In 1955, following the devastation of the Korean War, Bertha and Harry Holt made headlines for adopting eight Korean children. Driven by evangelical convictions and emboldened by a special act of Congress, the couple founded the Holt Adoption Program, which would facilitate the migration of tens of thousands of Korean children to the United States over the following decades.
The Sueppels were among the families profoundly shaped by the legacy of the Holt Adoption Program. To their suburban 海角乱伦社区City community, Steven and Sheryl Sueppel were kind and charitable, humble yet magnetic鈥攕eemingly ideal candidates to adopt. But in 2008, when Steven found himself facing federal embezzlement and money laundering charges, he murdered Sheryl and their adopted children before ending his own life.
Paige Towers traces the interwoven histories of the Holts and the Sueppels, exploring the deeper, often hidden complexities of intercountry adoption: the ethical gray zones, the influences of religion and race, and the global inequalities that made such large-scale child migration possible. Meticulously researched and sensitive with its storytelling, What They Stole examines how good intentions can coexist with systemic harm鈥攁nd how the consequences of systems like the Holts鈥 can reverberate across generations.
鈥泪苍 this meticulously researched book, Paige Towers braids a modern-day familicide with the story of one man鈥檚 messianic zeal in the 1950s to find South Korean babies for childless American couples. With an unflinching eye, Towers reveals a history of cruelty to birth mothers and their children and the lingering pain of this sorry legacy. What They Stole questions assumptions of cultural hegemony and asks to whom a child belongs. A fascinating read.鈥濃擬aria Laurino, author, The Price of Children: Stolen Lives in a Land Without Choice
鈥泪苍 What They Stole, Paige Towers blends true crime, geopolitical analysis, and historical storytelling to examine the legacy of the Holt Adoption Program, which shaped international adoption for generations. Her gripping account of the trafficking, traumas, and tragedies at the core of the Holt story builds to an elegiac reckoning that is long overdue.鈥濃擥retchen Sisson, author, Relinquished: The Politics of Adoption and the Privilege of American Motherhood