Dad gets out of the hospital after six weeks, the longest time he's stayed sober since they lived in Phoenix. A hospital administrator gets him a job at an upstate resort with room and board. He takes it, but Mom refuses to go with him, calling that part of the state the sticks. Dad goes alone and loves living there. However, as soon as it turns cool again, Mom convinces him that sleeping with someone in cold weather is easier than sleeping alone. So Dad returns to New York and promptly begins drinking again.
 Lori now works as an illustrator for a comic book company, Jeannette 
        still attends college, Maureen lives with Lori and is in high school, 
        and Brian is a warehouse foreman and is serving on the auxiliary police 
        force until he can take the police entrance exam. So Mom suggests they 
        all celebrate Christmas together at Lori's apartment. Jeannette purchases 
        an antique gold cross for Mom and all kinds of warm clothes for Dad. The 
        things their parents buy the kids are, for the most part, broken junk. 
        Dad becomes angry when he opens Jeannette's presents. He comments that 
        she must be very ashamed of your old man and that she must think he's 
        some sort of charity case. Then he storms out. Mom explains that she bought 
        her father nice things while all he had to bring her was junk. His pride 
        is hurt, because he's the one supposed to be taking care of his children. 
        None of those ideas fill Mom's head, however; she loves presents. 
 Just when the behavior of Rex and Rose Mary cannot be any more ironic 
        and strange, they do something else to just make the reader shake her 
        head: Mom convincing Dad to come back to New York, knowing he will start 
        drinking again and Dad becoming angry because Jeannette's generous gifts 
        remind him he has never taken care of his children they way they deserved. 
        
Dad and Mom are beginning the third year of homelessness, and Jeannette has come to accept that this is the way it is going to be. Mom blames it all on the city. They make it too easy to be homeless. If it was really unbearable, we'd do something different.
 In August, Dad calls to go over her course selection sheet with her, 
        but Jeannette tells him she's dropping out. She explains that she's $1000 
        short of her tuition money with no hopes of having it on time. A week 
        later, Dad calls Jeannette and asks her to meet him at Lori's apartment. 
        When she arrives, he empties a bag on the table and it is filled with 
        hundreds of dollars adding up to $950. Also in one of the bags is a mink 
        coat and he figures she can pawn it for at least $50. He had won it all 
        playing poker. So for her final year at Barnard, Jeannette makes the payment 
        with Dad's wadded, crumpled bills. 
 In spite of his refusal to accept her gift, Dad's sense of pride is 
        righted when he can pull together the money Jeannette needs for college. 
        
A month after Dad pays her tuition, Mom calls with the news that they have found a place to live. It's an old abandoned building where squatters live, and they love it. They invite Jeannette over for a visit, and as she looks around the place, she can't help but notice that it is almost exactly like 83 Little Hobart Street in Welch. It makes her want to bolt, but Mom and dad are clearly proud. The people who live in the building have access to electricity thanks to Dad's ability to hot-wire the whole system for free. These people also have been living homeless for a long time, and so Rex and Rose Mary have finally come home.
 Jeannette graduates from Barnard that spring, but even though she wants 
        Dad to come, she tells him she can't risk that he'll get drunk and try 
        to debate the commencement speaker. The magazine where she works has offered 
        her a full-time job, and her boyfriend named Eric offers to allow her 
        to move in with him on Park Avenue. When she thinks about her parents, 
        she can't help but wonder if she hasn't come home as well. 
Rex and Rose Mary and their daughter are on two extreme ends of the social spectrum, but both are content with what they have accomplished.
 Clapsaddle, Diane. "TheBestNotes on A Long Way Gone". 
          TheBestNotes.com.
            
            
            
            
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