The Fiction of Entitlement
A Novel
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
"This is by no means a sob story, rather an insight into the psychology which develops within institutions. The novel is my enquiry into understanding how we cope with disappointments due to the fiction of what we are conditioned to be entitled to and what we are told to expect.” Julienne Dolphin Wilding.
Spanning three generations, the novel is divided into three parts: The first is set in the 19th Century and tells the true story of how the determined philanthropist and religious fanatic Dr. Thomas Barnardo created alternative mothering and human rights for the destitute children of England.
The second part tells how a lost girl, Ann becomes a resident in Barnardos Girls’ Village Home in 1935 until her departure to Canada as a ‘human parcel’ from Barnardo’s emigration scheme. She sets off hoping to be worldly and useful but is exploited by the unjust and terrifying demands of her foster family.
The novel ends with the story of Ann’s daughter Evelyn who is raised in Barnardo’s care until 1953. Evelyn learns how to cope with injustices and disappointments during her institutionalised childhood.