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The Lost Boy by Anna Martin
The Lost Boy by Anna  Martin





The Lost Boy by Anna Martin

Later, David meets his first 'permanent' foster parents-Lilian and Rudy Catanze. When his mother and brothers visit, she swears to David that she will get him back. He is admired by the other foster children for being able to steal, and he is active and disruptive in this new setting. David eventually tells the truth about his mother, and becomes a permanent ward of the court, escaping from the abuse of his mother.Īfter the trial, he is put into a home under the care of a woman he calls Aunt Mary. Gold, on the other hand, assures him it had nothing to do with him, and that his mother is sick. Before the trial of whether or not to permanently remove him from his mother's custody, David becomes confused about whether he may have deserved the treatment his mother gave him. David's teachers eventually contact the authorities, causing David to be placed with a social services worker named Ms. David's father arrives to bring David home to his abusive mother, telling the police that David is just upset for not being allowed to ride his bicycle.

The Lost Boy by Anna Martin

The police brings David to the police station while sharing a pizza Mark gave David before he left. Mark calls the police while tricking David to stay by baiting him with a pizza. He ends up in a bar, getting caught by a staff named Mark for stealing a quarter. The book continues after the ending of the previous book, A Child Called "It" with David Pelzer, 9 years old, running away from his home in Daly City, California. The Lost Boy is included as the second book in Dave Pelzer's compilation My Story. It also talks about the kindness of his foster parents and other people around him as well as his inability to brush his mother aside. The book discusses Pelzer's struggling with his ability to fit in and adapt to the new environment around him as he is put into foster care. The Lost Boy (1997) is the second installment of a trilogy of books which depict the life of David Pelzer, who as a young boy was physically, emotionally, mentally, and psychologically abused by his obsessive mother.







The Lost Boy by Anna  Martin