In Second Chances, Marc Cullison tells the story of the Carter family through the voice of Susan Carter, a woman who grows up between two brothers whose differences are apparent long before they reach adulthood. From an early age, Susan learns to watch carefully, to listen closely, and to navigate the quiet tensions that define her family's inner life.
Both of Susan's brothers serve in Vietnam. Both return home. But the war leaves its mark unevenly. Dennis comes back much as he always was-confident, forceful, and untroubled by self-doubt. Alan, younger and more introspective, returns carrying the weight of what he experienced overseas, struggling to reconcile the man he was before the war with the one who came home.
As years pass, the family settles into patterns formed early in life. Dennis continues to dominate. Alan continues to withdraw. Susan remains in the middle, bearing witness to the long shadow cast by childhood roles and unspoken trauma. She understands that love does not require approval, and loyalty does not always bring peace.
When illness forces the family back into close proximity, Susan is confronted with memories she has spent years holding at a careful distance. The past resurfaces-not to be resolved neatly, but to be seen more clearly.
Written with restraint and emotional honesty, Second Chances is a novel about family bonds, the lingering effects of war, and the quiet endurance of those who observe more than they are allowed to speak. It is a story about memory, loyalty, and the uneasy truth that understanding does not always change people-but it can change how we live with them.