by Steve Luxenberg
Hardcover-
Newly selected Great Michigan Read 2013-14 and a Michigan Notable Book for 2010
One of the Washington Post Book World's "Best Books of ...
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We found the book to be inspiring to all of us that were interested in our own family trees and the struggle to find informaton. the story was so realistic of most of us.
This book was very interesting to me because I live in the Detroit area and have for my whole life. I studied at Eastern University and did volunteer hours at Northville State Hospital as part of completing my degree in Special Education.
This is a detective story, and it’s a mystery, and it’s true. Steve Luxenberg, a journalist, investigates the life of the aunt he never knew or knew of and the secret his mother kept to her dying day.
Luxenberg hears it first from his sister. Now adults, both their parents dead, it seems their mother, Beth, had a sister, Annie, who they had never heard of. And so begin the mysteries: Did Beth really have a sister? Why had she kept this secret? What was Annie’s story?
So he takes time off work at the WASHINGTON POST to investigate. He lays it out in chronological order, and the reader follows as he learns that, yes, Beth did have a sister named Annie who lived in an insane asylum in Detroit for more than 30 years until her death. And they never knew. But who did? Why was Annie left there, and why didn’t Beth want anyone to know?
ANNIE’S GHOSTS is so interesting, even mesmerizing. I’m glad I read it and only wish I had when it was named a Michigan Notable Book in 2009.
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