Synopses & Reviews
For almost three decades, renowned baby-seller Georgia Tann ran a children's home in Memphis, Tennessee, selling her charges--often neglected, abused, and stolen from their birth parents--to wealthy clients nationwide, Joan Crawford among them. Drawing on extensive interviews and correspondences with many of Tann's surviving victims, Barbara Bisantz Raymond shows how Tann not only popularized adoption--which until then had been feared and discouraged--but also commercialized and corrupted it. She tells how Tann abducted babies or coerced women to leave their children in her care and then sold them. To cover her kidnapping crimes, she falsified birth certificates, a practice that was approved by legislators who believed it would spare adoptees the taint of illegitimacy--and one that still holds in many states today in the form of amended birth certificates and closed adoption records. Uncovering many life-shattering stories along the way, Raymond recounts how Tann openly sold more than 5,000 children and killed so many through neglect that Memphis's infant mortality rate soared to the highest in the country. She explores how Tann's operation was able to thrive in a Tennesee governed by Ed Boss Crump and the political network that allowed her to operate with impunity. She also portrays the paucity of options available to women, affecting not only the birth mothers she robbed, but Tann herself, who turned to social work after having been barred from a masculine profession--the law. Part social history, part detective story, part expose, The Baby Thief is a riveting investigative narrative that explores themes that continue to reverberate in the modern era.
Synopsis
For almost three decades, renowned baby-seller Georgia Tann ran a children's home in Memphis, Tennessee selling her charges to wealthy clients nationwide, Joan Crawford among them. Part social history, part detective story, part expose, The Baby Thief is a riveting investigative narrative that explores themes that continue to reverberate today.
About the Author
Barbara Raymond has written extensively for
Good Housekeeping, Ladies Home Journal, Redbook, McCalls, Parents, Readers Digest, Working Mother, Writers Digest, and
USA Today. She contributed to
The Handbook of Magazine Article Writing (Writers Digest Books), and was an author of a
Good Housekeeping Child Care section that won the National Magazine Award for Public Service. She has been nominated for a National Magazine Award in Reporting and received two awards for feature writing from Women in Communications.