An invisible wall of secrets defined the Jones family. Growing up with an alcoholic mother and a deeply troubled, racist father, Clay Jones learned to become the "Frozen Boy" to survive a childhood of emotional neglect and unspoken horrors.
As the youngest child with his two older sisters, Clay felt an immediate, vital connection to Linda, his gentle confidante, finding solace in music and his own internal fantasy world. Yet, the family's façade of normalcy concealed devastating truths, foremost the horrific sexual abuse Linda suffered at the hands of their father-a crime the entire family, including their perpetually smiling mother, pretended did not exist.
My Sister's Brother is a raw and unflinching memoir of survival, chronicling a nomadic childhood between California, Brazil, and Mexico, marked by a constant struggle to reconcile the visible, acceptable reality with the hidden, unspeakable trauma. It traces the lifelong journey of an adult child of alcoholics to break decades of silence, unearth the devastating family secrets, and honor the memory of the sister who was his truest anchor. The story gives one pause to reconsider our understanding about boys and men as survivors of sexual and domestic violence.
Clay's path to healing-spurred by tragedy and a career in child welfare-is a testament to the power of forgiveness and the courage required to confront a past that nearly consumed him. This is the story of a man who finally thawed the frozen boy within to become a champion for the most vulnerable, forever declaring, I am, My Sister's Brother.