BOOK DESCRIPTION
Even if others abandon you, you must never abandon yourself
This simple truth became Terry’s lifeline as she was forced to grow up too soon.
Terry Helwig grew up the oldest of six girls in the big-sky country of the American Southwest, where she attended twelve schools in eleven years. Helwig’s stepfather, Davy, a good-hearted and loving man, proudly purchased a trailer house to enable his family to move more easily from one oil town to another, where Davy eked out a living in the oil fields.
Terry’s mother, Carola Jean, a wild rose, whose love often pierced those who tried to claim her, had little interest in the confines of home and motherhood. In Davy’s absence, she sought companionship in local watering holes—a pastime she dubbed, “visiting Timbuktu.” She repeatedly left Terry in charge of the household and her five younger sisters.
Despite Carola Jean’s genuine attempts to “better herself,” her life spiraled ever downward as Terry struggled to keep the family whole. In the midst of transience and upheaval, Helwig and her sisters forged an uncommon bond of sisterhood that withstood the erosion of Davy and Carola Jean’s marriage. But, ultimately, to keep her own dreams alive, Helwig has to decide when to hold on to what she loves and when to let go.
Unflinching in its portrayal, yet told with humor and compassion, Terry Helwig’s luminous memoir Moonlight on Linoleum explores a family’s inner and outer landscape of hope, despair and redemption. It will make you laugh, cry and hunger for more.