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Bice did, in fact, "pull herself up by her bra straps" after her husband died suddenly of a heart attack, by turning herself from "pampered" wife to a sole breadwinner for her two children.
You can read an excerpt from the book below.
From the time I was four until I was nine, we lived on Fifth Street in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. Behind our house was a huge barn of a garage that became the neighborhood playground. My dad was an auctioneer. Almost every week he would be on the road calling a household or farm auction. At the end of the day, if there were things that hadn't sold, he would say to the farmer, "I'll give you X number of dollars and clear all this out for you. I'll put it in another auction another time."
Soon our barn was full of furniture of every conceivable size and shape. We had furniture everywhere. On a warm summer day, all of my friends and I would go out to the big old barn, climb up the stairs to the attic and start pulling stuff down. Soon we would have a kitchen, a living room, a dining room, and a bedroom all set up. Our "house" would have everything that we needed, including an old sink and an even older pump. There was even an old stove we could use. We'd arrange and rearrange all the furniture until it was just right. When we played house, we literally played house!
I grew up during World War II, and in those days you kept all your tin cans and cardboard. My mother stored all our empty cans and empty boxes downstairs in the coal bin off the basement. We'd all troop downstairs to gather stuff for our house. We could carefully set up old oatmeal boxes on the shelves and use the empty cans to fix our meals.
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