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THE BABY SWAP CONSPIRACY

THE SHOCKING TRUTH BEHIND THE FLORIDA CASE OF TWO BABIES SWITCHED AT BIRTH

Potentially fascinating story of how two infants were switched at birth that's maimed by poor organization and choppy characterization and narration. On December 9, 1978, Schwartz-Nobel (Engaged to Murder, 1987, etc.) tells us, Barbara Mays, daughter of a prominent donor to Hardee Memorial Hospital in Sebring, Florida, gave birth at the hospital to baby Kimberly, born with a deformed heart. Three days later, Regina Twigg, a 35-year-old mother of six and the wife of an Amtrak maintenance man, arrived at the hospital, where she delivered baby Arlena. Shortly thereafter, an upset Regina insisted that the baby returned to her from the nursery wasn't hers: Arlena was blond and pink, while this child was dusky-hued and blue around the lips. Convinced by doctors that misidentification was impossible, the Twiggs returned home with the child, who needed constant medical care. Meanwhile, Barbara Mays died of cancer when her child was two, and Bob Mays remarried—and, evidence indicates, began to abuse his daughter. Years later, at age nine, Arlena Twigg died during heart surgery. Just before her death, though, Regina Twigg took a blood test that indicated that she couldn't have given birth to the girl now known as Arlena. Further investigation implicated hospital doctors and nurses in a baby-switch, perhaps motivated by pressure from above to please Barbara Mays's powerful father. Today, despite several law suits, Kimberly remains with Bob Mays. All this makes for a promisingly melodramatic scenario, but Schwartz-Nobel leaps all over the place in short, checkered chapters: We're with the Twiggs during genetic testing; then we jump into teenaged Regina Twiggs's voice chattering on about a reunion with her sisters; then we flash forward to the end of Bob Mays's second marriage—and all this in 20 pages. Strong story but a confusing execution that's best suited for double-acrostic fans.

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 1993

ISBN: 0-679-40015-X

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Villard

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 1993

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THE GIRL WITH SEVEN NAMES

A NORTH KOREAN DEFECTOR'S STORY

Remarkable bravery fluently recounted.

The ably reconstructed story of the author’s convoluted escape from North Korea, detailing the hardships of life there and the serendipity of flight.

A supremely determined young woman, Lee chronicles her life in North Korea and her defection in her late teens in 1998. With the assistance of co-author John, she re-creates a picaresque tale of incredible, suspenseful, and truly death-defying adventures, which eventually led her to asylum in South Korea and then America. The author grew up largely in the northeast province of Ryanggang, bordering the Yalu River with China, and her family home was in Hyesan. Her father was a privileged member of the military, and her enterprising mother was a successful trader on the black market. The family, including younger brother Min-ho, did not endure the hardships of famine like people of low songbun, or caste, but the author learned that her father was not her biological father only shortly before he died by suicide after being trailed by security, beaten, and imprisoned in her mid-teens. Her mother had previously married and divorced another man. At age 17, the lights of China, directly across the river, beckoned, and the author managed to cross and establish contact first with a trading partner of her mother’s, then dissident relatives of her father’s in Shenyang. While the author had no intention of leaving her mother, it was apparent that it was too dangerous for her to return. Her relatives shielded her for a few years, trying to arrange a marriage with a wealthy Korean-Chinese man, from whom the author fled at the eleventh hour. Working as a waitress in Shanghai afforded some invisibility, though she was always susceptible to con men and security police. As the narrative progresses, the author’s trials grow ever more astounding, especially as she eventually tried to get her mother and brother out of North Korea.

Remarkable bravery fluently recounted.

Pub Date: July 7, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-00-755483-6

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Harper360

Review Posted Online: May 18, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2015

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WHY I'M NO LONGER TALKING TO WHITE PEOPLE ABOUT RACE

A sharp, compelling, and impassioned book.

A London-based journalist offers her perspective on race in Britain in the early 21st century.

In 2014, Eddo-Lodge published a blog post that proclaimed she was “no longer engaging with white people on the topic of race.” After its viral reception, she realized that her mission should be to do the opposite, so she actively began articulating, rather than suppressing, her feelings about racism. In the first chapter, the author traces her awakening to the reality of a brutal British colonial history and the ways that history continues to impact race relations in the present, especially between blacks and the police. Eddo-Lodge analyzes the system that has worked against blacks and kept them subjugated to laws that work against—rather than for—them. She argues that it is not enough to deconstruct racist structures. White people must also actively see race itself by constantly asking “who benefits from their race and who is disproportionately impacted by negative stereotypes.” They must also understand the extent of the privileges granted them because of their race and work through racist fears that, as British arch-conservative Enoch Powell once said, “the black man will [one day] have the whip hand over the white man.” Eddo-Lodge then explores the fraught question of being a black—and therefore, according to racist stereotype—“angry” female and the ways her “assertiveness, passion and excitement” have been used against her. In examining the relationship between race and class, the author further notes the way British politicians have used the term “white” to qualify working class. By leaving out reference to other members of that class, they “compound the currency-like power of whiteness.” In her probing and personal narrative, Eddo-Lodge offers fresh insight into the way all racism is ultimately a “white problem” that must be addressed by commitment to action, no matter how small. As she writes, in the end, “there's no justice, there's just us.”

A sharp, compelling, and impassioned book.

Pub Date: Dec. 5, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-4088-7055-6

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Bloomsbury

Review Posted Online: Sept. 16, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2017

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