I first saw this book when Pastor Mark Driscoll said he recommended it to those who thought about adopting, was adopted, or know people who are adopted. So, being the one who wishes to adopt children, I got this (well, technically, my fiance bought it for me, but who's counting?).
Let me start off by saying that this book is good. I am unfamiliar with the author, Russell Moore, and this was the first book I read about adoption. There are many things I liked in this book but many things I didn't like and some things, I flat out disagreed with.
The part I disagreed with began on page 36, where Moore says people would ask him if he would teach his two adopted children about their cultural heritage (his adopted children are from Russia). He states that most people probably wondered if he would teach his children about Russian culture, folk songs and tales, holidays, etc. Moore says he will teach them about their heritage but not as Russians, but as Mississippians (apparently, that's where their family is from). As someone who is half-Korean, I admit that I was a little taken back by this--maybe because I was brought up with two different cultures colliding. To be honest, I want to teach my (adopted) children about their cultural heritage. That's who they are. I mean, sure they may not live where they are from, but to basically ignore it completely (which, for some reason, I felt Moore is suggesting) would be horrendous to me.
I did enjoy that he included a chapter entitled "Don't You Want Your Own Kids?" A lot of times, when I tell people I want to adopt, the question I get is, "Why? Why not have your own kids?" For months, and even to this day, I grapple with that question. Yes, I do want to have my own kids, I tell people, but I also want to adopt one because, like Moore lovingly stated over and over again, we were first adopted by God into sonship (or...daughter-ship, in this case) and we now heirs and co-heirs with Christ. It almost blows my mind that people think adoption is such a crazy idea when I, a perfectly healthy woman, wants to adopt a child. Someone also said to me, "You won't love that child as much as you love your own flesh and blood." All I thought was, "Seriously? A child I fought for and grew to love in nearly the same way as having it in my womb would somehow be loved differently?" I couldn't agree less with this certain person's statement.
That was a bit off topic...
Nonetheless, Moore was very well-rounded, I thought. This book was Scriptural and informative, answering a broad range of questions such as whether to adopt nationally or internationally, behavior and discipline, and also how extended family members may feel about their sons or daughters adopting a child.