![]() ![]() With no where to go, Brianna tracks down her recently deceased biological father’s trailer and moves into a Walmart carpark with her beloved dog. Brianna is immediately victimised by her mother until in a nasty confrontation, Brianna is told to leave. Despite her truly shocking childhood circumstances, Brianna establishes herself as an independent adult, until redundancy and the current state of the economy, forces her back home to live with her mother and stepfather. Abused and neglected as a child by her bipolar mother, Brianna grew up in a dysfunctional Seventh Adventist family. The Girl’s Guide to Homelessness is a memoir from twenty something Brianna Karp. I have had a few days to digest it now but I am still unsure how to address my thoughts. “The review for this is going to be hard to write” is what I wrote immediately after finishing the book. Status: Read from April 28 to 30, 2011 - I own a copy In short, I was just like you-except without the convenience of a permanent address.” Brianna Karp’s account of her journey through homelessness immerses us in a timely, relevant topic that all too many Americans know about first hand. If you saw me walking down the street, you wouldn’t have assumed that I lived in a parking lot. I am a career executive assistant-coherent, opinionated, poised, and capable. ![]() Synopsis: “I am an educated woman with stable employment and residence history. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |