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Abandoned: The True Story of a Little Girl Who Didn't Belong
Was R247.95Now R223.16(eB 2232)
Delivery time: Usually within 10 working days. Country: United KingdomFormat: Hardcover
Publisher: Harper ElementISBN: 9780007245727 Publication date: May 2007 Length: 222mm Width: 141mm Weight: 461g Edition: New title Pages: 320
Abandoned: The True Story of a Little Girl Who Didn't Belong
Author: Anya Peters
Was R247.95 Now R223.16
'Abandoned' is the true story of a childhood full of secrets, abuse and a little girl who didn't belong. This inspirational story is about how one woman finally overcame her traumatic childhood and adult homelessness to find a place she could call home. 'Abandoned' is the true story of a childhood full of secrets, abuse and a little girl who didn't belong. This inspirational story is about how one woman finally overcame her traumatic childhood and adult homelessness to find a place she could call home. 'Abandoned' tells the heartbreaking story of a little girl's abusive childhood and her subsequent homelessness as an adult. Born illegitimately to Irish lovers, Anya was given away by her real mother and brought up in England by her loving aunt. However, her childhood with her new family was far from happy -- verbally and sexually abused for years, Anya finally cracked. She was only 11 years old. Then, a few weeks after her violent uncle was taken away by the police for questioning, Anya lost her whole family overnight. They didn't die, although they might as well have done; they just went away, abandoning her. There was no one else to care, so Anya pretended that she didn't either. She learnt to shut down, and not to let anybody in. She thought that she had worked through it all, overcome it. But then, several years later, through a series of unrelated problems, her life imploded again. Several things ended together: a job, a relationship, money, luck -- and she ended up homeless and living in her car in a laneway at the edge of the woods. 'A powerful and utterly compelling story of a child's staggering courage.' -- Judy Westwater, author of Street Kid 'Hugely inspiring ! Anya's story gave me goose bumps.' --Jane Elliott, author of The Little Prisoner About Anya's blog: 'It is often powerfully written, giving a human face to anonymous suffering.' BBC 'She is intelligent, observant, engaging company.' BBC
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