Genre Biography & Autobiography. Page - 28

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Do you know Satyaki Sen? Maybe, you should - he is the epitome of perfect. Everybody is jealous of him. But what does the author feel of him? Is he jealous, or happy, or something else?

What's it like to be in middle school? Well it sucks other than that nothing much. Based on my life this story will show you how crappy it is.

It's basicaly an Autobiography about myself . So you can like it or you can disklike it . But it's the honest Truth . i'm going to go into alot of detail

My first ever novel. I true story about what I recall of my whole life. This is as true and close to the truth as I honestly can get. Anything written is exactly as I recall it. Any indescrepancies are asked to be forgiven, as this is how I viewed it and very much the truth to me.

Jessica has some family struggles though her life. Her dad cant keep his priorities strait and her three step brothes cant leave her be. She doesnt complain aboout her horrible life, but she gets annoyed when people just complain about a simple fight with their parents

Bonnie, age four, along with four of her siblings, was taken by force from her home in rural Canada and placed in the care of the Children's Aid Society. Over the next fourteen years, the children are split up and reunited multiple times, moving from foster home to foster home, always hoping to find one another again.

By luck or providence, the four sisters spend the majority of their young lives together working on a tobacco farm and living in an attic, where the stovepipe offers warmth, comfort, and news from the outside that they do not receive from their foster parents. Surviving some of the worst torments a child can know, Bonnie and her sisters depend on each other to meet even their basic needs, forming an unbreakable bond.

Bonnie Virag's heartrending yet triumphant memoir, The Stovepipe, recounts the author's experience growing up as a foster child in the 1940s and 1950s. In an honest, unflinching voice, Virag engrosses readers with not only the darkness that she and her siblings endured but, more important, their ability to join together to create a sense of light.

This unforgettable story is informed by Bonnie's recollections, remembrances from her sisters, and the official records received from the Children's Aid Society in Canada. This book is not an indictment of the foster care system and its many missteps. Rather, it is a testament to the resilience of the soul and the importance of family, friendship and fortitude.

The birth of a child is a wonderful, scary, life-boggling event.

Here is the true story of my first... and my observations along the way.

Some peoples pasts are bad. Mine just happens to be not that good.