- Hardcover
- Publisher: Penguin Books Canada, Limited (2003)
- ASIN: B002H083VO
- Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Most helpful customer reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
When Love Is Not Enough,
By Sigrid Macdonald (Ottawa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Missing Sarah (Paperback)
In Missing Sarah, Maggie de Vries writes a provocative and heartbreaking story about her sister, Sarah, who was one of 69 women who went missing from the Eastside of Vancouver in the 1990s. Shockingly, Sarah's DNA was discovered on Robert Pickton's farm, yet that evidence was not sufficient for the police to charge him with her murder.A professional writer, Maggie goes back in time to give us a detailed portrait of Sarah's earlier years. A child of mixed racial descent, Sarah was adopted into a Caucasian family; she was taunted at school and mocked for her ethnicity. Although the family adored Sarah and vice versa, this devotion was not enough to surpass the pain from the racist insults that Sarah received. She became a troubled teenager, feeling that she did not belong anywhere. Sarah began to run away, and eventually felt more comfortable in group homes and in her own low-rent apartment than she did with her family. Maggie traces Sarah's journey into drugs and prostitution. She also analyzes different factors that have decreased the safety of sex trade work. According to Maggie, between 1960 and 1974, only one prostitute was the victim of a violent death in British Columbia. From 1975 to 1980, the number increased to a total of three women. It started rising in the 90s, resulting in 24 dead sex trade workers in B.C. before the maniacal actions of Robert Pickton. This is an important book. Not only do we get to know Sarah de Vries as a person, rather than a faceless, drug addicted prostitute, but we also get a sense of how terribly wrong it is for our hypocritical society to push sex trade workers into the deepest and darkest corners of the city where they will inevitably be easy prey for perverts and malevolent men. Policymakers as well as the general public should take heed. Sex trade workers, who are often only teenagers, need our protection. Missing Sarah makes a strong argument for the decriminalization of drugs since many prostitutes cannot leave the job because they need to work to feed their habit. It also advocates the legalization of the sex trade. I support both of these positions. All acts between consenting adults should be legal, especially when doing so gives sex trade workers a safe physical location. That way they don't have to solicit on corners and get into cars with strangers who may beat, rob, rape or kill them.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Moving Account of One Sister's Life on the Streets,
By
This review is from: Missing Sarah (Paperback)
I gave this book 5 stars, not because it is a literary masterpiece, but because it stands out in its genre (that is, either a family memoir or true crime story). The author, a teacher of literature at the University of British Columbia, writes with confidence and clarity.I found the book unusually moving. It's too easy to say that hookers and drug addicts shouldn't be surprised when they meet danger on the streets. De Vries shows us that her sister, one of these supposed "throw away women", had feelings and interests. This book brought out feelings of fear, sorrow, and anger. It's rare that any one book can capture all those emotions in me. Well done, Maggie de Vries.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Missing Sarah review,
By A Customer
This review is from: Missing Sarah (Paperback)
I purchased this book because I knew Sarah briefly, and know Maggie, somewhat, via internet.I believe Maggie beautifully wrote what she remembers and I think this book might help others. Especially non native people, despite their good intentions, of adopting native kids. Hopefully too, it will help other women or girls who are considering a career of street prostitution. Its simply not safe to be out there today. I know. I have been there myself. In her book, Maggie was able to put a human face on women, who like Sarah, chose a very dangerous lifestyle. It would have been helpful if we heard more about Sarah's children. What is being done differently for them, as they are being raised by the same loving, but Caucasian grandmother? Are they being exposed to native culture, visiting Elders, attending Pow Wows and Traditional Ceremonies?
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