Some Way Home: A Memoir in a Myth - Inspirational True Story of Self-Discovery | Perfect for Book Clubs, Personal Growth & Gift Giving
Some Way Home: A Memoir in a Myth - Inspirational True Story of Self-Discovery | Perfect for Book Clubs, Personal Growth & Gift Giving
Some Way Home: A Memoir in a Myth - Inspirational True Story of Self-Discovery | Perfect for Book Clubs, Personal Growth & Gift Giving

Some Way Home: A Memoir in a Myth - Inspirational True Story of Self-Discovery | Perfect for Book Clubs, Personal Growth & Gift Giving

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Description

Based on a true story, Some Way Home is the account of the handling and healing of Dylan, a prototypical foster child. He comes into this world a fairly anonymous character and is soon sent wandering through the government's child protection agencies in search of a home. He lacks a stable family to hold, care, or protect him; so early on, he is subjected to several, significant traumas of abuse and abandonment. He suffers but strives to emotionally survive until his mental health is challenged to the brink of psychosis. After Dylan's first short stay in foster care, he and his brother move in with their Aunt Patti, who wishes to adopt them. There, Dylan and Patti fall in love. Unfortunately, Patti is also living with her boyfriend, Bruce, who becomes the "bad daddy". Eventually, after various episodes of brutality and loss, Dylan is permanently removed from Patti and placed into the foster care system again. The story continues as Dylan's social worker, Adam McDonnell, tries to heal Dylan's hurt and place him into a safe environment. However, reality intervenes in the appearance of abnormal behaviors that surface when a child is isolated, beaten and confronted by true rejection. Distress and the will to survive generate the little boy's desire to earn some value in society. Even after a complete deterioration in a disastrous second placement, his third placement brings new hope when Dylan learns of love again. But this positive period rapidly slips away with an increase in Dylan's impulsive and destructive behaviors that define him as a severe management problem. A permanent placement, an adoptive home, is Dylan's only hope but opportunities look bleak due to the systemic inadequacies of agency work. But with luck and manipulation, Adam finds adoptive parents for Dylan. They are Jacob and Martha Ebonite. However, most of Dylan's history is not divulged to them due to Adam's fear that they may back out if they knew the challenges that accompany Dylan. The trials of another transition hit hard for both Dylan and his trusting, naive new parents. The book continues by describing the distress that they all experience while attempting to merge into a real family. This process takes long but the Ebonite’s endure to become united with Dylan in a truly "forever family". Even though they experience both Dylan’s victories and the reappearance of emotional scars at the different stages in his development, the family is united beyond external understanding or repercussions.Some Way Home spans from Dylan’s birth to his fifteenth year and is told in two parts. The first part, from birth to five years old, depicts how Dylan barely survives the government’s protective services and is narrated by Adam McDonnell, his social worker/case manager. Part two is told by Dylan’s adoptive father, Jacob Ebonite. This is a passionate account of raising, loving, and trying to heal a severely injured child. It takes the reader through the highs of victory and the inevitable emotional devastation along the way. In the end, the reader is left with the hope of a mystifying victory obtained through enduring compassion.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Some Way Home: A Memoir in a Myth was written by David Kenney and Barbara Kenney and is based on the roller-coaster life of Dylan, a foster child who endured and experienced a harsh life. The book is an emotional read that caused me to pause reading. As a foster child in the “system” Dylan was placed in several homes and the books tells of the journey to finding his forever home. The book sheds light and aids in understanding the trauma in foster children. The feelings evoked were wide-ranging - fear, worry and anxiousness as Dylan had to fend for himself. The events he lived through manifested into an inability to trust and form a meaningful relationship.The book revealed the long-term psychological effect abuse has on foster children, the lower adolescent self-esteem, reduced coping skills, less self-regulation, weakened critical thinking, reduced self-motivation and the inability to build healthy relationships. Some Way Home: A Memoir in a Myth tells the trajectory of Dylan’s life from from birth to him finding his forever home. Jacob Ebonite and his wife Martha Ebonite are the saviors of this story. Having gone in blindly and without judgement, they embraced Dylan and helped the healing process. Their positive relationship significantly encouraged recovery as they identified the triggers and approached it all with love and patience.Three important and valuable lessons can be learned from Some Way Home: A Memoir in a Myth to help recover from past trauma:1. Be Patient - Each person's experience is unique, just like their healing process. Give them an opportunity to recuperate and support them whenever the situation allows.2. Be Consistent - The foster care framework places kids in an ocean of vulnerability. They might have moved homes a few times prior to arriving at their forever home. It may take time, but becoming a beacon of stability and safety can give children the room they need to start recuperating and healing.3. Be Flexible - Erratic behavior, unpredictable emotions and developmental delays are common in children who have experienced trauma, it helps by being ready to adapt to the situational challenges as they arise.David and Barbara Kenney tells the harrowing, tragic story of all parties involved in nurturing fragile, troubled, and damaged Dylan; the intensity of their writing makes it hard to put the book down. The dialogue is natural, and the emotional content is rich and varied. The pacing is brisk, and while there are sometimes bumpy transitions as the time line jumps from past to present and back, this fracturing of the time line also serves to relieve tension.Some Way Home: A Memoir in a Myth is a beautiful testament to what love can do in the lives of children in need. It’s an amazing resource for anyone considering fostering or adopting a child, as well as for counselors, and health care professionals. The book is written from the heart and points out how the system can fail to protect those in its care. But most of all, the book shines with joy for small miracles and inspires hope.