|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| Customer Reviews | |||||||||||
I am a mother and a retired teacher. "Hope's Boy" was an emotional experience for me. It reminded me that children choose what is important to them. Mr. Bridge's memoir convinced me that a child brings with them his/her own needs that a bed in a stranger's house leave unsatisfied. I think that anyone who lives with, or works with, children should read this book. It is disturbing that one little boy had these experiences. More disturbing is the fact that there are many children who have lived this life, are living this life, or will live this life if the foster system isn't re-evaluated. Was this review helpful? 5 of 5 A Sensitive and Honest Story of Love and Loss Wednesday, January 30, 2008 A Reader from Los Angeles A wonderful, wonderful memoir, beautifully written, and about an important topic that we should all know more about. Hope's Boy is a must! Was this review helpful? 5 of 5 Required reading for child advocates Wednesday, January 30, 2008 Sandra from North Carolina Like Andrew Bridge, I am an attorney. I, too, have represented many children who were removed from their parents because they needed protection or help at a particular time, only to suffer years of additional trauma and loss at the hands of the very systems and people that were supposed to be helping them. Bridge's memoir is a powerful example of the importance of the principle "First, do no harm." For all of us who are committed to helping, Bridge's book is a necessary and painful reminder that we must be ever mindful of the unintended but devastating consequences our actions in the name of helping can have. It is also a necessary and humbling reminder that love and a sense of belonging can never be replaced by even the best of our intentions and interventions. It should be required reading for social workers, lawyers, judges and policy makers working with and on behalf of children who are physically separated from their parents and other family members.
Was this review helpful? 5 of 5 The Power of Resilience Wednesday, January 30, 2008 Marcia from North Carolina I was delighted to read Hopes Boy. Connections with others, and the need for them, are at our core. They are powerful and enduring, as is the sense of loss when they are broken. In Bridges case, social workers and the foster care system broke his physical connections to his mother and grandmother. As a social worker, our role is to support, honor and do everything we can to sustain the core bond between parent and child. We failed to do that for Bridge. Despite our failures, Bridge held close his memories of Hope, developing his own extraordinary capacity for resilience. He lends a powerful voice to so many foster children who have learned to be still, who continue to long for their own enduring bond with a forever parent. We can and must do better for them. Thanks again for a wonderful reminder of our responsibility to nurture resilience and hope in all children.
Was this review helpful? 5 of 5 An excellent read - an important one, too. Wednesday, January 30, 2008 A Reader from New York, New York "Some families cannot be saved and their children cannot be return. Yet, even then, their love for each other must be worth something."
-- Andrew Bridge, Hope's Boy
This is a brave memoir about our nation's horribly broken foster care system, that all too often fails our children and families who are in most need and who are most vulnerable. With a steady and elegant voice, Bridge describes a mother who loved him desperately, and in the end, did more than most would ever ask of themselves, all the while savaged by mental illness. With tenderness, he describes how love can exist alongside failure and how a mother can ultimately "love a child more than she can care for him." The story is profoundly inspirational, told without a trace of bitterness - and clearly required tremendous courage to write.
Bridge went on to Wesleyan University, graduated from Harvard Law School, then devoted his life to the children he remembered -- children with broken lives who still wait for something far better than we give them. Was this review helpful? 0 of 5 customers found this review helpful. 5 of 5 Memories are tricky Friday, January 25, 2008 S Fletcher from Utah I lived in the same foster home as Andy did. This book is terribly inaccurate in describing the foster home. It was a loving and generous family. Andy had warped views of why he was in foster care. Lashing out at those trying to help him and seeing his sick, drug using mother, who had failed him, as part of his dream of the perfect childhood he wished he had.
Please be careful when reading this book. It is written of a tragic little boy who's mentally ill mother implanted unrealistic dreams in him that caused him to see malice where there was none and abuse where there was generosity and love.
Many of the incidents related of his foster care experience are grossly warped or completely false. There are many loving families like the one that did all that they could to nurtured Andy that are volunteering their time, energy and home that are being vilified because a few bad instances. For the few biological or foster parents that neglect, endanger or abuse their children there are thousands that are doing heroic and marvelous good.
Was this review helpful? 2 of 2 customers found this review helpful. 5 of 5 Unforgettable and Searing Friday, January 04, 2008 Michael from New York, NY I was deeply moved by "Hope's Boy," Andrew Bridge's haunting elegy of a childhood that seemed to be lost forever when Andrew, at age 7, became a ward of the State after being taken from the arms of his young mother on a street corner in North Hollywood. Andrew's unsparing chronicle of his experiences on the front lines of our nation's foster care system-- including his time in a facility that seemed more like a prison camp, and his rearing by a sadistic foster mother, who herself was a prison camp survivor -- opened my eyes more widely to the system's endemic problems than any piece of investigative journalism on the subject ever could. But, at its core, Andrew's book is a heartbreaking, unforgettable love story about a mother and her son. Even though Andrew's mother, Hope, appears intermittently throughout his memoir, I felt her presence, even in her absence, on every single page and in every paragraph of his book. I don't know that I've ever read anything more powerful about love and loss than Andrew's searing prose about his mother's embrace as she struggled to hold onto him when he was being pried from her arms. And ultimately, I was inspired by how Hope's love gave Andrew the strength to pursue, and, ultimately, achieve his goals. The adult Andrew has given a proud, defiant voice to the boy and his mother. I, for one, am glad to have heard them and hope that many others will too. Was this review helpful? 2 of 2 customers found this review helpful. 5 of 5 Great Book! Saturday, December 22, 2007 David from Chicago, Il This book was one of the best that I have read in years. A new author, Bridge has written a powerful memoir about the loss of his mother and life in foster care. I found the scene when his mother comes to visit him for the last time in the middle of the night one of the most beautifully written goodbyes between a boy and his mother. The style is engrossing but wonderfully controlled. A terrific, terrific book. Was this review helpful? 1 of 1 customers found this review helpful. 5 of 5 Beautifully Hopeful Saturday, December 22, 2007 Becky S. from Seattle, WA I loved this book. Bridge has written a profoundly moving memoir that describes the tragedies of his own childhood -- the loss of his mother at a young age then a childhood in the foster care system -- but as a Harvard educated lawyer who now represents foster kids, he offers insights in the lives of our country's poorest children and families. The writing is searing and unafraid to hit straight at the core of what more can be done. I admired his willingness and ability to describe the collapse of his young mother to schizophrenia, her faltering efforts to keep him with her, then his unbroken love for her after authorities removed him from her. Teachers and social workers, I think will especially enjoy the book -- though I am neither and will never forget it. Was this review helpful? 3 of 3 customers found this review helpful. 5 of 5 A Beautiful Memoir Friday, December 21, 2007 A Reader from Los Angeles, California Hope's Boy is just extraordinary. One of the most moving books that I have ever read. Honest and bravely written. An inspiring story of what a mother means to her son and how even the worst in life can be overcome and mended with time. Was this review helpful? |
|
|
|