The Lost Boy By Dave Pelzer

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All he wanted was love. The love of a family. A place he could call home. A place where he could fit in. For my nonfiction book, I read the amazing story, The Lost Boy, a New York Times bestseller written by Dave Pelzer. The Lost Boy is the inspiring sequel to A Child Called It, also a New York Times bestseller. The Lost Boy is an autobiography written by a physically and verbally abused boy in California, Dave, and his search through foster homes for the love of a family. Dave was rescued by a few of his teachers: however, what was Dave supposed to do after his rescue? Dave picks up all of his torn up belongings and goes in and out of five different foster homes and writes his adventure to share with others. Tears flowed from my eyes as I read Dave’s thoughts. I felt sorry for him. Dave’s misery portrays the power of a mother and her love. He says to his foster parent as his biological mother walks out on him, “She doesn’t love me, …show more content…

One reason I find this book to be such a marvelous work is because it shows the insight of the foster care system. “These same individuals may assume that foster parents ‘are only doing it for the money,’ that foster parents are nothing more than parental mercenaries, making a profit off of society’s ills” (Pelzer 308) explains Dave in his last chapter. Many people believe that foster care system is faulty and full of greedy people but that’s not always the truth. Throughout Dave’s teenage years his foster parents always treat him with love. Not once is he told he is a burden or unworthy like his mother did. I personally, also thought as if the foster system was full of cheap adults who didn’t want to genuinely take care of children but wanted to live off of them. Dave’s views express a whole other understanding on foster care system and how foster parents are not completely money-thirsty people. The Lost Boy’s content helps to perceive this idea more

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