3.73/5
Author: Martin Sixsmith, Dame Judi Dench
Publication Date: Nov 6, 2013
Formats: PDF,Paperback,Kindle,Audible Audiobook,Mass Market Paperback,Preloaded Digital Audio Player
Rating: 3.73/5 out of 16210
Publisher: New York: Penguin Books (US) # 591 1st Printing 1946
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Mar 02, 2014
As a person who was interviewed for this book and who appears as a “character†in it, I believe this book should be categorized as fiction. The Lost Child of Philomena Lee, written by Martin Sixsmith, was originally published in 2009. After the success of the movie Philomena, the book was reissued with a new title. By now, everyone knows that the book tells the tragic story of Philomena Lee, who had an illegitimate child in the early 1950s while living at an abbey run by nuns in Ireland. An As a person who was interviewed for this book and who appears as a “character†in it, I believe this book should be categorized as fiction. The Lost Child of Philomena Lee, written by Martin Sixsmith, was originally published in 2009. After the success of the movie Philomena, the book was reissued with a new title. By now, everyone knows that the book tells the tragic story of Philomena Lee, who had an illegitimate child in the early 1950s while living at an abbey run by nuns in Ireland. An American couple adopted her son, Anthony Lee, when he was 3 years old and renamed him Michael Hess. Philomena and Michael were stymied in their search to find each other by the nuns’ refusal to provide them with their records.Dec 04, 2013
The movie tie-in is so misleading, it borders on criminal. The book is 95% about the son's life, with his mother's protracted search occupying a miniscule number of pages. The movie trailer and Dame Denches's write-up of the mother's role must be from another role, since Philomena's effort was merely a footnote to the story. The title should be: Michael: A Son, His Mother and His Search for Identity.Sep 17, 2017
To call this book “Philomena†is nothing more than a marketing gimmick to get readers to pick up the book because they saw the recent film starring Judi Dench. The film is good, the book not so much. Philomena Lee, of the title is completely ignored in the text after page 84 of a 420-page book. From this point on it follows the life of the son she was forced to give up for adoption, Michael Hess.Nov 20, 2013
I watched the film and was deeply moved by Dame Judi Dench's portrayal of Philomena, one of the 1952 Irish Magdalenes. Mother of an illegitimate child, set to work in a convent laundry, whose two year old son was purchased from the Catholic Church by an American couple and taken to America. Despite this, Philomena remains true to the church and unbelievably forgiving. Her search was to find out what became of her Anthony.Feb 06, 2013
Historically very interesting and incredibly poignant. Particularly so as my mother was born in this place on 1st January 1939. Thankfully, I think my grandmother's sister and brother 'bought' them out when my mother was about two and a half - if they'd left it a few more months, I wouldn't be here! Reinforced my views on the Catholic Church and US Republicans...Dec 12, 2013
Poorly written & really determined to prevent the reader becoming involved in the story. This is a fantastic true story which he totally wastes. It was so hard to force myself to finish it.Dec 30, 2013
One of the rare times I would say the movie was better. The middle of the book really bogs down in Mike Hess personal issue with his sexuality. I understand it was all part of the story but I think it went on too long.Dec 26, 2013
I believe this book is creative non-fiction in that the dialogue has to be made up based on what the author has found out and surmised about 'the lost child.' The movie, Philomena (which I highly recommend) is based on the book. The movie looks at the quest that Philomenia and a former journalist, Martin Sixsmith, go on to find her son -- a son the Irish Catholic church sold to an American couple. The son is one of thousands of children of unwed mothers the church sold.Dec 16, 2013
Martin Sixsmith a British pol, journalist and historian wrote a fascinating piece about an unwed Irish mother's search for her child whom she was forced to give up for adoption by Irish nuns. The tale is just the kind of tale that inspires indy movie producers to invest in a bit more than the screen-rights and hire Judi Dench to pay the determined mum.Dec 18, 2013
First thing first: the movie tie-in version of this book (which is the one I got) is seriously misleading in cutting the title to just 'Philomena'. I bought the book thinking it was all about Philomena's search for her son, and got a little confused when it turned out to be 90% the other way around.Sep 14, 2012
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here. What a story! The first half of the book deals with a real life story of an unmarried mother sent to a Catholic Institution for a couple of years. That's what they did in the 60s: hide these sinners from society. The Abbey is situated in Roscrea, Co. Tipperary, near where I lived for over 10 years. And the Catholic Church played their part in selling babies into adoption in the USA.The second half shows what became of the adopted son, Michael: a high-flying Republican who turns out to be gay and What a story! The first half of the book deals with a real life story of an unmarried mother sent to a Catholic Institution for a couple of years. That's what they did in the 60s: hide these sinners from society. The Abbey is situated in Roscrea, Co. Tipperary, near where I lived for over 10 years. And the Catholic Church played their part in selling babies into adoption in the USA.The second half shows what became of the adopted son, Michael: a high-flying Republican who turns out to be gay and dies of Aids. The search for his birth mother was obstructed by the nuns in Roscrea and she only found him after he died.Ironically he is buried on the grounds of the abbey.Nov 17, 2013
A truly amazing book. I read all 484 pages over the course of one weekend, absolutely enthralled. And it takes one humdinger of a book to keep me reading these days. I couldn't put this book down.Nov 28, 2013
Philomena played by Judi Dench is playing in theatres now and getting great reviews. I decided to read the book first and was quite surprised that the mature Philomena Judi Dench plays has almost no presence in the book. Interesting, though very sad, to learn what the Irish Catholic church did to unwed young women and their babies. Cruel and heartbreaking. But this book is mostly dedicated to the life story of Philomena's lost son. Details of his gay sexual life and his conflicted political Philomena played by Judi Dench is playing in theatres now and getting great reviews. I decided to read the book first and was quite surprised that the mature Philomena Judi Dench plays has almost no presence in the book. Interesting, though very sad, to learn what the Irish Catholic church did to unwed young women and their babies. Cruel and heartbreaking. But this book is mostly dedicated to the life story of Philomena's lost son. Details of his gay sexual life and his conflicted political career are the focus. And of course his struggles with having been given up for adoption and forever feeling misplaced cause him to be at war with himself. ...moreJun 24, 2013
This book is well written, informative, and tells the very sad story of Michael Hess, who was born at a convent in Ireland, adopted by a family in the US, and although successful in his career never was able to feel like he belonged anywhere.Nov 26, 2014
After watching the film Philomena I got the book from the library, and to cut a long story short, found it to be total rubbish so full of errors that it was practically unreadable except as tabloid 'journalism'. Philomena never traveled to America with the author, and there were no confrontations with the nuns in the convent. Nearly all the events depicted in the film were fiction, although that is not unusual. A few pages at the front and a couple at the back were about Philomena Lee, who in my After watching the film Philomena I got the book from the library, and to cut a long story short, found it to be total rubbish so full of errors that it was practically unreadable except as tabloid 'journalism'. Philomena never traveled to America with the author, and there were no confrontations with the nuns in the convent. Nearly all the events depicted in the film were fiction, although that is not unusual. A few pages at the front and a couple at the back were about Philomena Lee, who in my opinion was shamefully used by the author. The rest of the book, about 97% was a fictionalized speculative account of her son, Michael Hess, who does not come off as a very nice person, although it is hard to tell as the story was so speculative.Feb 17, 2014
The original book title was accurate. It is about the lost child of Philomena Lee. It was reissued as Philomena with the release of the movie of the same name. But the mother is represented in about 20% of the entire book. But that isn't the only falsehood of this mess. It is a work of fiction based on a real story. The mother's story is compelling but the book is about the less interesting story of the son's life after his adoption. This story is told by a journalist who offers zero notes The original book title was accurate. It is about the lost child of Philomena Lee. It was reissued as Philomena with the release of the movie of the same name. But the mother is represented in about 20% of the entire book. But that isn't the only falsehood of this mess. It is a work of fiction based on a real story. The mother's story is compelling but the book is about the less interesting story of the son's life after his adoption. This story is told by a journalist who offers zero notes referring to interviews, letters, diaries, or other sources. He recreated dialogue that took place as long as 60 years earlier. He uses quotation marks when it clearly is recreated. This pisses me off and the entire book loses credibility because of this. He creates a scene such as the room lighting and stating that the gentleman stood but did not extend his hand and other unbelievable detail. The description of how the 4 year old ate his first peach was quite descriptive. But neither the adopted mother nor the kid was alive to be interviewed and they were the only two present. Not only that, after he ate the peaches, he was said to have run to his room "close to tears, racked his brains for something to say." Really? WTF? How does the author know what the kid was thinking? The book contains detailed conversations between two 5 year olds. Pure fiction. "He laughed at the earnestness of Craig's gaze." Says who? Where would that come from if not fictional. There is a long monologue, with emphasis, of the priest condemning Mike's sexual orientation. Where did that come from? "Reagan pulled a face about the teamsters meeting." The only people in that room were dead by the time the author got on this story. Mike had left a group to sit alone at a party, pondering his "lurking sense of his own unworthiness" and felt alone. Who knows what he thought? This is crap and I cannot believe a publisher ever picked it up as other than a novel. ...moreDec 12, 2014
So different parts of this get different star ratings from me:Feb 12, 2013
Heart wrenching true story which tackles a couple of major social injustices. The first was carried out by the Catholic church in 50’s Ireland to an unmarried pregnant girl Philomena, and subsequently her adored son who she is forced to give up for adoption. The second deals with the Reagan government's ambivalence toward AIDS research and action. There is a movie in the works starring the amazing Judy Dench, so you know it’s worth a read. Box of tissues at elbow though, at all times!Nov 12, 2015
From IMDb:Mar 20, 2014
I was so moved by Philomena the movie, that it was with great eagerness that I began reading this book. I hate to be harsh, but I can't hold back: this book is garbage and totally lacks credibility. Both the title and the cover photo suggest that the book's content resembles the movie's content, when in fact the book's focus is on Philomena's son, Anthony Lee, and bears virtually no resemblance to the film. I have no reason to doubt that the basic facts of Anthony's life are accurately depicted I was so moved by Philomena the movie, that it was with great eagerness that I began reading this book. I hate to be harsh, but I can't hold back: this book is garbage and totally lacks credibility. Both the title and the cover photo suggest that the book's content resembles the movie's content, when in fact the book's focus is on Philomena's son, Anthony Lee, and bears virtually no resemblance to the film. I have no reason to doubt that the basic facts of Anthony's life are accurately depicted in the book (the names of his adoptive parents, Anthony's American name Michael Hess, his education and employment history, and his cause of death, for example), but the author's imagination runs away with him when he attempts to weave these facts together to portray Michael's life. The book is full of dialogue that can't possibly be authentic (such as Michael's confidential conversations with a psychotherapist and the words he spoke to his confessor at Notre Dame about his homosexuality). Speaking of homosexuality, the author has an almost voyeuristic fascination with that part of Michael's life, and undoubtedly embellishes and fictionalizes the detailed descriptions of sexual episodes sprinkled throughout the book. I also was offended by the author's amateur psychoanalysis of Michael as a man haunted by feelings of inadequacy as the result of being an orphan. How does HE know what Michael thought and how he felt? He even goes so far as to tell the reader what was going through Michael's mind ("You don't deserve to be happy." "You can't be happy because you don't deserve it."), and the shame he felt after engaging in casual sex. I respect the role Martin Sixsmith played in helping Philomena Lee discover what happened to her son after he was adopted, but in my opinion, this book is a shameless exploitation of the remarkable lives of Philomena and her son, their tragic separation and their enduring bond. My advice: see the movie and skip the book. ...moreMar 25, 2014
This is a very compelling, moving book. I will admit to shedding a few tears at the end. I'm looking forward to seeing the movie. I will write more about the book later.Apr 18, 2014
Hard book to read--so sad. Gave it a 2 because it's published as NF but the author never really discusses his methodology for expressing the protagonist's most inner thoughts, since he never met him or communicated with him. Additionally, one of his sources excoriates Sixsmith on goodreads. I'm glad I read it, because people should know how the Irish government and Catholic Church dealt with babies in their care.Dec 08, 2014
First of all, the original title of this book was The Lost Child of Phliomena Lee -- which makes much more sense than just Philomena. Hollywood made an incredible movie based on this movie (loosely based, at times). The movie tells the embellished story of Philomea. The book tells the heartbreaking tale of the son Philomena was forced to give up for adoption.Oct 09, 2017
A detailed exploration into adoption and its lasting after-effects - though hardly any mention of the mother!Nov 30, 2013
When she became pregnant as a teen in Ireland, Philomena Lee was sent to a convent to give birth to the baby. Little did naive Philomena realize, the good nuns were charged with finding a good home for her baby and that meant her son Anthony Lee would be sent to America where his name would be changed and he would be lost to her forever. Journalist Martin Sixsmith was contacted in 2004 by a daughter Philomena had when she was later married---a woman who had only heard about this lost brother a When she became pregnant as a teen in Ireland, Philomena Lee was sent to a convent to give birth to the baby. Little did naive Philomena realize, the good nuns were charged with finding a good home for her baby and that meant her son Anthony Lee would be sent to America where his name would be changed and he would be lost to her forever. Journalist Martin Sixsmith was contacted in 2004 by a daughter Philomena had when she was later married---a woman who had only heard about this lost brother a year before. Thus begins their search for the son Philomena had secretly mourned for decades.Take your time and choose the perfect book.
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