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Diana Gaze

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The Gambling Mother : When a Mother's Love was not enough to stop her
Julie Carter is, by every measure, a devoted mother. She wakes before her family, makes breakfast, packs lunches, writes notes for her children's school bags, and holds the household together with quiet, steady love. She is known by her neighbors as dependable. Her children adore her. Her husband trusts her completely. Then, at a casual neighborhood gathering, she plays a card game for the first time.
She wins. The feeling that follows is small, sharp, and entirely new. What begins as an occasional habit becomes a compulsion. Over seventeen months, Julie's gambling quietly consumes the family savings, the mortgage payments, the children's education fund, and finally her son's medical money. But the financial damage is not the deepest damage. The deepest damage is what happens to the people who love her while they watch her disappear.
Her daughter Emma, fourteen, begins keeping a journal and learns to manage a household her mother can no longer hold. Her son Noah, nine, stops asking his mother for things because experience has taught him the answer. Her husband Michael watches a woman he has loved for fifteen years become someone he cannot reach. This is not a story about a villain. It is a story about a trap, and about the families who get caught inside it alongside the person who walked in first.
Honest, precise, and deeply human, this novel follows one family through collapse and into the long, imperfect work of finding their way back to each other.
She wins. The feeling that follows is small, sharp, and entirely new. What begins as an occasional habit becomes a compulsion. Over seventeen months, Julie's gambling quietly consumes the family savings, the mortgage payments, the children's education fund, and finally her son's medical money. But the financial damage is not the deepest damage. The deepest damage is what happens to the people who love her while they watch her disappear.
Her daughter Emma, fourteen, begins keeping a journal and learns to manage a household her mother can no longer hold. Her son Noah, nine, stops asking his mother for things because experience has taught him the answer. Her husband Michael watches a woman he has loved for fifteen years become someone he cannot reach. This is not a story about a villain. It is a story about a trap, and about the families who get caught inside it alongside the person who walked in first.
Honest, precise, and deeply human, this novel follows one family through collapse and into the long, imperfect work of finding their way back to each other.
Julie Carter is, by every measure, a devoted mother. She wakes before her family, makes breakfast, packs lunches, writes notes for her children's school bags, and holds the household together with quiet, steady love. She is known by her neighbors as dependable. Her children adore her. Her husband trusts her completely. Then, at a casual neighborhood gathering, she plays a card game for the first time.
She wins. The feeling that follows is small, sharp, and entirely new. What begins as an occasional habit becomes a compulsion. Over seventeen months, Julie's gambling quietly consumes the family savings, the mortgage payments, the children's education fund, and finally her son's medical money. But the financial damage is not the deepest damage. The deepest damage is what happens to the people who love her while they watch her disappear.
Her daughter Emma, fourteen, begins keeping a journal and learns to manage a household her mother can no longer hold. Her son Noah, nine, stops asking his mother for things because experience has taught him the answer. Her husband Michael watches a woman he has loved for fifteen years become someone he cannot reach. This is not a story about a villain. It is a story about a trap, and about the families who get caught inside it alongside the person who walked in first.
Honest, precise, and deeply human, this novel follows one family through collapse and into the long, imperfect work of finding their way back to each other.
She wins. The feeling that follows is small, sharp, and entirely new. What begins as an occasional habit becomes a compulsion. Over seventeen months, Julie's gambling quietly consumes the family savings, the mortgage payments, the children's education fund, and finally her son's medical money. But the financial damage is not the deepest damage. The deepest damage is what happens to the people who love her while they watch her disappear.
Her daughter Emma, fourteen, begins keeping a journal and learns to manage a household her mother can no longer hold. Her son Noah, nine, stops asking his mother for things because experience has taught him the answer. Her husband Michael watches a woman he has loved for fifteen years become someone he cannot reach. This is not a story about a villain. It is a story about a trap, and about the families who get caught inside it alongside the person who walked in first.
Honest, precise, and deeply human, this novel follows one family through collapse and into the long, imperfect work of finding their way back to each other.
