This is certainly an unusual story. Here we are women, children and the poor, mother caught in a friend of the family trust. The figure of the father of women has never been a father; He is married and has little experience with children. Nevertheless, both blend well together and create their own version of "family" - with only two of them.
Raising a child as a single father, without the presence of the mother and tackle stereotypical views that a man cannot take a child by himself, questions were raised in an irresistible Mansion from the beginning. Difficulties in the management of the corrupt systems and ruins on some medical scenes and child care are also high with strong emotion. The author provides the fact that the schools that teach the children as a generic mass rather focusing on the individual, leaving too many children on their own. Negligent doctors, thoughtless education systems exempted from unreasonable childcare and rigid all these are processed in the direction of women.
Young women is a gifted child victims of violence is overdose with prescription, strung and hyper active when he arrives at her new home. It has a capacity of secrecy to see things that others may not. The author uses this is to squeeze in time to the family who lived on the same piece lands generations ago, where shown another type of a father-son relationship.
Often justifiable, but tiring and emotional rants have been used to relay the rage and frustration felt by the father in this story. The writing style was definitely work - sometimes a little more description for my tastes. How the author concluded branch of Caleb was wondering if I had missed some pages, because he did not really conclude. It is painfully clear that there will be a book two on Slate, who may provide explanations and closing lacking in this book.
Direction of women, a relatively large book with over 400 pages, is difficult to classify. This is a non-fiction with mystery and paranormal occurrences family which involves two families separated by generations, but connected by a little boy named Caleb and the Earth, they were all called "home". I thought it was interesting that the author shows how having children can sometimes provide a new understanding of our education and our parents - and consequently of our personality.