This easy-rider is a fifty-two-year-old tax attorney, and this mid-life crisis is triggered by tragedy. The Harley roars, and the open road beckons, with tire-tracks of revenge and slivers of hope. Jack Tanner leaves everything behind for his looming mission on the Florida Keys. Winter’s weather gives way to warmth and spring. Winter’s anger is tempered by the kindness of strangers. And not every cop is out to get the biker, nor every friendly face to give him aid.
Author William Wells creates a very believable voice for his protagonist, muting his pain, hiding his hurts until the journey’s freedom gives him speech. Scenes come to vivid life, from Broadway Minneapolis, to the University of Wisconsin in Madison, to beaches and bars. Meanwhile a great cast of characters drift in and out of Jack’s life—the cop investigating the family’s loss, the stranger needing a ride, the biker dudes...
Surprises abound, but every step’s believable on a journey that covers physical and mental space, proving the truth that sometimes it’s really not the destination that counts. Jack’s quest to change his future has its roots in a changeless past, and grows into something more than either he or the reader might expect. There is kindness as well as cruelty in strangers. There is accident as well as evil design. And there is hope.
Crossing “fields and woodlands where so many young men fell,” keeping to the right side of the truck-stop café, showing up because anything less than showing up is meaningless, and following the journey of a grieving father, readers will learn as Jack does that, “sometimes, to get home, you have to ride away from home.”
Ride Away Home is a short, haunting novel; yet it's as huge as the country it crosses, wide as the ocean of pain, and clear as sunshine breaking through rain. It takes the deepest hurt and renders it human, manageable, agonizing but safe. It’s a book to treasure and a journey to remember.
Disclosure: I was given a free ecopy by the publisher and I offer my honest review.