WorldCat Linked Data Explorer

http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/896939895

The lost child : a mother's story

"A personal and moving account of two children; a girl living in Regency England and Julie's own troubled son. One bleak, late winter's day, Julie Myerson finds herself in a graveyard, looking for traces of a young woman who died nearly two centuries before. As a child in Regency England, Mary Yelloly painted an exquisite album of watercolours that uniquely reflected the world she lived in. But Mary died at the age of twenty-one, and when Julie comes across this album, she is haunted by the potential never realised, the barely-lived life cut short. And most of all, she is reminded of her own child. Because only days earlier, Julie and her husband locked their eldest son out of the family home. He was just seventeen. How could it have come to this? After a happy growing-up, it had taken only a matter of months for this bright, sweet, good-humoured boy to completely lose his way and propel his family into daily chaos. He had discovered cannabis and was now smoking it everyday, and nothing they could say or do, no help they could offer, seemed to reach him. And Julie--whose emotionally fragile relationship with her own father had left her determined to love her children better--had to accept that she was, for the moment at least, powerless to bring back the boy she had known."--Publisher's description.

Open All Close All

http://schema.org/about

http://schema.org/description

  • ""A personal and moving account of two children; a girl living in Regency England and Julie's own troubled son. One bleak, late winter's day, Julie Myerson finds herself in a graveyard, looking for traces of a young woman who died nearly two centuries before. As a child in Regency England, Mary Yelloly painted an exquisite album of watercolours that uniquely reflected the world she lived in. But Mary died at the age of twenty-one, and when Julie comes across this album, she is haunted by the potential never realised, the barely-lived life cut short. And most of all, she is reminded of her own child. Because only days earlier, Julie and her husband locked their eldest son out of the family home. He was just seventeen. How could it have come to this? After a happy growing-up, it had taken only a matter of months for this bright, sweet, good-humoured boy to completely lose his way and propel his family into daily chaos. He had discovered cannabis and was now smoking it everyday, and nothing they could say or do, no help they could offer, seemed to reach him. And Julie--whose emotionally fragile relationship with her own father had left her determined to love her children better--had to accept that she was, for the moment at least, powerless to bring back the boy she had known."--Publisher's description."
  • ""A personal and moving account of two children; a girl living in Regency England and Julie's own troubled son. One bleak, late winter's day, Julie Myerson finds herself in a graveyard, looking for traces of a young woman who died nearly two centuries before. As a child in Regency England, Mary Yelloly painted an exquisite album of watercolours that uniquely reflected the world she lived in. But Mary died at the age of twenty-one, and when Julie comes across this album, she is haunted by the potential never realised, the barely-lived life cut short. And most of all, she is reminded of her own child. Because only days earlier, Julie and her husband locked their eldest son out of the family home. He was just seventeen. How could it have come to this? After a happy growing-up, it had taken only a matter of months for this bright, sweet, good-humoured boy to completely lose his way and propel his family into daily chaos. He had discovered cannabis and was now smoking it everyday, and nothing they could say or do, no help they could offer, seemed to reach him. And Julie--whose emotionally fragile relationship with her own father had left her determined to love her children better--had to accept that she was, for the moment at least, powerless to bring back the boy she had known."--Publisher's description."@en
  • "Julie Myerson explores the parallel stories of a nineteenth-century girl and her own troubled son."
  • "Julie Myerson explores the parallel stories of a nineteenth-century girl and her own troubled son."@en
  • ""While researching the story of a talented child artist from Regency England, novelist Julie Myerson is haunted by lost potential. Mary Yelloly, the young painter of exquisite watercolors, died at twenty-one, and Julie visits her grave only days after she and her husband locked their own teenage son out of the house. He had discovered drugs, and it had taken only a few months for the once happy boy to propel his family into chaos. Julie tells his story with devastating candor, struggling to accept that she is powerless to bring her son back. While these two young lives, one cut short, one derailed, may be separated by centuries, they raise the same questions: what happens when a child disappears from a family? and how is a parent to cope when love in not enough?"--Publisher's description."

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Biography"@en
  • "Biography"
  • "Electronic books"
  • "Autobiografické romány"
  • "erindringer"
  • "English fiction"
  • "Powieść autobiograficzna angielska"@pl
  • "History"
  • "History"@en
  • "Case studies"@en
  • "Case studies"
  • "Powieść angielska"@pl
  • "Autobiographical novels"
  • "Anglické romány"

http://schema.org/name

  • "The lost child a true story"
  • "Ztracené dítě : o rodičovské lásce, bezmoci a pomíjivosti života"
  • "The lost child : a mother's story"@en
  • "The lost child : a mother's story"
  • "The Lost Child"
  • "The Lost Child"@en
  • "Il figlio perduto"@it
  • "Il figlio perduto"
  • "Przegrane dziecko"@pl
  • "The lost child : a true story"
  • "The lost child : a true story"@en
  • "The lost child a mother's story"