![]() ![]() What would happen to me when we got there? (Did he just toss Mom’s phone out the window?) 7 Was he trying to throw the police off our trail? (Mom smelled like cigarettes.)īut then I heard a word Mom wouldn’t say. I heard the car door open, heard it close. The way you might remember your best friend I was a happy little girl wearing a pink dress, PART ONE The Way You Might Remember Your Best Friend Wren Abbott 1 ![]() ![]() ![]() She currently lives in Fort Wayne, Indiana, with her family. Helen has lived in South Dakota, Oregon, Massachusetts, New York, Vermont, Scotland, Colorado, Alaska, California, and Indiana. Now, when she sits down to write, her own experiences become the details of her stories. “I didn’t know it at the time, but all those things were accumulating somewhere inside me.” As a child, she loved to travel, think, swim, sing, learn, canoe, write, argue, sew, play the piano, play softball, play with dolls, daydream, read, go fishing, and climb trees. “That’s how I became a writer,” she says. Her father told the family stories before they went to sleep, and Helen would dream about their travels, her family, and their old house. She recalls the summer her family moved from South Dakota to Oregon, traveling in a big trailer and camping in places like the Badlands and Yellowstone. Helen Frost was born in 1949 in South Dakota, the fifth of ten children. Helen Frost is the author of several books for young people, including Hidden, Diamond Willow, Crossing Stones, The Braid, and Keesha’s House, selected an Honor Book for the Michael L. ![]()
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