To Daddy, Who I Never Loved
- 328pages
- 12 heures de lecture
"As Hell Creek High School finally integrates in 1967, Curtis Pye, a fifteen-year-old sophomore of indeterminate race, is hyper-literate, the smartest kid, and has already read a quarter of books in the library. He's the first boy in his class to make friends with a black girl. However, he falls hopelessly, hormonally, despairingly infatuated with the prettiest girl, O'Murphy Scott. Curtis doesn't act on his desire. O'Murphy flirts with several boys, and every time she isn't with Scooter Anderson, her thuggy boyfriend assumes she's with Curtis. Although Scooter and his brothers, Spit and Pickle, pick a disastrous fight with Curtis, he's ordered not to return to school. After a fight with his brother, Curtis swallows a bottle of aspirin. Suicide fails, so Curtis hitchhikes to California, where he hopes to find his ex-Marine father and learn how to fight. Along that seventeen-hundred-mile odyssey, Curtis sleeps in trucks, in a ditch, on a rooftop, takes care of himself, and learns from dozens of mentors, including truck drivers, a college student and a soldier. Hippies on their way to the Summer of Love direct Curtis to Palo Alto. Curtis doesn't know his father's address, so he waits near the post office box and hopes each day his father, whom he hasn't seen in six years, will come for his retirement check. Curtis finds a temporary home, acceptance and friends at the Full Circle, a communal restaurant in Palo Alto where he can work for meals and a place to sleep. There Curtis also meets Brother Love, a postal worker, street preacher and psychologist who completes Curtis's education and arms him emotionally to finish his hero's journey, fight his own battles and understand his life. Curtis comes upon nothing he sought in California, but instead he discovers his own courage, independence, confidence and redemption. Months after he left, Curtis, who thought he was the most invisible boy in high school, returns to Oklahoma and finds Spit and Scooter have been abusing and assaulting O'Murphy. He fights off the Andersons, earns Murph's respect, and finally reconciles with Biggy."-- Amazon
