Motherland: Growing Up with the Holocaust
Book
The author writes: "I am the child of a woman who survived the Holocaust not by the skin of her...
Breath in the Dark
Book
Settling down on the bed, I stroked the plump, still body, watching my mother's face just to make...
Whatchareadin (174 KP) rated The Pink Bonnet: True Colors in Books
Jul 2, 2019
Thank you to NetGalley and Barbour Publishing for the opportunity to read and review this book.
This book is based on a true story. Georgia Tann was a real woman who really ran an adoption agency in Tennessee for over 25 years. During her tenure, it is believed that approximately 5,000 children were taken unwillingly from their parents and sold in adoptions to whoever would pay the highest price.
This book hit my heart hard. I can't imagine what I would do, if I left my child with a friend or neighbor for a little bit and then when I came back they had forged my name on documents to allow my child to be taken for adoption. Or if they were just snatched from the street on their way home from school. This was happening to hundreds of families during the depression. People were doing anything they could to make ends meet, but for Georgia Tann that didn't matter. One parent should be with the child at all times. That is the only way to show that you really love and are able to take care of the child.
I would love to read more about this lady. I hope there was a warm seat in hell waiting for her and all her cohorts when she passed away. Throughout the story, you can feel the love for Millie that Cecile has and she risks her life and the lives of those that are helping her in order to get to her daughter. No matter what she does, though it never seems like enough, Millie is always just beyond her grasp.
If you like historical, true crime fiction, you will enjoy this book.
Little Farmers - Tractors and Harvesters for Kids
Education and Book
App
In Little Farmers your kids can drive real 3D tractors, plow the fields, plant corn, wheat and...
Alphabet Learning Games For Preschool Children - ABC Phonics and sounds
Book and Education
App
As parents of preschoolers, we have developed this application in which your child can learn the...
Contractions Counter: pregnancy contraction timer
Medical and Health & Fitness
App
Time and log your contractions during labor. Track each contraction and watch your labor progress...
Life Story Books for Adopted and Fostered Children: A Family Friendly Approach
Joy Rees and Alan Burnell
Book
Through words, pictures, photographs, certificates and other 'little treasures', a Life Story Book...
The Foundling
Book
Two women from different worlds. And a secret that will change everything . . . London, 1754....
Historical fiction London Georgian Period
Highland Dew
Book
Bryce Andrews, west coast sales director for Global Distillers and Distribution, is tired of the...
Lesbian
Whatchareadin (174 KP) rated The Party in Books
Apr 9, 2019
Hannah and Ronnie had been friends when they were little. As they grew older, they grew apart. Now Ronnie is part of the popular crew at school and Hannah is dating a popular boy, but still has her more down to earth friends as well. When her two worlds come together at her birthday party, chaos ensues. Given the house rules, everyone at the birthday party breaks them. They drink, take drugs, invite boys over and Ronnie gets seriously injured. After the incident, Hannah is torn between wanting to retain her popularity and keeping her friendship with Ronnie.
What would you do if a child was seriously injured while in your care? What if their parents wanted to ruin you financially, no matter how the child felt about it?
For me, I wasn't sure whose side I was on in this book. I knew I was on the side of the kids. I was a young dumb kid at one point in my life, doing all the things these kids did at this sleepover. The kids understood that what they did was wrong and dumb and that they had to deal with the consequences of their actions. I don't think that I met any people who have turned on their friends the way the kids in this book do. If something happened to my child at a party, I don't know if I would try and get money out of the other family. I don't think I could do that. But I've never been in that situation.