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Help Promote Amy Baker’s Novel About Parental Alienation

May 13, 2015
By Robert Franklin, Esq, Member, National Board of Directors, National Parents Organization

Dr. Amy Baker has long been one of the most powerful voices advancing awareness of parental alienation. She’s been instrumental in having evidence of PA admitted under the strict Daubert standard in courts across the country. She’s testified in countless cases and written extensively on the topic.

Now she’s written a novel that she hopes will help to further raise awareness of parental alienation. Here’s what she says about it and how you can help promote her book:

“I am launching my Kindle Scout campaign for my novel about parental alienation, The Misery Checklist. The novel tells the story of alienation from the point of view of the targeted parent as well as from the point of the alienating parent. If the novel receives enough nominations, Amazon will select it and promote it. Hopefully, the story will bring greater attention to this devastating form of child abuse. Starting at midnight tonight, you can go the link — which I will post once it is active — and nominate the book (you can read the first few chapters). If selected as a winner, it will be sold by Amazon for a low price. Please feel free to share this link and help spread the word.”

Go to Amazon, nominate The Misery Checklist and help get the word out on parental alienation.

One reply on “Help Promote Amy Baker’s Novel About Parental Alienation”

OK — as a long-time supporter of NPO, I regularly read Robert Franklin’s column. And it comes as a surprise that he would recommend us supporting this book.

I read the excerpt. Right off, it’s pretty obvious that it panders to mental models about lots of things — the poor woman, the oppressive, abandoning males in all the main characters’ lives. Just by reading the first part, the bad guy’s the dad — he’s an obvious, unlikable narcissist. And you already know that his character is being set up as the alienator. And there’s the rub.

If this was anything resembling custody reality in the U.S., we already know that the mom is going to get the kids –especially if they’re young and of the age to actually experience PAS. So right away, we’re in ‘low probability’ zone of any kind of reality. It takes time to alienate — how is the non-custodial parent gonna do it?

The author has constructed a manipulative narrative that will come back to haunt us.

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