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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
From the moment she first held her new-born son in her arms, Anne
Crosby knew something was wrong with him. Although the staff at the
London hospital dismissed her response as cruel and unmaternal, her
instincts were correct: Matthew had Down syndrome. Struggling with
feelings of shock and grief, Crosby determined that she would do
whatever she could to help Matthew lead as full a life as possible.
This is the moving, candid, insightful, and often surprising
account of the life Matthew made with the help of his mother and
other caring people. With her painter's eye for the colourful
detail and a Dickensian ear for the voices of her characters,
Crosby describes Matthew's family and friends, doctors and teachers
- a large cast that includes Alice Strong, his Cockney caregiver,
the famous child psychologist D W Winnicott, and Princess Anne, a
benefactor of MacIntyre, Matthew's boarding school. Crosby evokes
the forbidding atmosphere of Normansfield, the residential
institution founded by the man who gave his name to Down syndrome;
the spacious beauty of Mentmore, the country estate where she often
took Matthew for outings; and the touching camaraderie of the
hospital ward in which Matthew died of heart failure at
twenty-four. In this remarkable memoir, Crosby also explores
Matthew's inner life, revealing his playful mimicry and unexpected
humour, his outbursts of affection and occasional fits of temper,
his gallantry toward his first love, and his disappointment over
the loss of his first job. Anne Crosby's portrait of her son gives
us an abiding image of Matthew that deepens our understanding of
what it means to be human.
Zoe Rutherford wasn't sure what she was expecting when she returned
to Sullivan's Island. The house on Sullivan's hadn't represented
home to her in decades. It was the place where she endured her
father's cruelty. It was the place where her mother closed herself
off from the world. It was the place where her sister disappeared.
But now that her parents are gone, Zoe needs to return to the
house, to close it down and prepare it for sale. She intends to get
this done as quickly as possible and get on with her life, even
though that life seems clouded by her past, both distant and
recent. But what she discovers when she gets there is far beyond
her imagining and will change her in profound ways. THE GIRL WHO
STAYED is a remarkable exploration of the soul by a writer with a
rare talent for reaching into the hearts of her characters and her
readers, a novel of transformation that will leave you moved and
breathless.
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