Kenneth Lieb

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He knew—by his thrift-store jeans, the thin walls of their trailer, the generic potato chips his mother bought—that his family was one kind of poor. He knew, too, that the Bensons were another kind of poor—a sadder, meaner kind. He wasn’t sure what the McClearys were, if they were rich or not, but they sure weren’t poor. They
Fall Back Down When I Die
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