This happened to me A reckoning

Kate Price

Book - 2025

In this exquisitely rendered, transformative memoir, Price describes how she broke free of that which had defined her childhood and went on to create a purpose-driven life and family, on her own terms. Eventually returning to the same Appalachian community to use hereducation and advocacy to help ensure children are given the attention, protection, and services that she never received. Kate Price grew up in a small mill town in central Pennsylvania with her sister and parents in northern Appalachia. At the insistence of her mother, and through her academic accomplishments, Price escaped the unbroken cycles of poverty, violence, addiction, mental illness, and abuse that had plagued her family for generations. She started a new life in Cambri...dge, Massachusetts, in pursuit of her master's and PhD. But despite having left this dark world behind, it still kept a firm grip on her. Overcome with unexplainable grief and sadness and having sustained a series of hazy flashbacks accompanied by a 'chilling of her blood and uncomfortable feeling in her bones,' Price sought out Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, a trauma specialist to help heal her constant emotional pain through EMDR therapy. He went on to write the bestselling book, The Body Keeps the Score, which features Price's story, as the two worked together to find out about her past. When Price, whose brain had been protecting her by shutting out these horrific memories, felt safe enough, she along with van der Kolk as her guide, discovered what that darkness that lay within her was. Her father had abused and trafficked her as a child. Price grappled with what had been revealed. Did this really happen to her? How could a parent do this to a child? A dedicated researcher and academic, she knew she needed confirmation, proof that what she had remembered had happened. And so began a 10-year quest alongside a journalist, to prove what Price knew to be her truth. With many trips back to the hometown she thought she had left forever, the two eventually found the hard-earned evidence Price had been searching for. In this exquisitely rendered, transformative memoir, Price describes how she broke free of that which had defined her childhood and went on to create a purpose-driven life and family, on her own terms. Eventually returning to the same Appalachian community to use her education and advocacy to help ensure children are given the attention, protection, and services that she never received.

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Review by Library Journal Review

Having escaped the generations of abuse, violence, and addiction that plagued her family in a small mill town in Pennsylvania, Price (then an adult pursuing her master's degree) began to experience grief, sadness, and anxiety as hazy memories of her childhood surfaced. She realized that her father had raped her. She also learned that something else must have happened at the truck stop, the X-rated theater, and a rest area near the old house she once lived in, as these places gave her chills in the present day, and she instinctively avoided them. She began to recall what happened, regaining her experience through sense and body memories; her relationship with her sister exposed how her abusive father pitted the siblings against each other to protect himself from their shared truth. Price worked with trauma expert Bessel van der Kolk, and her story became a part of his best-selling book The Body Keeps the Score. Price also collaborated with a Boston Globe journalist who spent a decade researching to bring her truth to light. Price's book provides valuable insight into mining memory. VERDICT An essential addition to collections, alongside The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls and Bastard Out of Carolina by Dorothy Allison.--Amy Cheney

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