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The Orphan Keeper von Camron Wright
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The Orphan Keeper (Original 2016; 2016. Auflage)

von Camron Wright (Autor)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
2157124,823 (4.12)3
Fiction. Literature. HTML:

Based on a remarkable true story

Seven-year-old Chellamuthu's life??and his destiny??is forever changed when he is kidnapped from his village in Southern India and sold to the Lincoln Home for Homeless Children. His family is desperate to find him, and Chellamuthu anxiously tells the Indian orphanage that he is not an orphan, he has a mother who loves him. But he is told not to worry, he will soon be adopted by a loving family in America.

Chellamuthu is suddenly surrounded by a foreign land and a foreign language. He can't tell people that he already has a family and becomes consumed by a single, impossible question: How do I get home? But after more than a decade, home becomes a much more complicated idea as the Indian boy eventually sheds his past and receives a new name: Taj Khyber Rowland.

It isn't until Taj meets an Indian family who helps him rediscover his roots, as well as marrying Priya, his wife, who helps him unveil the secrets of his past, that he begins to discover the truth he has all but forgotten. Taj is determined to return to India and begin the quest to find his birth family. But is it too late? Is it possible that his birth mother is still looking for him? And which family does he belong to now?

From the best-selling author of The Rent Collector, this is a deeply moving and gripping journey about discovering one's self and the unbreakable family bonds that connect us forever… (mehr)

Mitglied:FicusFan
Titel:The Orphan Keeper
Autoren:Camron Wright (Autor)
Info:Shadow Mountain (2016), Edition: Hardcover, 432 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek, Lese gerade, Book Group - Fiction
Bewertung:
Tags:fiction, family, orphan, kidnapping, India, USA, based on true story, BN Fiction Book Group, ebook, Kindle, IP

Werk-Informationen

The Orphan Keeper: A Novel Based on a True Story von Camron Wright (2016)

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This book is a captivating read, and it is a new addition that is geared to younger readers, 10 to 13 years old.
Lessons taught to the young Chellamuthu, are a bit harsh by our standards, but in the end help identify the adult Taj. Sadly, this is based on a true story, and I can’t imagine this families grief when this young boy is kidnapped from his village and life.
He finally ends up in America, and what we think of a life taking up turn, the author makes us think of the language barrier, food not the same, and missing your home and family.
We follow this young fellows struggles from before he is kidnapped, to the adult he becomes, and then his search for his lost family. Can you imagine looking for the home you lost in crowded India?
This is a story filled with emotions and perseverance, along with the caring for you fellow man, and it quickly becomes a page turner. A story to help you realize how blessed you are!
I received this book through the Publisher Shadow Mountain, and was not required to give a positive review. ( )
  alekee | Oct 6, 2022 |
“Seek dharma, child. Find out how you fit in, who you are. Remember that everything around you has a purpose. Even you.”

I loved this adaptation of the The Orphan Keeper for young readers. This powerful story is a must read realistic fiction based on the true story of Taj Rowland. As a young boy in Erode, India, Chellamuthu gets into the normal scrapes of growing up. He learns difficult lessons as less than savory companions tempt him to steal and do things he knows his mother wouldn’t approve of. But Chellamuthu is a good boy at heart who tries to do his best and sacrifices his own happiness to help others. When he is kidnapped and taken to an orphanage several hours away from his home, he pleads with them to take him back to his family. He knows his family wouldn’t give him up and he knows he’s not an orphan, yet he is deceptively sold to an unknowing family in America and promised a better life.

Chellamuthu’s new life in America consists of teasing, learning a new culture and language, and slowly losing his memories from home. Though his adoptive family is kind and loving, he still wants to find a way back to India. With the new name of Taj Rowland and through the years, his memories gradually slip away, yet he recognizes something is missing in his life. A study abroad to London, meeting a spunky psychology student Kelly, and being surrounded by Indian culture brings back old memories long forgotten. From this time on, Taj makes a plan to return to India and find his family.

This story was so touching. I could easily identify with Chellamuthu’s mother who goes to great lengths to find her missing son. I could also sympathize with Eli and the other orphanage’s owners who thought they were giving a better life to Chellamuthu and the children who were brought or kidnapped and placed in the orphanage. But, there’s something about understanding one’s family and roots. The ache for Taj is palpable and I can’t imagine what it was like for a little boy to be pulled from everything he loved and understood and placed in such a different culture. His survival and thriving is a great example to both young adults and adults. His search for his family is miraculous and the way he gives back to his village and family once he finds them shows he truly found “dharma.”

Highly recommend this book! It’s an inspiring, uplifting story that will touch your heart. I received an advanced complimentary copy from the publisher. All opinions are my own and I was not required to provide a positive review. ( )
  Melissas-Bookshelf | Oct 4, 2022 |
To quote the Nostalgia Critic's review of "The Phantom of the Opera," this was a biographic recap of falsified true events. I seriously wonder if the real people portrayed in this book were okay with the final product. I was clearly not the intended audience for this book. I was told it contained themes that were not there in the slightest. Instead, I trudged through a book that is in fact Christian literature, which I don't read. I'm not angry that it was Christian literature; I'm irritated that it was presented to me as something wholly different and I kept reading, looking for those themes. No, they were not there. This is instead one of the cheesiest, Disney-fied adoption stories I've read. You wanna do it right, read "Taking Flight: the story of a war orphan," the autobiography of Michaela DePrince. It treats tough themes with the respect deserved, instead of ramming suspense and "but he totes gets rescued!" down audience's throats. The discussion questions at the end of this book were so, so creepy. The entire book was written through the framing of "And then the nice white Christians rescued him and he converted and he's super divorced from his culture, which is fine because he needs to assimilate." They're not horrified he was kidnapped, as the book flap suggests. They were disappointed, but it's portrayed in purple prose. They never stop talking about the Christian god, and I was not reading for that. Even the kidnappers and the orphanage-runners talk about the Christian god and use that for justifying their horrifying behavior. People are so clearly the evilest villain to ever live or the shining example of whoever, in this.

There was just so much purple prose, especially around the love interest. His re-entry, as it were, into Indian culture was written about so strangely but also cliche, that I wondered a lot what the -real- experience was like. They even communicate in song lyrics as a code. That's called songfic in the fanfiction community, author. You're writing in fanfiction style when you're writing about someone's actual life! The way the author writes--I just--I couldn't take it seriously at all. I never did find the themes I was looking for. ( )
  iszevthere | Jun 25, 2022 |
This was an amazing tale, one eye-opening, heart-breaking and a bit astonishing – I was glued to the page from the very beginning. Never in the world have I read a more fortuitous coincidence as in this book. Camron Wright has written the story of Chellamuthu, keeping to the story he was told and fictionalizing parts where blanks needed to be filled in.

The Orphan Keeper was a two-tissue read for me. It is a tale of love of family, personal struggle and determination, vividly told. The characters are aptly depicted, and I was drawn into their struggles: the pain and abandonment felt by young Chellamuthu, the strong belief of the orphanage manager that he truly was giving the young people a chance at a better life (however misguided it was), the struggles of Taj to fit in as the only brown-skinned boy in several counties as he was growing up. His re-introduction to the Indian culture he had largely forgotten occurred while he was studying in London was fascinating. But it was the determination of Taj in his later years to seek out his family that stayed with me. Such a powerful and beautiful story about the strength of the family bond – I think it would be a wonderful pick for book clubs. ( )
  jenncaffeinated | Jul 4, 2021 |
This novel based upon a real story is set in India and later in the United States. Chellamuthu is a young boy living in the slums of a village in India. His life is hard, but he is basically happy and is loved by his family. One day he disobeys his father when the father tells him to wait outside a building. Chellauthu is kidnapped and taken in a van to the Lincoln Home Orphanage. Here he tries to tell Eli, the man seemingly in charge, that he has a family and he is not an orphan. Once he tries to escape by climbing through what is basically a sewer. He does meet others here particularly one boy who he plays with and a young girl who is very ill.

Eli, the manager of the orphanage, is a Christian and truly believes he is saving these children. Whether or not he really knows that the boys has been kidnapped is not clear. The goal of the orphanage is to place these children in places such as the United States.

Soon Chellamuthu finds himself on a plane to the United States where he is adopted into a loving family, Linda and Fred Rowland. Fred is a wrestling coach at the high school and the boy soon also learns to wrestle. Because his name is so strange to others, the family gives him the name of Taj. Several chapters deal with Taj's first impressions of the new home. Chapters then skip to Taj as a senior in high school. He has moved out of the house (that is never really explored), and is able to get a scholarship to a school in London where he lives with an Indian family. This is his first experiences with people from India as he never met any where he lived. This opens an entirely new world to him.

He develops friendships and eventually comes back to the US now determined to find his roots in India. He meets an Indian girl whom he falls in love with. Strangely, he finds that it is this girl's father who wrote the letter in India regarding the adoption. Taj and the girl eventually marry against the wishes of her family who still believe in arranged marriages and the father never helps Taj find his family. When they go back for a wedding of a relative, Taj explores the area and eventually does find the place where he grew up and the biological mother. All of this seems extreme, but it is based on a true story and there are pictures in the back of the book. Interesting story. ( )
  maryreinert | Mar 26, 2021 |
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"The Lord is thy keeper: The Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand."
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To the lost child in all of us, searching for home.
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The car jerks to a stop in front of my home, and two men climb out.
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Fiction. Literature. HTML:

Based on a remarkable true story

Seven-year-old Chellamuthu's life??and his destiny??is forever changed when he is kidnapped from his village in Southern India and sold to the Lincoln Home for Homeless Children. His family is desperate to find him, and Chellamuthu anxiously tells the Indian orphanage that he is not an orphan, he has a mother who loves him. But he is told not to worry, he will soon be adopted by a loving family in America.

Chellamuthu is suddenly surrounded by a foreign land and a foreign language. He can't tell people that he already has a family and becomes consumed by a single, impossible question: How do I get home? But after more than a decade, home becomes a much more complicated idea as the Indian boy eventually sheds his past and receives a new name: Taj Khyber Rowland.

It isn't until Taj meets an Indian family who helps him rediscover his roots, as well as marrying Priya, his wife, who helps him unveil the secrets of his past, that he begins to discover the truth he has all but forgotten. Taj is determined to return to India and begin the quest to find his birth family. But is it too late? Is it possible that his birth mother is still looking for him? And which family does he belong to now?

From the best-selling author of The Rent Collector, this is a deeply moving and gripping journey about discovering one's self and the unbreakable family bonds that connect us forever

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