Foster parents, adoptive parents, therapists, school counselors--anyone who works with behaviorally challenging children should read this book.
Wounded Children is a valuable resource for everyone involved with maltreated children--whether they are in foster care, have been adopted or are still living with bio parents. The authors focus on children who have been removed from abusive or neglectful homes and therefore experienced transitions in caregiving, but in my work I encounter children with many of the same emotional and behavioral problems who have never been removed from the maltreating parent. It's worth noting that if you work with children, you may well encounter kids with all the hallmarks of reactive attachment disorders even though they have never been removed from their birth parents.
The authors do a great job of presenting the current understanding of how childhood maltreatment shapes the brain and behavior, and then providing specific strategies and suggestions for how caregivers can respond to assist the children in healing.
Especially valuable is the emphasis on how the disruptive behavior and intense needs of maltreated children impact the caregivers and other children in the family. In my experience, children already living in the home before the arrival of traumatized foster/adopted children are the least recognized 'victims' in these family systems.
One bone to pick: One of the authors describes a couple who adopted a special needs child as doing so as part of their belief in "Voluntary Redemptive Suffering". Ugh. Something in me just rejects the notion of calling child-rearing voluntary suffering, as if parents are taking up the scourge as a way of martyring themselves for their own reasons, instead of just trying to produce a whole and healthy child for the child's sake. As objectionable as I find that concept and label, it does highlight the degree to which the experience of birth children is overlooked in our process of identifying the impact the arrival of traumatized children has on existing families--it isn't "voluntary" for the children of the adoptive/foster parents, but in many cases the suffering is very real.