Award-winning author of Don’t  Skip Out on Me and The Motel Life, and Lean on Pete, Willy Vlautin demonstrates his  extraordinary talent for confronting issues facing modern America, illuminated  through the lives of three memorable characters who are looking for a way out  of their financial, familial, and existential crises in The Free.While serving in Iraq, veteran Leroy Kervin suffered a  traumatic brain injury. Frustrated by the simplest daily routines, and unable  to form new memories, he eventually attempts suicide. Lying in a coma, he  retreats deep inside the memories locked in his mind. Freddie McCall works two  jobs and still can't make ends meet. He's lost his wife and kids, and the house  is next. Medical bills have buried him in debt, a situation that propels him to  consider a lucrative—and dangerous—proposition. Pauline Hawkins is a nurse at the  local hospital. Though she attends to others' needs with practical yet firm  kindness, including her mentally ill elderly father, she remains emotionally  removed. But a new patient, a young runaway, touches something deep and  unexpected inside her.        The lives of these characters intersect as they look for  meaning in desperate times. Heartbreaking and hopeful, The Free is a  testament to the resiliency of the human heart. The Free also includes a  P.S. Section (additional material in the back of the book) with interviews,  insights, and more about the author. Vlautin is the founder of the alternative  country band Richmond Fontaine and his debut novel, The Motel Life, has  been made into a film starring Emile Hirsch, Stephen Dorff, Dakota Fanning, and  Kris Kristofferson.