Welcome Guest, Not a member yet? Create Account  


Forum Statistics

14 Members,   3,536 Topics,   10,207 Replies,   Latest Member is Stanley


  David - The Sex Squad (1998)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-15-2025, 11:58 AM - Replies (1)

   


In the 1950’s, seventeen-year old Harry Potter moves to Greenwich Village, NY to pursue a career as a ballet dancer. Professionally, he finds a place as a chorus dancer at the old Metropolitan Opera house and becomes a member of the “Sex Squad”—those chorus dancers well built enough to carry off the skimpy costumes in Aida. Personally, he quickly becomes the focus point in a tempestuous, complicated love triangle with two of his fellow dancers. Torn between passion and his true love—dancing—Harry must come to a decision about whom he loves, who he is, and what he is willing to sacrifice for the world of ballet.

Continue reading..

  The Heartrending Story of James Bulger (2013)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-15-2025, 11:55 AM - Replies (1)

   


James Bulger was just a few weeks shy of his third birthday when, on 12 February 1993, he wandered away from his mum Denise in a shopping mall in Bootle. Grainy images from a security camera showed him trustingly holding the hand of ten-year-old Jon Venables as they walked away. Venables and his friend Robert Thompson murdered James, in a crime that shocked the world. In this haunting book, James' father Ralph describes how his world fell apart in the days that followed. In his darkest hours he drank to numb the pain, and the stress tore his marriage apart. He tells how he learned to cope with his grief, but the sorrow of James' death has never left him. He discusses the long legal battle to see justice for his son, as he tried to prevent his killers being released early, and his continuing fight to see them behind bars where they can't hurt anyone else. Above all, he pays tribute to his son, an adorable, cheeky boy whose bright smile brought joy to his family's lives.

Continue reading..

  What They Did to the Kid - Confessions of an Altar Boy
Posted by: WMASG - 12-15-2025, 11:52 AM - Replies (1)

   



”What They Did to the Kid” is a memoir spinning as a comic novel for general-fiction readers intrigued by boys’ school tales, and baby boomers who “survived Catholic school.” Ryan O’Hara, coming of age from 14 to 24, is the wise adolescent narrating readers’ entry into the secret culture of 1950’s altar boys who go to the seminary, meet priests, and must decide their own identities. The novel’s interior ticking covers the clock and calendar of boys’ emerging consciences and edgy consciousness. “The San Francisco Chronicle” says, “Jack Fritscher reads gloriously. “Strong characters and snappy dialog propel the character-driven plot of male-dominant pecking order. At Misericordia Seminary (aptly nicknamed “Misery”), Ryan O’Hara exposes his own story. He’s trapped for oxygen-with 500 other boys-by the imperial Rector Karg, the disciplinarian Father Gunn “of the USMC,” the tart Father Polistina, and the rebel-priest Chris Dryden “who knows Fellini and JFK.” The storytelling Irish-American author gives each ensemble character-hero or villain, student or priest, man or woman-a rich back story. Black civil rights of the 60’s as well as three interesting women characters open this tale out of the suffocating seminary and on to the hot streets of Chicago’s South Side and Old Town.The compelling psychological drama hinges on the very source and aspirations of priestly vocation versus self-esteem. “Is God calling me-and what about chastity? Or is it just the ‘Bali Hai’ of blind ambition and social climbing-and what about sex?” Fritscher makes deeper than usual sense of soulful coming-of-age material. The hearty supply of boarding school episodes cumulatively reveals the dueling dynamic between the boyish protagonist, Ryan O’Hara, and the callous ambition of the handsome bully, Tank Rimsky, as they fight toward the finish line of “manly men’s” ordination to the priesthood. “The hardest thing to be in America today is a man. “The novel is based on an under-reported story: the Catholic Church recruited 200,000 boys into seminaries in the 1950’s. Only 20,000 were ordained. “Kid” details, in a nostalgic and not unkind take what happened to the missing 180,000 boys and the women and men in their families. Daring to step inside Catholic culture, without being parochial, this American story reveals the 1950’s roots of 21st-century “recovering Catholic” panic and angst. The millions of post-Catholic baby boomers who have exited the Church will compare notes and laugh knowingly at the dead-on characterizations. Fashionably anti-Catholic campers will say, “but, of course!”Readers might catalog “Kid” in the genre of “Young Torless, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man,” and “Lord of the Flies.” Before now, no one of the surviving 180,000 ex-seminarians has dared reveal this insider confession on the secret milieu of the Catholic education of priests. From interviews with more than a hundred former seminarians, Jack Fritscher uniquely stages their true story arcs with wit, verve, and comedy. “What They Did to the Kid” is the fourth novel from Jack Fritscher whose twelve books have sold more than 100,000 copies. Jack Fritscher is a graduate of the prestigious Pontifical College Josephinum, a Roman Catholic seminary, located in Columbus, Ohio, and directly subject to the Vatican in Rome. He received his doctorate in American Literature from Loyola University, Chicago.

Continue reading..

  Greggory W - Unspeakable Acts (1993)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-15-2025, 11:48 AM - Replies (1)

   


In 1987, nine days before Christmas, Thomas Waters-Rimmer, a first-year college student, filed a $5 million lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Cleveland against Lorain County, its commissioners, and its child welfare agency. He accused the three of negligence, holding them responsible for the harm he suffered after the child welfare agency, the Lorain County Children Services Board, removed him from the custody of his abusive father when he was four and placed him in a home where he was sexually abused for twelve years. The focus of the complaint was Children Services but legal protocol required that the county and its commissioners also be named as defendants.
The suit—with its all too familiar allegation of a child protection agency failing to protect a child—sparked major news coverage. A CBS-TV affiliate in Vermont, where Tom lived, first reported the story. The broadcast was carried by a sister station in Cleveland, where the city’s major newspaper, the Plain Dealer, printed follow-up stories. And the Chronicle-Telegram in Elyria where the administrative office of Children Services was located, about thirty miles southwest of Cleveland, also published stories. Tom and one of his lawyers also were featured on a talk show of Cleveland radio station WWWE.
I learned about the lawsuit four months later in April 1988 when a literary agent phoned me in New York City, where I lived, provided some details about the lawsuit, and asked if I would be interested in working with Tom on a book. He called me because of a book I had written about kids who murdered their parents. Several chapters were based on interviews with sons and daughters who, because of the psychological, physical, and sexual violence they had suffered in their homes, killed their mothers and fathers. I believed the slayings were the only means for many of the kids to protect themselves and that the sentences for those imprisoned were exceedingly harsh in light of the sadistic treatment they suffered in their homes.
Those opinions had prompted the agent to contact me. If I could sympathize with murderous kids, he reasoned, then I should certainly be able to sympathize with his client, who had not killed anyone even though he had been cruelly mistreated by his natural father and then savagely abused by his foster father. Tom was seeing a psychologist regularly and attending college full time in Vermont, the agent said. He had not succumbed to the harmful effects of a brutal childhood like the kids I had interviewed. He was leading a normal life. He wanted justice, not revenge. That was his reason for filing the suit. He hoped it would make a difference in the lives of other kids.
Tom, the agent intimated, was on a crusade.
I told the agent I was too busy to take on another project. I was teaching full time in the journalism department at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, working part time at the New York Post and developing a proposal for a book about kids on death row. But besides having no spare time, I also was skeptical about working with Tom. I had learned from my earlier research that it was very difficult for kids to talk about what they had suffered in their homes even though many of the ones I had interviewed had told me more than they had told their lawyers and their

Continue reading..

  Lead Us Not into Temptation (1992)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-15-2025, 11:25 AM - Replies (1)

   


Winner of a Religious Public Relations Council Wilbur Award and a Catholic Press Association Book AwardJason Berry's Lead Us Not into Temptation put a national spotlight on the issue of clergy sex abuse of children and has been used in newsrooms across the country. Berry takes us through the lives of traumatized victims and their parents, torn by loyalty to the church, into the machinations of bishops and church lawyers. At root, this is a story about politics, how sexual conflicts within clerical culture have compromised the power structure of the church. This new paperback edition of Berry's investigation includes an updated introduction that takes the scandal into the Vatican.

Continue reading..

Online Users
There are currently 2 online users. 0 Member(s) | 2 Guest(s)

Welcome, Guest
You have to register before you can post on our site.

Username
  

Password
  





Search Forums

(Advanced Search)