A Place Called Home: A Memoir

A Place Called Home: A Memoir

by David Ambroz

Narrated by David Ambroz

Unabridged — 12 hours, 8 minutes

A Place Called Home: A Memoir

A Place Called Home: A Memoir

by David Ambroz

Narrated by David Ambroz

Unabridged — 12 hours, 8 minutes

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Overview

There are millions of homeless children in America today and in A Place Called Home, award-winning child welfare advocate David Ambroz writes about growing up homeless in New York for eleven years and his subsequent years in foster care, offering a window into what so many kids living in poverty experience every day.
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When David and his siblings should be in elementary school, they are instead walking the streets seeking shelter while their mother is battling mental illness. They rest in train stations, 24-hour diners, anywhere that's warm and dry; they bathe in public restrooms and steal food to quell their hunger. When David is placed in foster care, at first it feels like salvation but soon proves to be just as unsafe. He's moved from home to home and, in all but one placement, he's abused. His burgeoning homosexuality makes him an easy target for other's cruelty. * * *
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David finds hope and opportunities in libraries, schools, and the occasional kind-hearted adu< he harnesses an inner grit to escape the all-too-familiar outcome for a kid like him. Through hard work and unwavering resolve, he is able to get a scholarship to Vassar College, his first significant step out of poverty. He later graduates from UCLA Law with a vision of using his degree to change the laws that affect children in poverty.*

Told with lyricism and sparkling with warmth, A Place Called Home depicts childhood poverty and homelessness as it is experienced by so many young people who have been systematically overlooked and unprotected.* It's at once a gripping personal account of deprivation-how one boy survived it, and ultimately thrived-and a resounding call for readers to move from empathy to action.
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Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

06/27/2022

In this captivating debut, Ambroz, a national poverty and child welfare advocate, recounts his harrowing experience with homelessness and as a child in the foster care system. Raised in the 1990s in New York City by a schizophrenic, abusive mother, Ambroz and his siblings learned self-reliance early on as they bounced between homeless shelters and dangerous nights spent living on the streets. Eventually, Ambroz’s mother’s physical abuse became so extreme that he reported her and was subsequently thrown into foster care. But as Ambroz reveals in unflinching flashbacks, the system proved to be no sanctuary, rotating him through a series of group homes over the next few years that ranged from neglectful to abusive, before he finally met and moved in with a stable, loving family. At age 17, with the help of his attorney and social worker, Ambroz was able to emancipate himself a year early from the foster care system, after which he attended Vassar college and finally came out as a gay man. While the narration occasionally lags, Ambroz’s triumph over adversity will stir readers’ sympathies, as will his clear-eyed critique of the nation’s broken foster care system: “When it comes to ailments of the poor... poverty programs treat the symptoms, never the system that produced them.” Galvanizing and compassionate, this personal account of survival should be required reading. (Sept.)

From the Publisher

A Place Called Home will take your breath away. It’s a must read for anyone who’s looked at a raggedy street family and asked, ‘Who are those people?’ It’s also for everyone who cares about “Those People.” You will fall in love with David Ambroz, his beautifully-told, gut-wrenching story, and his great big heart.”Jeannette Walls, New York Times bestselling author of The Glass Castle

"It's impossible to read A Place Called Home and not want to redouble your efforts to fight the systems of poverty that have plagued America for far too long. In this book, David shares his deeply personal story and issues a rousing call to make this a more humane and compassionate nation."—Hillary Rodham Clinton

PORCHLIGHT BESTSELLER—.

“Gorgeous . . . A Place Called Home is a window into childhood poverty, abuse, homelessness, foster care, mental illness."—Chicago Tribune

Ambroz is a superb storyteller. Unless you lack a heartbeat, you can’t read A Place Called Home without wanting to do something to change our foster care system.—Washington Blade

Books to curl up with this December—Good Morning America

“It’s a story of struggle against enormous odds and infinite random cruelties. But it is not a story without hope. . . . Ambroz has written a book about a child’s life in poverty, homelessness, and the screwed-up foster care system that isn’t depressing or overly didactic. He offers the reader plenty about how the system works — and how it doesn’t — in recounting the life and adventures of one remarkable boy.”—Washington Independent Review of Books

"This gut-wrenching and rousing memoir of a childhood lived on N.Y.C. streets sheds unforgiving light on America’s own human-rights crisis—and dares us to do better."

PEOPLE

"A Place Called Home presents an unflinching, frank examination of the realities of being a child without a home and being surrounded by a fundamentally flawed system where neither child nor parent have enough help, or the right help, to break the cycle of poverty. Ambroz’s story is a frightening example of how easily inadequate procedures and policies traumatize lives each and every day. The heart of this first memoir is both a raw account of Ambroz’s journey to adulthood and a powerful, uncompromising call to action for significant change."

Booklist

"Riveting. . . A haunting, inspiring chronicle of fortitude and perseverance."

Kirkus, Starred Review

“[A] captivating debut…Galvanizing and compassionate, this personal account of survival should be required reading.”—Publishers Weekly

“An extraordinary memoir. I couldn’t put it down. It’s really changed the way I think and see people on the street who are homeless.” –Elizabeth Vargas, New York Times bestselling author of Between Breaths and host of  Heart of the Matter with Elizabeth VargasElizabeth Vargas

A Place Called Home asks us to reflect-on the family we come from and the family we find, the extraordinary courage of a child and the responsibility we all have to make the world safer for those who enter our world unprotected. In a society far too often consumed by division and dissonance, Ambroz writes to us at just the right time, lighting the way for a better world by asking us to give every child a chance.”—Steve Pemberton, author of A Chance in the World

“I love a true story where the downtrodden triumph over hardship—and A Place Called Home delivers. David Ambroz, through grit, courage, and integrity, overcomes obstacles beyond my imagination. I found myself cheering for him and the siblings he steadfastly protects, wondering how they were going to survive. David does more than that—he thrives—and then he pays it forward. A Place Called Home is an awe-inspiring story that will lift your spirits and soften even the hardest heart. It’s a beautifully told, captivating memoir.”—David Crow, author of The Pale-Faced Lie

“From his roller-coaster childhood being homeless on the streets of New York City to his boot-strapped entry to the privileged halls of the Ivy League, I was thoroughly entertained and even provoked by David Ambroz’s story.  More so than any book I have read in recent times, this must-read made me want to be better man.”—Dr. Alan Downs, author of The Velvet Rage

"A story destined to end in tragedy that magically rewards an indomitable determination to succeed. Beautifully written."
 —Ted Koppel, veteran ABC anchor and New York Times bestselling author of Lights Out

“I was deeply moved by his memoir, A Place Called Home, a soulful and ultimately uplifting tale of turning experience into power. This book tells the truths we need to hear and is a must-read for lovers of memoir and advocates alike; for those wondering what it is like to rise from poverty, and what an individual can do to fix the intractable problems we face.”—Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti

"A heartbreaking, gritty, and inspiring personal testament to the burden that is placed on a child in poverty. David’s elegantly written memoir is an ode to the millions of families who are struggling to survive and provides the immense hope that is needed to.”
 —Keith Ferrazzi, New York Times bestselling author of Competing in the New World of Work

“In A Place Called Home, Ambroz shares his personal journey out of a childhood marked by poverty, homelessness, and years in foster care – a story of courage, tenacity, and the power of education to transform lives.”
 —Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy

“David Ambroz faced seemingly insurmountable challenges his entire life and emerged with the grace and wisdom to tell the story. His dreams of a better life via education carried him through childhood abuse, homelessness, foster care, and finally to adulthood, where he leveraged his against-all-odds success to advocate for children living in poverty and foster care. This book is an inspiration to anyone who has encountered hardships, encouraging us to tackle them head-on with courage and determination.”
 —Madeline Di Nonno, President & CEO of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media

A Place Called Home is one of the best books I've ever read. . . . David, a true mensch, shared his story, so expertly written, to help the millions still in poverty — and so must we. This is the power of literature at its very best.”
 —Zibby Owens, Author of Bookends and Host of the Award-Winning Podcast Moms Don't Have Time To Read Books

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2022-06-22
Moving testimony from a survivor of trauma.

In his riveting debut memoir, lawyer and child welfare advocate Ambroz recounts an early life of poverty, cruelty, and degradation. With his mother suffering from severe mental illness, he and his two older siblings moved from New York City to Albany to Pittsfield, Massachusetts, living on the streets, in shelters, and occasionally in crumbling apartments from which, inevitably, they were evicted. Caught in a cycle of “homelessness, hunger, housing, welfare, and homelessness again,” Ambroz tried to mitigate his mother’s volatility by insulating her from triggers that would set her off. Not least, keeping her stable meant protecting himself and his siblings from countless “inexplicable moment[s] of brutal, casual cruelty.” Besides exposing the “illness, infection, infestation, and unmet needs” that marked his childhood, Ambroz indicts a system of severely inadequate social services. “The system doesn’t trust people in poverty,” he writes, and his desperate pleas for help were ignored: “Over and over again the three of us were left with a woman who was clearly hurting us by people in positions of authority.” When they were removed from their mother, the path to foster placement was fraught with obstacles. Ambroz was considered a special problem: Though he feared outing himself as gay, therapists—and one macho foster father—tried to “fix” him. After temporary housing in a juvenile detention facility and group homes, he was sent to a family that abused and exploited him. One of 450,000 children in foster care, Ambroz managed—with the help of sympathetic supporters and his own fierce determination—to escape the system that threatened to relegate him to the same “slide from poverty to disaster” that dogged his youth. Beginning in high school, as a member of the National Foster Youth Advisory Council, he has worked for meaningful reform, and with this potent memoir, he urges readers to “become one of the changemakers.” The author is now the head of Community Engagement (West) for Amazon.

A haunting, inspiring chronicle of fortitude and perseverance.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940178723661
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Publication date: 09/13/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 1,090,520
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