Trapped can either be read as a full-length eBook or in 3 serialised eBook-only parts.
This is PART 3 of 3 (Chapters 24-35 of 35).
You can read Part 3 on release of the full-length eBook and paperback.
The first in a series of highly anticipated new titles from foster carer Rosie Lewis.
Phoebe, an autistic nine-year-old girl, is taken into police protection after a chance comment to one of her teachers alerts the authorities that all might not be what it seems in her comfortable, middle-class home. Experienced foster carer Rosie accepts the youngster as an emergency placement knowing that her autism will represent a challenge – not only for her but also for the rest of the family.
But after several shocking incidents of self-harming, Pica and threats to kill, it soon becomes apparent that Phoebe’s autism may be the least of her problems.
Locked for nine years in a secret world of severe abuse, as Phoebe opens up about her horrific past, her foster carer begins to suspect that Phoebe may not be suffering from autism at all.
Rosie Lewis has been a short-term foster carer for over seven years and in that time has shared her home with over twenty children. Since childhood, Rosie has had an obsession with books and is now delighted to combine fostering with her other passion, writing, by recording some of her experiences in a series of memoirs. Based in northern England, Rosie writes under a pseudonym to protect the identities of the children she looks after.
She lives in the North of England with her own two children.
This series set off a lot of anxieties for me. For personal reasons. But I had to finish the third book. Rosie and her children are remarkable people. What Rosie did for Phoebe was magical. With each step of Phoebe’s growth I celebrated her. Thanks for a very touching, soul grabbing book. God bless you Rosie
I read the whole book in one morning. Having a daughter who is a foster carer made the book even more poignant. I am constantly amazed of the "evil that men do" and the carers who go the extra mile to heal those damaged children.