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- A Brother's Journey will appeal to the same audience that made #1
New York Times bestsellers of Dave Pelzer's popular novels: A Child
Called "It" (Health Communications, 1995), The Lost Boy (Health
Communications, 1997), and A Man Named Dave (E.P. Dutton, 1999),
which have sold over six million copies combined.
- There is a strong market for memoirs detailing traumatic
experiences, as demonstrated by the success of A Million Little
Pieces (Nan A. Talese, 4/03) and Running With Scissors (St.
Martin's Press, 2002).
- Subsidiary rights have already been sold in England and
Japan.
- Available as a Time Warner AudioBook.
Many thousands of readers were moved by Richard B. Pelzer's
heart-wrenching memoir, A Brother's Journey, in which he detailed
the horrifyingly abusive childhood he endured at the hands of his
mother, whose treatment of her children was first revealed by Dave
Pelzer in his own hugely successful memoir, A Boy Called "It." Now,
Richard reveals how the abuse inflicted on him as a child continued
to affect his life as a teenager. He turned to drugs and
contemplated suicide, while simultaneously trying to establish an
autonomous life away from his destructive family situation. Yet as
he stumbled toward adulthood, fighting and facing his demons,
Richard's ultimate struggle toward victory was his alone. His
salvation finally came when a surrogate family took him in,
offering comfort, hope, and unconditional love --and ultimately the
transformational power of forgiveness.
The story of Dave Pelzer is a legend of our times: the shattering
tale of the child called 'It' who was forced to live in the
basement. His mother was the perpetrator of the horror, but she had
a willing accomplice. It was Dave's brother Richard - the author of
this book. When Dave was twelve the police removed him from the
household, but the cycle of abuse continued. Mrs Pelzer had a new
target for her crazed, alcoholic wrath. The hunter became the
hunted - at the age of nine. This is his story. Recounting the
warped dynamics of a family riven by abuse, he reveals his guilt at
being the abuser, his scarring at being abused, the complete lack
of questioning within the family about what was happening - and
even the twisted respect the boys had for their mother. Richard
became the target of his mother's artillery of insanity, the victim
of savage beatings leading to hospitalization, the boy denied clean
clothes, the one who 'deserved' whole bottles of hot Tabasco sauce
poured down his throat ...
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