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The Little Girl at the Bottom of the Picture
The Little Girl at the Bottom of the Picture: A Journey of Selfless Discovery | Jeremy White
2 posts | 1 read
"John Hart is your father" is seared in Edie White's brain when AncestryDNA sucker-punches her at work in Baton Rouge in 2018. Author Jeremy White's wife had altruistically submitted a sample in hopes of healing an unknown woman's nearly fifty- year-old wound. The Little Girl at the Bottom of the Picture: A Journey of Selfless Discovery immersively reveals how the resulting bombshell propels the two college sweethearts into this beautifully epic, transformational adventure that resolves a trio of daunting mysteries, including one plaguing an enthusiastic horde of gangster-adjacent Ukrainian Americans for two-thirds of a century.The heart of this powerful story about healing is Edie's utterly selfless agenda. It's also what sets it apart, as far as this tenured cynic can tell, from other books involving searches for biological family. Edie successfully dodges all the traps that could have turned our unicorn of a story into a darker version of the insane yet heartwarming tale that it is. With a smattering of bittersweet moments, The Little Girl is heavy on happy reunions, including a mind-blowing, poetic parental reunion of sorts, one involving a venerable Baton Rouge bookstore, no less.It's also worth noting this story occurs on the eve of 2020. A post-COVID read brings several themes to the fore, including social and racial justice, police brutality, and the value of science. Additionally, insidious homophobia in 1950s Middle America lies at the root of our heartbreaking titular mystery. The Little Girl also reminds us of a recent time when air travel was less perilous and we could safely hug strangers. In an age characterized by sickening inhumanity, this work celebrates the best of our humanity. Transcending issues of genealogy, The Little Girl appeals to readers seeking empathy in a divided land, and authentic beauty in an increasingly ugly world.
LibraryThing
review
everlocalwest
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Mehso-so

Reviewing the author's new title under his previous one because I stay annoyed with litsy.

Inhumana is White's response to his family's trial through the American healthcare system, specifically Medicare with his elderly mother. It's funny and angry but lacks the emotional core of his previous memoir. Like many books put out to capture a moment, this one could have cooked a bit longer.

review
everlocalwest
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Pickpick

I am walking away from this memoir not only feeling like I know these folks but like I genuinely care for them. Edie White, adopted as an infant never knew her biological parents, after a bit DNA testing and a ton of internet sleuthing she found mother, father, siblings, and more. A single entry into Ancestry.com solved a family's decades old mystery. A fascinating and abundantly charming family story; well researched and lovingly told.