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Rodger Madden is immersed in his work when he learns of the Indonesian tsunami. Not realizing a disaster halfway around the world will change his world forever, he shrugs his shoulders and turns back . to the merger that has his full attention. But when an associate tells him the Benson family who owns this business maybe victims of the storm, Rodger realizes he must try to find any surviving family members. Without a living member to preserve the company, he would see his life's work sold to the highest bidder and the funds distributed to charity.His rescue mission is a stern teacher, and he learns just how much he doesn't know about life, compassion, communication, reason, and compromise. He must discover who to trust, and he must do it fast. His world is crumbling, and unlikely sources hold his future . The problem is not merely a natural disaster; its human facets have followed him home.Rodger has been existing, now he must learn to live.
The Beck House tells the story of Rena Beck, a twice-widowed woman who is looking for the means to care for her family of six daughters born to her and her first husband, three are still at home, and must be fed and cared for. How Rena transforms their home into a boarding house where guests are fed sumptuously and treated like family is another Southern story worth telling. In fact, this one has details that resonate across the generations, for Rena Beck is a woman for the generations. She is a mother hen who protects her daughters without smothering them; she is an entrepreneur who takes advantage of every opportunity that comes her way - and some that she invents - to keep her business going and growing. And she is a sympathetic, caring, land-lady who takes on the woes of the world through her colorful boarders. The story encompasses the World War II years. As her daughters' husbands go away and return; she lives to see them all settled in more comfort than she ever dreamed. And then she faces the fight of her life: she comes to court in Sumter County to face the big city lawyers who have come to represent the county in its efforts to take her land through the law of eminent domain. They're also demanding that she pay to have the house torn down and removed. Rena is a just woman. She has always treated others justly and cannot believe that someone would treat her otherwise. How she faces this final battle is characteristic of her life's story, a story you do not want to miss. In Rena Beck, author Janie Hopwood has created an unforgettable character from the annals of her own family history - a character you'll be telling friends about, and thinking about long after you have put the book aside with a smile, and perhaps a tear.
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