Author picture

About the Author

Marc Parent is the author of "Turning Stones: My Days & Nights with Children at Risk" & has written for the "New York Times" & "USA Today" among other publications. He lives in rural Pennsylvania with his wife & two sons. (Bowker Author Biography)

Includes the name: Marc Parent

Works by Marc Parent

The Secret Society of Demolition Writers (2005) — Editor; Contributor — 51 copies, 1 review
Stella (2001) 14 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
While others were trying to guess which writers were which, I was trying to guess what each writer found dangerous. Talking about other writers for some, I think. Lacking an ending? Lacking a plot?

In an actual demolition derby, you not only risk your life, you also risk the lives of others. The risk to others here is that the others might be mistaken for the author of your no so great story. I gave it 3 stars to be charitable, ultimately.
This is the heartbreaking telling of Marc Parent's 4-year job at New York's Emergency Children's Services office during the mid-1990's. He includes eight detailed stories of going out "into the field" to help children and families in dire situations. He and his partners must decide: do we leave the child or take the child? Sometimes there's no right answer. This was very difficult to read but eye-opening, even though we hear awful stories fairly often nowadays. Some of those stories seem show more kind of general, whereas this was very specific. However, I did like that Mr. Parent ended the book with a positive note that he thinks some of the services for families/children in these situations are getting better and more available. He also adds that we seem to hear about more of these stories every day, but not just in the cities. This happens all over the country. As I said before, difficult to read, and I don't know that I recommend it, but we should probably all read it. show less
I thought this was fascinating and insightful. Each of the stories was touching and I felt like I had a true view of what his job was like and what he was experiencing. I only wish I knew what happened later. The metaphor of turning stones was also a valuable one that will stick with me.

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
6
Also by
1
Members
277
Popularity
#83,812
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
4
ISBNs
20
Languages
2

Charts & Graphs