In rural Oklahoma, near the end of World War II, seven-year-old Gracie Timmons watches her grandfather die after confronting a gang of moonshiners on their farm. Gracie has memories of her deceased mother, but only a photograph of a uniformed soldier for a father. With no more family to care for her, she is taken in by the dauntless spinster who owns the general store. Plagued by fear, guilt, shame and nightmares, Gracie regularly locks herself in her closet and prays for her father to come home and save her.
Sargent Aaron Timmons does return home at the end of WWII, but he is not the medal-adorned hero-soldier of Gracie's dreams. A prisoner for most for the war, Aaron endured the Battle of Bataan, the Bataan Death March, the Japanese Hell Ships and three years in the POW camps. Back home, he is jumpy and easily angered. In the upper drawer of his dresser, he keeps a stolen Bible and a row of small boxes he claims are coffins filled with dead soldiers. The town's people whisper he is a broken man because he has fits, and spells and wets himself.
Gracie and Aaron have nothing in common except nightmares of the dead, poetry--the good kind that rhymes--and Miss Redding, Gracie's teacher. As Aaron feuds with the gang of moonshiners who've set up on the family farm, Gracie learns to trust her troubled father's attempt at love and care.