Unfortunately, children are enduring certain kinds of abuse everywhere. Other children like David Pelzer are faced with these two problems. David had to grow in a family of two alcoholic parents. He was tortured violently by his mother and was ignored by his father. David was afraid of his life and had to spend as a child. Sadly, his story wants others to say that they also experienced the childhood of abuse and is alive.
A child called Dave Pelzer's memoir "It" is a painful meditation on child abuse, embodied in Dave's mother Catherine Roerva (often called a mother or "scorpion"). For many years mother abused Dave physically and psychologically in words until the intervention of Dave's teacher freed the police from his mother's house at last. Child abuse is the most important topic in the memoir - in fact, the other topics we discuss are particularly important aspects of abusing the overall theme.
In a big autobiography called "It", Dave Pelzer shares one of his most childhood stories - one of the most dramatic and extreme child abuse stories ever prosecuted in California. When I was a child, Perze was violent, hungry, mentally and physically abused by alcoholic and mentally unstable mothers. As a man, Perze keeps love, happiness, a fulfilling career, and his own family. For many people, Perze seems to have discovered his happy ending. However, for survivors of child abuse, normal adult living can cause problems and complications that go beyond the challenges and complications most people face. This book is the fifth of Perze's non-fiction series, honestly about the difficulties inherent in marriage, parentage, work and life, from the perspective of those who survived from the terrible physical and emotional fears of childhood I will talk. And brave scenery. Responsibility and complexity of adult life
One of the most serious cases of child abuse in California is recorded by the children themselves in the book "Children Known as Children". "David Pelzer provides a detailed overview of his terrible life, a mother who grew up as a son of alcoholism and a father standing by to see abuse, imagining whether to stay up every morning and live tomorrow Can you imagine that there is something food today on a lucky day? Every morning you can imagine that you want to know that different kinds of torture are forced ... ... Children call