Kidnapped
Child Abduction in America
Paula S. Fass
Reviews and Awards
"A rare combination of riveting narrative and acute, provocative historical and cultural analysis."--Sissela Bok, Harvard University
"Through incisive analysis of historical and contemporary cases, Fass highlights changes in social awareness and public response to kidnapping since its emergence into public consciousness at the time of the first known U.S. child ransom abduction in 1874...Fass has written extensively on issues of youth and culture and challenges those concerned with child welfare to examine the commercial portrayal of childhood, which sanctifies vulnerability and at the same time exploits it."--Booklist
"More than a retelling of some of the most famous kidnapping cases of the past 120 years, [Kidnapped] places the crimes in an historical context, showing how each mirrors the social concerns of the times and, as a result, becomes a portrait of parental anxiety."--Susan May, California Monthly
"In her riveting Kidnapped: Child Abduction in America,...Fass gives us a tour of the crime parents fear most, offering one terrifying detail after another. But Fass...provides more than a detailed guide to the horrors of child abduction. Her task here is to plot the way this crime has evolved and to look closely at how we as a society choose to regard it."--Penelope Rowlands, San Franciso Chronicle
"This is a very scary book, and very important as the fear of this crime seems to escalate. In the end, Fass speaks as much from her heart as her head."--Jane Clifford, San Diego Union-Tribune
"A heartfelt and disturbing book...Kidnapped is not only a convincing analysis of child abduction; it is a compelling example of how studies of the past can illuminate the present and suggest alternative futures."--The Journal of American History