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IN BOOKSTORES NOW The Girl Who Fell From the Sky
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Greetings!
 The day is here: you can find the book at your local bookstore or at any major online retailer (and libraries too). The book has been hailed as a "Top 10 Book of 2010" by the Boston Herald; a "Top 10 Promising Debut" by Publishers Weekly; an Indie Next Pick, and an Amazon Best Book of the Month. Now, I'd love for you to read it and tell me what you think!
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Dreams Come True
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This has been a life-long dream. Thank you for helping make it come true!
The celebration kicks off tonight in Los Angeles: Feb. 16 at 7:30pm, at Skylight Books, 1818 N. Vermont Avenue.
I may just be in your town too. Check out my complete tour schedule on my website here.
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Many thank yous!
Sincerely,
Heidi www.heidiwdurrow.com
Become a Fan on Facebook and connect with other readers!
"Simply put, Durrow has written a beautiful novel. There is pain in it, but there is a great deal of love as well. Durrow doesn't wallow in emotion but deftly shows how people's minds work, how children's identities are formed. Rachel's struggle, though specific in detail, is universal in feel. All adolescents try to understand why the world is cruel. We all want to know who it is that we're supposed to be. [This] is a story that moves along, packing an emotional wallop that lasts well after the reading stops."
-The Oregonian
"Durrow has written a story that is quite literally breathtaking. There were times when I found myself gasping out loud, and at all times I was haunted by the events that shape Rachel's existence. I was pulled along each step of the way, wanting to know more and rooting for Rachel to overcome all odds and make her own peace with where she comes from and where her life will take her. The one thing we know for sure is that Rachel is a survivor-both in the sense that she is the only one who survived a horrific incident and in the sense that she becomes stronger with every step of her journey." -Elle Magazine Amazon Best Books of the Month, February 2010: Early on in The Girl Who Fell from the Sky,
Rachel Morse (the girl in question) wonders about being
"tender-headed." It's how her grandmother chides her for wincing at
having her hair brushed, but it's also a way of understanding how
Rachel grapples with the world in which she landed. Her parents, a
Danish woman and an African-American G.I., tried to hold her and her
siblings aloft from questions of race, and their failure there is both
tragic and tenderly wrought. After sustaining an unimaginable trauma,
Rachel resumes her life as a black girl, an identity she quickly learns
to adopt but at heart is always reconciling with the life she knew
before. Heidi W. Durrow bolsters her story with a chorus of voices that
often see what Rachel can't--this is particularly true in the case of
Brick, the only witness to her fall. There's a poetry to these
characters that draws you into their lives, making for a beautiful and
earnest coming-of-age novel that speaks as eloquently to teens as it
does to adults. -- Anne Bartholomew |
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