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​Valerie Kuhn Reid

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Valerie Kuhn Reid is a life-long reader, writer, educator, director, performer, mother, and grandmother. She was born and raised in Clarendon Hills, Illinois, a Chicago suburb, one train stop west of Hinsdale. Valerie left the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis in 1976 with a BS in Theatre and Education and headed to the seacoast town of Kennebunkport, Maine, where she has lived, raised a family, and taught school (most recently 20 years as Kennebunk High School’s Theatre teacher and play director) ever since.

At the age of 63, Valerie completed her MS in Writing and the Teaching of Writing, from the University of Maine at Orono, in conjunction with the Maine Writing Project.  Although her short story “Moving On” appeared in Woman's World Magazine, and two others received honorable mentions in Writer's Digest Annual Competitions, this is Valerie's debut book. She lives in Arundel, Maine.
ValerieKuhnReid.com

One Stop West of Hinsdale: Love Derailed in a Sixties Suburb

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Prologue sample
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Memoir

“For fifty years I've wondered. Who wrecked our happy home?"

So begins one daughter's search for truth as she turns back time and grills her beloved, but long-dead father.

The time is 1960. The place is Clarendon Hills, Illinois, the idyllic Chicago suburb just one train stop west of Hinsdale. Fairy tale families are beginning to crumble in staggering numbers and most of us still want to know why.  Armed with the pure eyes of childhood and the clear eyes of age, Reid braves the past, insisting on answers.

In this intimate examination of the demise of a family, rage, mental illness, alcohol abuse, divorce, and anorexia all play roles, but don't look for shock value or a sob story. It's all too familiar. It might be your story. too.

The deeper themes of love and loss, betrayal and loyalty, despair and hope, understanding and redemption emerge and entwine as Reid examines the consequences of our choices-those we make and those made for us—and how we manage to live with them.

Memoir, mystery, family saga and coming-of-age tale, One Stop West of Hinsdale is also a period piece. Reid tells her story with some flashbacks and fast-forwards, but it is mostly linear in chronology, all the better to illustrate how the turbulent sixties bled into the peaceful fifties and how people—like it or not—do change over time: hearts harden, dreams dissolve, minds crack. love leaves. And while Reid's tale speaks with resounding clarity to a certain generation it will touch the hearts of all who believe that even if love does leave what we once had is indelible.

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