- Genre:young adult fiction
- Sub-genre:Action & Adventure / Survival Stories
- Age Range (years):13 and up
- Language:English
- Series Title:The Long War
- Series Number:2
- Duration8 Hours 29 Minutes
- Audiobook ISBN:9798992917512
Book details
Overview
Storms forge heroes. Baseball tests them. Love redeems them.
In the spring of 1960, tragedy struck on the icy waters of Lake Superior, claiming the lives of a brother and sister. Their childhood friend, Richard Belisle, is accused of murder—and though released for lack of evidence, he carries the weight of suspicion, shame, and exile. Determined to prove himself worthy—of his family, his village, and Marie Jeanne Charbonneau, the girl he has always loved—Ricky takes to the road. From the small towns of the American South to the dusty ballfields of the West, he chases redemption as a minor-league ballplayer in an age of nuclear dread and cultural upheaval. But the world beyond the diamond is harsher than any fastball. Temptation, corruption, and injustice stalk him in every town. Within the ballpark, the rules are clear; outside, they are cruel and shifting. And when injury ends his pursuit of glory, Ricky must face a deeper trial—on the unforgiving slopes of a Colorado mountain, where nature, memory, and love collide. Haunted by childhood terrors and tested by forces beyond their control, Ricky and Marie Jeanne must summon the courage of their warrior ancestors—or risk losing one another forever. Find out in "Wounded," a heart-wrenching tale of love, loss, and the resilience of the human spirit. Readers who enjoy stories of redemption, love, and overcoming trauma will be captivated by Ricky and M.J.'s journey in "Wounded." Fans of similar books such as "The Great Alone" by Kristin Hannah will also find themselves drawn to this powerful and emotional tale. For fans of "The Grapes of Wrath" and "To Kill a Mockingbird," "Wounded" is a must-read. Sweeping, lyrical, and searing with tension, this is a story of redemption, resilience, and the enduring power of love
Description
A storm begins. A journey unfolds. A love is tested.
Wounded and restless, Richard "Ricky" Belisle and Marie Jeanne Charbonneau leave behind their remote Lake Superior village—a place bounded by Life Magazine and the Saturday Evening Post, by the radio's flickering voices, by kitchen-table stories spun during long winter storms, and by the rare arrival of a visitor bearing news from the distant city. For generations, this insular world has shaped its children, giving them its silences, its rituals, its shared history of survival against a merciless landscape. Marie Jeanne—M.J. to those who know her best—is younger than Ricky by a handful of months, but she carries within her a wisdom tempered by years of watchfulness. She believes meaning is not shouted in grand declarations but lived quietly through the rituals of daily life: a shared cup of coffee, a walk at dusk, the miracle of a birth, the solemnity of a burial. To her, the world is built in concentric rings—man and wife at the center, then family, then community, and, only after those are tended to, the nation beyond. Ricky, however, cannot see it that way. For him, worthiness is measured not only in the eyes of his beloved M.J., nor in the warmth of his family's acceptance, but in the judgment of "them"—the men of his clan, his parish, his nation. To Ricky, life is a test, an arena where his worth must be proven again and again. Though most already consider him honorable, even noble, he feels the shadow of an old debt, a burden placed upon his parents for sins not entirely his own. To clear it, to redeem himself, he will endure exile, hardship, and sacrifice. Had his priest been more perceptive—or perhaps better read—he might have offered Ricky the words of Augustine: "Lord, make me chaste, but not yet." Instead, Ricky sets out into the great unknown, driven by a hunger he cannot name, but which consumes him nonetheless. It is 1960, the dawn of the nuclear age, a time when soldiering—the ancestral calling of the Belisle men—is no longer the path it once was. With the uniform of war denied to him, Ricky turns to the ballfield. Baseball becomes his battlefield, his discipline, his fragile sanctuary. Within the white chalk lines, the rules are firm, the order certain; outside, the world is riddled with hypocrisy, rage, and injustice. Across the American South and West, Ricky plays with grit and longing, his name whispered among the minor leagues even as temptation, corruption, and prejudice stalk his every step. But fate is merciless. A collision at third base shatters more than his body; it nearly destroys his spirit. Jailed, injured, and cast adrift, Ricky finds himself broken and wandering, with only shadows for company. And yet—on a remote Colorado mountain, battered but unbowed—he is found. Marie Jeanne, faithful through silence and separation, seeks him out once more. Together, they face a wilderness indifferent to love or suffering, a trial by nature as brutal as the storms of their childhood. Here, among jagged peaks and thin air, the two must confront not only the wounds of their bodies but the terrors buried deep in memory. If they are to survive—if they are to save one another—Ricky and M.J. must summon a strength older than the nuclear age, older than baseball, older even than the village they left behind. They must call upon the spirit of their ancestors, warriors in times past, and prove themselves worthy not only to others, but to each other. Epic in scope yet intimate at its heart, this is the story of love tested by history, by nature, by guilt and redemption—a journey across America and into the soul itself.
Fans of similar books such as "The Great Alone" by Kristin Hannah will also find themselves drawn to this powerful and emotional tale. For fans of "The Grapes of Wrath" and "To Kill a Mockingbird," "Wounded" is a must-read. Don't miss out on this powerful story.