Will the circle be unbroken A memoir of learning to believe you're gonna be okay

Sean Dietrich, 1982-

Book - 2020

""Sean of the South" Sean Dietrich is known for his stories of steel workers, small towns and trusty bloodhounds, but most of all, the small, everyday evidences of true good in the world. Will the Circle Be Unbroken? is his story - told for the first time - of love, loss, and the unlikely hope that we're gonna be alright"--

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Subjects
Published
Grand Rapids, Michigan : Zondervan Books [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Sean Dietrich, 1982- (author)
Physical Description
263 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780310355755
  • 1. Camp Creek
  • 2. Paper Plates
  • 3. Caskets
  • 4. Cardboard Boxes
  • 5. "Rose Colored Glasses"
  • 6. Pikes Peak
  • 7. Paper Routes
  • 8. Bad Dreams
  • 9. Six Old Strings
  • 10. And It Was Mary
  • 11. Portrait of the Baptist as a Young Man
  • 12. Cathead Biscuits
  • 13. Where River Ends
  • 14. Redman
  • 15. Bowties and Moonshine
  • 16. Melted Ice Cream
  • 17. Big Man on Campus
  • 18. Fools and Children
  • 19. Girls Become Women
  • 20. Visiting the Dead
  • 21. Trailer Courts
  • 22. Private Tutors
  • 23. Late Mourning
  • 24. Old Red
  • 25. Los Planos
  • 26. The Boy Columnist
  • 27. World Series Champs
  • 28. Forgetting to Forget
  • 29. Sean of the South
  • 30. Ellie Mae
  • 31. The Funeral
  • 32. On the Road Again
  • 33. You're Doing It
  • 34. Humboldt Beginnings
  • 35. Our House
  • 36. Purple Mountains Majesties
  • 37. Climb Every Mountain
  • 38. The Showman
Review by Library Journal Review

Dietrich (Star of Alabama) extends the narrative of his popular blog "Sean of the South" with this deeply personal memoir. A self-declared simple storyteller who champions finding a way to shine the light of positivity, Dietrich shifts the lens a bit as he unpacks his own tragedy. Chapters slowly unfold how a 12-year-old copes with the loss of a father to suicide; a parent who had been his hero but has also committed domestic violence. Without shame, Dietrich shares his coming-of-age struggles, from dropping out of school in the seventh grade to washing dishes and working construction to the arduous process of completing community college years later. More sorrowful stories are interspersed with amusing antics from Dietrich's beloved dog, Ellie Mae, as well as the author's own self-deprecating quips on Southern living. What could easily have been a heavy read is uplifted with Dietrich's quirky one-liners told with a big-hearted, Southern voice. VERDICT Followers of "Sean of the South" or Dietrich's podcast will relish this revelatory, faith-filled memoir.--Angela Forret, State Lib. of Iowa

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