“Drs Lisa Brown and Peter Jones have written a fascinating account of the effects of extreme social deprivation endured by three children during the earliest years of their lives. Like thousands of others, these children were sent to secret orphanages in the Romania of the Ceausescu regime of the 1980s. The book follows each of the children for about two years, from the ages of 10, 11 and 13 – several years after leaving Romania for a new life with their adoptive families in the UK. Brown and Jones focus on the language and cognitive development of the three children during this period of late childhood and, in doing so, address important practical and theoretical questions that will be of interest to parents, educators, speech and language therapists, developmental psychologists and linguists.”Professor Thomas KleeUniversity of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand“The book offers hope even for children who suffer years of neglect, disadvantage and lack of human contact. It thus points in new directions: although these are only three children, they score 3SD below average on both visuo-spatial intelligence and measures of expressive language. While sensibly cautious in following Karmilloff-Smith in interpreting these as developmental outcomes, the findings suggest that, developmentally, the dimensions intertwine. On a similar tack, this evidence supports the view that the development of linguistic skills – and, especially abilities for complex manipulation of morphology and syntax – continues into adolescence. Though ‘Bringing Back the Child’ cannot show how this is possible, the findings point far beyond nativist inspired views of what is involved in learning to talk and, generally, doing things with (and without) words.”Professor Stephen J CowleySyddansk Universitet, Denmark