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There he started his research on domestic violence. His study, The Violent Home, was the first systematic investigation to provide empirical data on domestic violence. Though originally a supporter of keeping families intact, his research leading to The Book of David: How Preserving Families Can Cost Children's Lives forced a change in his ...
Once Were Warriors is New Zealand author Alan Duff's bestselling first novel, published in 1990.It tells the story of an urban Māori family, the Hekes, and portrays the reality of domestic violence in New Zealand.
His first book, Healing Collective Trauma, addresses exactly that, but in his newest book, Attuned, he describes how to use this same toolkit in a more personal way. “In the more challenging ...
Rose Madder is a horror/fantasy novel by American writer Stephen King, published in 1995.It deals with the effects of domestic violence (which King had touched upon before in the novels It, Insomnia, Dolores Claiborne, Needful Things, and many others) and, unusually for a King novel, relies for its fantastic element on Greek mythology.
Her 1977 book, Plants Do Amazing Things, was dedicated, in part, "to Joel, my everyday inspiration." [ 3 ] Due to Nussbaum's occasionally obvious bruises and other injuries, friends and colleagues suspected that Nussbaum was the victim of domestic violence .
Dolores Claiborne (/ ˈ k l eɪ b ɔːr n /) is a 1992 psychological thriller novel by Stephen King.The novel is narrated by the title character. Atypically for a King novel, it has no chapters, double-spacing between paragraphs, or other section breaks; thus, the text is a single continuous narrative, which reads like the transcription of a spoken monologue.
The Children of Violence is a sequence of five semi-autobiographical novels by British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing: Martha Quest (1952), A Proper Marriage (1954), A Ripple from the Storm (1958), Landlocked (1965), and The Four-Gated City (1969). [1]
Readers experiencing domestic violence can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233 and reach out to local resource groups for help. Sherida Davis had a life. Three sons, a job ...