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            Review by Louella Moreland 
            
            Jeanne Warren has written a 
            heart-touching story to aid single parents in the difficult task of 
            helping explain to small children why their family may be different 
            from families of other children they know. 
            
            "Do I have a daddy/mommy?" "Why doesn't 
            my daddy/mommy live with us?" These are questions that can cause 
            single parents a lot of pain. No matter how young or old the child, 
            no matter how much time has passed since a separation, a parent 
            faced with these questions may feel unprepared to deal with the 
            child's emotions or reasoning. 
            
        
            
            The story begins with a preschool boy, 
            Erik, and a friend, Jennifer, happily playing house until an 
            accident occurs. Jennifer announces she will tell her daddy. 
            Predictably, Erik also responds in kind -- until Jennifer points out 
            that he does not have a daddy. This in turn raises questions for the 
            little boy, who takes them to his mother. In this particular story 
            the mother and father have never been married, although the boy's 
            father had been an active parent in the beginning of his life. 
            
            The mother has probably been preparing 
            her answers to these questions for a number of years, as the father 
            had left when Erik was an infant. She has good support from an 
            extended family. If there is bitterness from the past relationship, 
            she hides it well. She calmly explains to her son that his father 
            loved him, and she does not fully understand herself why his father 
            went away, but that it had nothing to do with Erik. She also 
            reaffirms that she will always be there for him. 
              [to top of second column in 
            this review]
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             Of course, this is a mother who says 
            all the right things, giving her son the comfort he needs, the male 
            bonding with other male family members and so on. Not all single 
            parents do as well with this situation, which is where the special 
            section for single parents at the back of the book can help. It 
            includes these topics: Divorced Parents, Never-Married Parents, 
            Honesty is Essential, Stress Positive Points, Totally Absent Father, 
            Importance of Feeling OK, Your Own Feelings, Male Role Model, "Right 
            Time to Talk," Risks of Cover-Up, and If Daddy Returns. 
            
            The author had spent 16 years working 
            with a teen parent program in southern California before writing 
            this book. She brings a great deal of practical expertise and 
            believability to her story. The illustrations by Jami Moffett are 
            adorable as well as comforting. 
            
            Although the book is written from the 
            perspective of a family with a mother as head of the household, it 
            could be used by fathers also facing these questions. "Do I Have a 
            Daddy?" is also a good story to read to children with both parents 
            residing in the household. Almost all young people beginning a 
            school career will come in contact (some for the first time) with 
            children from single-parent homes. This can help these children be 
            more sensitive to the feelings of others and bring about 
            communication with their own parents about fears children may 
            develop that the same situation may occur in their own family. 
            To check out 
            this book or others concerning similar topics, visit us at the 
            Lincoln Public Library, 725 Pekin St., or call us at 732-5732. 
            
            [Louella Moreland, Youth 
            Services Department, 
            Lincoln 
            Public Library District] 
            
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