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White Lies: A Tale of Babies, Vaccines, and Deception
 
 
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White Lies: A Tale of Babies, Vaccines, and Deception [Hardcover]

Sarah Collins Honenberger (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 21, 2006
Inspired by a true story, one mother's quest for the truth about her baby's injuries from a vaccine, and the unlikely friendship that develops with her small town attorney who has problems of her own. A popular book club selection and an insightful look at life with a vaccine-injured child. This novel offers hope to families who are considering filing a claim with the government's compensation fund.

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Evidence of Harm: Mercury in Vaccines and the Autism Epidemic: A Medical Controversy $11.15

White Lies: A Tale of Babies, Vaccines, and Deception + Evidence of Harm: Mercury in Vaccines and the Autism Epidemic: A Medical Controversy


Editorial Reviews

Review

Sarah Collins Honenberger's White Lies is a compelling account of tragedy, but it is also a compelling portrayal of heroism and how complicated and difficult it is to right a wrong. Here is a courtroom drama of the highest order, where the human scale of justice and suffering is beautifully portrayed. White Lies is a wonderfully sympathetic and knowing portrait of a sorrowing mother and the attorney who came to her aid. --Carrie Brown, author of The Hatbox Baby and The Rope Walk

A brilliant debut by a fine new novelist, a rare gem - a superbly written tale that deals with the sorts of things that matter most in life - such as love and family - and also with such great and timeless themes as tragedy and triumph; character strengths and failings; duty, honor and integrity; and courage in the face of adversity. Sarah Collins Honenberger is a gifted storyteller, a master of nuance who knows how to move you deeply; how to lift your heart; how to grab your attention and hold it. --Copley News Service

"Sarah Collins Honenberger's White Lies is a compelling account of tragedy, but it is also a compelling portrayal of heroism and how complicated and difficult it is to right a wrong. Here is a courtroom drama of the highest order, where the human scale of justice and suffering is beautifully portrayed. White Lies is a wonderfully sympathetic and knowing portrait of a sorrowing mother and the attorney who came to her aid." --Carrie Brown, author of The Hatbox Baby and The Rope Walk

From the Publisher

Because White Lies is inspired by true events - one mother's quest for the truth about her baby's seizures and brain damage - Honenberger hopes her book will help spread the word about vaccine-associated risks. "This mother is so upbeat despite all the bad things that happened to her. She was my inspiration. She still is. She's feisty and outspoken, a great advocate. When she finally gave me permission to tell the story, she hoped the book would encourage other families whose children had an adverse reaction to investigate before allowing a booster. And to go forward and file for assistance."

Cedar Creek Publishing also believes the story is an important one. Editor, Linda Layne, remarked how her company has traditionally only handled nonfiction works, but has tracked Honenberger's talent as an award-winning writer for the past decade. "It's an honor to be launching Sally's first novel. Like a watercolor artist, Sally has creatively blended a good book of fiction using a palette of true experiences and raw emotions that take you into the minds of the characters and to the heart of the events. White Lies is more than an opportunity to raise awareness for vaccine injury issues. It's about conflict and loss, hope and redemption for a grieving mother and her disillusioned attorney. A good story. And that's what readers want, to lose themselves in a good story."


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 283 pages
  • Publisher: Cedar Creek Publishing; 1st edition (November 21, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0979020514
  • ISBN-13: 978-0979020513
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,935,766 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Surprise cancer diagnosis in 2009 shocked me, but I'm writing again after surgeries and treatment, inspired by all the courageous people I met that year. Books have forever lured me in to other worlds. Writing fiction satisfies my sense of adventure in the everyday of all kinds of people in all kinds of places. The mother of a vaccine injured baby, an old cowboy who ran away from a pregnant wife 40 years earlier, the 16 year old boy in a river town who doesn't want to miss his life now that he's diagnosed with leukemia. The miracle of writing for me is that mere words, albeit honed with a fierce red editing pen, can create these characters and make them friends.

 

Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (10)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Auspicious Debut by a Fine New Novelist, November 29, 2007
By 
This review is from: White Lies: A Tale of Babies, Vaccines, and Deception (Hardcover)
One of the major pleasures in reading 'first works' by unknown writers is the discovery of great writing in the nascent stage. With WHITE LIES Sarah Collins Honenberger steps onto the stage with a securely written, well researched 'mystery', a novel based on fact that is played by actors so well defined that by the end of the book we feel as though we know each of them - the 'heroes' and the 'villains' - so well that from every angle of each the character motivation is fully detailed. No mean feat this, especially when dealing with a subject matter that is by nature controversial. That Honenberger succeeds in making this fast paced intrigue a truly memorable novel places her in the upper echelon of new writers.

WHITE LIES explores the lives of two disparate women: Jean is a divorce lawyer, happily married with three children, and Lacy who is the product of the poor Carolinas, a women with a history of childhood abuse, bad marriages, but most importantly a mother who has a twenty year old child Danny who has been a vegetable since age 3 months, the apparent result of a reaction to a DPT vaccination. Jean becomes Lacy's lawyer and confidant and friend and the story revolves around the preparation of the case against the drug company who produced the DPT vaccine - a too many years' hidden mystery of deceit that has devastated Lacy and her now fairly normal family life. The manner in which the case is investigated is as well researched and as well written as, say, 'Erin Brockovich', but Honenberger does not stop there. There are fascinating sidebars involving the families of both women (one of Jean's sons, Stephen, may be having a drug problem - a finely tuned story in its own development) that make this also a fascinating story of the trials of parenting. This is a thorough-composed novel that is startlingly well written, a book that can be recommended to every reader without reservation. We will be hearing more from Sarah Collins Honenberger! Grady Harp, November 07
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "He was healthy and then he wasn't.", December 6, 2008
This review is from: White Lies: A Tale of Babies, Vaccines, and Deception (Hardcover)
"White Lies," by Sarah Collins Honenberger, is the heartbreaking story of a three-month old named Danny Kellam who, in 1969, suffers permanent brain damage. What caused this beautiful and apparently thriving baby to suddenly have seizures and difficulty breathing? One possibility is that he experienced a negative reaction to a routine DPT vaccination. Over twenty years pass and Danny, who is profoundly disabled, lives in a state residential facility. His mother, Lacy Stonington, has remarried, but she is still disconsolate about Danny's condition. After seeing a television program dealing with vaccine-damaged children, Lacy believes that her son had an adverse reaction to his DPT shot. She is horrified that "even though the kids were getting sick, the drug companies were getting rich, so they didn't tell anyone. They just kept using the same medicine."

Lacy turns to her attorney, Jean Driscoll, who lives in the small Virginia farming community of Parry's Crossing, for help. Jean is a solo practitioner who handled Lacy's divorce from Danny's father, but she has no experience in personal injury cases. Jean is married to a teacher, Peter, and they have two sons and a daughter. Her busy schedule leaves her little time to spend with her family, and when she decides to assist Lacy, she risks alienating her husband and exacerbating the problems that they are having with their rebellious teenager, Stephen. At Jean's insistence, Lacy hires as lead counsel Hamilton Fine, a high-powered tort litigator. Fine is an expert in his field, but he can also be "rude, opinionated, [and] downright mean." Dealing with Fine proves to be a challenge for both Jean and Lacy, but his knowledge and experience are essential if Lacy is to have any chance of winning her case.

Honenberger has written a complex, insightful, and multilayered novel. She not only explores the possibility that a vaccine meant to ensure one's health may cause harm, but she also takes a close look at the ups and downs of marital relationships, the conflicts that make parenting teenagers so difficult, and the role that luck and/or fate plays in our lives. The author gives Lacy and Jean their own chapters, enabling each woman to offer her unique perspective on the events as they unfold. Although Lacy had a dysfunctional childhood and little formal education, she is gritty, spunky, generally cheerful, and has a great deal of common sense. As intelligent and emotionally together as Jean considers herself to be, she learns a great deal from Lacy, and in the course of the narrative, grows in ways that she could never have anticipated.

"White Lies" has compelling courtroom scenes that feature the aggressive and overbearing Fine going toe to toe with his equally tough opposing counsel. There are also wrenching encounters during which Jean wonders whether or not she has done enough to keep her family happy and safe. The title refers not only to the corporate lies that executives and physicians tell us, but also to the fibs that we tell ourselves concerning our own shortcomings. The most fortunate among us eventually find the strength to look in the mirror and face reality while there is still time to make things right. Unfortunately, for some people there can be no happy ending. Sometimes, the best that we can do is care for one another and reach out with compassion to those who are suffering.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Expert firt-person writing, March 21, 2009
This review is from: White Lies: A Tale of Babies, Vaccines, and Deception (Hardcover)
There were several reasons that I knew I wasn't going to be persuaded to buy "White Lies." It was in hardback and I always wait for the paperback, unless it's Harry Potter. It's about a something serious - childhood vaccinations - and Michael Crichton's "State of Fear" has put me off fiction that pretends to educate. It's about the lives of two separate families, and I hate books with artificial, or artsy connections. It's emotional - I don't want my emotions manipulated. It's written in first person, which I don't usually relate to. And it involves a lawyer - oh no, not another Jodi Picault courtroom scene; I've long since sworn off those overly dramatic surprise conclusions.
But I read the first chapter of "White Lies" on Sarah Honengberger's web site and went racing to the nearest bookstore. Why?

For a start, Sarah writes very well. In particular, she writes very well in the first person. Just a few paragraphs were enough to create a character I liked and related to. The single scene was so perfectly drawn - a mother remembering the day her child fell ill, providing details that any mother would relate to, retelling emotions that moved me to concern without tears. It wasn't that I became desperate to know what happened next. Rather, I finished the chapter eager to get to know the mother better. So I had to buy the book.

As for my concerns, I did learn learn something, despite myself,from reading the book - I learned about courts and advocates and medical records and the way laws might be phrased. But Sara wasn't educating me; she was giving me background that brought the story to life. I never felt like she was imposing her opinions or her interpretations on me, or on her characters.

I did become very involved in two separate family's lives. But I never felt I was reading separate stories. There was one story here, with real characters, who had real families and real lives that impinged on the telling.

I found myself emotionally attached to the story - could hardly put it down. But no one was manipulating my emotions; I was excited, angry, sad, concerned, disturbed, because that's what the characters deserved, because the author had made me care.

And the first person writing wasn't a problem. Actually, there are two first person narrators in White Lies. And, amazingly - very expertly - Sarah Honenberger manages to keep their voices so well delineated I never once was unsure of who was speaking. Okay, the chapter headings helped. But when I'm really involved in a book, I don't read headings, and I didn't need to. Not only do the characters have very different narrative voices, but they don't even hear each other the same way as they speak, and it doesn't matter. The mother as narrator is older and wiser than the mother quoted by her lawyer, and yet is still clearly the same person. Both voices are eminently readable - no artificial vocal quirks to distract me. And the narrators grow and change through the course of the book. They form opinions, express opinions, and change their opinions; all the time as real people; people I would want to know.

Sarah's first chapter drew me in. And the book fulfilled its promise. If you're looking for a really good read, with two fascinating, flawed, wise and wonderful lead characters, and an interesting look at the legal and medical systems and their interaction, you should go to the web site for yourself and see if you're not intrigued just as I was
Or you could take my word for it and go buy the book.
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