My Portable Life: Reluctant Runaway Finds Families For Thousands of Children |  | Author: Jean Nelson Erichsen Publisher: iUniverse Category: eBooks
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Rating: 8 reviews
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Edition: 1
ASIN: B003C1QMVU
Publication Date: December 12, 2009
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Product Description Sacred Heart, Minnesota, 1934: Born in the Great Depression to a sadly mismatched couple, a child is moved from one small town to another in her family's quixotic search for more money. She is neglected, abused, kept penniless in a middle-class family. She dreams of helping children find the stable family she is denied. Forced out of her home at sixteen, she's a runaway, a child bride, a battered teenage mother. While she observes major events of the twentieth century, she wins her private struggle for independence.
Through romance with a former World War II German soldier during the social revolution of the 1960s, to moving to Texas in the 1980s, Jean Erichsen becomes an innovator in international adoptions and a widely acclaimed and emulated agency director, social worker, and author. On an international journey spanning three decades, she and her husband raise children while traveling abroad and shaping ethical adoption practices for the benefit of thousands of children.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
One woman's chaotic childhood inspires her to help thousands January 28, 2010 K. Means (The Woodlands, Texas) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
With Jean Nelson Erichsen's riveting memoir of a painful childhood in the hands of irresponsible parents, she joins the sisterhood of Mary Karr, Jennifer Lauck and Jeannette Walls, to name a few of the women who have written so poignantly about the deprivation of their early lives. Although she was reluctantly dragged from house to house and town to town with all her belongings in a single cardboard box, I experienced no reluctance in following her simultaneously heartwarming and heartbreaking journey. Her prose is as delicate as the intricate tracery she describes on the frosted windowpane of the Minnesota home where she was born.
Unlike other members of the memoirists' sisterhood, she overcame her emotionally battered, economically deprived early years to help thousands of abandoned or neglected children find loving homes with adoptive families. Part of her salvation was her good fortune in meeting a former World War II German soldier who, like the current Pope, had been forced to join The Hitler Youth. He ended up a prisoner of war in Texas. Jean and Heino Erichsen's shattered childhoods inspired them to become pioneers of international adoption.
While her book is a window into her private past, it is also a revealing portrait of small town and rural America in the middle third of the Twentieth Century.
Rainbows from a Cardboard Box February 22, 2010 Cassandra A. Jones 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I found "My Portable Life" compelling and dramatic. Jean Nelson-Erichsen brings the frigid Midwest to life with brilliant details, intimate recollections and vivid stories. I was so engrossed I read it in one sitting. Thank heavens she did not reap what was sown. From her cardboard box she could have pulled out rocks -- instead she produced rainbows. Jean is an inspiration to all those who think their lives are doomed by a dismal upbringing. Her example shows that we can choose to live our dreams rather than our nightmares.
Read this book...you will love it! March 2, 2010 Martha Jurkowski (The Woodlands Texas) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I just finished the book and loved it. Jean Erichsen is a master at writing a novel that grips you from the first page. I am amazed at her conviction to overcome her childhood abuse and turn those experiences into something that reaches far beyond herself. Her description of her Swedish upbringing in the Lutheran church reminded me of my upbringing in a small, Swedish Nebraska town. Her ability to overcome poverty, go back to school and form the first non-profit adoption agency in the US is quite impressive. Read this book. It is definitely a page turner!
An Inspirational Memoir March 2, 2010 R. Thompson 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a must read story about survival, diversity, family dynamics, international relations and true grit. The book starts with the author, Jean Erichsen, sharing her genealogy as a backdrop to her personal story. From the loneliness in the struggle with her birth family and first marriage to the struggle in creating a world-class adoption agency, Jean shows her grit in being successful with any hand she is dealt. She survives unimaginable, personal challenges and turns that around by being the voice for families wanting to adopt. Her struggles as a youth gave her insight and sensitivity to the needs of infants and children when she visited adoption agencies in other parts of the world. She and her husband, Heino, create a successful diverse family to be proud of. This is a mesmerizing book about the life of the author, Jean Erichsen.
Highly Recommend! March 5, 2010 E. Perlman (Henderson, NV) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Fascinating story of the author's journey from growing up with many hardships in Minnesota to settling with her multicultural family in south Texas. Jean Nelson Erichsen writes with sensitivity, compassion, and gentle humor. I found it very compelling the way she wove the story of her current husband's past into her story of overcoming many challenges while working toward her goals.
In addition to the appeal for the adult reader, the memoir is an uplifting read for teenagers who find themselves in challenging family situations. Readers of all ages will be inspired by the author's triumph over many hurdles to achieve her lifelong dream of helping people build families through adoption.
Jean Nelson Erichsen tells a heartwarming story of how she and her husband Heino raised six children and successfully directed a world-renowned adoption agency for over 25 years.
Readers will be moved by the author's resilient spirit and her accomplishment of touching the lives of thousands of families.
In many ways the memoir reminded me of The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls. This memoir will stay with you for a long time after you've finished reading it.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
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