Boissevain Books has just released Brigid Marlin's The Box House, a poignant and inspiring story of a child's ability to transcend neglect and abuse.
This remarkable new book is the true story of an abused and neglected child's struggle to survive.
Only eight years old when we first meet her, Cassie Drover is determined to protect her younger siblings and create a "real home" for them all.
The Box House is Cassie's story. Both heartbreaking and inspiring, this story will stay with you long after you finish the last page.
Set in a small English town in the 1960s, the story follows the Cassie's journey. She has taken on the role of caretaker to her younger siblings.
She is determined to make a home for them. She literally builds a box house - a home constructed out of cardboard boxes.
The heroine of the story is a young teenager. The book is not intended for young children, since it describes child abuse. It might be appropriate for young adult readers.
The Box House is the Brigid Marlin's third book. She previously authored A Meaning for Danny and From East to West: Awakening to a Spiritual Search.
Ms. Marlin is known primarily as an artist and is the Founder and Director of the Society for Art and Imagination based in the UK. She has also illustrated a number of books, including King Oberon's Forest, a children's book written by her mother, Hilda van Stockum.
Boissevain Books has primarily published books for children, building on those of Hilda van Stockum (1908-2006), whose books are the core of the list. Starting with Robert Wack's book, Time Bomber, Boissevain Books has opened up a list of biographies/memoirs, of which this book is the third. (The second was Brigid Marlin's A Meaning for Danny, about the tragic life of an autistic/epileptic boy.)
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