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Adult Children, Mental/Psychological Disorder Patients - Biography, Childhood Memoirs & Biography
Two Thousand Minnows: An American Story by Sandra Leigh β€” book cover

Two Thousand Minnows: An American Story

by Sandra Leigh
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Overview

Sandra Leigh, the oldest of three, was only seven when she protected her mother against her father's fury, helping her escape the house in the midst of winter, and then retrieving her through an open window. They had just moved to the isolated mountains of West Virginia to being their new life. A city girl, Sandra became lost in the magic of the long hot summer days full of discoveries, from rope swings to catching minnows in the clear river, all while navigating her abusive and unpredictable father. Then her mother, pregnant again, went to the hospital to give birth and returned without the baby.
For the next ten years, her family - with her peripatetic father at the helm - traveled across the country from West Virginia to California and back again in search of stability, each destination holding out the promise of this time "making it." And as we travel with Sandra and her family in their crowded car and precarious truck back and forth across the country, we come to realize that in chasing the dream they are actually running from truth. The truth that, with each new attempt at finding home, Sandra gradually comes closer to uncovering - the mystery of what really happened to the baby.
In a memoir full of stunning honesty, which begins in her vibrant seven-year-old voice and matures throughout, Sandra brings us with her on her journey. She is a bright shining star in the midst of this American tragedy. She is full of surprises, humor, joy and magic. And, in the end, with tremendous fortitude and bravery, she performs a true miracle - and the family secret is finally revealed.

About the Author, Sandra Leigh

SANDRA LEIGH moved to Los Angeles when she was twenty-five and began her career in film and TV. This is her first book. A television producer, she now lives in the mountains of northern California with her sweetheart, Rob, and is currently at work on her second book.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

About three-quarters into this labored memoir of a difficult childhood, a preteen Leigh looks around the rundown cinderblock house she, her parents and two younger siblings are about to rent. It's the latest in a series of way stations on her dysfunctional family's fruitless cross-country forays between California and West Virginia. "I want to close my eyes until I turn eighteen," she writes. It's no wonder. In her first book, television producer Leigh, the oldest child of an adored mother and violent, alcoholic father, chronicles the years of abuse, near poverty and shameful secrets that fueled her longing to escape. In an early scene, Sandra's father terrorizes her mother until she flees from the house into a cold night without coat or shoes. A few months later, Sandra's mother goes to the hospital to have her fourth child, but returns alone; the baby died, her mother reports, "And I don't ever want to talk about it again." As Leigh and her family continue to search for better luck and a stable life during the late 1960s and early '70s, Sandra focuses on the missing child, and, believing she has another sibling, pursues the question until-as an adult-she makes contact with her sister. Like many stories of survival, Leigh's includes some powerful moments, and she is a sympathetic narrator. Though this long volume lacks the depth and insight of others in the genre (Angela's Ashes and The Liar's Club come to mind), it's likely to offer welcome comfort to readers who endured childhood traumas themselves. (May) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2003
Publisher
Lyons Press
Pages
464
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781585748549

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