Free: The Boy Who Loved Tornadoes, A Mother's Story *by Randi Davenport* - Nonfiction Books - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

FREE: The Boy Who Loved Tornadoes, A Mother's Story *by Randi Davenport*

The Boy Who Loved Tornadoes, A Mother's Story *by Randi Davenport*
A member of Listia gave this away for free!
Do you want FREE stuff like this?
Big yes    Big no
Listia is 100% Free to use
Over 100,000 items are FREE on Listia
Declutter your home & save money
La times

"Listia is like EBay, except everything is free" - Los Angeles Times
Techcrunch

"An Awesome Way To Give And Get Free Stuff" - Michael Arrington, TechCrunch
This Stuff is Free Too:
Description

The listing, The Boy Who Loved Tornadoes, A Mother's Story *by Randi Davenport* has ended.

Brand hardcover book from a smoke free home.Please feel free to ask questions!

From Publishers Weekly
An academic and writer at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, offers a dense, achingly inconclusive tale about her developmentally challenged son, whose difficulties remain elusively untreatable and largely undiagnosed. Davenport writes poignantly about her increasing sense of helplessness over the years as her son, Chase, moving into his teens, grows harder and harder to manage, from his inability to focus and sit still, to his paranoia and obsession with morbid thoughts, his seizures, to his eruptive agitation and truculence that eventually warranted long-term hospitalization. What was wrong with him? Davenport lists the dozens of doctors' suggestions over the years, from autism and severe ADHD to seizure disorder, psychosis, and schizophrenia. Yet, stubbornly, Chase's diagnosis remains unnamable, and a plethora of drugs often fail him, such as Clozaril, which checked his psychosis but left him vegetative. Chase's indefinable state proves problematic for insurance providers, who cut off his hospital coverage though no long-term care facility will take him. As a result, Chase has to spend a frightening stint at the state mental hospital. Davenport's memoir is intensely thorough and affecting. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Questions & Comments

The Boy Who Loved Tornadoes, A Mother's Story *by Randi Davenport* is in the Books | Nonfiction Books category