In Put One on the Moon, Joe and Henry explore the hidden corners of a small town named Bend.
Joe begins the process of putting together courage to question the meaning of family. His mother and little brother, Ben, seem both able to fit in to small town life. His father, who they left in Boston, is about to have a second family, and Joe envisions this new family as replacing the old, one by one. He feels not at home, neither here nor there.
In this work of growing up, he meets Memphis, the veteran who lives in a trailer that can't go anywhere. And Morley Hudson, volunteer at the town museum, keeper of historical stories. And Tabitha, who has created a home in an abandoned church, surrounded by garden and sacred words. Tabitha, aging daughter of a minister, says, "I'm not at all sure that my kind of faith is something to ring bells about." Indeed, the bell tower of her home is boarded up and locked.
What started out as an innocent tagging quest in an innocuous place—a movie-set town—takes an ugly turn as Henry questions life itself. Joe has to act—with friendship, and with new and raw faith.
Put One on the Moon is a story of "going deep," of making time to pause, to challenge our fears, and to allow for change—maybe even exploration of our very soul. Someday a Kilroy was Here will be on the moon. Meanwhile, here on earth, our own backyard is more likely to be in need of what the old World War II symbol "Kilroy" represents: seeking out, acknowledging, and tagging the unknown.
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