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Sadie Taube, the daughter of a deceased heroin addict, has been forced to live with her aunt and uncle in their "big ass house." While they treat her all right (she's living on Bainbridge Island), she's not exactly their daughter. Sadie has been working in a diner and saving every penny. She finds it funny how this diner is decorated with the dollar bills customers have left behind. And she loves her boss Bev, who trained her to be a waitress and continues to offer support. Case in point: when Sadie turns 18, Bev asks her to stay after work so they can celebrate. Unbeknownst to Bev, Sadie has…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Sadie Taube, the daughter of a deceased heroin addict, has been forced to live with her aunt and uncle in their "big ass house." While they treat her all right (she's living on Bainbridge Island), she's not exactly their daughter. Sadie has been working in a diner and saving every penny. She finds it funny how this diner is decorated with the dollar bills customers have left behind. And she loves her boss Bev, who trained her to be a waitress and continues to offer support. Case in point: when Sadie turns 18, Bev asks her to stay after work so they can celebrate. Unbeknownst to Bev, Sadie has a plan brewing, one focused on the Coast Starlight. She's gonna get on that train and head to California. She does stay for Bev's party, but then she finds reason to track down a little extra money (when Bev isn't looking). What she really needs to discover is a family of her own.
Autorenporträt
Kari Wergeland, who hails from Davis, California, is a librarian and writer. She moved to Oregon at the age of 14 and eventually attended the University of Oregon, where she earned a BA in English. She also holds an MLS in Librarianship from the University of Washington and an MFA in Creative Writing with an emphasis in poetry from Pacific University. Wergeland wrote a children's book review column for The Seattle Times, which ran monthly for 11 years. Her fiction has appeared in Calliope, Doubly Mad, and through Medusa's Laugh Press.