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A Child Called "It": One Child's Courage to Survive is Dave Pelzer's 1995 autobiographical account of his maltreatment as a child by his alcoholic mother, Catherine Roerva, who singled him out much more so from among her other children as an object of abuse. However, doubts have been raised about the authenticity of the book, especially by his close relatives. Dave Pelzer (born 1961 in California) is an author and advocate for childrens rights from California. ...
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The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
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The year 1995 in literature involved some significant events and new books. ...
Dave Pelzer David James Pelzer (born December 29, 1960)[1] is an American author, best known for his book, A Child Called It. ...
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King Alcohol and his Prime Minister circa 1820 Alcoholism is the consumption of or preoccupation with alcoholic beverages to the extent that this behavior interferes with the alcoholics normal personal, family, social, or work life. ...
Child abuse is the physical, psychological or sexual abuse or neglect of children. ...
Synopsis
| | This section does not cite any references or sources. (March 2008) Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. | Dave Pelzer was the second born of five children. His father was a fireman and, according to Dave, his mother was originally a loving, kind and wonderful person that would do anything for her family. After the abuse started, Dave could tell what kind of day he could expect to have by the way his mother was dressed. If she was all made up then he could expect a good day, but if she wasn't he knew he would be beaten and starved. Look up fireman in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
The book describes the worsening abuse that Pelzer suffered at the hand of his mother and her alcoholism. Most speculate that she had some other addiction or a chemical imbalance but none is known. Among the many incidents discussed is that his mother attempted to burn Dave on a stove when he was 8 years old. It was at this point his mother began to make him go without food for extended periods of time. The abuse gets worse and David is forced to sleep in the cellar and perform hard labor. He got an average of half a meal a day on a good day. When David was 10, she also stabbed him in the stomach—accidentally, as Pelzer notes in the book—and did not take him to the hospital (though she did take care of the wound herself). By this point he was no longer considered part of the family and lived in the basement, denied basic contact, play, and food. His mother stated that she did not want Dave to interact with "her family". Over time the depth of the abuse worsened. Dave claimed he was forced to sit in the "prisoner of war" position (head bent backwards facing sky, sitting on hands). His mother stopped using his name and began referring to him first as "The Boy" and finally "It". The punishments are reported to have evolved into "sick games" in which she made her son suffer. Incidents cited in the book include forcing ammonia down his throat, cleaning a sealed bathroom while inhaling the fumes from a bucket of ammonia mixed with bleach( Gas Chamber), inducing vomiting followed by forced ingestion, smashing his face against a mirror while forcing him to say "I'm a bad boy", beating him with a rubber hose, lying in the bathtub naked with freezing water for hours, rubbing his face in his baby brother's soiled diaper trying to make him eat his youngest brother's feces, as well as starvation and general malnutrition, and "accidentally" stabbing him with a knife when he didn't meet the time limit to do the dishes. For other uses, see Ammonia (disambiguation). ...
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In each of the sequels, the author reveals more forms of torture he did not describe in this book (e.g., his mother hitting his neck with a broom handle, causing his neck to swell so that he was unable to breathe). Initially the abuse did not happen when his father was around. But when David entered first grade for the second time, the abuse began to occur even in his fathers' presence. At first he tried to stop the abuse but as time went on felt unable to intervene. David generally only got food when his father was home, for example. In the face of this abuse, his father gradually distanced himself from the house, and finally moved out when David turned 12. About two months later, on March 5th, 1973 David was rescued by teachers at his school.
Controversy Questions have been raised about Pelzer's works and their authenticity.[1][2] In a 2002 New York Times article, "Dysfunction for Dollars," Pelzer's younger brother, Scott Pelzer, is quoted as saying, "David wasn't at all ostracized from the family; he was very close to me and Richard. We were the Three Musketeers. David would make up lies, to receive some attention. But David had to be the center of attention. He was a hyper, over happy spoiled brat." Adding to the controversy, "his grandmother, Ruth Cole (born in 1910 and still living) remembers him as a 'disruptive kid, only interested in himself, with big ideas of grandeur.'"[citation needed] The New York Times is an internationally known daily newspaper published in New York City and distributed in the United States and many other nations worldwide. ...
Supporting Pelzer's story is schoolteacher Athena Konstan of Salt Lake City, who wrote, "In my 31 years of teaching, David Pelzer was the most severely abused child I have ever known." His brother Richard also supports his story, and has written a book himself, A Brother's Journey, which chronicles his own abuse. He has also written a true account of his own brothers lifestyle.
See also References - ^ "Dysfunction for Dollars" by Pat Jordan, July 28, 2002
- ^ Dave Pelzer - The Child Abuse Entrepreneur - Slate.com
External links - A Survivor's Tale (Notes on A Child Called 'It')
- Pelzer, David J. A Child Called it', 1995, ISBN-10: 1558743669
Dave Pelzer David James Pelzer (born December 29, 1960)[1] is an American author, best known for his book, A Child Called It. ...
The Lost Boy (1997) is the second installment of a trilogy of books which depict the life of David Pelzer, who as a young boy who was physically, emotionally, and spiritually abused by his obsessive mother. ...
A Man Named Dave, (ISBN 0-452-28190-3) the third installment of Dave Pelzers life, tells the story of Dave Pelzer struggling to get money and survive in society and how he tries to overcome his memories of being abused as a child. ...
<< A Man Named Dave | Lifes Lessons >> The Privilege of Youth, published in 2004, is the fourth installment in Dave Pelzers series of autobiography. ...
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