Blind Hope was a moving and easy read. The author shared her story with such frankness and transparent emotion. As I read, I could imagine us talking as if she were sitting across from me at my kitchen table. Like we were past friends catching up on several years.The subject content was suitable for older youth and up (ages 14 and up) especially in light of the amount of peer pressure the author struggled against and was at seasons lost to its false security.
Her account of Hope's initial condition and their struggle together was moving. Their internal battles: learning to listen to a voice it was unaccustomed to obey, learning to trust, and experiencing acceptance for the first time, all of it is universal to the human plight. For an afternoon read, I recommend Blind Hope: An Unwanted Dog and the Woman She Rescued by Kim Meeder and Laurie Sacher. Pour yourself a cup of coffee and grab a box of kleenex (just in case).
Find more about Blind Hope: An Unwanted Dog and the Woman She Rescued and other Meeder and Sacher books at Amazon.com , Barnes & Noble , and at WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group.