Search - A Man Named Dave: A Story of Triumph and Forgiveness

Used Book ~ A Man Named Dave: A Story of Triumph and Forgiveness by author Dave Pelzer
 
A Man Named Dave: A Story of Triumph and Forgiveness
Author: Dave Pelzer

Book Information
Publisher: Dutton Books
Book Type: Hardcover
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780525945215 - ISBN-10: 0525945210
Publication Date: 10/1/1999
Pages: 284

Book Description:
The inspiring conclusion to the New York Times bestselling series that includes A Child Called 'It' and The Lost Boy

Dave Pelzer's incredible and inspiring life story has already captured the interest of more than one million readers. A Man Named Dave is the long-awaited conclusion to his trilogy in which he describes how he triumphed over years of physical and emotional abuse from his parents to become a self-accepting and confident adult. Readers of Pelzer's previous two bestsellers await this book--the first of Pelzer's books to be available in hardcover--to learn how he finally confronts his pathologically abusive mother and his neglectful, alcoholic father in an effort to turn a childhood marked by rejection and emotional abuse into an adulthood filled with love and acceptance.

* Dave Pelzer's first two books have been on the New York Times bestseller list for more than one hundred weeks combined

* The first two books in this trilogy have been translated into ten languages

"A Child Called 'It' was so riveting, neither I nor my staff could put it down! Dave Pelzer's story does not focus on his life-threatening plight as much as his unyielding determination that inspires us all. Dave is a living example that all of us have the capability to better ourselves no matter what the odds. One's life is forever changed after living through the eyes of A Child Called 'It'."--Jack Canfield, coauthor of Chicken Soup for the Soul

"The Lost Boy stands shining as the premier book on the unique love and dedication that social services and foster families provide for our children in peril. Dave Pelzer is certainly a living testament of resilience, personal responsibility, and the triumph of the human spirit."--John Bradshaw, bestselling author of Homecoming

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Genres:
Other Versions of this Book: Paperback, Audio Cassette (Abridged), Paperback


Please Rate these Book Reviews

Tammy T. (tleet) wrote on 2/3/2009...


Amazing that Pelzer is as balanced as a human as he is considering what he's been through.

Jamie B. (mrsb) wrote on 7/31/2008...


This is the final book in the triology (A Child Called It (aged 4 to 12) and The Lost Boy (aged 12 to 18)) and this book is centered on his life from age 18 onward. I have to say that this is my favourite of the three. The other two were good as well ... they were just kinda difficult to read.

This book FINALLY answers some of your questions (and his as well) if you can believe what The Mother says to him (which he even admits he's not sure if she was honest or playing one of her "games" again). There are some more hellacious horrors revealed in this book and it just makes it all the more difficult to believe that there really ARE people like this cruel, hateful and vindictive MOTHER out there in the world!!

You get to see his "reunion" with his father, confrontations with his mother, his marriage and his wonderful awesome love for his son ...

Although I wasn't physically abused by my mother growing up, I was emotionally and mentally abused by her and I really REALLY related to this part of his life. Trying to figure out why he can't trust people and why he pusehes those he does love away and why he never feels like he is worth the love he is offered. I honestly learned some things about myself in this book and it was nice to see a happy ending in this wonderful person's life. It's amazing his amount of forgiveness ... I am not sure I could do it ... but I'm learning ... and trying ... with the help of his words from this book!

Jennifer T. (jenniferthib) wrote on 4/15/2007...


These words were eighteen year old Dave Pelzer's declaration of independence to his mother, and they represented the ultimate act of self-reliance. Dave's father never intervened as his mother abused him with shocking brutality, denying him food and clothing, torturing him in any way she could imagine. This was the woman who told her son she could kill him any time she wanted to - and nearly did.
The more than one million reader's of Pelzer's previous best selling memoirs, A Child Called It and The Lost Boy, know that he lived to tell his courageous story. But even years after he was rescued, his life remained a contual struggle. Dave felt rootless and awkard, an outcast haunted by memories of his years as the bruised, cowering "It" locked in his mother's basement. Desperately trying to make something of his life, Dave was determined to weather every setback and gain strength from advertity.
Dave's dramatic reunion with his dying father and the shocking confrontation with his mother - along with the discovery of her secret past - led to his ultimate calling: mentor to others struggling with personal hardships. From a difficult marriage to the birth of his son, from an unfilling career to an enduring friendship, Dave was finally able to break the chains of his past, learing to trust, to love, and to live.
A Man Named Dave is the gripping conclusion to his inspiratonal trilogy. With stunning generosity of spirit, Dave Pelzer invites his readers on his journey to discover how he turned shame into pride and rejection inot acceptance - how a lost, nameless, boy finally found himself in the heart and soul of a man who is free at last.

Drew R. (Shrew) wrote on 3/13/2007...


Awesome book. It's about Dave growing up. he was the child called it and how the affects of his childhood made him the man is his today.

Ellen K. (airangel) wrote on 2/24/2007...


Last of the Pelzer trilogy. Very good upbeat book of a man's rise from awful abuse for years as a child.

Michele M. wrote on 1/16/2007...


I loved this book. It was a book I couldn't put down.

Amanda H. (willowxand25) wrote on 11/12/2006...


All those years you tried your best to break me, and I'm still here. One day you'll see, I'm going to make something of myself." These words were Dave Pelzer's declaration of independence to his mother, and they represented the ultimate act of self-reliance. Dave's father never intervened as his mother abused him with shocking brutality. But even after he was rescued, his life remained haunted by memories of his years as the bruised, cowering "It" locked in his mother's basement. Desperately trying to make something of his life, Dave was determined to weather every setback and gain strength from adversity.
With stunning generosity of spirit, Dave Pelzer invites readers on his journey to discover how a lost, nameless boy finally found himself in the heart and soul of a man who is free at last.



Linda J. wrote on 10/14/2006...


Inspirational without covering up his own flaws.

LENNY S. (LENNY01) - Greensburg, PA wrote on 8/28/2006...



If you have read "It" and "Lost Boy", you must read this. His life is a triumph over evil. And his courage to forgive and face life head on is a valuable lesson for us all.

Carol W. (frugalfriends) wrote on 7/17/2006...


a great read. i could not put it down!