For Kids and Adults Alike
Carley Connors has
learned to be tough, growing up in Las Vegas with her fun-loving mother. But
after a heartbreaking betrayal, Carley finds herself in foster care. When’s
she’s placed with the Murphys, a lively family with three boys, she’s
blindsided. Do happy families really exist? Mrs. Murphy makes her feel heard
and seen for the first time. Then, just when she’s feeling like she could truly
be one of the Murphys, news from her mother shakes her world.
This
is one of the most nerve-wracking, mind-bending books I’ve ever read. It will
make you sad, angry, and horrified all at once. I thought ‘How to Speak
Dolphin’ was an emotional rollercoaster but this book is ten times more
emotional.
This
poor girl is put into a nice home with a kind women and she doesn’t know how to
handle it. She was so used to being around a mother who would get mad at her so
often she doesn’t understand why this women is being so nice to her.
This
is yet another story I think all kids should read. People need to know that a
parent can love a child like they are their own even when they’re not. But they
also need to know that there are some adults who should never have children.
Not all parents love their children and that’s pretty much the saddest thing
ever.
Carley
has more people being mean to her besides her mother. The older Murphy brother
and a girl at school are giving her a hard time. I can understand why the boy
is giving her a hard time. He thinks she’s trying to steal his mother. But the
girl has no reason to give Carley a hard time. This girl just has her own
family issues and is taking them out on poor Carley. That’s something I found
out in a TV show once; you apparently never strike out on the thing you’re
really mad at, you just take it out on someone else. So if someone makes fun of
you, it’s really their problem not yours.
I’ve
never understood how a parent can’t love their child. Mostly because I’m so
loved. I think a parent who would purposely hurt their child is the worst kind
of person ever.
This
is one of those books that elementary school teachers would have children read.
I remember in school how we would read a book and then dissect it, figuring out
why the character is doing a particular thing.
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