• Mother Warriors

  • A Nation of Parents Healing Autism against All Odds
  • By: Jenny McCarthy
  • Narrated by: Tavia Gilbert
  • Length: 5 hrs and 15 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (65 ratings)

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Mother Warriors  By  cover art

Mother Warriors

By: Jenny McCarthy
Narrated by: Tavia Gilbert
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Publisher's summary

When Jenny McCarthy published her story of her successful efforts to save her son from autism, the response was tremendous, including a number-three rank on the New York Times best seller list. What she hadn't anticipated was the overwhelming response from other parents of autistic children who wanted to share their own stories of success.

No two autistic children heal in exactly the same way. And in her new book, Jenny expands her message to share recovery stories from parents across the country, showing how each parent fought to find her own child's perfect "remedy of interventions." Along the way, Jenny shares her own journey as an autism advocate and mother, as well as the continuing progress of her son, Evan. Emotional and genuinely practical, Mother Warriors will inspire a generation of parents with hope.

©2008 Jenny McCarthy (P)2008 Blackstone Audio

What listeners say about Mother Warriors

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McCarthy Is Pro Vaccine Safety

Any additional comments?

It breaks my heart that Jenny McCarthy has been vilified, gaslighted and made a scapegoat for telling her personal story, about her experience with her son's having an adverse reaction to vaccines. She is NOT anti-vaccine, just pro safe vaccine. The media has falsely labeled those actively seeking safe, better researched vaccines as being 'anti-vaccine'. In addition, McCarthy tells of how, with her doctors' help, she fixed her son's gastrointestinal problems, which dramatically improved or cured his autism symptoms. She cut out gluten and casein in his diet, etc.I don't think my review can do her book justice. It's better to just read the book and get McCarthy's side of the story.Also, youtube has interviews with Dr. Andrew Wakefield, which are very informative and give his side of the story. There's also the movie, 'Vaxxed', And, Dr. Stephanie Seneff, Ph.D., Sr. Research Scientist at MIT videos on youtube are also very informative, etc.

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4 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Raw but needs to be read and make your own opinion

We could help so much more in the world for our loved ones. It is all up to us.

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1 person found this helpful

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Should be mandatory reading for every parent

This book tells it like it is and every parent owes it to their children to read it and if you choose not to and your child or your next-door neighbors child or your grand child is harmed I don’t know how you look yourself in the mirror when you wouldn’t even open the pages when the truth was staring you in the face

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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Hope

Powerful, necessary and inspiring action! If you have a child on the autism spectrum this book is a must have.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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Some interesting profiles after Jenny's story

What did you like best about Mother Warriors? What did you like least?

I am an autism mom and I happen to like Jenny McCarthy. I think the work she has done to raise awareness of biomedical interventions for autism is huge. I think this even though biomedical has done little for my son, but I do know others who have been helped by it. I knew Mother Warriors profiled various moms of recovered kids. I did not realize that was the second half of the book and that in the first half Jenny continues with her own story, going through her media tours for her books and the reactions she got from various people in the media. It was interesting but I was impatient to read about the moms.
There were some interesting profiles. There was one from a mom whose son is 30 now and it was very interesting to read about what they tried back then - very interesting to know that one thing that was suggested to her even back then was the GFCF diet. That was such a wild story she should write her own book. I was also particularly interested in reading about the mom of Elias Tembenis, and I should have figured that would be the last profile in the book. Elias, unlike the other profiled kids did not recover, though perhaps he was recovering when he died at the age of 7. Elias was vaccine injured by his 4 month well check shots, developing a seizure disorder. At 7 he had a sore throat and his mom took him to the hospital and he had a seizure and ended up dying. It was very sad and powerful stuff. Some of the profiles got a bit repetitive but I guess that only served to make Jenny's point about a certain consistency of experiences which doctors should not be disregarding. She profiled Katie Wright of course, daughter of the Autism Speaks founders also. Anyway, some people, particularly autism parents do not like reading recovery stories. There is something self-congratulatory and superior in some of it. In this case taken as a whole I found them interesting since even in recovery not everything is all rosey.

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