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Reaching
for the Sky
The recollections of a young
Greek girl growing up during two devastating wars are dramatic
yet heartwarming and buoyant. The character insight in the
stories is incredibly moving. It is indeed a vivid and unique
microcosm about war and survival.
Book Description
The serene life of the irrepressibly optimistic little girl
was disturbed. Child-play and fantasies gave way to fear
and anguish. Wild thoughts were going through her mind while
the German bombs were falling nearby her picturesque retreat:
How dare they disturb my peaceful space? Who are these people
who want to conquer the world? Why aren’t they satisfied
with their own terra firma, their own hideaways and retreats,
their own Camelot? Why would they bother my magical surroundings
and the environment of all the other children of other lands?
Don’t they have dreams, other than destroy other people’s
dreams? Weren’t they ever children themselves, or better
yet, don’t they have children of their own? Don’t they know
that, above all, children need to feel safe and secure,
warm and loved?
Only three chapters were completed with the anticipation
that the conclusion of this book would be optimistic and
cheerful, along with the fervent wish that never again would
children have to live through the horrors of war and its
dreadful consequences.
The dreadful morning of September 11, 2001, however, changed
the mood of us all. The devastation of the horrific events
in New York, Washington D.C., and Pennsylvania will haunt
us forever.
Reaching
for the Sky
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