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This book could so easily have turned into a self pitying, and purely shocking book. But the account is so evenly balanced, and the under statement so well judged that the reader is left fighting "Andy's" corner all the more. I was carried along in the rollercoaster,hoping against hope that each "new man" was "the one", not willing to resign myself to the fact that the page would end in flying fists and broken ornaments. I felt the hurt every time.
Yes, the accademic success is a triumph over adversity, but far beyond that is the connection with something greater beyond those four walls.
I cannot claim to have had the same experiences, I'm lucky. But the greatness of this book is that , that doesn't matter.
As someone once said, "You read to know you are not alone" Ashworth found sanctury in the words of others and I found it in hers.
Read it.
Don't be put off this book thinking that it will be traumatic reading - it's also packed with funny anecdotes, and snatches of dialogue from a fast-fading era.
I'm sure Andrea Ashworth's story is not one in a million. Thousands of people experience what she went through on streets up and down the country every day, but what makes HER one in a million is her ability to tell it in such a vivid manner.
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