Dyslexia is due to the immaturity in a certain area of the brain. Because of this, dyslexic children cannot memorize the letters properly. They simply lack the neurobiological prerequisites. By playing with letters and typing, the children improve their reading and writing skills significantly and can usually overcome their weakness within a year.
Joe Kennedy has made it his mission to take the pressure off children with dyslexia and other learning disabilities such as dyscalculia and ADHD, and to give them back the love of learning.
With the help of his methods, which he has been successfully using in his Kennedy School in Germany for 30 years, he helps families regain more leisure time and enjoy a more harmonious coexistence.
Families at War is a sweeping tale of love, loyalty, and the brutal legacy of war.
In 1930s Friedrichshafen, a shared passion for art binds English-Jewish Judith, idealistic Matthias, and zealous Hinrich, until Nazi ideology tears them apart. As WWII ignites, Judith returns to England to serve as a wartime nurse.
Matthias, haunted by his love for Judith, fights on the Eastern Front, battling not just enemies but his own conscience. Meanwhile, Hinrich descends into darkness as a sadistic SS officer. Their families, too, are drawn into the maelstrom ― some resisting, others complicit. Years later, an art exhibition reunites the trio, each scarred by the past.
Now artists, Judith and Matthias must confront the memories that shaped them, while Hinrich reappears in a guise both familiar and changed. Moving and unflinching, this is a story of shattered innocence, the enduring power of memory, and art’s ability to redeem or destroy.

