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A Very Fine House

A Mother's Story of Love, Faith, and Crystal Meth

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A Very Fine House is an intimate memoir of a mother's Norman Rockwell family turned upside down by her daughter's descent into meth addiction and crime. Bright and beautiful, Annie is an unlikely candidate for meth. Living fast and hard on the streets of Bend, Oregon, she commits crimes against herself, the community, and her own family.

The author chronicles her child's addiction in a way that other writers have not written about addiction. What begins as an obsession to save her daughter, and a rage against God for allowing drugs to devour her college-age girl, transforms into release in a life changing letting-go-and-letting-God moment.

The reader is first introduced to the Stoefen family and Barbara's dream for its idyllic future. Kinks in the perfect life appear. When Annie's alcoholism, drug use, and criminality ensue, Barbara fights to save her. There is all-consuming grief and the devastating loss of not just her daughter, but her dream for her own life as well. Barbara eventually finds support and a new way of thinking. While she continues the battle to save her daughter, she ultimately finds the courage to save herself. The conclusion deals with Annie's recovery—and Barbara's. Both experience a spiritual awakening and are transformed. A new and better dream for Barbara's life is born.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 11, 2014
      Stoefen opens her memoir at the moment she learns that Annie, her troubled daughter, is addicted to methamphetamine. Annie was a bright, beautiful, happy child, and the family—“mom and dad, boy and girl, dog and cats, a bountiful table”—led a “Norman Rockwellesque existence” until Annie’s adolescence, when she struggled with depression. But Stoefen was totally unprepared for her daughter’s drug addiction. The author explores the nuances of her emotions with refreshing honesty, and records the chaos and destruction of dreams that go along with addiction. “I was furious with God,” she admits. Her despair, her anger at God, and the ways her faith did and did not help her will resonate with readers. She peppers the book with familiar 12-step slogans—“Let go and let God,” for example—but they are truly lived in her narrative. The book contains a list of resources to help other families, as well as detailed information about addiction. Meth addiction and alcoholism don’t prefer broken homes, it turns out. Today Annie is clean and sober, one day at a time. Agent: Alice Crider, WordServe Literary.

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  • English

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