The Girl That No One Claimed: When Hell Comes Back
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Exclusivo para miembros Prime: ¿Nuevo en Audible? Obtén 2 audiolibros gratis con tu prueba.Compra ahora por $14.95
-
Narrado por:
-
Virtual Voice
-
De:
-
P. Johnson
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The Girl That No One Claimed: When Hell Comes Back is a raw, unflinching memoir about what happens after survival—when the past doesn’t stay buried, and the systems meant to protect instead teach predators how to operate.
Raised in foster care, shaped by abuse, courtrooms, and silence, Paige Johnson grows up learning how to survive without ever being claimed. As an adult, she builds a life—marriage, children, a home—only to discover that survival training doesn’t expire. It follows you into love, into motherhood, into every place where power, control, and credibility collide.
This book traces the long arc of trauma across decades: violent relationships, institutional betrayal, cancer, homelessness, stalking, and a justice system that repeatedly mistakes paperwork for protection. It shows how abuse evolves—how it hides behind charm, community loyalty, and “good guy” reputations—and how women are punished not for being harmed, but for refusing to stay quiet about it.
What sets this memoir apart is its refusal to romanticize resilience. Revenge doesn’t heal. Love doesn’t automatically save. Leaving is not a single decision but a thousand calculated risks—especially when children, illness, money, and public perception are weapons used against you. The narrative exposes the dangerous myth of “just leave” and replaces it with the reality of containment, escalation, and survival in plain sight.
At its heart, this is also a story about motherhood and legacy. About what it means when a son becomes the protector no one ever was. About breaking generational patterns not with perfection, but with clarity, boundaries, and documentation. About learning—late and hard—that healing isn’t becoming softer, quieter, or easier to handle. Healing is becoming harder to harm.
Written with dark humor, brutal honesty, and razor‑sharp insight, The Girl That No One Claimed: When Hell Comes Back is not a story of victimhood—it is a record. A warning. And a refusal to let silence finish what violence started.