『Letter to Child "X"』のカバーアート

Letter to Child "X"

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Letter to Child "X"

著者: John Emroch
ナレーター: Evan Crowley
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Letter to Child “X” is a powerful, emotionally devastating courtroom drama that explores the human cost of child welfare systems, addiction, justice, and redemption. Told through interwoven perspectives—primarily that of Judge Alan Merrick and a struggling mother named Marie—the novel unfolds like a sealed letter gradually being opened, one heartbreak at a time.

At the heart of the story lies an anonymous child—“X”—born into turmoil and caught in a legal battle she cannot understand. The narrative begins inside a weary courtroom, where Judge Merrick presides over a relentless docket of custody and termination cases. He is a man schooled in detachment, trained to treat each file as procedure rather than tragedy. But when the case of Marie—a young woman with a long history of addiction and grief—lands on his bench, something shifts. Her story, fragmented and painful, resists easy classification.

Marie gives birth in a shelter, alone and frightened, whispering her child’s name before the infant is taken away. As the state machinery clicks into place, we witness Marie’s desperate attempts to comply with the system’s demands: parenting classes, supervised visits, sobriety checkpoints. There are fragile victories—songs sung in a playroom, drawings exchanged—but the looming pressure of relapse is always there. A single drink, a missed appointment, and the clock resets.

Each chapter traces Marie’s journey as she moves through a revolving door of foster homes, rehab centers, and courtroom appearances. Her inner world, captured in unsent letters and raw journal entries, paints a portrait of a woman torn between shame and hope, desperation and love. Even as the system labels her a failure, she clings to the belief that one day her daughter will understand her side of the story.

Meanwhile, Judge Merrick, once unshakeable in his judgements, finds himself haunted by Marie’s case. He recalls an earlier file, a boy lost to bureaucracy, a decision he can never undo. With each new hearing, Merrick becomes less certain that justice is being served—or even defined.

The novel crescendos at a final hearing where parental rights hang in the balance. Marie delivers her statement not as a plea, but as a truth. The adoptive parents—present, loving, unfamiliar—wait quietly. Merrick hesitates, caught between law and conscience. Ultimately, the gavel falls. The decision is final. But the story is not.

In the quiet aftermath, Marie writes her last letter—meant for the child she carried, held, and lost. She leaves the courtroom unnoticed, the letter sealed and stored until the girl turns twenty-one. Judge Merrick reads it alone, then returns to his chambers and wonders, perhaps for the first time in his career, what justice really means when seen through the eyes of a child grown old enough to read the truth.

Years pass. Merrick retires. Marie disappears. But the letter waits.

Letter to Child “X” is a haunting meditation on motherhood, accountability, and the silent scars of family court. It asks uncomfortable questions: Can love survive addiction? Can justice and compassion coexist? And when a life is shaped by decisions made in her absence, can a single letter change the way she sees her mother—or herself?

This is not a story about heroes or villains. It is a story about people. Broken, trying, and often unseen.

Until now.

©2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK (P)2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK
大衆小説 女性文学 家庭生活 心理学
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