Photo de l'auteur

Amanda Berry (1) (1986–)

Auteur de Hope: A Memoir of Survival in Cleveland

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Amanda Berry, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

1 oeuvres 358 utilisateurs 17 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Amanda Berry was born on April 22, 1986. A day before her 17th birthday, she was kidnapped by former school bus driver Ariel Castro. She was imprisoned with two other young women Michelle Knight and Georgina "Gina" DeJesus. The nearly 10-year period of captivity included alleged beatings, rape, and afficher plus starvation. Berry gave birth to a daughter on December 25, 2006 inside the house where the women were imprisoned. DNA evidence confirmed that Castro was the biological father of the child. They were rescued by neighbors on May 6, 2013. DeJesus and Berry wrote the book Hope: A Memoir of Survival in Cleveland. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Amanda Berry

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1986-04-22
Sexe
female
Pays (pour la carte)
USA

Membres

Critiques

This memoir is a perfect example of how things affect people in different ways. The story is mostly written by Amanda Berry, with random remembrances interjected by Gina DeJesus, along with some case notes by the police department about how they kept missing this guy on their radar. Makes a person wonder why they all didn't just write separate stories. While not a stark contrast in facts to the story that Michelle Knight wrote about her experience in the same Cleveland kidnappers house, still some differences were noted. The fact that one girl was treated better (Amanda) clearly shows through but some details differ. Case in point, Amanda and Gina say the girls were allowed to be downstairs on occasion but that Michelle chose to stay in her room. While Michelle's version is that she was made to stay upstairs and not allowed down with the rest. I think it is all in the perception. Regardless all three of these girls (now women) survived a horrific ordeal and have gone on to try to live normal lives. Hopefully sharing their stories has been therapeutic for them.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Jen-Lynn | 16 autres critiques | Aug 1, 2022 |
This was a remarkable story showing exactly how brave these 3 women were when looking into the face of pure evil.
 
Signalé
Micareads | 16 autres critiques | Jun 21, 2022 |
In the spring of 2003, 17 year old Amanda Berry, walking home from work, was lured into a van by the father of a schoolmate. She was then taken to his house (still believing he was taking her to see her friend), where she was grabbed, brutally raped, and then chained up in the basement. She, and later Gina DeJesus, would remain in this house until 2013. Also there was Michelle Knight, who decided to tell her story on her own, so she is largely absent from these pages.

For ten long years, they were held inside without even a window to look out of. They were chained up, repeatedly raped, not fed nearly enough, terrified the whole time. Amanda had a baby girl while captive. Her rapist, Ariel Castro, was very proud to be a father and doted on the baby- while still keeping Amanda chained up. Amanda tried to raise the little girl with some sense of normalcy, teaching her to read, write, and do arithmetic. Castro enjoyed allowing the girls to watch the TV news when their families were on, begging for the return of their loved ones- an extra little bit of sadism.

The story is nothing short of horrifying. Castro and his treatment of the young women was viscerally revolting to me. The families and the police searched for them for years without finding anything. They despaired that they would never be found, never get out. Castro lied to each of them, telling them how he liked each one better than the others and that the other girls were saying bad things about them, driving a wedge between them so they could only look to him and not have warm feelings for the others. Now, Amanda and Gina are best friends- who else could understand what they have been through?-and have the support of their families again. I’m amazed at how well they have settled back into normal lives. They are very strong people to have survived as they did- I know I could never have survived in their situation.

The book alternates points of view, not just of the two girls, but also third person sections that show what their families, the police, and Castro himself were doing at the time. Amanda kept a diary of sorts; she intended to remember every detail and wrote in notebooks Castro bought her; when she filled those, she wrote on pizza boxes, receipts, and any other piece of paper she could find. The book was riveting; like a bad auto accident, I wanted to look away but couldn’t. Five stars, but very, very hard to read.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
lauriebrown54 | 16 autres critiques | Sep 29, 2019 |
This is the true story of the 3 teenage girls abducted in Cleveland, Ohio in the early 2000s by Ariel Castro. Their escape captivated the nation, but they didn't speak much publicly about what they endured during their captivation. This story is written in their own words (by 2 of the 3 survivors), aided by the diary kept by Amanda Berry during the 10 years she was held prisoner. The story is rounded out by reporters who lend details about what was happening in their community during this time. The story is fascinating in its details, especially in the coincidences and tiny, seemingly insignificant decisions that led to the abductions, and in the sheer volume of interactions that their captor had with their friends and family members while the women were missing.

The book is easy to read. Each short chapter is headed by a date. It is both heartbreaking and voyeuristic without being too graphic. And the title "hope" is fitting because so many of the people involved maintained hope in the face of adversity.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
originalslicey | 16 autres critiques | Jan 23, 2019 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
1
Membres
358
Popularité
#66,978
Évaluation
½ 4.3
Critiques
17
ISBN
47
Langues
4

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