Mother Mame was a well-known caretaker in the community, but she also brought strangers into the house and force-fed them until they were sick. Their father Jack, better known as the town drunk, threw Wilson around like a rag doll for the amusement of his drunken friends. And then there were Annabelle and Abigail, Wilson's beloved sisters, whose neglected and tortured lives ended all too soon.
A story of survival, The House on Telegraph Hill, details the abuse Wilson suffered and sheds light, not only on his own demoralizing experience, but also on the epidemic of child abuse. His brutally honest stories reveal all of the disguises, sugar-coatings, and lies that abusers heap on their victims. By recounting his dreadful upbringing along with his lifelong struggles, Wilson is finally pushing his story to the forefront to help educate others about the horrors and complexities of child abuse.
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"The film doles out its secrets like pieces of candy and you’ll eat them up!" Noir Nook's Karen aka @TheDarkPages shares 'new-to-me-noir' thoughts and trivia about The House on Telegraph Hill directed by 'birthday boy' Robert Wise... https://t.co/h0xS7QU5EF https://t.co/eEC1X4Ecqe