I was sort of drawn to this book by some folks giving it the thumbs up on Shelfari, and imagine my suprise today at the library that I come to find the very book that I didn't think I would find it at our library. But I took that book home and couldn't stop reading it until last night. I feel the author in his own way wanted to put his unique story to paper after dealing with his past, he tries to make peace with it by writing about it. I was already feeling a bit raw behind Tears of the Desert, then to turn around and read this book just made me want to go somewhere and bawl. I almost did and believe me when I tell you, I don't do that. To recap the book, Gene Cheek was the son of an alcoholic father and loving mother. When the mother took as much as she could take from the father, she left him. She moved in with her mother and brother, but when her mother passed, she moved out. Quietly, she began to have a relationship with a African American man, Cornelius Tucker, who was everything her first husband wasn't. She got pregnant and had another son, Randy. Here is when the trouble start. The first husband got mad, and started making trouble for the mother and had a hearing to get his son away from the mother. Although the author said he loved his mother, preferred to be with his mother,and they wanted her to get rid of the baby she just had, The author sacrificed himself instead. he was taken away by the courts into foster care. Despite of the difficulties, he had no ill will against his mother or Tuck, though he had some against his father, fraternal grandmother, who claims she couldn't take him in, aunt, uncle( both of whom later asked for forgiveness), he did grow up well, went into the Navy, married, had children, worked, and later divorced. He never forgot his mother, he forgave his father(who wouldn't acknowledge or even speak on what he did at the end of his own life)and he spoke very well of his siblings. Matter of fact, Tuck to me, was a better father figure for him, and he spoke glowingly of him. If you want to read about a young man's choice to love, keep some kleenex handy.