A steady story of resilience for children navigating the "mountains" of adult choices.
"There are days that split your life into before and after. You don't always know it when you wake up; sometimes it's just a normal Tuesday."
For twelve-year-old Kai, life has always been a series of "good days" filled with music and laughter, and "bad nights" where he had to be the one to check the stove and lock the doors. He has spent his childhood bracing for the moment everything would fall apart. When that moment finally arrives on a normal school Tuesday, Kai is moved from the only home he's ever known to his Uncle Max's quiet farm.
At first, the farm feels alien. The mornings start at 5:30 AM, the work is physical, and the rules are as straight as the fence lines. But as Kai learns to drive a tractor, tends to the animals, and navigates a new school, he discovers something he never had before: consistency.
Through honest letters from his father and a supportive new friendship, Kai begins to realize a life-changing truth: He is not responsible for his parents' struggles. While he can't change the past, he has the power to decide what kind of man he wants to become.
Kai's Mountain is a poignant and hopeful middle-grade novel that explores:
The impact of substance abuse on the family unit.
The transition from "parentified child" to a healthy, supported adolescent.
The healing power of routine, hard work, and safe adults.
The vital message that children are not defined by the mistakes of the adults in their lives.
Written by a nurse with years of experience supporting families in crisis, this book serves as both a mirror for children in similar situations and a window for those seeking to understand them. It is an essential resource for school libraries, counselors, and foster or kinship care families.