About this deal
It offers a cogent set of policy prescriptions for change, grounded in personal experience, but supported by empirical evidence and written by someone who you can only believe will see to it that they are enacted.
Leading man, Luke Cameron seemed well thought out and decidedly appealing as did all the Cameron's in this novel. On a brutally cold night in New York when he was about four years old, Ambroz said he thought he might die. At times, it seems like there are too many POVs and Wick doesn't really delve into the minor characters' POV very well.Right then and there he told himself that he would someday work at Disney and he would help kids like himself.
Meanwhile evacuee Ruby Clark has much to contend with when her estranged mother turns up, having completed a long prison sentence.While I can't recc this to a younger audience, due to some scenes in the end of the book, I do recc to others, even if romance isn't a favorite genre. He tells his story from the lens of a child who felt the weight of trying to keep his depressed and delusional mom stable and his family safe, together, and fed. Heartbreaking devastating memoir that focuses on the burden that is placed on a child in poverty and indictment of society that criminalizes it. There is an element of suspense woven into the story line that keeps you involved with Christine as she comes to faith and love in this near turn of the century tale.