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Bezig met laden... They cage the animals at night (editie 1984)door Jennings Michael Burch
Informatie over het werkIk had alleen maar een knuffeldier door Jennings Michael Burch
Geen Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. (sigh) This is the third book in a week or something that I'm reading for the first time since I was a tween, and discovering that I didn't like it as an adult. Why I was assigned this in Advanced English in seventh grade, I don't know. This is the memoir of a kid who had a terrible few years in childhood of cycling in between abusive nuns in Catholic-sponsored group homes, with brief stays in abusive foster homes in between. I'm not sure what literary devices I gleaned from it at twelve. I don't even remember writing papers on it, but I do remember the teacher discussing it. The writing was both vivid and simplistic. It was written blandly as well, especially for a memoir. Somehow it's all three. There's a ton of stuff left out. Sibling relationships were described briefly, the mom's sickness was never explained, and Sal just kind of appears. The transitions in this book are nonexistent. Everything is bunched together or wrenched apart because the author doesn't know how to change settings or timelines smoothly. People are hardly described. The vivid writing is of emotions, food, and the violence Burch suffers from nuns who hate children, and schoolyard bullies. The epilogue wraps things up a little too neatly. Perhaps the weirdest thing was, I read this in paperback in seventh grade. It was a much slimmer volume. While I remembered nearly all of it, I'm wondering what was cut out from the school version and why, if anything. A lot of the abuse by the nuns was kept in. Maybe the typeset was just changed. ( ) I absolutely loved this book. The story of Jennings Michael Burch is both heart-wrenching and uplifting. The book vividly captures that sadness and anxiety that envelop a young boy who is shuffled between orphanages and foster homes. I found the narrative to be remarkably authentic. I know some reviewers have wondered aloud if the author embellished his experiences to make them even more harrowing than they were. Others have aptly noted that the writing is far from perfect. But the fact that Burch doesn't come off as a Faulkner, Hemingway or Steinbeck makes the book even more authentic. True, the emotional roller coaster ride readers experience as Jennings is bounced back and forth from his home to various facilities is draining. But that's the whole point. I can't recommend this book highly enough. Meh. This was an easy read, moving along quickly, but not especially gripping, and not interesting writing. typical of an amateur writer. I suspect that much of this was fictionalized. Or, perhaps it was a collection of the experiences of a number of different children in the homes. But some of the stories just seem suspect, particularly the last, where he's made to stand in a pee-soaked sheet all night and then stand naked in front of all the kids. Why was there ever only one adult supervising 150 or more children in those homes at any one time? Really? And always the mean ones? The nice adults seemed to work only marginally. I also suspect the whole episode with the Dailys was made up. If he'd been whipped at the home, Mrs. Daily would have seen the marks when she bathed him. And just why were SO MANY people SO MEAN, especially that first womon, Mrs. Carpenter? It takes a lot of energy to be that mean. Who has that kind of energy to spare, especially when they're somewhat desperate themselves? I have no doubt that he did grow up in homes and had a difficult childhood, and that horrible things happened to the children in those homes. But in watching a video of him with Michael Jackson when he was towards the end of this life, it seemed as though perhaps he wasn't quite "normal". He begged, tearfully, for MJ to promise, like a 5 year old, that they'd be best friends forever. He comes across, even in the book, a little backwards, and it's not a stretch to think he might have elaborated on his stories. He was, after all, trying to sell a book. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
The heartbreaking, iconic true story of an abandoned little boy's horrific journey through the American foster care system. On a misty evening in Brooklyn, Jennings Michael Burch's mother, too sick to care for him, left her eight-year-old son at an orphanage with the words, "I'll be right back." She wasn't. Shuttled through a bleak series of foster homes, orphanages, and institutions, Jennings never remained in any of them long enough to make a friend. Instead, he clung to a tattered stuffed animal named Doggie, his sole source of comfort in a frightening world. Here, in his own words, Jennings Michael Burch reveals the abuse and neglect he experienced during his lost childhood. But while his experiences are both shocking and devastating, his story is ultimately one of hope--the triumphant tale of a forgotten child who somehow found the courage to reach out for love, and found it waiting for him. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)362.7320924Social sciences Social problems and services; associations Social problems of & services to groups of people Child welfare Adoption OrphansLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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