Friday, November 4, 2011

When The Stars Fall To Earth *Giveaway* 2 Winners!

When The Stars Fall To Earth by Rebecca Tinsley

About The Book:
Centered around the plight of five Darfuri refugees, the novel follows the stories of Zara, Ahmed, Hawa, Abdelatif, and Rashid as each of them copes with life and soul threatening circumstances. Author Rebecca Tinsley makes their journey the reader's journey, and long after you put the book down the characters will stay with you. Zara, barely escapes from the marauding Arabs and, numb with terror, crouches in a dried up riverbed beneath a rocky pass in the mountains. As the killing helicopter gunship flies overhead, her heart stops as she spies her pink flip flops clearly visible on the open ground near her. Zara, who is unusually gifted with both intelligence and education, hears the steady and calm voice of her grandfather the Sheikh of her village now dead telling her to use both of her gifts. I'm going to survive this, she assures herself as she rescues her shoes and resumes her flight toward the uncertain sanctuary of the refugee camp. Ahmed, as fleet of foot as Zara is of mind and a born soccer player, organizes soccer teams in the refugee camp to help the dispirited refugees cope. Now, however, sitting in the stifling interrogation room, Ahmed tries to take his mind off the heat and the pain of the bullet lodged in his hip. Maybe this wound of mine will stop me playing professional soccer, but I can live with that, if it means getting out of here, he thinks. He recalls how the cool dawn air used to feel as he emerged from his hut, back in the village, when he used to run. After the first few paces he would get into his stride, leaving the village behind, like a streak of lightning, like the wind. Free of the cares and woes that plagued him and the rest of his village. His mind and his eyes looking forward, for the future, for hope. Hawa, measured and accustomed to being obedient, accepted the traditional role of a woman in her Darfuri village. Now wounded and damaged, she fights to find the will to live. She finds that will with help from Mary, the Christian nurse, from Ahmed, the optimist and organizer, and even in a backhanded way from Rashid, to whom she had been betrothed. The pain returned when she pulled herself upright, but Hawa felt strangely triumphant. I survived, she thought. I made it and I'm here and I survived. They're not going to destroy me that easily. Ultimately, she goes far beyond finding the will to live: she develops into a strong leader who takes on the task of helping her people to learn and develop a new way of thinking and living. As Rebecca Tinsley guides us through each character's journey, we learn about the politics of violence and genocide, about the pain and terror of the African Wild West and about the hope, burning like a beacon in the night, that drives these young Darfuris to fight for their country, fight for their freedom, and fight for their lives.

My Thoughts:
This is a fiction book, but based on reality. And as you read it, you don't feel as if it is fiction. You can tell these are real people, and this is their story. You get to know the characters so well, and your heart breaks for them. Here in America, we are so far removed from anything like genocide that it is almost unfeasible that this is happening to other people. This is a well written story, and very informative. The author tells the story well, as you are gripped throughout the book until the very end.

About The Author:
Rebecca Tinsley is a three-time novelist, a lawyer, a journalist, and a tireless worker for human rights. Today her work is concentrated in Africa. This work is not only her passion but the main focus of her life. Born in Canada to an English father and an Irish Canadian mother, she has spent a great deal of her life confronting prejudice and the architects of genocide. At age 15, she appeared on TV attacking apartheid. She was once arrested for participating in a protest against apartheid. In the meantime, she had an education to acquire, and a degree in Law from the prestigious London School of Economics. Initially, the Liberal Party seemed to offer the most rational political path toward social justice, and she stood twice for Parliament though was never elected. She continues to play a role as a gifted speechwriter for politicians she supports and is a free-lance journalist covering countries with political stories she thinks important. As a BBC reporter, she decided to take an activist role in Bosnia and Kosovo. Lessons learned from Auschwitz survivors had persuaded her that people who have lived together for long periods of time can be divided by ruthless politicians greedy for power and wealth. Bosnia revealed the same pattern. In Bosnia, Rebecca not only reported what she saw but also initiated programs to soften the damage. This experience led her to understand the pattern of genocide: First, organize your group and arm them. Second, create a disinformation crusade on the weaker group, and expose them to ridicule. Show how their very existence threatens you and your family's jobs and welfare. Finally, begin your enemy's extinction by driving the survivors to panic and leave. In Africa, focusing her attention on Rwanda, she saw the patterns of genocide repeated. She sharpened her activist approach by providing concrete assistance to genocide survivors. She organized Waging Peace, a human rights organization to make people aware. She took on countless speaking engagements to raise money to create schools and places of refuge for the orphans. While occupied with Rwanda, Tinsley heard rumors of what was going on in southern Sudan and Darfur. When she was offered a chance to see firsthand what was happening in Darfur, she took it. Denied permission to re-enter Sudan, Rebecca was forced to confine her visits to refugee camps along the border and to rely on others to carry out her programs of information and refugee assistance within Darfur. What she learned conformed in large part to the pattern of genocide she observed elsewhere, except that in the case of Darfur religion played a minor role. The oppressor and the oppressed are both Muslims. Both racial groups are black, and a foreigner might not recognize any difference between the groups. But the Arabs of northern Sudan have always had the upper hand. But Darfur is resource rich, and the Sudanese rulers wanted the rich farm land found there and they wanted it without sharing with the southern tribes. Disinformation programs were launched. The slow attrition of the people began, with the survivors leaving their lands and homes behind and streaming into refugee camps. At first world governments looked the other way, as they had in Bosnia and Kosovo, as they had in Rwanda, Burundi, and elsewhere. But gradually Waging Peace, the organization she had organized and other groups got the word out. The novel grew out of experiences in the refugee camps, from interviews with the survivors.Visit Rebecca Tinsley online.

Buy this book on Amazon.

Two lucky winners will each receive a copy of this book. Here's how to enter to win:

1. Follow this blog via GFC, the newsletter, or Networked Blogs.
4. Promote this giveaway on your own blog, share the link.
5. Promote this giveaway.

Giveaway ends November 18th. US only, sorry. Good luck!

I received a complimentary review copy of this book from Make Things Happen PR. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

18 comments:

  1. fb fan

    pamela j

    pjames330 at aol dot com

    ReplyDelete
  2. twitter follower
    of
    rebecca

    pj436
    pjames330 at aol dot com

    ReplyDelete
  3. I follow via GFC as dukebb.

    Thanks,
    VaDebby@cox.net

    ReplyDelete
  4. I Like Hanging off the wire on FB.

    Thanks,
    VaDebby@cox.net

    ReplyDelete
  5. I follow Rebecca Tinsley on Twitter.

    Thanks,
    VaDebby@cox.net

    ReplyDelete
  6. I follow on GFC, Found you on the Alexa Group from Pitch it! thanks for the great giveaways!
    zcscooby@msn.com

    ReplyDelete
  7. I like you on FB
    zcscooby@msn.com
    facebook.com/zcscooby Zabrina C.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I follow on Twitter
    zcscooby@msn.com
    @ZsSpace

    ReplyDelete
  9. I follow you on GFC

    katladyu18 at prodigy dot net

    ReplyDelete
  10. I follow you on networked blogs
    katladyu18 at prodigy dot net

    ReplyDelete
  11. I like Hanging Off The Wire on Facebook.

    katladyu18 at prodigy dot net

    ReplyDelete
  12. I Follow Rebecca Tinsley on Twitter @katladyu18

    katladyu18 at prodigy dot net

    ReplyDelete
  13. Promoted on my blog:
    http://8kidzforme.blogspot.com/2011/11/book-giveaway-when-stars-fall-to-earth.html

    katladyu18 at prodigy dot net

    ReplyDelete
  14. GFC follower :)
    Sara McKibben Lehman
    sarasarasweet@aol.com

    ReplyDelete
  15. FB fan!
    Sara McKibben Lehman
    sarasarasweet@aol.com

    ReplyDelete
  16. I follow on GFC and Rebecca Tinsley on twitter. @omgitsarod

    erica_316@yahoo.com

    ReplyDelete
  17. I follow on GFC and Rebecca Tinsley on twitter @omgitsarod

    erica_316@yahoo.com

    ReplyDelete

Thank you so much for taking the time to comment! I LOVE comments! :)

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