Richard B. Pelzer

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Richard B. Pelzer, (b. 1965) public speaker an international best selling author.

Richard Pelzer
[[Image:
Author Richard Pelzer 2004
Author Richard Pelzer 2004
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Born: 1965
San Francisco,
California,
USA Flag of United States
Occupation: Memoirist, Novelist
Nationality: American
Genres: Crime fiction,
Thriller

Richard Pelzer was born in 1965 in Daly City, San Francisco County, California, the fourth of five sons of Stephen Pelzer and Catherine Roerva. Richard is author of A Brother’s Journey as well as the sequel entitled A Teenager’s Journey. Author Richard Pelzer has also written several Fictional Novels. It has been rumored that author Richard Pelzer has used a “ghost name” for his fictional work.

He is currently married, with four children.

Contents

[edit] The abuse

Pelzer is the author of a number of New York Times best-seller A Brother’s Journey that is an account the incredible story of his young adult life.

Unlike his brother, Richard was never taken away by the authorities. Richard Pelzer’s books have been a resource for many educational institutions around the world, including a majority of the middle and high school systems in the United States.

Richard Pelzer often travels throughout the world speaking on behalf of children and parents in such abusive situations. Richard Pelzer has spent the majority of his time and efforts “behind the scenes” and “out of the spotlight” promoting the safety of children and the rights of parents.

[edit] Controversy

A rather heated argument has been alleged between Richard Pelzer and his brother Dave Pelzer. Questions about Richard’s brother’s ethos have been raised concerning Dave’s heavily one sided depiction of his childhood. Numerous articles have been associated with Richard’s brother including Mail on Sunday ("Is He Making 'It' All Up?"), the New York Times Magazine ["Dysfunction for Dollars", by Pat Jordan, July 28, 2002), and the online magazine Slate ("Dave Pelzer - The Child Abuse Entrepreneur").

There is a very notable difference between these two bothers. As siblings, they spent only a few years together as children, Dave Pelzer was rescued by state authorizes around 1973 and Richard Pelzer was never rescued. Richard Pelzer has been related to a “underground philanthropist” opposed to his brothers dubious notoriety as a “child abuse entrepreneur”. Richard Pelzer has been quoted on public radio and newsprint in the United States as saying “I would rather donate to a cause than ask them to pay tens of thousands of dollars to hear how great I am or how much good I bring to the world. I just cant find the need to self promote a farce. But then again we are very different people [ my brother and I].

“I would rather have people hate me for what I am then love me for what I am not.”

“I would never have the nerve to tell children or anyone for that matter, that I could fly them in my private jet and drop them off in Iraq only to show that their life isn’t as bad as others may have it. For one thing, I don’t have a jet, I don’t have need to travel to Iraq and I would never assume that someone else doesn’t have it as bad as I once did. That’s simply presumptuous and arrogant.”

[edit] Works

  • A Brother's JourneySurviving a Childhood of Abuse, Warner Books (New York, NY), 2005.
  • A Teenager's Journey, Warner Books, 2006.

[edit] Reviews

  • Booklist, November 15, 2004, Stephanie Zvirin, review of A Brother's Journey: Surviving a Childhood of Abuse, p. 538.
  • Kirkus Reviews, October 15, 2004, review of A Brother's Journey, p. 995.
  • Library Journal, January 1, 2005, Antoinette Brinkman, review of A Brother's Journey, p. 132.
  • Publishers Weekly, November 15, 2004, review of A Brother's Journey, p. 50.


[edit] External links

[edit] Footnotes


    [edit] Resources

    Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2006. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2006.Rpelzer 01:33, 16 March 2007 (UTC)

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