About This Book
A first-person narrator recalls a modest childhood in an industrious family, a restless inclination that earned him the nickname the Rolling Stone, and his father's death, which thrust him into responsibility. Removed from school, he begins an apprenticeship in his father's trade under a journeyman whose steady help sustains the household but arouses in the narrator an intense and unexplained antipathy. The memoir charts family adjustments to loss, the narrator's conflicting gratitude and resentment, his developing skills in the trade, and the growing tension as domestic dependence and personal pride collide.
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