Having been born with a large birthmark on her face, Glory finds making friends difficult as she is teased about it constantly, yet when she meets Marvalene, a young girl who travels on the carnival circuit, Glory thinks she has finally found someone who will accept her as she is.
June Rae Wood, the author of the famous The Man WHo Loved Clowns , was born in 1946 in Sedalia, Missouri. "My brother Richard was born [in 1948] with Down's syndrome and a heart defect," author June Rae Wood wrote in the Sedalia Democrat in 1995. "The doctor said he wouldn't live, and even if he did, he would never walk or talk. He advised my parents to send Richard to die in an institution, rather than take him home and let the family get attached to him." Wood, the second of what would eventually be eight children, was only two years old when her parents brought Richard, their third child, home from the hospital. Although her parents gave all their children special attention, Richard, whom Wood's mother called her little "Dickey-bird," was doted on and protected by all the family members. This was not just because he was handicapped, but also because Richard was very special to them all. He would eventually become the subject of Wood's award-winning first book, The Man Who Loved Clowns.
Two girls from very different backgrounds desperately need acceptance and friendship. They find that They find that with each other each girl learns that they are where they should be. Marvalene also teaches Glory that who she is is not defined by the port-wine birthmark on her face.