Door in the Mountain
A Daughter’s Memoir of Fracture and Forgiveness
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Thomas Nelson
What happens when you no longer recognize the people you were once closest to? What would it take to rebuild your relationship with them?
Alex Goodson spent years building a life far from where she began, trading a rural, working-class upbringing for the fast-paced world of New York City journalism. She is confident, independent, and unapologetically herself. But one voice still echoes louder than the rest: her father’s.
Phil Goodson is everything Alex is not. A seventy-five-year-old outdoorsman forged by hardship, tradition, and a lifetime of unspoken rules. Between them lies a quiet but unyielding divide: politics, class, identity, and years of things unsaid. Over time, their distance had only grown more prominent. There were moments when Alex looked at him and saw a stranger, an enigma. A mountain. Yet when she makes a bold decision to join him on a hunting trip in the frozen wilderness of upstate New York, that distance becomes impossible to ignore.
In the stark silence of the forest, there are no distractions—only the rhythm of footsteps, the tension of the hunt, and the weight of a shared past. As father and daughter move through the unforgiving terrain, long-buried emotions surface. Old wounds reopen. And beneath Phil’s gruff exterior, Alex glimpses something unexpected: vulnerability, fear, and a love that can be hard to see.
But understanding comes at a cost.
Caught between the pull of her father’s expectations and the truth of her own identity as a gay woman, Alex faces a choice that will define not just their relationship, but her sense of self. Can she honor where she comes from without losing who she is?
Door in the Mountain is a powerful, unflinching, and timely memoir about family, distance, and the courage it takes to see each other clearly. At its heart lies a quiet revelation: reconciliation doesn’t require agreement. It only requires the willingness to love what cannot be changed.