The expose about Thomas's early life, is the key strength of this book. Particularly details of her early years trapped with two under two, in a severely physically abusive relationship. Those details were gripping and fascinating, alongside how she managed to escape the situation, and build her life from the ground up, whilst supporting an infant and a toddler. Interesting also, was the reveal of how she began her foray into working with disturbed children. It began with her seeking help from a neighbour, for the behaviours of her traumatised, disturbed, arsonist son. The narrative loses its power and honestly, when she details her actual work as a "therapeutic mom". She sounds self-righteous, judgemental, self-aggrandising, at parts creepy even (particularly her repetitive refrain that children need to be "respectful, responsible and fun to be around"). Her pompous and heavy-handed tone suggests to me that she is a narcissist, and is motivated to take on these damaged children, for her ego and sense of power/ control. The contributions of the infamous Beth Thomas (the child from the 90's HBO feature, 'Child of Rage'), felt flat and contrived to please and appease the author by flattering her, and corroborating her account. It lacked genuine honesty and insight into Beth's experience of her foster and eventual adoptive mother.