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Paper Angels: A Novel
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Paper Angels: A Novel Hardcover - 2011

by Wayne, Jimmy; Thrasher, Travis [Contributor]

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  • Hardcover

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Howard Books, 2011-11-01. Hardcover. New. 4x1x6.
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Details

  • Title Paper Angels: A Novel
  • Author Wayne, Jimmy; Thrasher, Travis [Contributor]
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition Advance Uncorrec
  • Condition New
  • Pages 291
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Howard Books, NY
  • Date 2011-11-01
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 1451606192-11-17105679
  • ISBN 9781451606195 / 1451606192
  • Weight 0.67 lbs (0.30 kg)
  • Dimensions 7.07 x 5.24 x 1.21 in (17.96 x 13.31 x 3.07 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Domestic fiction, Christmas stories
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2011016283
  • Dewey Decimal Code FIC

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Summary

Kevin Morrell is a forty-three-year-old husband and father who runs a successful design and marketing firm that's crashed into the suffering economy. Attempting to navigate the busyness of the mall at Christmas, Kevin is humbled when he stumbles across the Salvation Army's Angel Tree Project. His wife insists that he take a paper ornament.
 
The name on the ornament is Thomas Brandt, a fifteen-year-old still reeling from the implosion of his familyâÈ'from years of verbal abuse from an alcoholic father to a mother who finally left him behind, only to find herself and her children penniless and struggling. The only thing has allowed Lynn to survive is her faith. Thomas shares that faith, but he also wonders why God has seemingly abandoned them. 

This is the story about a man and a boy one December. A man whose life is changed by a simple expression of kindness, and a boy who takes that expression of kindness and shows the true meaning of Christmas.

Excerpt


Preface

When his mom decided it was time for them to leave and leave for good, Thomas knew they better get far away or heâÈçd come and find them. The good thing or the bad thing, depending on how one looked at it, was that it was Christmas day and food was still cooking in the kitchen. Just another Christmas, with Mom sweating in a tiny room over a tiny stove, Thomas and Sara dreaming of the iPods or gaming equipment they could be enjoying, and Dad watching college basketball on his flat-screen television and drinking with a vengeance. This was the worst time they could possibly ever leave, and that was what made it the best.

âÈêThomas, I need your help,âÈë Mom called.

He didnâÈçt go right away, watching the game with almost as much interest as Dad. It was only when his father barked out his name that Thomas went. Dad wasnâÈçt concerned about MomâÈçs needing helpâÈ'he didnâÈçt want any interruptions to his game. It would sure help them all out if the UNC Tarheels would score a little more often. Thomas got up, figuring he needed to take out the garbage or Benny, his dadâÈçs dog.

âÈêI want you to do something and not ask any questions, do you understand?âÈë MomâÈçs voice was barely audible over the sound of the stoveâÈçs fan.

âÈêWhat do you mean?âÈë

âÈêI want you to get your sister and go out to the car, okay?âÈë

Right there and then he knew. Something was wrong. The way his mother looked and sounded today seemed different. The bruise above her lips was still swollen, but that wasnâÈçt anything new. It was the look in her eyes, a look heâÈçd never seen before.

âÈêWhere are we going?âÈë

âÈêGet Sara and take her to the car right now.âÈë

He nodded. The smell of the sweet potatoes and the ham and the fresh biscuits and the macaroni pie all made his mouth water. But fear made his hunger go quiver in a corner.

Thomas wanted to ask his mother but he knew. The knowing part of him whispered for his mouth to stay shut and for his legs to start moving.

Getting Sara would be easy. In fact, doing anything now would be easy except taking DadâÈçs can of Coors Light away from him or turning off his game.

He was able to get his sisterâÈçs attention without a problem. She looked up when he came into the living room. She was eleven but she tried to act older. For a moment he mouthed that she needed to come, signaling for her to follow him. The game no longer interested him. All he could think about was his motherâÈçs request.

âÈêWhat do you think youâÈçre doing?âÈë his father asked.

Thomas hadnâÈçt seen his father looking at him. Usually by now, about three-fourths of the way into the basketball game, he was in a semicoma that would only to be broken by another trip to the fridge.

âÈêEvery time you wave your arms Benny thinks youâÈçre playing with him. So knock it off. Unless youâÈçre going to take him outside for a walk.âÈë

âÈêYes, sir.âÈë

Sara didnâÈçt need an explanation to follow into the other room. DadâÈçs tone was enough. Once inside the kitchen, Thomas guided her toward the back door.

âÈêWe need to go,âÈë he said outside.

âÈêGo where?âÈë

âÈêAway.âÈë

âÈêWhereâÈçs that? IâÈçm hungry.âÈë They walked quickly out the door and to the car.

The first thing Thomas thought of as he climbed into the musty-smelling Nissan was his bike.

The bike that he and Mom had finally saved up enough to buy, a used and recycled mountain bike that theyâÈçd spent a hundred and fifty bucks on. A bike that when new would have cost over a thousand. A bike that had seen better days but still had some life in it.

Maybe not much of a life after all.

Thomas thought about what to do about the bike. It was getting rusty and the paint was chipped but he still loved it. Maybe he could ride it and follow behind the car. Or maybe they could fit it in the fifteen-year-old Maxima.

They waited in the car for ten minutes. Ten whole minutes. He sat in the front seat looking at the small house with the wild shrubs growing unevenly around it and the rusted-out white truck that couldnâÈçt fit all of them in the front seat.

âÈêWhat are we doing?âÈë Sara kept asking.

âÈêWeâÈçre waiting for Mom.âÈë

âÈêWhere are we going?âÈë

âÈêFar away.âÈë

Mom had told themâÈ'no, sheâÈçd promised themâÈ'that they would be getting a special Christmas present today. Just the two kids. She had said she would give it to them during the day, that it was going to be a surprise, that they couldnâÈçt mention it to Dad. This is her present, Thomas thought as he waited and worried that the next one out of the house would be the man with the glassy eyes and the tightened jaw. His hands felt sweaty as he rubbed them and tried to act like he wasnâÈçt nervous in front of his sister.

Maybe she planned on leaving later. Maybe the fight they had when she started cooking dinner convinced her to go now.

The door opened and Thomas stopped breathing.

It was Mom.

All she carried was her purse. Maybe she had already packed a few things, but he didnâÈçt see anything in the backseat.

How do I ask her about my bike?

As she climbed into the car, Thomas could see the fear on her face and in the way she moved. Before starting up the car, she turned to face both of them.

âÈêYou two, listen to me. WeâÈçre leaving and weâÈçre not coming back, and IâÈçll explain why. But for now we have to go. Do you understand me?âÈë

Sara began asking questions, but it was Thomas who told her to be quiet, not Mom.

He didnâÈçt need to be told why.

He didnâÈçt need to ask about his bike either.

The car left without hesitation.

Thomas and Sara had received the best gift ever: freedom.

The question was whether it would still be there tomorrow and the next day and the day after that.

And whether the man inside the house they were leaving would find them and reclaim them as his own.

Âû 2011 Jimmy Wayne Barber

Media reviews

âÈêPaper Angels is a heartfelt Christmas tale about finding kindness amid consumerism, highlighting the historic Salvation Army Angel Tree Program. But itâÈçs so much more than that too: itâÈçs a story of brokenness and redemption, of forgiveness and second chances, of empathy and integrity and repaying evil with good. Travis Thrasher and Jimmy Wayne have crafted three-dimensional and true-to-life characters and woven their storylines together seamlessly. The result is an inspirational masterpiece set to challenge minds and move hearts.âÈë

About the author

Jimmy Wayne is an American country music singer and songwriter. He released his self-titled debut album in 2003 on the DreamWorks Records label. A second album, Do You Believe Me Now, was released in August 2008 via Big Machine Records subsidiary Valory Music Group, and its title track became his first Number One hit in late 2008.

Travis Thrasher is the bestselling author of over thirty works of fiction in a variety of genres. He has also helped write memoirs and self-help books. Learn more at TravisThrasher.com.