Don't mention the tragedies..
The author says that he has never written with such honesty before in his life, and you should believe him, dear reader. This is a story written by a grandfather about his addicted grandson. The grandfather knew his grandson as a young boy and thought that he did not know him as a young man. The young man was Joplin, who made his home on the street, traveled, and learned to jump on freight trains. The road everywhere became his home as well, and he was one of those wanderers who had a mysterious and confusing life. Joplin was born in 1988, when his grandfather was forty-seven, and he lived to see his grandson on a journey that confined him to a small circle of 21st-century vagabonds, who called themselves "traveller boys." This is a journey into the dark side of America that most people don't even know exists, where traveling boys get to their destinations by any means available: they walk, ask strangers for rides, take strange buses, but prefer to hop on freight trains. In five years, the grandson traveled twenty-five thousand miles traveling by train. The grandfather writes out of the narrator's passion and love for the grandfather, and he presents us with a true, intimate story of Goblin and his companions, from which we learn a lot about life, friendship, love, and human relationships, and not just addiction, as Goblin lived a life that is unlike any logical life we ​​have known. This book, in its description of Joplin's life, gives us every warning against falling into the trap of addiction. Rather, it is a live broadcast of what the life of an addict can be like between the streets and hospitals, a permanent obstacle to success and to the completion of love. The reader of this book cannot help but fear addiction, stay away from his path by all means, and learn the harsh lesson from the life of Goblin and his companions. An addict cannot read it without seeking to quit his addiction.
1146288481
Don't mention the tragedies..
The author says that he has never written with such honesty before in his life, and you should believe him, dear reader. This is a story written by a grandfather about his addicted grandson. The grandfather knew his grandson as a young boy and thought that he did not know him as a young man. The young man was Joplin, who made his home on the street, traveled, and learned to jump on freight trains. The road everywhere became his home as well, and he was one of those wanderers who had a mysterious and confusing life. Joplin was born in 1988, when his grandfather was forty-seven, and he lived to see his grandson on a journey that confined him to a small circle of 21st-century vagabonds, who called themselves "traveller boys." This is a journey into the dark side of America that most people don't even know exists, where traveling boys get to their destinations by any means available: they walk, ask strangers for rides, take strange buses, but prefer to hop on freight trains. In five years, the grandson traveled twenty-five thousand miles traveling by train. The grandfather writes out of the narrator's passion and love for the grandfather, and he presents us with a true, intimate story of Goblin and his companions, from which we learn a lot about life, friendship, love, and human relationships, and not just addiction, as Goblin lived a life that is unlike any logical life we ​​have known. This book, in its description of Joplin's life, gives us every warning against falling into the trap of addiction. Rather, it is a live broadcast of what the life of an addict can be like between the streets and hospitals, a permanent obstacle to success and to the completion of love. The reader of this book cannot help but fear addiction, stay away from his path by all means, and learn the harsh lesson from the life of Goblin and his companions. An addict cannot read it without seeking to quit his addiction.
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Don't mention the tragedies..

Don't mention the tragedies..

Don't mention the tragedies..

Don't mention the tragedies..

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Overview

The author says that he has never written with such honesty before in his life, and you should believe him, dear reader. This is a story written by a grandfather about his addicted grandson. The grandfather knew his grandson as a young boy and thought that he did not know him as a young man. The young man was Joplin, who made his home on the street, traveled, and learned to jump on freight trains. The road everywhere became his home as well, and he was one of those wanderers who had a mysterious and confusing life. Joplin was born in 1988, when his grandfather was forty-seven, and he lived to see his grandson on a journey that confined him to a small circle of 21st-century vagabonds, who called themselves "traveller boys." This is a journey into the dark side of America that most people don't even know exists, where traveling boys get to their destinations by any means available: they walk, ask strangers for rides, take strange buses, but prefer to hop on freight trains. In five years, the grandson traveled twenty-five thousand miles traveling by train. The grandfather writes out of the narrator's passion and love for the grandfather, and he presents us with a true, intimate story of Goblin and his companions, from which we learn a lot about life, friendship, love, and human relationships, and not just addiction, as Goblin lived a life that is unlike any logical life we ​​have known. This book, in its description of Joplin's life, gives us every warning against falling into the trap of addiction. Rather, it is a live broadcast of what the life of an addict can be like between the streets and hospitals, a permanent obstacle to success and to the completion of love. The reader of this book cannot help but fear addiction, stay away from his path by all means, and learn the harsh lesson from the life of Goblin and his companions. An addict cannot read it without seeking to quit his addiction.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789777653893
Publisher: ???? ????? ????????
Publication date: 09/01/2024
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 15 - 18 Years
Language: Arabic

About the Author

ديف كيندريد (من مواليد 12 أبريل 1941) هو كاتب رياضي أمريكي. الحياة المبكرة والتعليم ولد كيندريد في 12 أبريل 1941 في أتلانتا، إلينوي ، الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية.[1] عندما كان مراهقًا، اشترت له والدته آلة كاتبة في عيد ميلاده وكتب عنها ستان موسيال . في نفس العمر تقريبًا، كان يطمح إلى أن يصبح كاتبًا رياضيًا مثل ريد سميث ، وكان يلتقط أعمدته من محطة القطار صباح كل يوم أحد.[3] التحق كيندريد بمدرسة أتلانتا الثانوية حيث لعب في فريق كرة السلة، وقادهم إلى البطولة الإقليمية عام 1959. واصل تطلعاته في أن يصبح كاتبًا رياضيًا على الرغم من أن مدرس اللغة الإنجليزية الخاص به أحبطه وقال: "ربما في يوم من الأيام يمكنك أن تكبر وتصبح مراسلًا أجنبيًا".[3] بعد التخرج، التحق كيندريد بجامعة إلينوي ويسليان بمنحة للصحافة[2] وتنافس في فريق البيسبول من القسم الثالث.[4] أثناء وجوده في المدرسة ولمدة عامين بعد ذلك، عمل بدوام كامل في القسم الرياضي في البانتاجراف .[2]لقد وجد وقته في الصحيفة أمرًا صعبًا لأنه كان مسؤولاً عن تغطية جميع مباريات كرة السلة في جميع أنحاء المدينة وتتبع النتائج.[5]
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