| The Burning Bed |  | Author: Faith Mcnulty Publisher: Harcourt Category: Book
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 712838
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st ed Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 275
ISBN: 015114981X Dewey Decimal Number: 364.15230924 EAN: 9780151149810 ASIN: 015114981X
Publication Date: October 1980 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Millions of satisfied customers and climbing. Thriftbooks is the name you can trust, guaranteed. Spend Less. Read More.
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Suspense and justice June 21, 2008 Being a survivor of two abusive marriages, I can totally relate to Francine. I think the bastard got what was coming to him. Okay, you may say that no-one deserves to die that way. No one deserves to be beaten, degraded and tormented either. Thank God I found a wonderful man who treats me with respect and love. She snapped; and I can't blame her. The police did nothing(as they did in my case, asking my husband to leave for one night, nothing more). This book is very graphic but hits home, as I am sure it will to a lot of women who live this kind of hell every day. It isn't so easy to leave either, especially if you have small kids. Society is male oriented, including the courts. All I can say is, good for her. She only sped up his fate-going straight to hell.
an example of what too much pressure for too long can do August 12, 2004 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
I can not honestly say that What Francine did was right, but I can say I can definitely see how in her pressured and stressed predicatment that she felt so trapped and let down by the system that she felt her only sure option was to burn her husband alive. I think this is a good definition of what intense and prolonged trauma can do to a human. Even the best of us can snap in a situation like that. Lenore Walker used the idea of learned helplessness and the battered woman syndrome to explain such behavior and Francine, unfortunately, demonstrated it. I can praise the spirit of survival of Francine, but we must continue to work hard to elimate the climate that would entrap victims into seeking their own solutions because the system did not provide them. Francine did the only thing she could rationally believe would work at that time. I hope and I do feel today, we all have more options. The book should be used as a continous tool as a warning of what extreme relentless trauma can do to a rational person. Torn From the Inside Out is a memoir that is similar in many ways.
Enough February 13, 2004 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
When is enough, enough? For Francine Hughes it took years of abuse and loneliness for her to realize that she had had enough. The Burning Bed was one of the inspirational books that I have ever read. For a young woman, Mrs. Hughes was so courageous. I admire her strength. After years of being beaten by the hands of her husband, Francine retaliates and while her husband is sleeping, starts a fire in their bed. For years she had come so close to death that the thought of dying didn't even scare her; it was like she had hoped for it to come. But after bearing four of his children, she had something to live for. Lonely and afraid she did the only thing she could do. Now facing murder charges Francine is forced to go back to her battered life and let the world know of her sorrow. The Burning Bed follows her through her long trial and the outcome leaves you breathless.
A pioneering study in domestic violence February 17, 2003 10 out of 12 found this review helpful
The 1984 NBC telepic with Farrah Fawcett probably got more attention than Faith McNulty's book on which it was inspired. In the realm of "Men, Women and Rape," still regarded as the definitive study of rape as an act of violence, "The Burning Bed" does likewise on the subject of domestic violence. Based on the 1970's trial of a battered wife and mother who doused her passed out, drunken husband with gasoline before sending him off in flames, McNulty calls attention to the shame and silence with which the subject of spousal abuse was given, even in that era. The author does a masterful job in detailing the victim's years of physical and mental abuse, so much and so many that triggered what we now call post-traumatic stress or battered wife syndromes. But without those clinical identifications and before it become vogue not to have to be beaten, the wife and mother here is charged with premediated murder, and her only legal defense then was a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. That that was the only plea victims of violence had, in modern history, is shameful unto itself, and McNulty's book doesn't pooh-pooh the subject and confronts it openly and critically. In many respects, the success of the TV adaptation overshadowed the actual book, and that's a shame. Even more than in the dramatization, the book delves into the deepest and darkest pits of domestic violence, brings it to light and commands the judicial system and private citizenry to demand that the matter become a public policy issue. Obviously, McNulty's position paid off. Now, unlike then, the victims of domestic crimes really do have a choice, and that choice no longer is solely physical retaliation against the perpetrator.
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