minister. But when the Lady impulsively plucks Dana from the Midwest and moves the two of them south, their fresh start results in homelessness and bankruptcy. In North Carolina, Dana becomes torn between her gritty midwestern past and her desire to be a polite southern girl, hiding her homelife of drugs and parents whose severe mental illnesses have left them debilitated.

Dana imagines that her hidden Indiana life is finally behind her after she graduates from Duke University and becomes a professor and an ambivalent female Southern Baptist minister. But Dana was a child of the drug trade. Though she escapes flyover country, she realizes that she will never be able to escape her father’s legacy, and that her childhood secrets have kept her from making peace with the people and places that shaped her. Ultimately, Dana finds that no one can really “make it” until they return to where their story home.

243 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 16, 2024

293 people are currently reading
19121 people want to read

About the author

J. Dana Trent

11 books122 followers
J. Dana Trent is a speaker, professor, award-winning spirituality author, and minister. A graduate of Duke Divinity School, she teaches world religions and critical thinking at Wake Technical Community College in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
523 (16%)
4 stars
1,224 (38%)
3 stars
1,131 (35%)
2 stars
253 (7%)
1 star
38 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 382 reviews
Profile Image for Sharon Orlopp.
Author 1 book1,102 followers
October 23, 2024
My head is still spinning! I listened to Dana Trent's memoir,Between Two Trailers, on audiobook. It is narrated by the author, which I love it when an author narrates their work.

Dana was named after her hometown of Dana, Indiana, population 500. Her parents, nicknamed King and the Lady, met each other while working at a mental institution. Lady lays in bed all day and King is a drug dealer.

I gasped out loud when Dana described being taught how to cut product (marijuana) with a razorblade as a toddler. She learned how to sort out the buds and stems from the leaves and how to put three fingers worth of pot into baggies. King would hide marijuana and cocaine inside of kiddy carousel animals and then set up a fair in parking lots to distribute drugs.

King would often say, "Crazy comes in all forms," and "You can't fix crazy." This memoir has all kinds of crazy in it. The amazing and inspiring aspect is that Dana graduated from college, became an author, and also became one of the few women ordained Southern Baptist ministers in the US.
Profile Image for Barbara.
1,745 reviews5,254 followers
April 17, 2024


J. Dana Trent overcame a difficult childhood to become a Southern Baptist minister and a college professor in North Carolina.


J. Dana Trent

Dana's parents, Rick Lewman (aka King) and Judy Trent Lewman (aka the Lady), met at Cincinnati, Ohio's Rollman Psychiatric Institute, where King was a recreational therapist and the Lady was a psychiatric nurse. What's ironic is that both Dana's parents were mentally ill: King suffered from paranoid schizophrenia with depression and anxiety; and the Lady was narcissistic with dependent personality disorder.


Rick Lewman (King)


Judy Trent Lewman (the Lady)

In the early 1980s King, the Lady, and toddler Dana moved to Indiana, and the Lewmans bought a trailer in King's hometown of Dana, in Vermillion County. Dana is famous for being the home town of Ernie Pyle, a Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist and war correspondent.


Dana, Indiana


The Ernie Pyle Festival in Dana, Indiana


Rick Lewman (King), Judy Trent Lewman (the Lady), and baby Dana

In Indiana, King became a drug dealer and the lady lounged around in a king size bed in the trailer's back bedroom, smoking joints, binge-watching the 700 Club, and guarding King's marijuana bales and cocaine bricks.


Dana's father (King) became a drug dealer

By the time Dana was four-years-old, she recalls, "I helped my schizophrenic drug-lord father chop, drop, and traffic kilos in kiddie-ride [ponies] across flyover country....Dad's entourage were loyal men with street names that reflected their personalities or vices....Together with them, our little family supplied Midwesterners with enough uppers and downers to soothe the monotony of landlocked Vermillion County."


Young Dana and her father (King)

When the drug trade was doing poorly Dana lived on ketchup sandwiches, and when things picked up the Lewmans ate bologna and scrambled eggs with cheese. Luckily, Dana's grandmother and grandfather (aka G&GL), as well as her Uncle Leuge and Aunt Marietta, lived nearby, and Dana could eat her fill when she visited their homes. Dana especially loved her grandmother's 'candy spaghetti', which was Chef Boyardee box pasta doctored up with ketchup and brown sugar.


Dana and her cousins with their grandmother and grandfather (G&GL)


Chef Boyardee spaghetti

Despite her chaotic life, Dana dearly loved her father. King would take Dana and her cousins on midnight bike rides, and impart wisdom such as: 'If you want to kill somebody, you do it in Vermillion County' and 'There's only so much sugar in the sack' (when King was out of drugs, time, or money). Dana notes, "We rode without the heaviness of drugs or cash that needed to be hidden. It was a rare respite from slinging and the fetid trailer."


Little Dana


Dana and her father (King)

King and the Lady had different aspirations for the future, and when Dana was six, the Lady took Dana and relocated to North Carolina - where the Lady had family. Dana's mother proceeded to divorce King, and Dana's anxiety resulted in her compulsively pulling out chunks of hair by the roots.


Young Dana

Dana writes, "I was now of two worlds - Indiana and North Carolina - and I took up a shape-shifting identity to be the daughter they needed in each environment." A therapist diagnosed Dana as "operating at a superior level of intellectual functioning" but with "emotional resources insufficient to cope with current stressors."


Young Dana


Dana being baptized at Binkley Baptist Church in North Carolina

The Lady sometimes worked as a nurse to support herself and Dana, but King paid no child support, money was scarce, and the Lady's family had to help out (a lot). Meanwhile, Dana felt deserted by her father, who seemed to have abandoned her.

Later on, Dana would spend summers in Indiana, visiting with her extended Lewman family. However, King's mental illness often led to bizarre behavior and forgetfulness about food, and G&GL would have to step in.

Dana enjoyed her summers in Vermillion County, but they hurt her relationship with the Lady. Dana observes, "Navigating time with my parents was a losing game of Whac-A-Mole. If I met the deficit with one, the other would pop up. It was as much about hatred for each other as it was about love for me or parental self-esteem." The Lady's resentment "manifested as meanness, then obnoxious self-importance that covered her insecurity."


Dana's mother (the Lady)

Things escalated to the point that the Lady insisted Dana change her last name to Trent (the Lady's family name). Dana observes, "It was the beginning of a formal certified separation from my heritage, my home, my father, and my family."

When Dana entered adolescence, she became boy crazy, and dated a steady stream of boys, in both Indiana and North Carolina. Dana writes, "I was the young woman who tried to replace her absent father's love and attention with external validation from the opposite sex."


Adolescent Dana


Dana and her father (King)

After high school Dana went on to Salem College and had dreams of law school; however, the Lady persuaded Dana to apply to Divinity School at Duke University, and, in time, Dana was ordained. The years after high school were hard for Dana, as booze and food put on the pounds, while anxiety led to Dana's prescription drug use.


Duke Divinity School

The Lady insisted Dana sever her Indiana roots; was miffed when Dana fell in love and got married; and did everything she could to control Dana's life - which Dana attributes to the Lady's mental illness. It wasn't until the Lady passed away, in 2017, that Dana could re-establish ties to her childhood roots in Indiana.


Dana and her mother (the Lady)


Dana's mother (the Lady)

Dana now seems to be a well-adjusted minister and teacher, and her resilience can serve as encouragement for young people in challenging situations.


Dana and her husband Fred


Minister Dana Trent preaching


Professor Dana Trent teaching


Dana with her husband Fred and their cats

Thanks to Netgalley, J. Dana Trent, and Convergent Books for a copy of the book.

You can follow my reviews at http://reviewsbybarbsaffer.blogspot.com/
Profile Image for ♥Milica♥.
1,763 reviews703 followers
April 17, 2024
“My get-up-and-go done got up and went!”

I will now be using that line frequently, thank you Lady!! There are so many interesting (and unhinged) lines in this book, starting with the very intro which is guaranteed to make you go "what the heck did I just read?".

I normally would've listened to the audiobook version, but because of how crazy Dana's early childhood is, I know I would've kept pausing every few seconds going "what", so I'm really glad I read it myself instead. This way I could process the chaos that was happening much better.

So basically, the author grew up with two (very) mentally ill parents, her father (King) was a drug dealer and even trained her to follow in his footsteps from birth, and her mother (Lady) wanted Dana to grant her every whim and take care of her indefinitely while she lounged around doing nothing all day.

Dana had to raise herself, learn how to survive, and thrive which is no easy feat in general, let alone coming from a background like that. But she did manage to do it, and I'm so proud of her for it.

It was so fascinating reading about her life, I literally devoured her story and had to pace myself so that I wouldn't finish it too fast. She's an excellent storyteller, knowing exactly how to keep her readers engaged. I'd love to read more of her work in the future, in book form or not.

There's even some things we have in common (not the drug dealing father, thankfully), like getting carsick & trichotillomania. I was sitting there going "girl, me too!!!", I really don't remember the last time I've seen either of those things mentioned in a memoir, if ever.

Now for the slightly negative, Between Two Trailers had a time jump that felt a bit abrupt. We got to see her growing up in great detail, then suddenly she's an adult and that part of her life is told in flashes. I think the book would've benefited from another 50-100 pages added, to properly cover that period so that it wouldn't feel so jumpy.

There was one thing in particular I wanted to see more of, and that's Fred. Like the story of how exactly they met, a bit about their relationship and so on. Though I understand this is more about Dana's past/childhood and healing from it. And I also saw that she has a shorter book about their love story, so maybe it makes sense we didn't get more about it here.

I also wish my early copy had pictures, I'm pretty sure the final version will, so I'm jealous of all of you who get to experience that from the get go.

Though I did look through the author's socials after finishing the book, to see if I could put a face to the name, and her parents look EXACTLY how I imagined them, which just shows how talented of a writer Trent really is. I swear she described them perfectly, down to a T, I could see them (and the rest of the cast) so clearly.

All in all, I enjoyed this memoir and would recommend it to anyone who feels like reading an unbelievable story that actually happened, and one that's so engrossing it reads like fiction instead of nonfiction.

P. S. There might've been something to King's Vaseline theory, it sounds completely sensible to me!

*Thank you to the publishers and Netgalley for providing me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review*
Profile Image for Liralen.
3,305 reviews268 followers
April 9, 2024
A preschooler's hands are the perfect size for razor blades, begins Trent. I know because I helped my schizophrenic drug-lord father chop, drop, and traffic kilos in kiddie-ride carcasses across flyover country. (loc. 88*)

There's an opening to capture the attention if ever there was one. Growing up in Indiana, Trent was schooled from a young age in life lessons: if you kill somebody, do it in Vermillion County; there's only so much sugar in the sack; natural elements are the best weapons; never trust a liar. Her father was convinced that these lessons would not just keep her safe but make her strong, and her mother's focus was primarily on ruling the trailer from the nest of sheets and blankets she built up in bed. They loved her—but theirs was not a conventional love.

Dad, too busy to bother with me before I could walk, used duct tape to fasten my hands to my baby bottle filled with chocolate milk. I sat on the kitchen counter by him all day, lifting that duct-taped bottle to my mouth and catching his marijuana exhales as weed ash fell onto his open King James Bible. (loc. 113)

Between Two Trailers sees Trent through those young years of drug-running in Indiana (the right age for those kiddie rides: "That ain't no toy!" her father yelled (loc. 1033)) and off to North Carolina, where her mother relocated the two of them on a whim. A trailer her mother called a shotgun house because if our enemies sent twelve-gauge buckshot through the kitchen window, we'd drop like dominoes (loc. 103); ceiling tiles razored to pieces as her father searched for government bugs; apartments in North Carolina subsidized by the extended family as her mother's fortunes—and get-up-and-go—fluctuated.

It is King and the Lady, as Trent refers to her parents throughout the book, who set the scene and rule the roost throughout the book. King and the Lady who define what normal is throughout Trent's childhood and King and the Lady who compete for Trent's affections and future. The book slows down a bit as Trent gets older and dives headfirst into as ordinary a life as she can create for herself and as she moves away from the lessons of her childhood. It's clear, though, that however complicated a childhood it was (and oh man—it was complicated), Trent has come to make peace with that childhood and to embrace her parents for who they were.

Thanks to the author and publisher for inviting me to review this title through NetGalley.

*Quotes are from an ARC and pay not be final.
Profile Image for kimberly.
652 reviews500 followers
September 30, 2023
A beautiful memoir about resentment, regret, and redemption.
A marriage between two mentally ill drug addicts that begins in a psych hospital is bound to end in madness

In the 1980s, Dana grew up in a broke down trailer with her parents—educated and capable, but troubled— surrounded by bales of marijuana and cocaine bricks. Recruited to work for a drug boss and struggling with their own addictions, trauma, and mental health conditions, her parent's, "King" and "the Lady", left Dana mostly neglected. By the age of four, Dana was sitting at the counter chopping up marijuana for her father and helping him sling his drugs. After all, kids make the best hustlers... "No one expects a runt in a Looney Tunes T-shirt to shank you".
When she was six years old, the Lady ripped Dana away from her home and her father and moved her to North Carolina where life only got harder. Living in fear of abandonment by the only parent she had left, Dana grew anxious, angry, and lonely. It wasn’t until many, many years later that she recognized that in order to move forward and accept herself, she had to make peace with her past.

I realize now that... the real danger was in not accepting my parents for who they were, mental illness and addiction and poverty and all. The real danger was in not realizing that they were doing the very best they could with what they had.

Trent had a truly remarkable childhood. Bearing witness to her living through so much neglect and poverty was heartbreaking and yet fascinating to read about. I found it truly inspiring that she was able to turn her own life around after coming from such a rough upbringing. I'm such a sucker for these kinds of stories. The writing style was not my favorite, however. At times, the writing felt choppy and jumpy and, at other times, cryptic and vague, which would make it difficult to follow the story line but overall, I still enjoyed the journey.

Thank you NetGalley for my digital copy! Out 04/16/2024!
Profile Image for dori.
149 reviews7 followers
February 12, 2024
I wanted to like this book, but instead I kept searching for a storyline that would hold it together. In the end I gave up on that endeavor, but it was long before the end of the book.

A memoir needs a central theme that holds it together and keeps the author and the reader focused. We were all invested in Tara Westover's education, for example, and we knew that from the beginning. It kept the story cohesive and kept us all focused on something other than simply "escape."

I felt as if the author of this one got caught up in recollection without trajectory.

I am aware that I read a pre-pub, so I sincerely hope that there is an intense editing process ahead to make this what it has the potential of being.
Profile Image for Melina.
74 reviews3 followers
October 27, 2023
For anyone who thinks that this book may be a dramatization, as someone who grew up in the rural Midwest this book is gospel. I appreciated how it gave me insight into the upbringings of some of my childhood friends lives, as I lived more on the periphery of it all. I think this book should be required reading for all transplant Midwest therapists who wonder why so many of us struggle to express emotion or abandon our very sick families to take care of ourselves. Trent is so good with vivid imagery and while it was a difficult read I was honored to have been one of the first to read it.
Profile Image for Kate O'Shea.
1,262 reviews183 followers
March 28, 2024
3.5

An interesting debut memoir from Dana Trent whose upbringing was extremely unconventional (please bear in mind I was brought up by middle class parents in Yorkshire). Dana's father, King, and her mother, Lady, met in a mental health facility where they'd both been previously employed. It was clearly a recipe for disaster.

King brought Dana up to be his sidekick when it came to drug deals. Lady wanted Dana to be her minder. I don't doubt that they loved her but they simply weren't capable of providing her with a childhood.

This leads to Dana struggling, in later life, with her own mental health. She struggled to make real friends and continued to be her mother's nurse.

The memoir, for all the chaotic circumstances, shows a young woman who cared for her family and her community very deeply. It's a really moving story that often left me open mouthed that a girl managed to almost bring herself up and keep both parents happy.
J Dana Trent is clearly an extraordinary woman.

Thankyou to Netgalley and Convergent Books for the advance review copy.
Profile Image for Porshai Nielsen.
323 reviews1 follower
October 7, 2023
I don't typically rate memoirs, but as this is an ARC, I have provided a rating.

"Old baggage was hard to let go of, no matter where we found ourselves living, no matter how new our paths looked. King had his new place on an old coal pile; I had my new master's degree from an old university. But we were still us: Vermillion County drug-running trailer trash one meth hit away from the carny caste."

This memoir follows Dana, beginning with her earliest memories of her father making her separate marijuana seeds and stems and cutting cocaine with razor blades at four years old, to dealing with her childhood trauma in college, and eventually, in her forties, learning to understand her parents behavior and mental health. This novel was really interesting for someone studying psychopathology as Dana's parents both had some very complex diagnoses. Dana's experience makes me think a lot about attachment theory and how at some point, we will either have to work through childhood trauma, or the burden will only become heavier to carry. I would recommend this to all my social work friends. I only removed a star because it did feel a little unorganized and there were some meaningless tangents. I still read them because I was invested in Dana's story and felt she deserved to tell it just how she observed it.

Thank you NetGalley for this digital ARC.
Profile Image for Tracy.
825 reviews16 followers
July 9, 2024
This memoir of a young girl being raised by two parents with severe mental health issues was really hard to read at many points. I was so sad reading about her young years that I considered not finishing. I'm glad I did. Dana finds love from her family and family friends, strength within herself and finds a way to create a beautiful life for herself.

This memoir could be a helpful read to someone else struggling to find a light at the end of the tunnel... Dana is proof that it's worth the effort. Her get up and go never got up and went.

Profile Image for Sarah Gay (lifeandbookswithme).
766 reviews40 followers
April 28, 2024
3.5 stars!
Dana lives with her parents, the Lady and King. The Lady has severe mental illness, never gets out of her bed and pays very little attention to Dana. King is a drug dealer, who employs Dana in helping him cut product and acting as a lookout. King is also a paranoid schizophrenic, who is unmedicated and often experiences delusions. Through poverty and neglect, Dana finds her way after the Lady decides to leave King, once and for all.

Thank you to @convergentbooks and @netgalley for my review copies! This memoir reminded me of Educated in some ways. It was so gritty and I couldn’t believe some of the things that Trent endured as a young child. She was so resilient and overcame so much. I liked the length, but wish we knew more about Dana’s successes as an adult today.
Profile Image for Chelsea Pittman.
633 reviews9 followers
April 21, 2024
Reading the synopsis I was immediately intrigued. A preschooler dealing drugs?! That’s wild.

However, upon reading the book I found that it wasn’t holding my interest as well. The preschool drug dealer thing is a little blip at the beginning.

Doesn’t make it a bad book but I didn’t find myself looking forward to reading more. I’m glad Dana was able to get to a good place in her life.

Thanks to NetGalley, J. Dana Trent, and Convergent Books for the opportunity to read Between Two Trailers. I have written this review voluntarily.
Profile Image for Brittany Mazzola Leath.
207 reviews
May 6, 2024
Repetitive and semi-pointless. We get it; you loved your parents and they were mentally ill. I do like the similes and metaphors but some people are going to think it’s overkill. Bare minimum, it’s hokey.
Profile Image for bimbo.
29 reviews13 followers
October 1, 2023
between two trailers is a memoir that follows Dana, more affectionately known as ‘Budge.’ Dana grew up with two severely mentally ill parents, her father ‘King’ struggled with schizophrenia and was a drug dealer in their small town. Her mother ‘Lady’ dealt with personality disorders and had an obsession with psychiatric care, despite never listening to doctors advice on her condition. Dana was constantly pulled between the two parents, we see her being a razor wielding 6 year old to a full grown woman constantly attending to her mothers every need. Dana truely had to learn to survive her childhood, relying on the care of her community and extended family to keep her afloat.
An incredible story of addiction, loss, trauma, mental illness and pure survival.
Thank you to NetGalley and Convergent Books for the digital ARC <3
Profile Image for Ginni.
428 reviews36 followers
did-not-finish
January 5, 2024
Just couldn't get into this one. The concept is intriguing, but the way it's written is so detached and bizarre that I couldn't connect with it.

(I received this book for free through a Goodreads giveaway.)
Profile Image for Cheryl.
643 reviews10 followers
June 13, 2024
A woman’s account of growing up with her mentally unstable parents. Her extended family was able to give her much needed support. A subtext was religion- she got her PhD at Duke in religion but she never really wrote anything about. I found that really bizarre.
Profile Image for Emily Herron.
191 reviews17 followers
July 27, 2024
I was really intrigued and excited by this memoir, and it just didn’t grip me. It feels weird critiquing a memoir because it’s a life story, but there was no real narrative or overarching conflict. I struggled to finish it.
Profile Image for Faith✨.
83 reviews
June 3, 2025
2.5 - scattered writing with no plot. I wanted so badly to like this book but it unfortunately was a DNF. It felt like a string of memories strung together with no connection to a story line.
Profile Image for Judy.
599 reviews54 followers
November 8, 2024
Read by the author on audio. She has a soothing voice, btw. Very tumultuous childhood with two mentally ill parents. She has processed this well, has healed/is healing (it’s life-long), and doesn’t hate her parents. I believe this is a good sign for her mental health. I seem to gravitate towards traumatic childhood memoirs, but unlike many, this was hopeful. Glad I listened.
Profile Image for Sharon.
470 reviews13 followers
April 13, 2024
Dana Trent is named for her town, Dana, Indiana. Her early memories are cutting marijuana with a razor blade, assisting her father in his drug dealing business. Her parents met in a psychiatric treatment facility. Her mother was nicknamed The Lady, and her dependent personality disorders caused continual havoc. Her father, nicknamed The King suffered from schizoaffective disorder which led him to make poor choices. The “only difference between the two was that his symptoms were unmistakeable.”

Both of them had college degrees. The King had degrees and skills and licenses to work anywhere else, he always came back to his hometown. Her mother also found work in the health sector. Her parents were moody, anxious, volatile and unregulated but they never beat her and food was never out of reach.

Her early home was a beat-up trailer which her mom called a shotgun house because if their enemies fired a shotgun down through the kitchen window they would drop like flies. Dana at one point had a thousand residents and thrived as a agriculture hub. It had an opera house, a theater, a bank, and churches that were busy and faithful. But prosperity is always temporary.

Home, Dana writes, “was there all along in my two very loving and very unconventional yet faithful parents, who believe in miracles. I am their miracle. I am their legacy. They are my home. Home, it turns out, is where the war is. It’s also where the healing begins.” Thank you to NetGalley for permission to read this delightful memoir.
Profile Image for Cecily Black.
2,323 reviews21 followers
June 9, 2024
Omg I loved this! This memoir is a great representation for grown children who finally reach a place in their mind that finally gives them the freedom from guilt and shame over the things they can not control. Dealing with your parents and the trials and tribulations of having parents with mental illness and addiction can lead to some mental health issues of your own and pain and resentment but the day you can forgive and understand they did the best they could considering all the various situations they faced is a great marker of personal growth. Some of us can pull out of it positively and I think this is a great way to show others who've gone through the same things how to shift to a more positive outlook depsite a life full of absolute bullshit. Kids are resilient and will find beauty where others think there isn't any. Great read!
Profile Image for Terry.
680 reviews14 followers
June 2, 2024
Interesting memoir. The author is an ordained Baptist minister, motivational speaker and now an author. This book tells the unbelievable tale of her childhood. She is the daughter of two mentally ill adults who were also drug addicts. The story of Dana’s dysfunctional upbringing was so sad and unbelievable that it was hard to read and comprehend at times. How the parents were allowed to keep this child was just unfathomable. They couldn’t even take care of themselves, much less a child. I can’t believe the other relatives allowed it to happen either. Just very sad and yet remarkable that she became a college grad and respected member of society.
199 reviews2 followers
November 22, 2024
This was a fascinating and well written memoir of a girl growing up in poverty with two parents that had severe mental illnesses. She was definitely resilient, but it wasn’t easy.. she had to put in the hard work of therapy and healing so she could she process and talk about her childhood and the relationships with her parents in a healthy and honest way. Much of the book took place down in NC, and after I saw that she’d spoken at one of my favorite book stores I confirmed she works in Raleigh not far from me, so that’s a fun fact too 😃
Profile Image for Jordan Pawl.
39 reviews
May 4, 2024
4.5 🌟 but rounding up. Even though this took me forever to finish, it had nothing to do with the actual book. Loved her writing style and the way she communicates all this batshit crazy stuff; you forget that this is all in the perspective of a whole child.
Profile Image for Savannah.
107 reviews1 follower
Read
September 5, 2024
A wild and crazy journey! Stories of the author’s parent’s mental health showed how untreated and unrealized conditions lend its way to chaotic and damaging environments for a child to grow in. At times, I got lost in the details of the author’s stories but the disarray of J. Dana Trent’s life will take up residence in my mind for some time.
Profile Image for JoAnna.
48 reviews47 followers
April 16, 2024
On the surface, J. Dana Trent's memoir tells the dramatic story of a childhood with two mentally ill, addicted parents. There's a deeper story here, too, that should be relatable to anyone who has ever questioned what it means to call a particular place your home.

I grew up with a similar family dynamic, and the emotional tone of the book rang true to me. Trent is a fantastic, detail-oriented writer who interweaves multiple places and timelines into a moving narrative that made me sob like a baby at the end. This was a great read!

(Thanks to NetGalley and Convergent Press for providing me with an ARC copy of Between Two Trailers to review.)
Profile Image for Jennifer V..
101 reviews4 followers
January 12, 2025
What a powerful testimony of God’s protection, love, hope, and redemption.

Isaiah 61:3 - I will give them a crown of beauty instead of ashes. I will give them the oil of joy instead of sorrow, and a spirit of praise instead of a spirit of no hope. Then they will be called oaks that are right with God, planted by the Lord, that He may be honored.
Profile Image for Sharae RaetheReader.
138 reviews3 followers
August 16, 2024
I enjoyed this book.Trent not only gives us her life story but also a testimony of a hard life that she survived and is able to thrive from. I had to remind myself that a pastor wrote this, and it didn't come off preachy or overtly religious. I love memoirs that are filled with blunt truths and humor, and Trent was able to do that. There were so many one-liners that were memorable long after I finished.
(I would recommend for readers of Educated & Maid.)
Profile Image for Wendi Flint Rank (WendiReviews).
424 reviews32 followers
October 30, 2023
I typically do not rate memoirs because it seems a bit sanctimonious however since
this download is offered by Convergent Books, via NetGalley, I’m happy to share my
thoughts about the presentation, if not the story.
First of all, I’m often drawn to titles with their cover art, and this book jumped out
at me. The title and artwork captured me before I’d even looked at the description.
Now, having finished the book, I’m struck by how miraculous it is that a small child,
especially this child, was able to be the parent in her family and have silent influences
that ended up not just saving her, but giving her the internal fortitude to absolutely
soar to unbelievable heights-all while caring for her mother, and managing her father.
At times the story is a challenge- when you’re just afraid for the family, and not just
their mental health, but their freedom.
To make it to the end of the story is like a double rainbow of sorts. I absolutely
recommend this book. And my thanks to Convergent Books, via NetGalley, for
a download copy for review purposes.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 382 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.