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Little Boy Broken reminds us in the most graphic fashion that not all child abuse victims are little girls. Although it reads like a novel, this book masterfully drives home the true horror of how outrageous maltreatment of children mangles the developing personality.
--
Fr. Heyward B. Ewart, III, Ph.D.
St. James Counseling Service
St. James the Elder Theological
Seminary
St. James Catholic Charismatic
Church, Jacksonville, FL

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This book is not for the faint-hearted. It is a no-nonsense, no prisoners taken account of the most horrific abuse a father can inflict on his progeny: physical, emotional, and, finally, sexual. This is the story of a road to one person's inner hell as it unfolds within the setting of a series of therapy sessions. The disconcertingly factual tone jars with the author's attempts at distancing himself through philosophizing. There is nothing general about his very private agony, his frightful demons, and his slow, almost inexorable disintegration. The tale is cast in terms of good vs. evil and, because of the enormity of the deeds related, its apocalyptic vocabulary is utterly believable. A heart-rending, nightmarish confession of a tortured soul.
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> >Sam Vaknin, author of "Malignant Self-love: Narcissism Revisited"

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Jeremy Todd has written a very disturbing book about women and men who abuse young boys from the perspective of a young boy who endured, suffered and survived such horrendous abuse that it’s a miracle he is still alive.  Not only does he survive his father’s attempt to murder him and survives being swallowed by a house of sick perverts for the purpose of sex – he also did not commit suicide.  His sense of self-preservation was strong – as is his understanding of the need for survivors to help one another.

Little Boy Broken details a true account of a father’s horrendous abuse of his 6-year-old son and the neighborhood men and women who readily and greedily snatched the offered sexual sacrifice – and willingly paid cash to the dad for the sexual misuse of this innocent boy.  Think it can’t happen in your neighborhood?  Think again and look more closely!  You’re in for a disturbing shock! This book exposes examples of the secrets within the houses around us – and the people we think we know.   

aCatharsis Foundation

www.catharsisfoundation.orgIt’s Time To Tell!

Graphic Abuse, Survival, Endurance, and Healing, September 24, 2008

Reviewed by Richard Blake for Reader Views (9/08)

"Little Boy Broken" is Jeremy Todd's story. This is a case study of a victim of child abuse and the long-term impact on his life. This is not simply a story of a dysfunctional family. It is a story of unimaginable and unspeakable brutality to a young child. It is all the more appalling by the shocking acts of abuse, physical, verbal, and sexual over a period of twelve years.

The story begins as Jeremy tells of awaking from a nightmare screaming. He goes on to introduce his family and develops a picture of his father's background, demand for dominance, and cruelty to his children. This background gives credence to the story that follows.

Jeremy was a top student always doing his work until the day he was molested by his father. His grades dropped, his behavior changed. His teacher badgered him instead of looking for the root cause for this change in behavior. The school principal joined in the cycle of abuse by getting permission from Jeremy's parents to punish him by "paddling" for his uncooperative conduct.

Educators, teachers, and school administrators did not recognize the symptoms of abuse and the traumatic devastation this played on a child's mind. The haughty school administrator missed or intentionally ignored the signs of physical abuse and "stole" the one thing Jeremy had left, the solace and peace he found through his school classroom and his friends.

Twenty-one years later Jeremy visited a mental health expert, a therapist, Dr. Sam Donaldson. Through the dialog between Dr. Donaldson and Jeremy as he revealed his story, the reader gains a deeper understanding of the long-term effects of child abuse, and a hope for the future. Jeremy learned that the feelings of shame, pain, and embarrassment he endured could be transformed into personal strength through these new insights he began putting his life back together again.

Dr. Donaldson helped Jeremy understand that his flashback experiences as well as hearing voices were a result of blocking out painful childhood experiences. Dr. Sam explained these as symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and disassociation resulting from the images burned in his memory, stored away to be revealed at another time.

Jeremy has been accused by his family of fabricating his story based on an alcohol-induced fantasy. Although Jeremy turned to alcohol to find momentary peace he remained optimistic throughout his ordeal. For a time he lost faith. He later identified his life with the sufferings of Job of the Old Testament.

Jeremy has been encouraged by therapists for years to share his experience in writing to help others face their issues.

The story of Shawn H., a fifteen-year-old boy, kidnapped by a pedophile predator at age 11, was the motivation Jeremy needed to publish his story. Shawn was put through the same brainwashing Jeremy had experienced. Jeremy identified in Shawn "an uncommon will and inner strength" to face each new day.

This true life story reads like a novel. The characters are well developed and become the real people they are. The bitter truth is horrific and unbelievable; however, it is repeatedly happening all around us. "Little Boy Broken" is an important book for parents, educators, counselors, mental health therapists, pastors, and first responders, to family related emergency calls. Heart wrenching!

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Little Boy Broken, well written and engrossing, is an almost unbelievable tale of not only the extent of abuse one human can inflict, but of what another human can endure and survive.”

—M. McKinnon, author REPAIR Your Life: A Program for Recovery from Incest and Childhood Sexual Abuse

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