Adopted at birth in 1956, Emily enjoyed a golden childhood, attending private schools and going to dancing lessons. Things changed when Emily was seven years old and her mother turned on her, suddenly viewing her daughter as a rival. She became addicted to beating her and encouraged her new husband, a narcissistic bully, to use his rhino-whip on her. By the time Emily was twelve, he was sexually abusing her.
Emily found her way into the care system, where she was vulnerable to the worst excesses of male violence. She ran away to London and was drawn into life as an underage prostitute, servicing perverted clients. It was only when she was almost murdered that she turned her life around.
Set principally between 1966 and 1972, Runaway is a shocking book that brilliantly captures the sleazy Soho of the period, and exposes the frightening conditions in which many children were kept in care.
The Prologue is shocking enough as Emily tells us about her life up to the age of 16. Horrific. She then goes back to her roots in Lancashire, England and being adopted from birth in 1956. Her mother was particularly cruel. Issuing beatings on a constant basis from the age of 7. She dishes out physical and emotional abuse. What a start to life and let me tell you, it does not get any easier or any better for Emily.
This is like an early Martina Cole book but this is factual. Poor Emily just goes from one sexually abusive paedophile to the next. It is so so terrible. Absolutely sickening. The same grooming was happening in 1969 as it is now with young girls in children’s homes. She was 13 years and 2 months old when she was gang-raped by five men and became pregnant.
The book is well written and at times I just did not want to go on to a new chapter as you know something else will happen and that something is never good. What a life if you can call it that.
As a father I could never imagine letting down my daughters like Emily was. My eldest is the same age as Emily when Emily became a fully-fledged prostitute on the streets of Soho and having to perform the most derogatory acts for men who should be locked up. It just sickens me. Nobody should have to go through what Emily went through. Emily was let down by nearly every adult she met. From being adopted at a very young age it just went from bad to worse. The most wretched childhood you can imagine.
She briefly goes over her adult life but that is rushed to the extreme which is a shame as it actually sounds really interesting.
Disturbing yet gripping memoir - the author suffered at the hands of her adoptive parents and then later in care and ended up running away and living on the streets in London before eventually 'finding her way'. Told in a straightforward way, the author makes no excuses for her 'wrong choices' but is equally critical of those that abused her or chose to ignore/permit the abuse. Nevertheless, she admits to rarely trying to tell anyone what was going on, despite being given opportunities to do so, but explains that she thought she wouldn't be believed which, as it was set in the 1960s and 1970s, is probably true - 8/10.
Shatteringly brilliant. I read this as I am researching the Sixties and thought it was about someone who ran away to London. Well not exactly - it is about someone, Emily, who ran away from abuse - so far so depressing. However the brilliance is in the honesty of Emily's reflections and the expertise she has developed as a professional counsellor who is determined to improve the care system in the UK. But this isn't a dry academic recounting of her childhood problems, it is a visceral and brutally honest story of what happened to her as the outcast child of divorce and step childhood who was both abused because of that happening and in various aspects of the care system she stumbled into whilst running away from her abusive step family (mother and step father). It is written both to identify the failings in the care system but also as a searingly honest autobiography where we are identifying with Emily's hopes and desires to find some small place where she can express herself, do well and receive love in return. It has been written recently, after the recent scandals in the UK about abuse that have come to light following the Jimmy Saville inquiry, which has both given her the strength and purpose to reveal her own experiences and helped shape what she is trying to do with the book. Despite having this larger, and noble, purpose, the book is compellingly written. Like a good thriller you can only take chapter at a time, but in the end you can't put it down as you so want Emily to find the small place where she is accepted for who she is, and can become something more; brilliant.
I's been a while since I last read this sort of book, but, as sad as the topic was, I really enjoyed reading it. Poor Emily went through hell with an abusive adoptive mother and stepfather, then even worse was to come when she entered the "care" system. This is something that goes on under our noses everyday; Emily was brave to tell her story and strong enough to get through it and move on; now in a position to help others.
This autobiography is a heart-breaking story of an abused child. I would urge everyone to read this and open their eyes to the neglect and abuse that children go through.
A very good book but it is a very touchy subject but it's done in a way that makes you want to keep reading I was so happy to find out that Emily turned her life around in the end I just wish she would stop blaming her self for what happened to her. It makes you think that in the 70s there must of been a lot of child abuse happening but no one really talk about it. It makes me sick that no one did anything about at the time in till now just show you how messed up this world is. sorry about the grammar but I love reading but not any good at writing
Easy to read yet emotionally unpleasant. But story had to be told. Author had done an amazing work with very right conclusions in the end. Don't regret that I read it, it gives more insights to the lives of runway children and homeless.
Runaway: Wild Child, Working Girl, Survivor is not for the faint-hearted. This woman went through a lot at a young age and reading what she went through, in sometimes graphic and some times a quite flippant way was challenging at times.
It's hard to hear about the depravity of our fellow man and just when you think nothing left can surprise you it does. I learnt a lot from this book and Emily's experiences .
I hesitate to say it was a good book because of the content, but it was certainly though-provoking, heart-wrenching and well written.
An insight into the world of prostitution as experienced by a young girl previously abused in care homes and by her stepfather . A thought provoking book which highlights the sexual abuse which can be rife in many supposedly safe environments . Abusers can take many forms from care workers and those seemingly well respected in society . Fascinating and thought provoking .
This book covers some awful topics and isn't for the faint hearted, I couldn't put it down. Emily suffers at the hands of her neglectful mother and abuser step father, is dragged through a disfunctional 'care' system, being abused, mistreated and let down along the way. She ends up working the streets of Soho in the 70s, being abused, degraded and used. Until she finds the strength to get help and is finally reunited with her dad.
Reading this book was interesting because of a few minor issues. Writing ok. Storyline ok. But having been through some of what Emily described made me wonder about exactly what happened to Emily. Are some points embellished? Possibly. Or it could just be me, I am really not sure.
A hard hitting gut wrenching factually blunt account of a young life destroyed not only by the monsters she came into contact with. Also by society and the people paid to care and protect her. You owe it to Emily to read her story and accept that truth of the society we all play a part in creating.
A heart wrenching book, what this young girl went through from the age of 7 is so frightening, and was so terrible, what gives an adult the right to abuse any child, life is so violent from birth to the grave, we must fight for our children for a better life.
Quite an eye opener into the lives of abused people. It is very descriptive, so be warned, but it was a book that raises very important issues. The fact that all these things had to happen in real life to Emily makes this book incredibly moving and horrifying. Definitley a page turner.
This book has been on my shelf for ten years and I finally got round to it. It was very good but harrowing graphic and heartbreaking. Makes you realise how lucky you are even if times you don't think it.
Thought-provoking and emotionally harrowing. The courage needed to pen her experiences is borne out by the same courage and determination Emily MacKenzie demonstrated in overcoming her situation.
Really enjoyed this book. Life as a girl forced into care is not nice back in the 70s. Really gives you something to think about. Throughly enjoyed. Definitely recommend.
If this had been a work of fiction I'd be sitting here complaining it was too over-the-top, it wasn't realistic enough, it's too unlikely that bad thing after bad thing could happen like that with not a single glimmer of hope at any point...
But this wasn't fiction, it was real life. And all that really DID happen. Shocking does not even cover it. The book ends when Emily has just turned 16, but the amount of crap she'd been through could have filled a life many years older than that. I knew this would be a depressing read, though I didn't realise quite how depressing. That Emily managed to survive all that really is amazing. Her experiences would have finished most of us off, myself included, and one has to be made of pretty stern stuff just to read about it.
The Epilogue gave a great summing up of the situation and makes you realise that although the 1960s-'70s were a long time ago, the same issues are still with us and that protecting children from all forms of abuse is an ongoing battle to this day.
This book was a bomb. I thought I wouldn't feel amazed of the story plot based on the summary of the story. After a few chapters, I felt so heartbroken for this girl, Emily, for being a traumatized girl, who was verbally abused by her supposedly mother (turned out to be her stepmother), then physically raped by the stepfather and another few young men she met in the pub. After going through confinement in the boarding school, run away to be a prostitute, being raped and was forced to abort her unborn child and finally detained by an abusive man, I felt like her world is filled with bastards and assholes. After seeing standing up for herself, I was glad her sufferings was a blessing in disguise.