Adoption Memoirs
Memoirs are accounts of experiences over a period of time as remembered by the author, and members of the adoption and foster care communities have exceptional stories to tell that fall into this genre. Listed alphabetically.
1)Beneath a Tall Tree 
Jean Strauss' memoir as an adoptee, a tribute, diary, and journal of search and reunion all rolled into one. Strauss tells her story - at once both funny and sad, personally exclusive and inclusive, hers and ours - starting with the 'tallest of trees,' her father, and culminating in a family tree replete with adoptive and birth families.
Read ReviewClick here to buy 2)Like Family: Growing Up in Other People's Houses 
Paula McLain's remarkable book about growing up in the foster care system with her two sisters during the 70s and 80s should be in every library.
Read ReviewClick here to buy 3)Secret Thoughts of an Adoptive Mother Jana Wolff's account of building a transracial, open adoption in the 90s is filled with sensitivity, candor, and humor that often borders on hilarity. Not afraid to admit to some pretty awful thoughts, Wolff's memoir has helped many adoptive and birth families open the door to better communication.
Click here to buy 4)The Same Smile This wonderfully human story of a 60s relinquishment, the loss of a subsequent child to leukemia, and a family reunited is told in the blended voices of mother and (found) daughter.
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