From Publishers Weekly
While orphanages are often viewed through Dickensian lenses, McKenzie, who at the age of 10 was placed in a home for boys and girls, takes spirited issue with such disparagement. In the 1950s in Raleigh, North Carolina, life in The Home, as it was called, was no picnic, he says, but then neither was life with alcoholic, negligent parents. At the orphanage, he was sheltered in a bucolic setting; came to understand relationships that were positive, yet left room for boyish longings for a mother's affection; and established the survival techniques that led to successful adulthood. McKenzie's personal revisiting of boyhood haunts led to his inquiry into how well his peers had fared in life after The Home. More than a thousand alumni contacts confirmed his intuition that "orphans as a group indicate a far more positive attitude toward life than the average American." His poignant story sheds light on institutional care that served children when all else failed. McKenzie is professor at the graduate school of management at UC-Irvine.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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From Library Journal
In 1952, ten-year-old Richard and his 12-year-old brother were delivered to the Home, a Presbyterian orphanage in rural North Carolina, after their mother committed suicide and their father was found too chronically drunk to care for them. They remained there until they graduated from high school. McKenzie's remembrance of those years is neither whitewashed nor nostalgic; he gives evidence that orphanages can be "a refuge and a source of inspiration" to neglected children. McKenzie, an author and professor of economics, has prefaced this work with responses from a survey of over 1000 living "alumni" of the Home supporting the positive attributes of institutional care: security, stability, permanence, direction, and a value system. McKenzie presents a compelling argument in favor of giving abused or homeless children an opportunity to begin a new life by escaping both their sordid past and their hopeless present. Highly recommended for both lay readers and policymakers.
Cathy Sabol, Northern Virginia Community Coll., ManassasCopyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.