Hi there! Guess my book will be available sooner than I thought:
for those unfamiliar with my book I am posting the back cover info. below this announcement. Thanks.
From: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, June 01, 2002
Subject: RE:
Hello,
Are you wanting to order a copy of Father's Touch by Donald D'Haene? You need to either go to our bookstore at www.pdbookstore.com and place an order with a credit card or send a check or money order in US funds. For the correct amount for your area in the world, contact: [email protected]
Publisher's Direct
325 East 2400 South
Salt Lake City, Utah 84115
If you have further questions, please let me know.
Thank you,
Melanie
Melanie Brandt
Bookstore Manager
[email protected]
*****************************************************************
Father's Touch is an extraordinary book. I have read many impressive memoirs by survivors of sexual child abuse; many features set this one above the pack. In addition to his fearless self examination, Donald D'Haene presents excerpts from his father's writings that offer a chilling first person portrait of an abuser's denial, distortions, justifications and rationalizations of his crimes. D'Haene details the response (ranging from ignoring the problem through outright resistence to re-victimization) by many segments of the community - religious, educational, police, and the legal system. That Donald D'Haene persisted in his quest for understanding and justice in the face of these obstacles, is testimony to his strength, courage and resilience. This is a book that will stay with you long after you close its covers.
Mike Lew, Author
Victims No longer and
Leaping upon the Mountains
Imagine this. You are four years old, and you're summoned to your father's bedside to play . . . The Game. Begin then, a decade's journey of sexual exploitation. You and your siblings suffer the manipulations of an abusive religious zealot whose lust for power and control robs your childhoods. Father's Touch portrays much more than a somber memoir. Emerging from this realm of victimhood, the soul of Donald D'Haene draws us upward into the light. In his teens, Donald realized there'd be no triumph without the struggle. His chilling portrayal reveals that sexual abuse, particularly of boys, was and is yet today clumsily handled. Not only did this boy's first authority figure fail him mightily, but so did the various "systems" he trusted — church, police, the courts. Father's Touch looks both back and ahead as Donald recovers the joys of innocence delayed. His narrative leaves readers grateful most of us grew up with "Father Knows Best" and equally grateful he's telling his very different and penetrating story.
(author web site: www.fatherstouch.com)