adult children of divorced parents

Type: 
Topical Term
Subfield: 
a
Alias: 
adult children of divorced parents

Vanishing acts

Thirty-two-year-old New Hampshire search-and-rescue worker Delia Hopkins, a soon-to-be-married mother of a five-year-old daughter, begins having strange flashbacks of a forgotten childhood and learns that her father, whom she always believed to be a widower, kidnapped her when she was four--and that her mother is still alive.
Cover image of Vanishing acts

The color of love

a mother's choice in the Jim Crow South
2005
Gene Cheek describes his childhood in North Carolina with his loving mother and abusive, alcoholic father, tells how he was torn from his mother's home at the age of twelve when his father filed a complaint in court that she was unfit due to her involvement with an African-American man, and discusses the lasting impact of that event on his life.

The love they lost

living with the legacy of our parents' divorce
2000
Discusses how a child's adult life is affected by their parents' divorce.

Ask again later

2007
After learning that her mother has cancer, New York attorney Emily Rhode decides to quit her job and move home to take care of her mom; and while doing so, becomes reacquainted with her father, who left when she was five, and gains perspective on her relationship with a man she refuses to commit to.

Vanishing acts

2005
Thirty-two-year-old New Hampshire search-and-rescue worker Delia Hopkins, a soon-to-be-married mother of a five-year-old daughter, begins having strange flashbacks of a forgotten childhood and learns that her father, whom she always believed to be a widower, kidnapped her when she was four--and that her mother is still alive.

Not damaged goods

a successful strategy for children of divorce from infancy to adulthood
2001
Helps children of all ages, from four to forty, deal with the issues they may encounter when their parents get divorced, and understand how the divorce may affect them at every stage in life.

The color of love

a mother's choice in the Jim Crow South
2006
Gene Cheek describes his childhood in North Carolina with his loving mother and abusive, alcoholic father, tells how he was torn from his mother's home at the age of twelve when his father filed a complaint in court that she was unfit due to her involvement with an African-American man, and discusses the lasting impact of that event on his life.
Subscribe to RSS - adult children of divorced parents