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Ward Lassoe
Author
Diane: True Survivor
Diane: True Survivor is the powerful story of a woman who overcomes a lifetime of hardship and abuse. The details read like fiction, but it’s all very real. Through a series of compelling conversations, she shares intimate memories filled with faith and resilience. Diane is born in 1960 to a prostitute in London. When she’s an infant, her mother tries to kill both Diane and herself in a failed suicide attempt. Diane’s mother is committed to a mental asylum, and Diane is sent to a British orphanage. At age nine, her mother unexpectedly regains custody of Diane. Her mother is now living in the South Bronx, so Diane experiences major culture shock as she moves from an English village to an American ghetto. She soon faces even more challenges as she endures physical and emotional abuse from her mother and sexual abuse from her stepfather. Diane gets pregnant at fourteen and runs away. Along the way, she encounters a series of “angels” who help her survive on the streets. They include a love-struck, teenage paraplegic and a half-bald lesbian poet. Despite a series of abusive romantic relationships, Diane manages to create a new life for herself. She raises eight children (three biological and five adopted), and she finally finds happiness when she reunites with the father of her first child. He has kicked his long-time heroin addiction, but they soon learn that he is HIV-positive. They move to Charleston, South Carolina and have 10 happy years together before he dies. After his death, Diane discovers a new sense of faith and develops a meaningful spiritual life. The book concludes when Diane’s mother suddenly reappears in her life. Despite the years of abuse when she was a child, Diane eventually forgives her mother and invites her into her home. As they make a new life together, Diane’s story becomes one of grace and mercy. Diane: True Survivor also offers an interesting perspective on race relations. Diane is white but lives almost all her life in an African-American community and culture.
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