8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Harrowing, inspiring account of orphanage life, July 3, 2001
This review is from: Freedom of Angels: Childhood in Goldenbridge Orphanage (Paperback)
This is a surpisingly objective account in places, but it's interesting to see how the author, a qualified counsellour, often reverts back to a childhood linguistic mode when describing her early experiences. She's conscious of the effect that living in an orpanage has on the way she percieves the world as a whole. At times it feels like the book is written by 2 different authours, one a badly scarred orpanage vitim, the other an impartial commentator.
it works, though, it's often harrowing and should be enough to make anyone who perpetuated the institionalised cruelty of these institiutions feel ashamed. It's an angry, but not necessacarily bitter book that deserves a wide audience in Ireland and elsewhere.
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