No Way Back is a powerful coming-of-age memoir set against the upheavals of the late 1960s. Bruce Parkinson Spang traces his early life as 'Jason', a young man caught between who he is, who he's expected to be, and the violent shifts reshaping America. Leaving behind a privileged but emotionally fraught Midwestern home, Jason enters Vanderbilt Divinity School seeking distance, purpose, and a place to belong. What he finds instead is a country on fire-civil rights battles, antiwar protests, an awakening community fighting for justice, and transformative work in the Appalachian mountains.
Through encounters with courageous activists, fellow seekers, mountain families, and the dispossessed of Nashville, Jason confronts his own fears, desires, and illusions. Stripped of familiar props-family expectations, privilege, and even certainty-he is forced to navigate identity, faith, sexuality, and moral responsibility in a world unwilling to stand still.
This is the intimate, reflective journey of a young man learning that finding home begins with finding himself.