EBOOK

No Way Home

A Memoir of Life on the Run

Tyler Wetherall
(0)
Pages
320
Year
2018
Language
English

About

One of PureWow's "20 Books We Can't Wait to Read in 2018" and "Books to Read in April" • One of InStyle UK's "Best New Books to Read in 2018" • One of LitHub's 20 Books You Should Read This April • One of Bustle's "5 Gripping Memoirs Under 300 Pages To Read In One Weekend"

A memoir of growing up on the run-and what happens when it comes to a stop.



Tyler had lived in thirteen houses and five countries by the time she was nine. A willful and curious child, she never questioned her strange upbringing, that is, until Scotland Yard showed up outside her ramshackle English home, and she discovered her family had been living a lie: Her father was a fugitive and her name was not her own.

In sunny California, ten years earlier, her father's criminal organization first came to the FBI's attention. Soon after her parents were forced on the run taking their three young children with them, and they spent the following years fleeing through Europe, assuming different identities and hiding out in a series of far-flung places. Now her father was attempting one final escape-except this time, he couldn't take her with him.

In this emotionally compelling and gripping memoir, Tyler Wetherall brings to life her fugitive childhood, following the threads that tie a family together through hardship, from her parents' first meeting in 1960s New York to her present life as a restless writer unpacking the secrets of her past. No Way Home is about love, loss, and learning to tell the story of our lives.

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Reviews

"Wonderfully suspenseful and an unexpected page-turner, this story of an immensely likable family under an incredible strain will stay with readers."
Booklist
"Brave and vulnerable...recounts a beautifully detailed story about family, felony and the redemption that writing itself can offer to those we love."
The New Statesman
"Witty and eloquent...Wetherall has written a luminous memoir that no one who reads it will soon forget."
The Washington Post

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