Time After Time

A Memoir

Nonfiction, Family & Relationships
Cover of the book Time After Time by Susan D. Anderson, AuthorHouse
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Susan D. Anderson ISBN: 9781481706094
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publication: January 24, 2013
Imprint: AuthorHouse Language: English
Author: Susan D. Anderson
ISBN: 9781481706094
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication: January 24, 2013
Imprint: AuthorHouse
Language: English

A riveting and devastating memoir, Time After Time reveals the slow and inexorable damage done to a child by an emotionally abusive parent. It's the 1950's, the age of modern conveniences and upward mobility. In a middle class Boston suburb, where mothers stay home to raise children and fathers take trains to the city, life is peaceful. But inside what appears to be a typical nuclear family, one child is living a nightmare. Susans mother is systematically stripping away her rights, her sense of belonging, her activities, her access to family life and her self-respect, until she has nothing left but food, clothing and shelter. Her father, a devout Christian Scientist, as well as her sister, brother, extended family, neighbors and friends witness the constant bullying and oppression her mother inflicts on her and don't know how to intervene. Susan realizes at an early age that she must endure her situation alone: every day, time after time, for years to come. The authors courage to survive in the face of emotional deprivation, as well as her ultimate triumph, commands us to speak out for the children in our midst who are suffering in silence.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A riveting and devastating memoir, Time After Time reveals the slow and inexorable damage done to a child by an emotionally abusive parent. It's the 1950's, the age of modern conveniences and upward mobility. In a middle class Boston suburb, where mothers stay home to raise children and fathers take trains to the city, life is peaceful. But inside what appears to be a typical nuclear family, one child is living a nightmare. Susans mother is systematically stripping away her rights, her sense of belonging, her activities, her access to family life and her self-respect, until she has nothing left but food, clothing and shelter. Her father, a devout Christian Scientist, as well as her sister, brother, extended family, neighbors and friends witness the constant bullying and oppression her mother inflicts on her and don't know how to intervene. Susan realizes at an early age that she must endure her situation alone: every day, time after time, for years to come. The authors courage to survive in the face of emotional deprivation, as well as her ultimate triumph, commands us to speak out for the children in our midst who are suffering in silence.

More books from AuthorHouse

Cover of the book The Quote by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Our Destiny by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Drink Up! by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Is There a Place Called Heaven? by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Confidences by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Religious Politics Plaguing the 21St Century by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Johnny and the Jayhawkers by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book A Beautiful Life in Berlin, New Hampshire by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Keep It Real by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book In Sickness and in Health by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Straight Up by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Zap by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Help Wanted by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book Let's Pretend Everything's Okay by Susan D. Anderson
Cover of the book The Lover, the Lunatic, the Poet- Thoughts of a Native Queen by Susan D. Anderson
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy