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Summary of Rainn Wilson's The Bassoon King
Summary of Rainn Wilson's The Bassoon King
Summary of Rainn Wilson's The Bassoon King
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Summary of Rainn Wilson's The Bassoon King

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#1 I had the biggest head of any baby that was ever born. My name is Rainn, and my parents were odd. They changed their names to Shay in 1965. My mom was raised on a farm in Weyauwega, Wisconsin, and spent a year living with chickens.

#2 My father, Robert George Wilson, had a miserable childhood. His father, Chester Wilson, was an alcoholic who stole his lightning rod company, Wilcor Grounding Systems, from his brother and made millions off of it while his brother moved back to Minnesota and had to run Wilson Brothers Auto Parts in Thief River Falls.

#3 My father wanted to call me Rainer, but there was a mountain that hovered over the skyline of Seattle called Mount Rainier. I imagine weird chicken-coop Mommy and slot-machine Daddy having a conversation about my name on the deck of their rainy houseboat on Lake Union in Seattle.

#4 The city of Seattle was a mossy, shambly town in the 1970s, famous only for the film It Happened at the World’s Fair with Elvis Presley as a crop-dusting pilot dancing under the Space Needle with a little Chinese girl.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherIRB Media
Release dateMay 13, 2022
ISBN9798822515567
Summary of Rainn Wilson's The Bassoon King
Author

IRB Media

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    Summary of Rainn Wilson's The Bassoon King - IRB Media

    Insights on Rainn Wilson's The Bassoon King

    Contents

    Insights from Chapter 1

    Insights from Chapter 2

    Insights from Chapter 3

    Insights from Chapter 4

    Insights from Chapter 5

    Insights from Chapter 6

    Insights from Chapter 7

    Insights from Chapter 8

    Insights from Chapter 9

    Insights from Chapter 10

    Insights from Chapter 11

    Insights from Chapter 12

    Insights from Chapter 13

    Insights from Chapter 14

    Insights from Chapter 15

    Insights from Chapter 16

    Insights from Chapter 17

    Insights from Chapter 18

    Insights from Chapter 19

    Insights from Chapter 20

    Insights from Chapter 21

    Insights from Chapter 22

    Insights from Chapter 1

    #1

    I had the biggest head of any baby that was ever born. My name is Rainn, and my parents were odd. They changed their names to Shay in 1965. My mom was raised on a farm in Weyauwega, Wisconsin, and spent a year living with chickens.

    #2

    My father, Robert George Wilson, had a miserable childhood. His father, Chester Wilson, was an alcoholic who stole his lightning rod company, Wilcor Grounding Systems, from his brother and made millions off of it while his brother moved back to Minnesota and had to run Wilson Brothers Auto Parts in Thief River Falls.

    #3

    My father wanted to call me Rainer, but there was a mountain that hovered over the skyline of Seattle called Mount Rainier. I imagine weird chicken-coop Mommy and slot-machine Daddy having a conversation about my name on the deck of their rainy houseboat on Lake Union in Seattle.

    #4

    The city of Seattle was a mossy, shambly town in the 1970s, famous only for the film It Happened at the World’s Fair with Elvis Presley as a crop-dusting pilot dancing under the Space Needle with a little Chinese girl.

    #5

    The Baha’i Faith is a peaceful religion that believes all religions are one faith and that all people are worshipping the same God. It was around this time that my parents became members of the faith.

    #6

    In 1968, my parents got a divorce. My mother took off and I remained with my father. He was heartbroken and devastated, and he did what any recently divorced bohemian Baha’i dad with a tumescent tot would do in his situation: he moved to Central America and got remarried.

    Insights from Chapter 2

    #1

    My dad married my stepmom, Kristin, in Nicaragua. They had no idea what they were getting into.

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