Philomena: A Mother, Her Son, and a Fifty Year Search by Martin Sixsmith
This book interested me because of the topic, adoption, which I have always found fascinating. Also, I've heard how great the movie is, and so I was curious about the book. (I'll see the movie later; I like to read the book first, if I can.)
If you are squeamish about sex-scene details, don't read this book. There is a tad more detail than I wanted to know, however some of it is pertinent to the story.
The mother gives birth in a convent in Ireland, and the boy is adopted by a family in the USA. This book is the story of the boy's life, as discovered by his mother and a journalist many years later.
Both the boy and the mother experience self-doubt and questions about their innate worth, thanks to the adoption itself and to the treatment of out-of-wedlock births as a terrible sin, the mother a "sinner." The nuns presumably thought they were doing everyone a favor, but their harsh treatment left life-long scars on both baby and mother.
I give the book 3.5 stars.. not quite a four, but still quite a good read. And the baby was born in the same year as I, so it was interesting to read about the attitudes of the time.
Did you see the real Philomena at the Academy Awards?
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