The Glass Castle A Memoir
Jeannette Walls
SCRIBNER New York London Toronto Sydney
Acknowledgments
I'd like to thank my brother, Brian, for standing by me when we were growing up and while I wrote this.  I'm also grateful to my mother for believing in art and truth and for supporting the idea of the book; to  my brilliant and talented older sister, Lori, for coming around to it; and to my younger sister, Maureen,  whom I will always love. And to my father, Rex S. Walls, for dreaming all those big dreams.
Very special thanks also to my agent, Jennifer Rudolph Walsh, for her compassion, wit, tenacity, and  enthusiastic support; to my editor, Nan Graham, for her keen sense of how much is enough and for  caring so deeply; and to Alexis Gargagliano for her thoughtful and sensitive readings.
My gratitude for their early and constant support goes to Jay and Betsy Taylor, Laurie Peck, Cynthia  and David Young, Amy and Jim Scully, Ashley Pearson, Dan Mathews, Susan Watson, and Jessica  Taylor and Alex Guerrios.
I can never adequately thank my husband, John Taylor, who persuaded me it was time to tell my story  and then pulled it out of me.
Dark is a way and light is a place, Heaven that never was Nor will be ever is always true
—Dylan Thomas, "Poem on His Birthday"
I A WOMAN ON THE STREET
I WAS SITTING IN a taxi, wondering if I had overdressed for the evening, when I looked out the  window and saw Mom rooting through a Dumpster. It was just after dark. A blustery March wind 
whipped the steam coming out of the manholes, and people hurried along the sidewalks with their  collars turned up. I was stuck in traffic two blocks from the party where I was heading.
Mom stood fifteen feet away. She had tied rags around her shoulders to keep out the spring chill and  was picking through the trash while her dog, a blackandwhite terrier mix, played at her feet. Mom's  gestures were all familiar—the way she tilted her head and thrust out her lower lip when studying items  of potential value that she'd hoisted out of the Dumpster, the way her eyes widened with childish glee  when she found something she liked. Her long hair was streaked with gray, tangled and matted, and her  eyes had sunk deep into their sockets, but still she reminded me of the mom she'd been when I was a  kid, swandiving off cliffs and painting in the desert and reading Shakespeare aloud. Her cheekbones  were still high and strong, but the skin was parched and ruddy from all those winters and summers  exposed to the elements. To the people walking by, she probably looked like any of the thousands of  homeless people in New York City.
It had been months since I laid eyes on Mom, and when she looked up, I was overcome with panic that  she'd see me and call out my name, and that someone on the way to the same party would spot us  together and Mom would introduce herself and my secret would be out.
I slid down in the seat and asked the driver to turn around and take me home to Park Avenue.
The taxi pulled up in front of my building, the doorman held the door for me, and the elevator man took  me up to my floor. My husband was working late, as he did most nights, and the apartment was silent  except for the click of my heels on the polished wood floor. I was still rattled from seeing Mom, the  unexpectedness of coming across her, the sight of her rooting happily through the Dumpster. I put some  Vivaldi on, hoping the music would settle me down.
I looked around the room. There were the turnofthecentury bronzeandsilver vases and the old books  with worn leather spines that I'd collected at flea markets. There were the Georgian maps I'd had  framed, the Persian rugs, and the overstuffed leather armchair I liked to sink into at the end of the day.  I'd tried to make a home for myself here, tried to turn the apartment into the sort of place where the  person I wanted to be would live. But I could never enjoy the room without worrying about Mom and  Dad huddled on a sidewalk grate somewhere. I fretted about them, but I was embarrassed by them, too,  and ashamed of myself for wearing pearls and living on Park Avenue while my parents were busy  keeping warm and finding something to eat.
What could I do? I'd tried to help them countless times, but Dad would insist they didn't need anything,  and Mom would ask for something silly, like a perfume atomizer or a membership in a health club.  They said that they were living the way they wanted to.
After ducking down in the taxi so Mom wouldn't see me, I hated myself—hated my antiques, my  clothes, and my apartment. I had to do something, so I called a friend of Mom's and left a message. It  was our system of staying in touch. It always took Mom a few days to get back to me, but when I heard  from her, she sounded, as always, cheerful and casual, as though we'd had lunch the day before. I told  her I wanted to see her and suggested she drop by the apartment, but she wanted to go to a restaurant.  She loved eating out, so we agreed to meet for lunch at her favorite Chinese restaurant.
Mom was sitting at a booth, studying the menu, when I arrived. She'd made an effort to fix herself up.  She wore a bulky gray sweater with only a few light stains, and black leather men's shoes. She'd washed  her face, but her neck and temples were still dark with grime.
She waved enthusiastically when she saw me. "It's my baby girl!" she called out. I kissed her cheek.  Mom had dumped all the plastic packets of soy sauce and duck sauce and hotandspicy mustard from  the table into her purse. Now she emptied a wooden bowl of dried noodles into it as well. "A little snack  for later on," she explained.
We ordered. Mom chose the Seafood Delight. "You know how I love my seafood," she said.
She started talking about Picasso. She'd seen a retrospective of his work and decided he was hugely  overrated. All the cubist stuff was gimmicky, as far as she was concerned. He hadn't really done  anything worthwhile after his Rose Period.
"I'm worried about you," I said. "Tell me what I can do to help."
Her smile faded. "What makes you think I need your help?"
"I'm not rich," I said. "But I have some money. Tell me what it is you need."
She thought for a moment. "I could use an electrolysis treatment."
"Be serious."
"I am serious. If a woman looks good, she feels good."
"Come on, Mom." I felt my shoulders tightening up, the way they invariably did during these  conversations. "I'm talking about something that could help you change your life, make it better."
"You want to help me change my life?" Mom asked. "I'm fine. You're the one who needs help. Your  values are all confused."
"Mom, I saw you picking through trash in the East Village a few days ago."
"Well, people in this country are too wasteful. It's my way of recycling." She took a bite of her Seafood  Delight. "Why didn't you say hello?"
"I was too ashamed, Mom. I hid."
Mom pointed her chopsticks at me. "You see?" she said. "Right there. That's exactly what I'm saying.  You're way too easily embarrassed. Your father and I are who we are. Accept it."
"And what am I supposed to tell people about my parents?"
"Just tell the truth," Mom said. "That's simple enough."
II THE DESERT
I WAS ON FIRE.
It's my earliest memory. I was three years old, and we were living in a trailer park in a southern Arizona  town whose name I never knew. I was standing on a chair in front of the stove, wearing a pink dress my  grandmother had bought for me. Pink was my favorite color. The dress's skirt stuck out like a tutu, and I  liked to spin around in front of the mirror, thinking I looked like a ballerina. But at that moment, I was  wearing the dress to cook hot dogs, watching them swell and bob in the boiling water as the late morning sunlight filtered in through the trailer's small kitchenette window.
I could hear Mom in the next room singing while she worked on one of her paintings. Juju, our black  mutt, was watching me. I stabbed one of the hot dogs with a fork and bent over and offered it to him.  The wiener was hot, so Juju licked at it tentatively, but when I stood up and started stirring the hot dogs  again, I felt a blaze of heat on my right side. I turned to see where it was coming from and realized my  dress was on fire. Frozen with fear, I watched the yellowwhite flames make a ragged brown line up the  pink fabric of my skirt and climb my stomach. Then the flames leaped up, reaching my face.
I screamed. I smelled the burning and heard a horrible crackling as the fire singed my hair and  eyelashes. Juju was barking. I screamed again.
Mom ran into the room.
"Mommy, help me!" I shrieked. I was still standing on the chair, swatting at the fire with the fork I had  been using to stir the hot dogs.
Mom ran out of the room and came back with one of the armysurplus blankets I hated because the  wool was so scratchy. She threw the blanket around me to smother the flames. Dad had gone off in the  car, so Mom grabbed me and my younger brother, Brian, and hurried over to the trailer next to ours.  The woman who lived there was hanging her laundry on the clothesline. She had clothespins in her  mouth. Mom, in an unnaturally calm voice, explained what had happened and asked if we could please  have a ride to the hospital. The woman dropped her clothespins and laundry right there in the dirt and,  without saying anything, ran for her car.
* * *
When we got to the hospital, nurses put me on a stretcher. They talked in loud, worried whispers while  they cut off what was left of my fancy pink dress with a pair of shiny scissors. Then they picked me up,  laid me flat on a big metal bed piled with ice cubes, and spread some of the ice over my body. A doctor  with silver hair and blackrimmed glasses led my mother out of the room. As they left, I heard him  telling her that it was very serious. The nurses remained behind, hovering over me. I could tell I was  causing a big fuss, and I stayed quiet. One of them squeezed my hand and told me I was going to be  okay.
"I know," I said, "but if I'm not, that's okay, too."
The nurse squeezed my hand again and bit her lower lip.
The room was small and white, with bright lights and metal cabinets. I stared for a while at the rows of  tiny dots in the ceiling panels. Ice cubes covered my stomach and ribs and pressed up against my  cheeks. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw a small, grimy hand reach up a few inches from my face and  grab a handful of cubes. I heard a loud crunching sound and looked down. It was Brian, eating the ice.
* * *
The doctors said I was lucky to be alive. They took patches of skin from my upper thigh and put them  over the most badly burned parts of my stomach, ribs, and chest. They said it was called a skin graft.  When they were finished, they wrapped my entire right side in bandages.
"Look, I'm a halfmummy," I said to one of the nurses. She smiled and put my right arm in a sling and  attached it to the headboard so I couldn't move it.
The nurses and doctors kept asking me questions: How did you get burned? Have your parents ever hurt  you? Why do you have all these bruises and cuts? My parents never hurt me, I said. I got the cuts and  bruises playing outside and the burns from cooking hot dogs. They asked what I was doing cooking hot  dogs by myself at the age of three. It was easy, I said. You just put the hot dogs in the water and boil  them. It wasn't like there was some complicated recipe that you had to be old enough to follow. The pan  was too heavy for me to lift when it was full of water, so I'd put a chair next to the sink, climb up and  fill a glass, then stand on a chair by the stove and pour the water into the pan. I did that over and over  again until the pan held enough water. Then I'd turn on the stove, and when the water was boiling, I'd  drop in the hot dogs. "Mom says I'm mature for my age," I told them. "and she lets me cook for myself  a lot."
Two nurses looked at each other, and one of them wrote something down on a clipboard. I asked what  was wrong. Nothing, they said, nothing.
* * *
Every couple of days, the nurses changed the bandages. They would put the used bandage off to the  side, wadded and covered with smears of blood and yellow stuff and little pieces of burned skin. Then  they'd apply another bandage, a big gauzy cloth, to the burns. At night I would run my left hand over  the rough, scabby surface of the skin that wasn't covered by the bandage. Sometimes I'd peel off scabs.  The nurses had told me not to, but I couldn't resist pulling on them real slow to see how big a scab I  could get loose. Once I had a couple of them free, I'd pretend they were talking to each other in  cheeping voices.
The hospital was clean and shiny. Everything was white—the walls and sheets and nurses' uniforms— or silver—the beds and trays and medical instruments. Everyone spoke in polite, calm voices. It was so  hushed you could hear the nurses' rubbersoled shoes squeaking all the way down the hall. I wasn't used  to quiet and order, and I liked it.
I also liked it that I had my own room, since in the trailer I shared one with my brother and my sister.  My hospital room even had its very own television set up on the wall. We didn't have a TV at home, so 
I watched it a lot. Red Buttons and Lucille Ball were my favorites.
The nurses and doctors always asked how I was feeling and if I was hungry or needed anything. The  nurses brought me delicious meals three times a day, with fruit cocktail or JellO for dessert, and  changed the sheets even if they still looked clean. Sometimes I read to them, and they told me I was  very smart and could read as well as a sixyearold.
One day a nurse with wavy yellow hair and blue eye makeup was chewing on something. I asked her  what it was, and she told me it was chewing gum. I had never heard of chewing gum, so she went out  and got me a whole pack. I pulled out a stick, took off the white paper and the shiny silver foil under it,  and studied the powdery, puttycolored gum. I put it in my mouth and was stunned by the sharp  sweetness. "It's really good!" I said.
"Chew on it, but don't swallow it," the nurse said with a laugh. She smiled real big and brought in other  nurses so they could watch me chew my firstever piece of gum. When she brought me lunch, she told  me I had to take out my chewing gum, but she said not to worry because I could have a new stick after  eating. If I finished the pack, she would buy me another. That was the thing about the hospital. You  never had to worry about running out of stuff like food or ice or even chewing gum. I would have been  happy staying in that hospital forever.
* * *
When my family came to visit, their arguing and laughing and singing and shouting echoed through the  quiet halls. The nurses made shushing noises, and Mom and Dad and Lori and Brian lowered their  voices for a few minutes, then they slowly grew loud again. Everyone always turned and stared at Dad. I  couldn't figure out whether it was because he was so handsome or because he called people. "pardner"  and. "goomba" and threw his head back when he laughed.
One day Dad leaned over my bed and asked if the nurses and doctors were treating me okay. If they  were not, he said, he would kick some asses. I told Dad how nice and friendly everyone was. "Well, of  course they are," he said. "They know you're Rex Walls's daughter."
When Mom wanted to know what it was the doctors and nurses were doing that was so nice, I told her  about the chewing gum.
"Ugh," she said. She disapproved of chewing gum, she went on. It was a disgusting lowclass habit, and  the nurse should have consulted her before encouraging me in such vulgar behavior. She said she was  going to give that woman a piece of her mind, by golly. "After all," Mom said. "I am your mother, and I  should have a say in how you're raised."
* * *
"Do you guys miss me?" I asked my older sister, Lori, during one visit.
"Not really," she said. "Too much has been happening."
"Like what?"
"Just the normal stuff."
"Lori may not miss you, honey bunch, but I sure do," Dad said. "You shouldn't be in this antiseptic  joint."
He sat down on my bed and started telling me the story about the time Lori got stung by a poisonous  scorpion. I'd heard it a dozen times, but I still liked the way Dad told it. Mom and Dad were out  exploring in the desert when Lori, who was four, turned over a rock and the scorpion hiding under it  stung her leg. She had gone into convulsions, and her body had become stiff and wet with sweat. But  Dad didn't trust hospitals, so he took her to a Navajo witch doctor who cut open the wound and put a  dark brown paste on it and said some chants and pretty soon Lori was as good as new. "Your mother  should have taken you to that witch doctor the day you got burned," Dad said, "not to these headsup theirasses medschool quacks."
* * *
The next time they visited, Brian's head was wrapped in a dirty white bandage with dried bloodstains.  Mom said he had fallen off the back of the couch and cracked his head open on the floor, but she and  Dad had decided not to take him to the hospital.
"There was blood everywhere," Mom said. "but one kid in the hospital at a time is enough."
"Besides," Dad said, "Brian's head is so hard, I think the floor took more damage than he did."
Brian thought that was hilarious and just laughed and laughed.
Mom told me she had entered my name in a raffle at a fair, and I'd won a helicopter ride. I was thrilled.  I had never been in a helicopter or a plane.
"When do I get to go on the ride?" I asked.
"Oh, we already did that," Mom said. "It was fun."
Then Dad got into an argument with the doctor. It started because Dad thought I shouldn't be wearing  bandages. "Burns need to breathe," he told the doctor.
The doctor said bandages were necessary to prevent infection. Dad stared at the doctor. "To hell with  infection," he said. He told the doctor that I was going to be scarred for life because of him, but, by  God, I wasn't the only one who was going to walk out of there scarred.
Dad pulled back his fist as if to hit the doctor, who raised his hands and backed away. Before anything  could happen, a guard in a uniform appeared and told Mom and Dad and Lori and Brian that they  would have to leave.
Afterward, a nurse asked me if I was okay. "Of course," I said. I told her I didn't care if I had some silly  old scar. That was good, she said, because from the look of it, I had other things to worry about.
* * *
A few days later, when I had been at the hospital for about six weeks, Dad appeared alone in the 
doorway of my room. He told me we were going to check out, Rex Walls–style.
"Are you sure this is okay?" I asked.
"You just trust your old man," Dad said.
He unhooked my right arm from the sling over my head. As he held me close, I breathed in his familiar  smell of Vitalis, whiskey, and cigarette smoke. It reminded me of home.
Dad hurried down the hall with me in his arms. A nurse yelled for us to stop, but Dad broke into a run.  He pushed open an emergencyexit door and sprinted down the stairs and out to the street. Our car, a  beatup Plymouth we called the Blue Goose, was parked around the corner, the engine idling. Mom was  up front, Lori and Brian in the back with Juju. Dad slid me across the seat next to Mom and took the  wheel.
"You don't have to worry anymore, baby," Dad said. "You're safe now."
A FEW DAYS AFTER Mom and Dad brought me home, I cooked myself some hot dogs. I was  hungry, Mom was at work on a painting, and no one else was there to fix them for me.
"Good for you," Mom said when she saw me cooking. "You've got to get right back in the saddle. You  can't live in fear of something as basic as fire."
I didn't. Instead, I became fascinated with it. Dad also thought I should face down my enemy, and he  showed me how to pass my finger through a candle flame. I did it over and over, slowing my finger with  each pass, watching the way it seemed to cut the flame in half, testing to see how much my finger could  endure without actually getting burned. I was always on the lookout for bigger fires. Whenever  neighbors burned trash, I ran over and watched the blaze trying to escape the garbage can. I'd inch  closer and closer, feeling the heat against my face until I got so near that it became unbearable, and then  I'd back away just enough to be able to stand it.
The neighbor lady who had driven me to the hospital was surprised that I didn't run in the opposite  direction from any fire I saw. "Why the hell would she?" Dad bellowed with a proud grin. "She already  fought the fire once and won."
I started stealing matches from Dad. I'd go behind the trailer and light them. I loved the scratching  sound of the match against the sandpapery brown strip when I struck it, and the way the flame leaped  out of the redcoated tip with a pop and a hiss. I'd feel its heat near my fingertips, then wave it out  triumphantly. I lit pieces of paper and little piles of brush and held my breath until the moment when  they seemed about to blaze up out of control. Then I'd stomp on the flames and call out the curse words  Dad used, like. "Dumbass sonofabitch!" and. "Cocksucker!"
One time I went out back with my favorite toy, a plastic Tinkerbell figurine. She was two inches tall,  with yellow hair pulled up in a high ponytail and her hands on her hips in a confident, cocky way that I  admired. I lit a match and held it close to Tinkerbell's face to show her how it felt. She looked even 
more beautiful in the flame's glow. When that match went out, I lit another one, and this time I held it  really close to Tinkerbell's face. Suddenly, her eyes grew wide, as if with fear; I realized, to my horror,  that her face was starting to melt. I put out the match, but it was too late. Tinkerbell's once perfect little  nose had completely disappeared, and her saucy red lips had been replaced with an ugly, lopsided  smear. I tried to smooth her features back to the way they had been, but I made them even worse.  Almost immediately, her face cooled and hardened again. I put bandages on it. I wished I could perform  a skin graft on Tinkerbell, but that would have meant cutting her into pieces. Even though her face was  melted, she was still my favorite toy.
DAD CAME HOME IN the middle of the night a few months later and roused all of us from bed.
"Time to pull up stakes and leave this shithole behind," he hollered.
We had fifteen minutes to gather whatever we needed and pile into the car.
"Is everything okay, Dad?" I asked. "Is someone after us?"
"Don't you worry," Dad said. "You leave that to me. Don't I always take care of you?"
"'Course you do," I said.
"That's my girl!" Dad said with a hug, then barked orders at us all to speed things up. He took the  essentials—a big black castiron skillet and the Dutch oven, some armysurplus tin plates, a few knives,  his pistol, and Mom's archery set—and packed them in the trunk of the Blue Goose. He said we  shouldn't take much else, just what we needed to survive. Mom hurried out to the yard and started  digging holes by the light of the moon, looking for our jar of cash. She had forgotten where she'd buried  it.
An hour passed before we finally tied Mom's paintings on the top of the car, shoved whatever would fit  into the trunk, and piled the overflow on the backseat and the car floor. Dad steered the Blue Goose  through the dark, driving slowly so as not to alert anyone in the trailer park that we were, as Dad liked  to put it, doing the skedaddle. He was grumbling that he couldn't understand why the hell it took so  long to grab what we needed and haul our asses into the car.
"Dad!" I said. "I forgot Tinkerbell!"
"Tinkerbell can make it on her own," Dad said. "She's like my brave little girl. You are brave and ready  for adventure, right?"
"I guess," I said. I hoped whoever found Tinkerbell would love her despite her melted face. For comfort,  I tried to cradle Quixote, our gray and white cat who was missing an ear, but he growled and scratched  at my face. "Quiet, Quixote!" I said.
"Cats don't like to travel," Mom explained.
Anyone who didn't like to travel wasn't invited on our adventure, Dad said. He stopped the car, grabbed  Quixote by the scruff of the neck, and tossed him out the window. Quixote landed with a screeching  meow and a thud, Dad accelerated up the road, and I burst into tears.
"Don't be so sentimental," Mom said. She told me we could always get another cat, and now Quixote  was going to be a wild cat, which was much more fun than being a house cat. Brian, afraid that Dad  might toss Juju out the window as well, held the dog tight.
To distract us kids, Mom got us singing songs like. "Don't Fence Me In" and. "This Land Is Your  Land," and Dad led us in rousing renditions of. "Old Man River" and his favorite. "Swing Low, Sweet  Chariot." After a while, I forgot about Quixote and Tinkerbell and the friends I'd left behind in the  trailer park. Dad started telling us about all the exciting things we were going to do and how we were  going to get rich once we reached the new place where we were going to live.
"Where are we going, Dad?" I asked.
"Wherever we end up," he said.
* * *
Later that night, Dad stopped the car out in the middle of the desert, and we slept under the stars. We  had no pillows, but Dad said that was part of his plan. He was teaching us to have good posture. The  Indians didn't use pillows, either, he explained, and look how straight they stood. We did have our  scratchy armysurplus blankets, so we spread them out and lay there, looking up at the field of stars. I  told Lori how lucky we were to be sleeping out under the sky like Indians.
"We could live like this forever," I said.
"I think we're going to," she said.
WE WERE ALWAYS DOING the skedaddle, usually in the middle of the night. I sometimes heard  Mom and Dad discussing the people who were after us. Dad called them henchmen, bloodsuckers, and  the gestapo. Sometimes he would make mysterious references to executives from Standard Oil who  were trying to steal the Texas land that Mom's family owned, and FBI agents who were after Dad for  some dark episode that he never told us about because he didn't want to put us in danger, too.
Dad was so sure a posse of federal investigators was on our trail that he smoked his unfiltered cigarettes  from the wrong end. That way, he explained, he burned up the brand name, and if the people who were  tracking us looked in his ashtray, they'd find unidentifiable butts instead of Pall Malls that could be  traced to him. Mom, however, told us that the FBI wasn't really after Dad; he just liked to say they were  because it was more fun having the FBI on your tail than bill collectors.
We moved around like nomads. We lived in dusty little mining towns in Nevada, Arizona, and  California. They were usually nothing but a tiny cluster of sad, sunken shacks, a gas station, a dry goods store, and a bar or two. They had names like Needles and Bouse, Pie, Goffs, and Why, and they  were near places like the Superstition Mountains, the driedup Soda Lake, and the Old Woman  Mountain. The more desolate and isolated a place was, the better Mom and Dad liked it.
Dad would get a job as an electrician or engineer in a gypsum or copper mine. Mom liked to say that  Dad could talk a blue streak, spinning tales of jobs he'd never had and college degrees he'd never  earned. He could get about any job he wanted, he just didn't like keeping it for long. Sometimes he  made money gambling or doing odd jobs. When he got bored or was fired or the unpaid bills piled up  too high or the lineman from the electrical company found out he had hotwired our trailer to the utility  poles—or the FBI was closing in—we packed up in the middle of the night and took off, driving until  Mom and Dad found another small town that caught their eye. Then we'd circle around, looking for  houses with forrent signs stuck in the front yard.
Every now and then, we'd go stay with Grandma Smith, Mom's mom, who lived in a big white house in  Phoenix. Grandma Smith was a West Texas flapper who loved dancing and cussing and horses. She was  known for being able to break the wildest broncs and had helped Grandpa run the ranch up near Fish  Creek Canyon, Arizona, which was west of Bullhead City, not too far from the Grand Canyon. I thought  Grandma Smith was great. But after a few weeks, she and Dad would always get into some nasty  hollering match. It might start with Mom mentioning how short we were on cash. Then Grandma would  make a snide comment about Dad being shiftless. Dad would say something about selfish old crones  with more money than they knew what to do with, and soon enough they'd be facetoface in what  amounted to a fullfledged cussing contest.
"You fleabitten drunk!" Grandma would scream.
"You goddamned flintfaced hag!" Dad would shout back.
"You nogood twobit pudsucking bastard!"
"You scaly castrating banshee bitch!"
Dad had the more inventive vocabulary, but Grandma Smith could outshout him; plus, she had the  homecourt advantage. A time would come when Dad had had enough and he'd tell us kids to get in the  car. Grandma would yell at Mom not to let that worthless horse's ass take her grandchildren. Mom  would shrug and say there was nothing she could do about it, he was her husband. Off we'd go, heading  out into the desert in search of another house for rent in another little mining town.
Some of the people who lived in those towns had been there for years. Others were rootless, like us— just passing through. They were gamblers or excons or war veterans or what Mom called loose women.  There were old prospectors, their faces wrinkled and brown from the sun, like driedup apples. The kids  were lean and hard, with calluses on their hands and feet. We'd make friends with them, but not close  friends, because we knew we'd be moving on sooner or later.
We might enroll in school, but not always. Mom and Dad did most of our teaching. Mom had us all  reading books without pictures by the time we were five, and Dad taught us math. He also taught us the  things that were really important and useful, like how to tap out Morse code and how we should never  eat the liver of a polar bear because all the vitamin A in it could kill us. He showed us how to aim and  fire his pistol, how to shoot Mom's bow and arrows, and how to throw a knife by the blade so that it  landed in the middle of a target with a satisfying thwock. By the time I was four, I was pretty good with 
Dad's pistol, a big black sixshot revolver, and could hit five out of six beer bottles at thirty paces. I'd  hold the gun with both hands, sight down the barrel, and squeeze the trigger slowly and smoothly until,  with a loud clap, the gun kicked and the bottle exploded. It was fun. Dad said my sharpshooting would  come in handy if the feds ever surrounded us.
Mom had grown up in the desert. She loved the dry, crackling heat, the way the sky at sunset looked  like a sheet of fire, and the overwhelming emptiness and severity of all that open land that had once  been a huge ocean bed. Most people had trouble surviving in the desert, but Mom thrived there. She  knew how to get by on next to nothing. She showed us which plants were edible and which were toxic.  She was able to find water when no one else could, and she knew how little of it you really needed. She  taught us that you could wash yourself up pretty clean with just a cup of water. She said it was good for  you to drink unpurified water, even ditch water, as long as animals were drinking from it. Chlorinated  city water was for nambypambies, she said. Water from the wild helped build up your antibodies. She  also thought toothpaste was for nambypambies. At bedtime we'd shake a little baking soda into the  palm of one hand, mix in a dash of hydrogen peroxide, then use our fingers to clean our teeth with the  fizzing paste.
I loved the desert, too. When the sun was in the sky, the sand would be so hot that it would burn your  feet if you were the kind of kid who wore shoes, but since we always went barefoot, our soles were as  tough and thick as cowhide. We'd catch scorpions and snakes and horny toads. We'd search for gold,  and when we couldn't find it, we'd collect other valuable rocks, like turquoise and garnets. There'd be a  cool spell come sundown, when the mosquitoes would fly in so thick that the air would grow dark with  them, then at nightfall, it turned so cold that we usually needed blankets.
There were fierce sandstorms. Sometimes they hit without warning, and other times you knew one was  coming when you saw batches of dust devils swirling and dancing their way across the desert. Once the  wind started whipping up the sand, you could only see a foot in front of your face. If you couldn't find a  house or a car or a shed to hide in when the sandstorm started, you had to squat down and close your  eyes and mouth real tight and cover your ears and bury your face in your lap until it passed, or else your  body cavities would fill with sand. A big tumbleweed might hit you, but they were light and bouncy and  didn't hurt. If the sandstorm was really strong, it knocked you over, and you rolled around like you were  a tumbleweed.
When the rains finally came, the skies darkened and the air became heavy. Raindrops the size of  marbles came pelting out of the sky. Some parents worried that their kids might get hit by lightning, but  Mom and Dad never did, and they let us go out and play in the warm, driving water. We splashed and  sang and danced. Great bolts of lightning cracked from the lowhanging clouds, and thunder shook the  ground. We gasped over the most spectacular bolts, as if we were all watching a fireworks show. After  the storm, Dad took us to the arroyos, and we watched the flash floods come roaring through. The next  day the saguaros and prickly pears were fat from drinking as much as they could, because they knew it  might be a long, long time until the next rain.
We were sort of like the cactus. We ate irregularly, and when we did, we'd gorge ourselves. Once when  we were living in Nevada, a train full of cantaloupes heading east jumped the track. I had never eaten a  cantaloupe before, but Dad brought home crates and crates of them. We had fresh cantaloupe, stewed  cantaloupe, even fried cantaloupe. One time in California, the grape pickers went on strike. The 
vineyard owners let people come pick their own grapes for a nickel a pound. We drove about a hundred  miles to the vineyards, where the grapes were so ripe they were about to burst on the vine in bunches  bigger than my head. We filled our entire car full of green grapes—the trunk, even the glove  compartment, and Dad piled stacks in our laps so high we could barely see over the top. For weeks  afterward, we ate green grapes for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
* * *
All this running around and moving was temporary, Dad explained. He had a plan. He was going to  find gold.
Everybody said Dad was a genius. He could build or fix anything. One time when a neighbor's TV set  broke, Dad opened the back and used a macaroni noodle to insulate some crossed wires. The neighbor  couldn't get over it. He went around telling everyone in town that Dad sure knew how to use his noodle.  Dad was an expert in math and physics and electricity. He read books on calculus and logarithmic  algebra and loved what he called the poetry and symmetry of math. He told us about the magic qualities  every number has and how numbers unlock the secrets of the universe. But Dad's main interest was  energy: thermal energy, nuclear energy, solar energy, electrical energy, and energy from the wind. He  said there were so many untapped sources of energy in the world that it was ridiculous to be burning all  that fossil fuel.
Dad was always inventing things, too. One of his most important inventions was a complicated  contraption he called the Prospector. It was going to help us find gold. The Prospector had a big flat  surface about four feet high and six feet wide, and it rose up in the air at an angle. The surface was  covered with horizontal strips of wood separated by gaps. The Prospector would scoop up dirt and  rocks and sift them through the maze of wooden strips. It could figure out whether a rock was gold by  the weight. It would throw out the worthless stuff and deposit the gold nuggets in a pile, so whenever  we needed groceries, we could go out back and grab ourselves a nugget. At least that was what it would  be able to do once Dad finished building it.
Dad let Brian and me help him work on the Prospector. We'd go out behind the house, and I'd hold the  nails while Dad hit them. Sometimes he let me start the nails, and then he'd drive them in with one hard  blow from the hammer. The air would be filled with sawdust and the smell of freshly cut wood, and the  sound of hammering and whistling, because Dad always whistled while he worked.
In my mind, Dad was perfect, although he did have what Mom called a little bit of a drinking situation.  There was what Mom called Dad's. "beer phase." We could all handle that. Dad drove fast and sang  really loud, and locks of his hair fell into his face and life was a little bit scary but still a lot of fun. But  when Dad pulled out a bottle of what Mom called. "the hard stuff," she got kind of frantic, because  after working on the bottle for a while, Dad turned into an angryeyed stranger who threw around  furniture and threatened to beat up Mom or anyone else who got in his way. When he'd had his fill of  cussing and hollering and smashing things up, he'd collapse. But Dad drank hard liquor only when we  had money, which wasn't often, so life was mostly good in those days.
Every night when Lori, Brian, and I were about to go to sleep, Dad told us bedtime stories. They were  always about him. We'd be tucked in our beds or lying under blankets in the desert, the world dark  except for the orange glow from his cigarette. When he took a long draw, it lit up just enough for us to  see his face.
"Tell us a story about yourself, Dad!" we'd beg him.
"Awww. You don't want to hear another story about me," he'd say.
"Yes, we do! We do!" we'd insist.
"Well, okay," he'd say. He'd pause and chuckle at some memory. "There's many a damned foolhardy  thing that your old man has done, but this one was harebrained even for a crazy sonofabitch like Rex  Walls."
And then he'd tell us about how, when he was in the air force and his plane's engine conked out, he  made an emergency landing in a cattle pasture and saved himself and his crew. Or about the time he  wrestled a pack of wild dogs that had surrounded a lame mustang. Then there was the time he fixed a  broken sluice gate on the Hoover Dam and saved the lives of thousands of people who would have  drowned if the dam had burst. There was also the time he went AWOL in the air force to get some beer,  and while he was at the bar, he caught a lunatic who was planning to blow up the air base, which went  to show that occasionally, it paid to break the rules.
Dad was a dramatic storyteller. He always started out slow, with lots of pauses. "Go on! What happened  next?" we'd ask, even if we'd already heard that story before. Mom giggled or rolled her eyes when Dad  told his stories, and he glared at her. If someone interrupted his storytelling, he got mad, and we had to  beg him to continue and promise that no one would interrupt again.
Dad always fought harder, flew faster, and gambled smarter than everyone else in his stories. Along the  way, he rescued women and children and even men who weren't as strong and clever. Dad taught us the  secrets of his heroics—he showed us how to straddle a wild dog and break his neck, and where to hit a  man in the throat so you could kill him with one powerful jab. But he assured us that as long as he was  around, we wouldn't have to defend ourselves, because, by God, anyone who so much as laid a finger on  any of Rex Walls's children was going to get their butts kicked so hard that you could read Dad's shoe  size on their ass cheeks.
When Dad wasn't telling us about all the amazing things he had already done, he was telling us about  the wondrous things he was going to do. Like build the Glass Castle. All of Dad's engineering skills  and mathematical genius were coming together in one special project: a great big house he was going to  build for us in the desert. It would have a glass ceiling and thick glass walls and even a glass staircase.  The Glass Castle would have solar cells on the top that would catch the sun's rays and convert them into  electricity for heating and cooling and running all the appliances. It would even have its own water purification system. Dad had worked out the architecture and the floor plans and most of the  mathematical calculations. He carried around the blueprints for the Glass Castle wherever we went, and  sometimes he'd pull them out and let us work on the design for our rooms.
All we had to do was find gold, Dad said, and we were on the verge of that. Once he finished the  Prospector and we struck it rich, he'd start work on our Glass Castle.
AS MUCH AS DAD liked to tell stories about himself, it was almost impossible to get him to talk  about his parents or where he was born. We knew he came from a town called Welch, in West Virginia,  where a lot of coal was mined, and that his father had worked as a clerk for the railroad, sitting every  day in a little station house, writing messages on pieces of paper that he held up on a stick for the  passing train engineers. Dad had no interest in a life like that, so he left Welch when he was seventeen  to join the air force and become a pilot.
One of his favorite stories, which he must have told us a hundred times, was about how he met and fell  in love with Mom. Dad was in the air force, and Mom was in the USO, but when they met, she was on  leave visiting her parents at their cattle ranch near Fish Creek Canyon.
Dad and some of his air force buddies were on a cliff of the canyon, trying to work up the nerve to dive  into the lake forty feet below, when Mom and a friend drove up. Mom was wearing a white bathing suit  that showed off her figure and her skin, which was dark from the Arizona sun. She had light brown hair  that turned blond in the summer, and she never wore any makeup except deep red lipstick. She looked  just like a movie star, Dad always said, but hell, he'd met lots of beautiful women before, and none of  them had ever made him weak in the knees. Mom was different. He saw right away that she had true  spirit. He fell in love with her the split second he laid eyes on her.
Mom walked up to the air force men and told them that diving off the cliff was no big deal, she'd been  doing it since she was little. The men didn't believe her, so Mom went right to the edge of the cliff and  did a perfect swan dive into the water below.
Dad jumped in after her. No way in hell, he'd say, was he letting a fine broad like that get away from  him.
"What kind of dive did you do, Dad?" I asked whenever he told the story.
"A parachute dive. Without a parachute," he always answered.
Dad swam after Mom, and right there in the water, he told her he was going to marry her. Twentythree  men had already proposed to her, Mom told Dad, and she had turned them all down. "What makes you  think I'd accept your proposal?" she asked.
"I didn't propose to you," Dad said. "I told you I was going to marry you."
Six months later, they got married. I always thought it was the most romantic story I'd ever heard, but  Mom didn't like it. She didn't think it was romantic at all.
"I had to say yes," Mom said. "Your father wouldn't take no for an answer." Besides, she explained, she  had to get away from her mother, who wouldn't let her make even the smallest decision on her own. "I  had no idea your father would be even worse."
Dad left the air force after he got married because he wanted to make a fortune for his family, and you  couldn't do that in the military. In a few months, Mom was pregnant. When Lori came out, she was  mute and bald as an egg for the first three years of her life. Then suddenly, she sprouted curly hair the 
color of a new penny and started speaking nonstop. But it sounded like gibberish, and everyone thought  she was addled except for Mom, who understood her perfectly and said she had an excellent vocabulary.
A year after Lori was born, Mom and Dad had a second daughter, Mary Charlene, who had coalblack  hair and chocolatebrown eyes, just like Dad. But Mary Charlene died one night when she was nine  months old. Crib death, Mom always said. Two years later, I was born. "You were to replace Mary  Charlene," Mom said. She told me that she had ordered up a second redheaded girl so Lori wouldn't  feel like she was weird. "You were such a skinny baby," Mom used to tell me. "The longest, boniest  thing the nurses had ever seen."
Brian arrived when I was one. He was a blue baby, Mom said. When he was born, he couldn't breathe  and came into this world having a seizure. Whenever Mom told the story, she would hold her arms rigid  and clench her teeth and go bugeyed to show how Brian looked. Mom said when she saw him like that,  she thought, Uhoh, looks like this one's a goner, too. But Brian lived. For the first year of his life, he  kept having those seizures, then one day they just stopped. He turned into a tough little guy who never  whined or cried, even the time I accidentally pushed him off the top bunk and he broke his nose.
Mom always said people worried too much about their children. Suffering when you're young is good  for you, she said. It immunized your body and your soul, and that was why she ignored us kids when we  cried. Fussing over children who cry only encourages them, she told us. That's positive reinforcement  for negative behavior.
Mom never seemed upset about Mary Charlene's death. "God knows what He's doing," she said. "He  gave me some perfect children, but He also gave me one that wasn't so perfect, so He said, 'Oops, I  better take this one back.'" Dad, however, wouldn't talk about Mary Charlene. If her name came up, his  face grew stony and he'd leave the room. He was the one who found her body in the crib, and Mom  couldn't believe how much it shook him up. "When he found her, he stood there like he was in shock or  something, cradling her stiff little body in his arms, and then he screamed like a wounded animal," she  told us. "I never heard such a horrible sound."
Mom said Dad was never the same after Mary Charlene died. He started having dark moods, staying  out late and coming home drunk, and losing jobs. One day soon after Brian was born, we were short on  cash, so Dad pawned Mom's big diamond wedding ring, which her mother had paid for, and that upset  Mom. After that, whenever Mom and Dad got in a fight, Mom brought up the ring, and Dad told her to  quit her damn bellyaching. He'd say he was going to get her a ring even fancier than the one he pawned.  That was why we had to find gold. To get Mom a new wedding ring. That and so we could build the  Glass Castle.
"DO YOU LIKE ALWAYS moving around?" Lori asked me.
"Of course I do!" I said. "Don't you?"
"Sure," she said.
It was late afternoon, and we were parked outside of a bar in the Nevada desert. It was called the Bar 
None Bar. I was four and Lori was seven. We were on our way to Las Vegas. Dad had decided it would  be easier, as he put it, to accumulate the capital necessary to finance the Prospector if he hit the casinos  for a while. We'd been driving for hours when he saw the Bar None Bar, pulled over the Green Caboose —the Blue Goose had died, and we now had another car, a station wagon Dad had named the Green  Caboose—and announced that he was going inside for a quick nip. Mom put on some red lipstick and  joined him, even though she didn't drink anything stronger than tea. They had been inside for hours.  The sun hung high in the sky, and there was not the slightest hint of a breeze. Nothing moved except  some buzzards on the side of the road, pecking over an unrecognizable carcass. Brian was reading a  dogeared comic book.
"How many places have we lived?" I asked Lori.
"That depends on what you mean by 'lived,'" she said. "If you spend one night in some town, did you  live there? What about two nights? Or a whole week?"
I thought. "If you unpack all your things," I said.
We counted eleven places we had lived, then we lost track. We couldn't remember the names of some of  the towns or what the houses we had lived in looked like. Mostly, I remembered the inside of cars.
"What do you think would happen if we weren't always moving around?" I asked.
"We'd get caught," Lori said.
* * *
When Mom and Dad came out of the Bar None Bar, they brought us each a long piece of beef jerky and  a candy bar. I ate the jerky first, and by the time I unwrapped my Mounds bar, it had melted into a  brown, gooey mess, so I decided to save it until night, when the desert cold would harden it up again.
By then we had passed through the small town beyond the Bar None Bar. Dad was driving and smoking  with one hand and holding a brown bottle of beer with the other. Lori was in the front seat between him  and Mom, and Brian, who was in back with me, was trying to trade me half of his 3 Musketeers for half  of my Mounds. Just then we took a sharp turn over some railroad tracks, the door flew open, and I  tumbled out of the car.
I rolled several yards along the embankment, and when I came to a stop, I was too shocked to cry, with  my breath knocked out and grit and pebbles in my eyes and mouth. I lifted my head in time to watch the  Green Caboose get smaller and smaller and then disappear around a bend.
Blood was running down my forehead and flowing out of my nose. My knees and elbows were scraped  raw and covered with sand. I was still holding the Mounds bar, but I had smashed it during the fall,  tearing the wrapper and squeezing out the white coconut filling, which was also covered with grit.
Once I got my breath back, I crawled along the railroad embankment to the road and sat down to wait  for Mom and Dad to come back. My whole body felt sore. The sun was small and white and broiling hot. A wind had come up, and it was roiling the dust along the roadside. I waited for what seemed like a  long time before I decided it was possible Mom and Dad might not come back for me. They might not 
notice I was missing. They might decide that it wasn't worth the drive back to retrieve me; that, like  Quixote the cat, I was a bother and a burden they could do without.
The little town behind me was quiet, and there were no other cars on the road. I started crying, but that  only made me feel more sore. I got up and began to walk back toward the houses, and then I decided  that if Mom and Dad did come for me, they wouldn't be able to find me, so I returned to the railroad  tracks and sat down again.
I was scraping the dried blood off my legs when I looked up and saw the Green Caboose come back  around the bend. It hurtled up the road toward me, getting bigger and bigger, until it screeched to a halt  right in front of me. Dad got out of the car, knelt down, and tried to give me a hug.
I pulled away from him. "I thought you were going to leave me behind," I said.
"Aww, I'd never do that," he said. "Your brother was trying to tell us that you'd fallen out, but he was  blubbering so damned hard we couldn't understand a word he was saying."
Dad started pulling the pebbles out of my face. Some were buried deep in my skin, so he reached into  the glove compartment for a pair of needlenosed pliers. When he'd plucked all the pebbles from my  cheeks and forehead, he took out his handkerchief and tried to stop my nose from bleeding. It was  dripping like a broken faucet. "Damn, honey," he said. "You busted your snot locker pretty good."
I started laughing really hard. "Snot locker" was the funniest name I'd ever heard for a nose. After Dad  cleaned me up and I got back in the car, I told Brian and Lori and Mom about the word, and they all  started laughing as hard as me. Snot locker. It was hilarious.
WE LIVED IN LAS VEGAS for about a month, in a motel room with dark red walls and two narrow  beds. We three kids slept in one, Mom and Dad in the other. During the day, we went to the casinos,  where Dad said he had a surefire system for beating the house. Brian and I played hideandseek  among the clicking slot machines, checking the trays for overlooked quarters, while Dad was winning  money at the blackjack table. I'd stare at the longlegged showgirls when they sashayed across the  casino floor, with huge feathers on their heads and behinds, sequins sparkling on their bodies, and  glitter around their eyes. When I tried to imitate their walk, Brian said I looked like an ostrich.
At the end of the day, Dad came to get us, his pockets full of money. He bought us cowboy hats and  fringed vests, and we ate chickenfried steaks in restaurants with icecold airconditioning and a  miniature jukebox at each table. One night when Dad had made an especially big score, he said it was  time to start living like the high rollers we had become. He took us to a restaurant with swinging doors  like a saloon. Inside, the walls were decorated with real prospecting tools. A man with garters on his  arms played a piano, and a woman with gloves that came up past her elbows kept hurrying over to light  Dad's cigarettes.
Dad told us we were having something special for dessert—a flaming icecream cake. The waiter  wheeled out a tray with the cake on it, and the woman with the gloves lit it with a taper. Everyone  stopped eating to watch. The flames had a slow, watery movement, rolling up into the air like ribbons. 
Everyone started clapping, and Dad jumped up and raised the waiter's hand above his head as if he'd  won first prize.
A few days later, Mom and Dad went off to the blackjack table and then almost immediately came  looking for us. Dad said one of the dealers had figured out that he had a system and had put the word  out on him. He told us it was time to do the skedaddle.
* * *
We had to get far away from Las Vegas, Dad said, because the Mafia, which owned the casinos, was  after him. We headed west, through desert and then mountains. Mom said we should all live near the  Pacific Ocean at least once in our lives, so we kept going all the way to San Francisco.
Mom didn't want us staying in one of those touristtrap hotels near Fisherman's Wharf, which she said  were inauthentic and cut off from the real life of the city, so we found one that had a lot more character,  in a place called the Tenderloin District. Sailors and women with lots of makeup stayed there, too. Dad  called it a flophouse, but Mom said it was an SRO, and when I asked what that stood for, she told me  the hotel was for special residents only.
While Mom and Dad went out looking for investment money for the Prospector, we kids played in the  hotel. One day I found a halffull box of matches. I was thrilled, because I much preferred the wooden  matches that came in boxes over the flimsy ones in the cardboard books. I took them upstairs and  locked myself in the bathroom. I pulled off some toilet paper, lit it, and when it started burning, I threw  it down the toilet. I was torturing the fire, giving it life, and snuffing it out. Then I got a better idea. I  made a pile of toilet paper in the toilet, lit it, and when it started burning, the flame shooting silently up  out of the bowl, I flushed it down the toilet.
One night a few days later, I suddenly woke up. The air was hot and stifling. I smelled smoke and then  saw flames leaping at the open window. At first I couldn't tell if the fire was inside or outside, but then I  saw that one of the curtains, only a few feet from the bed, was ablaze.
Mom and Dad were not in the room, and Lori and Brian were still asleep. I tried to scream to warn  them, but nothing came out of my throat. I wanted to reach over and shake them awake, but I couldn't  move. The fire was growing bigger, stronger, and angrier.
Just then the door burst open. Someone was calling our names. It was Dad. Lori and Brian woke up and  ran to him, coughing from the smoke. I still couldn't move. I watched the fire, expecting that at any  moment my blanket would burst into flames. Dad wrapped the blanket around me and picked me up,  then ran down the stairs, leading Lori and Brian with one arm and holding me in the other.
Dad took us kids across the street to a bar, then went back to help fight the fire. A waitress with red  fingernails and blueblack hair asked if we wanted a CocaCola or, heck, even a beer, because we'd  been through a lot that night. Brian and Lori said yes, please, to Cokes. I asked if I might please have a  Shirley Temple, which was what Dad bought me whenever he took me to a bar. For some reason, the  waitress laughed.
The people at the bar kept making jokes about women running naked out of the burning hotel. All I had  on was my underwear, so I kept the blanket wrapped tightly around me. After I drank my Shirley 
Temple, I tried to go back across the street to watch the fire, but the waitress kept me at the bar, so I  climbed up on a stool to watch through the window. The fire trucks had arrived. There were flashing  lights and men in black rubber coats holding canvas hoses with big jets of water coming out of them.
I wondered if the fire had been out to get me. I wondered if all fire was related, like Dad said all  humans were related, if the fire that had burned me that day while I cooked hot dogs was somehow  connected to the fire I had flushed down the toilet and the fire burning at the hotel. I didn't have the  answers to those questions, but what I did know was that I lived in a world that at any moment could  erupt into fire. It was the sort of knowledge that kept you on your toes.
* * *
After the hotel burned down, we lived for a few days on the beach. When we put down the backseat of  the Green Caboose, there was room for everyone to sleep, though sometimes someone's feet would be  sticking in my face. One night a policeman tapped on our window and said we had to leave; it was  illegal to sleep on the beach. He was nice and kept calling us. "folks" and even drew us a map to a place  where we could sleep without getting arrested.
But after he left, Dad called him the goddamn gestapo and said that people like that got their jollies  pushing people like us around. Dad was fed up with civilization. He and Mom decided we should move  back to the desert and resume our hunt for gold without our starter money. "These cities will kill you,"  he said.
AFTER WE PULLED UP stakes in San Francisco, we headed for the Mojave Desert. Near the Eagle  Mountains, Mom made Dad stop the car. She'd seen a tree on the side of the road that had caught her  fancy.
It wasn't just any tree. It was an ancient Joshua tree. It stood in a crease of land where the desert ended  and the mountain began, forming a wind tunnel. From the time the Joshua tree was a tiny sapling, it had  been so beaten down by the whipping wind that, rather than trying to grow skyward, it had grown in the  direction that the wind pushed it. It existed now in a permanent state of windblownness, leaning over so  far that it seemed ready to topple, although, in fact, its roots held it firmly in place.
I thought the Joshua tree was ugly. It looked scraggly and freakish, permanently stuck in its twisted,  tortured position, and it made me think of how some adults tell you not to make weird faces because  your features could freeze. Mom, however, thought it was one of the most beautiful trees she had ever  seen. She told us she had to paint it. While she was setting out her easel, Dad drove up the road to see  what was ahead. He found a scattering of parched little houses, trailers settling into the sand, and  shacks with rusty tin roofs. It was called Midland. One of the little houses had a forrent sign. "What  the hell," Dad said, "this place is as good as any other."
* * *
The house we rented had been built by a mining company. It was white, with two rooms and a  swaybacked roof. There were no trees, and the desert sand ran right up to the back door. At night you  could hear coyotes howling.