The book "Invisible Lines" was written by Laura Schroef. This novel is the best seller of the New York Times and tells the true story of long-term friendship. Schroff currently worked with many companies listed in the United States and People magazine and now grew up in Long Island, New York, where he lives in West Chester, New York.
Laura Schroff was walking along a lively street in Manhattan when he passed through Morris. He appealed for money and she decided to take him to McDonald for lunch. This is the beginning of a long-term friendship that changes their lives and makes them better. Morris conceals the real fear of his world, including his addicting family and his dangerous family life. For many years, Schrof continued to support him as the second mother. Even if they come from two different worlds, they can maintain friendship
One theme in a book is that no one knows how someone will affect you in someone's life and that someone's influence can change the future. By writing this book, she indicates that parenting does not need to define a person as a person. The influence of Schrof on Morris has made him understand that he does not have to go to the drug industry like other family members.
I like this book very much because this book is very honest and provides insight into the poor communities in New York. This book is generally satisfied and well read. I like the whole book, and you can see Morris and Schrove advance to different people. This book is of high quality, but one of the downsides is that I am saying so many things. She should make both views more visible
I will recommend this nonfiction novel to teenagers and young people. It provides insight into those unhappy people and their lives. I do not recommend this book to those who have problems with physical abuse or substance abuse.
Invisible Thread: An 11-year-old Panhandler's truth story, a busy sales executive, and a meeting with Destiny are memoirs of US advertising director and author Laura Schroff and American writer Alex Tresniowski. It is a story of Schrof's encounter with young New York City and the development of their lifelong friendship. Invisible thread with the theme of wealth, coincidence, and life changing persons widely praised by Schroef and Morris' 30 years of emotional story and detailed explanation of friendship. I met this boy. It is a day. It is a best seller, often taught in school. It is translated into a dozen language
The invisible line is Morris and my moving touch. I met at 56th Street in Manhattan in 1986, I was a 35-year-old successful advertising sales executive, 11 years old homeless. He asked me for additional changes; I said no, keep on walking. But there was something that stopped me and came back to him and that day I took him for lunch. We will meet next Monday and we will meet Monday every Monday for the next 4 years, and there will be hundreds of hours thereafter.
An invisible thread is a true story about the relationship between a sales executive in a hurry and an eleven-year old boy who is supposed to live a poor life. This is a warm story about friendship, for 30 years this friendship brings meaning to oversupplied experts, hoping for a hopeless hopeless boy living in the street. Laura Schroff is a former advertiser who has worked with many major media companies, including Time Inc. and Conde Nast. Laura grew up in Long Island, was a member of the advertising team, and made "USA Today" a nationwide successful newspaper. Prior to supporting the launch of InStyle, Teen People, People StyleWatch, three of the most successful startups in the company's history, he is also the branch manager of New York People magazine. Laura also served New York Women Magazine's New York Advertising Manager and Brides Assistant Publisher. Laura spent in an apartment in Long Island and will visit New York and her family in Florida.
Invisible clues: 11-year-old cockroaches, the truth story of busy sales executives, and an impossible encounter with fate