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“You Are My Sunshine: A Story of Love, Promises and A Really Long Bike Ride”

Discussion in 'News' started by NewsBot, Nov 30, 2022.  |  Print Topic

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    “You Are My Sunshine: A Story of Love, Promises, and A Really Long Bike Ride” By: Sean Dietrich Alabama Public Radio

    “You Are My Sunshine: A Story of Love, Promises, and A Really Long Bike Ride”

    Author: Sean Dietrich
    Publisher: Zondervan Books
    Grand Rapids MI, 2022
    Pages: 224
    Price: $26.99 (Hardcover)
    Sean Dietrich, “Sean of the South,” has become a very popular author/entertainer and blogger.

    In his memoir, “Will the Circle Be Unbroken?” he writes of his difficult childhood, and how much he owes to his wife, Jamie, a vivacious, energetic teacher who, among other things, got this dropout through junior college and college, especially tutoring Sean in math. Sean writes here “This woman saved …my life.”

    One can imagine the horror then when Sean and Jamie learn that she may have cancer of the ovaries and breast.

    His terror is palpable. This would be the end of his world. There are tests, biopsies, the full gamut of fearful medical procedures. By chance, Jamie happens onto a magazine article that describes taking a long bike trip through the GAP, The Great Allegheny Passage, and perhaps continuing down the C & O Canal Towpath, from Pittsburgh to Washington, D. C.

    If all goes well, she wants to do something fun and something unimpeachably BIG. They are not outdoors people, especially Sean, but she makes him promise. Not a casual promise.

    She insists “Swear to God.” Reluctantly, he does and his readers know this promise can’t be broken.

    Well, of course, Jamie’s medical crisis is a grotesque false alarm and sometime later she decides the moment has come. There is no way out for Sean.

    Jamie buys the equipment they need: a tent, bike saddlebags, dried food, beef sticks and Kit-Kat bars, cooking gear and a bicycle for herself and, ridiculously, a recumbent Tricycle for Sean who is afraid of bikes and tends to fall off.

    The adventure begins and, honestly, even though the reader knows this is going to be a horror show, the book carries one along. Dietrich’s prose is sardonic, whiney, funny, sometimes touching.

    They bike first through dangerous city streets, then mud and rain. They encounter snakes, insects of every irritating kind. Their phones get drowned, they get separated, lost, hungry, wet, exhausted, frustrated.

    But there is magnificent scenery from time to time and a huge satisfaction in finishing, which they do.

    Sean’s three-wheeler is not bult for this and keeps breaking down.

    Sean is not a mechanic.

    As one would expect, they meet a variety of odd and interesting people on their journey, including a Roman Catholic priest, twice, and he is something of a mechanic.

    The first time the priest helps put Sean’s derailleur— whatever that is—back together.

    The second time they meet...

    Continue reading...
     

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