The Triumph of Belva Jane

by Del Hood


Formats

Hardcover
£18.02
Softcover
£12.95
Hardcover
£18.02

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 12/12/2014

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 238
ISBN : 9781503523050
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 238
ISBN : 9781503523067

About the Book

Tenant farmer Frank Warren’s wife dies, leaving him with two small children – Belva Jane, 5, and Stanley, 3. He spurns advice to put his children up for adoption. Instead, he hires a widow from a nearby town, Bertha Grossbaum, as a housekeeper. She is physically and psychologically abusive to the children, especially to Belva Jane who has a learning disability that affects her ability to concentrate. When Belva Jane turns 14, the housekeeper (now her stepmother) contrives to commit her to a girls’ training school for delinquents. A new administrator at the school determines that Belva Jane is not delinquent and should be elsewhere. Belva Jane cannot return to her home because of the objections of her tormentor. Tests are ordered for Belva Jane, one of which labels her as “high-grade feebleminded.” Based on that finding, she is transferred to what was long known as the state’s Home for the Feeble-minded and assigned to care for hydrocephalic infants, a task that is emotionally devastating. Belva Jane asks her father to seek a parole for her, which he does successfully with the assistance of relatives, but she can be released only if she is sterilized. This an inspirational story of the huge price a young woman pays for her freedom, but who marries, cares for several small children until they are teen-agers and makes it her mission to shower her love on them and on lonely and ailing relatives and friends in her part of Nebraska.


About the Author

Del Hood, a graduate of Hastings College and the University of Nebraska School of Journalism, left Nebraska in 1959 to pursue a newspaper career in the Pacific Northwest. He worked for the Baker (OR) Democrat-Herald and the Eugene (OR) Register-Guard before going to Southern California where he spent 30 years as associate editor or executive editor of The Daily Californian in El Cajon near San Diego. His next book, recording the most notable events during a 50-year swath of history of communities served by the newspaper for which he worked, is to be published in 2015. He and his wife of 44 years, who was a newspaper advertising executive, are retired and have two grown daughters, a son-in-law and three grandchildren.