Finding Family
Last week I attended a book club meeting with a few people from our genealogy society. We try and get together once a month to discuss and share the books we have on our shelves. Sometimes we have eight people in attendance, sometimes we have only three or four.
This month, one member discussed a book
she borrowed from another member of our society who bought the book
from our Ways and Means Sales table at one of our general meetings.
She said she couldn't put it down and finished reading it in one
sitting. She gave it to her daughter who also finished reading it in
no-time flat. That intrigued me.
When we got up to leave, I asked to
borrow the book and then pass it onto another member who also said
she was interested in reading it. This past week I started and
finished this wonderful, easy to read and hard to put down book from
Richard Hill called “Finding Family: My Search for Roots and the
Secrets in My DNA”.
I love a good mystery, in fact, that's
mostly what I read on my Nook. This book kept me up late at night; I
was sneaking a few chapters as I ate lunch or while a passenger in
the car. Let me quote what is on the back of the book:
“...this isn't fiction.
It's an engrossing account of an adoptee trying to reclaim the
biological family denied him by sealed birth records. This
fascinating quest—including the author's landmark use of DNA
testing—takes readers on an exhilarating roller-coaster ride and
concludes with a twist that rivals anything Hollywood has to offer.”
The book is only 249 pages but they are
packed with insightful and helpful tips anyone could use. The chapters were tight, didn't ramble
and moved the story along in a nice easy clip.
I'm not adopted, nor is anyone else in
my family, but I would highly recommend this informative, delightful
and sometimes humorously funny mystery. Our society's Ways and Means
chairperson will be purchasing more of these
books for our sales table.
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