Poetry and Ponderings by Diamante Lavendar might just be the most powerful collection you'll ever read. Journaling her way through abuse and eventual healing, Lavendar holds back nothing: pain, anger, hate, sadness, acceptance, revelation, peace, healing...
Meant to encourage and inspire other victims of abuse, this captivating collection of Christian poetry and prose will make you cry, will make you think, and will stay with you long after you've turned the last page. You will want to hold onto this one and read it again.
Paperback: 138 pages
Publisher: Written Dreams Publishing (April 26, 2017)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0998167398
ISBN-13: 978-0998167398
Purchase at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, BAM, Indiebound
Diamante Lavendar has been in love with reading since she was a child. Diamante believes that everyone should try to leave their own positive mark on the world, and to make it a better place for all. Writing is her way of leaving her mark—one story at a time. She began writing in college and has published poetry in anthologies over the years. Most of her writing is very personal and stems from her own experiences, and those of her family and friends. She writes to encourage hope and possibility to those who read her stories. To learn more about Diamante Lavendar and her books, please visit her website at: www.diamantelavendar.com.
I received a copy of this book from the author. This review contains my honest opinion, which I have not been compensated for in any way.
Showing posts with label sexual abuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sexual abuse. Show all posts
Sunday, September 3, 2017
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Book Review: Falling Through Ice by Carolyn Huebner Rankin with Rosetta D. Hoessli
An amazing true story of child abuse, an adult life damaged by secrets, and the power of God's healing is what you'll find in Falling Through Ice
by Carolyn Huebner Rankin with Rosetta D. Hoessli.
Carolyn Sue Shaw was only six when she was abducted by her biological mother. She was neglected and sexually abused as no child ever should be. Once returned to her parents, the Shaws try to put Carolyn's ordeal behind them. But Carolyn's past continues to haunt her into adulthood.
Married to Larry Huebner, and mother to daughter Audra, Carolyn starts Texas Child Search, Inc. and dedicates her life to helping children so they don't suffer the way she did. But she can't sleep and she finds it hard to be the mother that Audra needs. Nightmares and strange, broken memories fill her mind. She is chosen to work in the San Antonio District Attorney's Office, where her daily work continues to bring her back to those days of her capture and abuse.
After years of working to save children and being interviewed by the media hundreds of times, Carolyn Sue Huebner makes headlines for attempting to solicit a hit man to kill her husband. As her past and present collide, she spends years in a penitentiary trying to finally deal with the secrets that have made her life a living hell and to reconnect with the God her Daddy had told her about; the God she now knows was with her every step of the way.
I honestly wasn't sure until the end of Falling Through Ice how I was going to feel about it. The story seems too out there to be true; and yet, after years of therapy and with the help of family and friends, Carolyn was able to piece together the puzzle that was her life. She chose her good friend and chief assistant from Texas Child Search, Inc., Rosetta Hoessli (Ronni) to collaborate on this story. Hoessli is a full-time freelance writer and editor who has had articles on child sexual abuse published in McCall's and the Christian Herald.
This gripping true story is told by Ronni, which is unexpected, especially since the majority of the story is told through Carolyn's eyes. There are also times when confusion took over because Ronni was sometimes spoken about in the third person, though she was the narrator.
That said, I couldn't put Falling Through Ice down. I had to keep turning the pages of this fantastic, moving story. The details of Carolyn's abuse are graphic and downright scary to someone like me who has thankfully never experienced such torture.
The one thing I wish we had seen more of is Carolyn's developing relationship with her Savior. God had always been there for her--sometimes appearing as a vision in a flowing white robe--but while it's acknowledged that her time in prison really started her on the way to reaching out to God, we hear more about this aspect of Carolyn's life from her current husband, James Rankin, in the epilogue he provides at the end of the book. There are Bible verses included in different parts, and it's obvious Carolyn sees God's hand in her life all the way through; even when she couldn't see it then. I was just looking for a bit more of that transformation during prison and after her marriage to James.
I would definitely recommend this book to readers who enjoy gripping narratives.
Title: Falling Through Ice
Author: Carolyn Huebner Rankin with Rosetta D. Hoessli
Publisher: Crossover Publications
ISBN-10: 0981965776
ISBN-13: 978-0981965772
SRP: $18.95
I received a copy of this book from the author's publicist in exchange for my honest opinions. I received no monetary compensation to provide my review.
Carolyn Sue Shaw was only six when she was abducted by her biological mother. She was neglected and sexually abused as no child ever should be. Once returned to her parents, the Shaws try to put Carolyn's ordeal behind them. But Carolyn's past continues to haunt her into adulthood.
Married to Larry Huebner, and mother to daughter Audra, Carolyn starts Texas Child Search, Inc. and dedicates her life to helping children so they don't suffer the way she did. But she can't sleep and she finds it hard to be the mother that Audra needs. Nightmares and strange, broken memories fill her mind. She is chosen to work in the San Antonio District Attorney's Office, where her daily work continues to bring her back to those days of her capture and abuse.
After years of working to save children and being interviewed by the media hundreds of times, Carolyn Sue Huebner makes headlines for attempting to solicit a hit man to kill her husband. As her past and present collide, she spends years in a penitentiary trying to finally deal with the secrets that have made her life a living hell and to reconnect with the God her Daddy had told her about; the God she now knows was with her every step of the way.
I honestly wasn't sure until the end of Falling Through Ice how I was going to feel about it. The story seems too out there to be true; and yet, after years of therapy and with the help of family and friends, Carolyn was able to piece together the puzzle that was her life. She chose her good friend and chief assistant from Texas Child Search, Inc., Rosetta Hoessli (Ronni) to collaborate on this story. Hoessli is a full-time freelance writer and editor who has had articles on child sexual abuse published in McCall's and the Christian Herald.
This gripping true story is told by Ronni, which is unexpected, especially since the majority of the story is told through Carolyn's eyes. There are also times when confusion took over because Ronni was sometimes spoken about in the third person, though she was the narrator.
That said, I couldn't put Falling Through Ice down. I had to keep turning the pages of this fantastic, moving story. The details of Carolyn's abuse are graphic and downright scary to someone like me who has thankfully never experienced such torture.
The one thing I wish we had seen more of is Carolyn's developing relationship with her Savior. God had always been there for her--sometimes appearing as a vision in a flowing white robe--but while it's acknowledged that her time in prison really started her on the way to reaching out to God, we hear more about this aspect of Carolyn's life from her current husband, James Rankin, in the epilogue he provides at the end of the book. There are Bible verses included in different parts, and it's obvious Carolyn sees God's hand in her life all the way through; even when she couldn't see it then. I was just looking for a bit more of that transformation during prison and after her marriage to James.
I would definitely recommend this book to readers who enjoy gripping narratives.
Title: Falling Through Ice
Author: Carolyn Huebner Rankin with Rosetta D. Hoessli
Publisher: Crossover Publications
ISBN-10: 0981965776
ISBN-13: 978-0981965772
SRP: $18.95
I received a copy of this book from the author's publicist in exchange for my honest opinions. I received no monetary compensation to provide my review.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Book Review: The River of Forgetting by Jane Rowan
In this brave and touching memoir, Jane Rowan shares her journey through the healing process of recovering from childhood sexual abuse; a past she knew nothing about until vague, foggy memories began invading her mind.
The River of Forgetting: A Memoir of Healing from Sexual Abuse
opens with a moving Prologue and Introduction that set the scene for all that is to come. A successful scientist and professor, she was unprepared for the memories to come flooding back, not able to reconcile the past she was discovering to what she had grown up believing about her family. Yes, she knew things were a bit off. She had always called her parents by their first names, she had a sister with Down syndrome that was quietly tucked away in a home and never spoken of to others, and her extended family--grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins--were distant; but she had a normal childhood. Didn't she?
When the first memory appears during a therapy session, her therapist assures her, "People don’t make up things like that for fun." This first memory puts Rowan on a journey to come to terms with her past, using Inner Child work, journal writing, painting, and dancing.
The River of Forgetting is an intense story. It's not one you read and just move onto the next book in your stack. It's impossible for me, as someone who had a less than ideal childhood, not to compare some of Rowan's experiences with my own. Granted, there wasn't the level of abuse that Rowan endured, but there is an amount of neglect that has followed me to this day; something I unsuccessfully attempted to deal with over 10 years ago in therapy. I had tried Inner Child work, but couldn't reach what I needed to get me through.
The reader spends time with Rowan in the therapist's office, the studio, in group sessions, at home and at family events. This well-written, powerful memoir dives deeply into those years when the past collided with the present. It discusses how during a portion of her journey, problems at work and mysterious threatening postcards and letters pushed her to the edge. At times I was a bit uncomfortable with the intimate relationship between Rowan and her therapist, but then I got to wondering if my own therapy wasn't successful because I couldn't connect with my therapist in such a meaningful way. These women tackled some tough issues together, and it was important for Rowan to feel Sarah's love and support throughout the entire process.
The River of Forgetting inspires with poetry, journal writing, and a poignant narrative. As readers follow Rowan's transformation, they too will be encouraged to find the peace and joy they deserve.
Title: The River of Forgetting
Author: Jane Rowan
Publisher: Booksmyth Press
ISBN-10: 0981583024
ISBN-13: 978-0981583020
SRP: $14.95 (Also available in a Kindle edition)
I received a copy of this book from the author and was paid to promote this book with a virtual book tour through Pump Up Your Book. That fee did not include a review. This review contains my honest opinions, for which I received no monetary compensation.
The River of Forgetting: A Memoir of Healing from Sexual Abuse
When the first memory appears during a therapy session, her therapist assures her, "People don’t make up things like that for fun." This first memory puts Rowan on a journey to come to terms with her past, using Inner Child work, journal writing, painting, and dancing.
The River of Forgetting is an intense story. It's not one you read and just move onto the next book in your stack. It's impossible for me, as someone who had a less than ideal childhood, not to compare some of Rowan's experiences with my own. Granted, there wasn't the level of abuse that Rowan endured, but there is an amount of neglect that has followed me to this day; something I unsuccessfully attempted to deal with over 10 years ago in therapy. I had tried Inner Child work, but couldn't reach what I needed to get me through.
The reader spends time with Rowan in the therapist's office, the studio, in group sessions, at home and at family events. This well-written, powerful memoir dives deeply into those years when the past collided with the present. It discusses how during a portion of her journey, problems at work and mysterious threatening postcards and letters pushed her to the edge. At times I was a bit uncomfortable with the intimate relationship between Rowan and her therapist, but then I got to wondering if my own therapy wasn't successful because I couldn't connect with my therapist in such a meaningful way. These women tackled some tough issues together, and it was important for Rowan to feel Sarah's love and support throughout the entire process.
The River of Forgetting inspires with poetry, journal writing, and a poignant narrative. As readers follow Rowan's transformation, they too will be encouraged to find the peace and joy they deserve.
Title: The River of Forgetting
Author: Jane Rowan
Publisher: Booksmyth Press
ISBN-10: 0981583024
ISBN-13: 978-0981583020
SRP: $14.95 (Also available in a Kindle edition)
I received a copy of this book from the author and was paid to promote this book with a virtual book tour through Pump Up Your Book. That fee did not include a review. This review contains my honest opinions, for which I received no monetary compensation.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Author Spotlight: Eight Days of Darkness by Angela Roegner and Anita Wooldridge

Kidnapping and rape victim Anita Wooldridge began seeing licensed social worker Angela Roegner in 2002, four years after her traumatic abduction and eight days of abuse.
Eight years later, Anita is sharing her story with the world.
In her new book, Eight Days in Darkness: The True Story of the Abduction, Rape, and Rescue of Anita Wooldridge
Adapted from journals Woodridge wrote as part of her healing process and several years of therapy with Roegner, Eight Days of Darkness recounts in graphic detail the summer day that Woodridge was abducted from her parents’ home and the eight days that her abductor held her captive in a metal box, beat and raped her.

A native of Indiana, Angela Roegner received a bachelor’s degree in sociology from Purdue University in 1997, and a master’s in social work from Indiana University in 1999. Roegner works as a licensed clinical social worker at Family Psychiatric Center and is a member of the National Association of Social Workers.
Roegner has served as a CASA and Big Brothers Big Sisters volunteer and currently lives in Kokomo, Indiana with her husband and their three children.
Anita Wooldridge serves as a victim’s advocate on the Howard County Community Corrections Advisory Board in Kokomo, Indiana. She is an active member in her local church where she leads the youth group and runs the church food pantry.
Wooldridge’s story has been featured on “FBI Files.” First airing in 1999, “FBI Files: Evil Intent” is still available for viewing today. She travels to conferences across the country to tell her story and to educate law enforcement agencies on the elements of her own successful rescue case. Wooldridge currently lives in
Kokomo, Indiana, where she is a full-time nursing student at Ivy Tech.
To learn more about the authors and their book, please visit http://8daysindarkness.com/

Thursday, May 13, 2010
Author Spotlight: Breakaway by Nadia Sahari

Breakaway is the breathtaking and courageous story of one woman's survival of molestation, rape, repeated beatings, domestic violence, and other attempts on her life.
• Nadia reveals hope, courage and inspiration!
• A true story of personal freedom
• Highly revealing memoir - dramatic details of more than 18 years of abuse.
In Breakaway: How I Survived Abuse
Unfortunately, many of the events that she experienced in her early years were heartwrenching because they involved sexual and physical abuse. She bares her soul to us as she describes horrific events that she experienced.
"Nadia's touching story is one of admirable courage in the face of adversity. From a very young age, Nadia has had to endure brutal abuse, but she has emerged as a winner that really inspires. Indeed, success is the best revenge." --Sam, Sam in the Morning, LA Talk Radio.com
"The hope that it filled me with was not only knowing I had the choice to leave the abuser, but that wanting to heal was also my choice." --Christa Jan Ryan, author of Silent Screams from the Hamptons
"Nadia teaches us how to forgive and move forward with your life." --Ebony Black, Producer and Director
"Hearing your story and the fact that you managed to survive and thrive later in life will hopefully be a beacon of hope for others who are living in similar hardships." --Peter Anthony Holder, Host, Holder Tonight, CJAD Canada
"It restores the soul." --Connie Curry, author of Give Me Back My Glory
Breakaway is an inspiration for any woman who dared to dream. Nadia bears her soul in this book, her raw emotions of overcoming domestic violence, family violence and incest I found very touching. Nadia gives of herself to her community, her sincerity radiates forgiveness. Breakaway is a must have for all people as this book transcends, gender and race. We have adopted this as one of or classroom's Text at Women Are Dreamers Too and the First class commencing August 8th will have a chance to read this so they may learn that in order to be free one must learn to forgive. The Story also has to be told in order to overcome and release one's soul from the bondage of domestic violence. All the above Nadia has done with this awesome classic. Proud to know this awesome, classy generous lady, a hard working woman with the heart of gold. Break Away is an awesome read with life lessons enshrined within the pages of this awesome book! Grab a copy folks you'll be glad you did. --Cindy Williams, Ph.D. Women Are dreamers Too

Nadia Sahari was born in Beirut, Lebanon. She came to America at the age of two. She speaks fluent Lebanese. Now, for the first time in years, she is living her dream of acting which she has had since the age of ten.
Nadia Sahari performed as a headliner belly dancer and choreographer. She was a featured guest on various television shows in Detroit, Michigan. The newspapers frequently featured her story and pictures in their publications. Nadia Sahari drew crowds from many states and received standing ovations wherever she headlined. Her dancing was professional, exotic, and true to her culture. She also taught more than two thousand women the art of belly dancing. She alone produced and directed live dance shows for the public as well as families and friends of her students.
In her late twenties, she ventured out to Las Vegas where she attended the Las Vegas School of Acting. Later she registered and trained at various universities and private schools to refine her craft. She was an entrepreneur for many years and was very creative in business in order to support herself and her family.
Nadia now resides in Austin, Texas. She has enrolled in filmmaking classes at the Austin Film School and is a member of SAG. She plans to film documentaries and short films in the future. She continues to train in acting, improv, film, and comedy classes.
Ms. Sahari has also been a guest panelist on the Oprah show. Oprah has requested a copy of Ms. Sahari's memoir. Currently, she is auditioning for commercials and film. Recently she has been cast as an Aunt for the movie Bandslam, and as a Reporter for the movie Conflict of Interest, both of which showed in the theaters in 2009.
In 2008, she was the cover girl in the FEB/MAR issue of The County Woman Magazine.
In addition to her busy schedule, she is an activist for women's rights, animal rights and the rights of children. She is active in trying to change the laws to give tougher sentencing to convicted criminals who abuse animals and children. In her words, she says: "I love all people and all animals. I believe that anything or anyone who has breath deserves life and freedom from abuse or control and should not be killed by anyone. God created us and only God can take us. No one has the right to end someone else's life."
Most of all, Nadia is thankful for the support and love of her husband of twenty-four years and her two sons.
This is the year for all things beautiful. Nadia loves this quote from Longfellow, "Ah, nothing is too late, till the tired heart shall cease to palpitate."
You can visit Nadia online at www.nadiasahari.com and www.nadiasaharibook.com.
Monday, May 10, 2010
The Caterpillar Flight by Laura Lester Fournier

The Caterpillar's Flight is a journey through childhood sexual, emotional, and physical abuse to a life of forgiveness and joy. The author reflects upon her past and more than twenty-five years of study in metaphysics, world religion, and philosophy; she discusses everything from sexuality to politics with an honest and appealing approach. Laura sheds light on how often we create obstacles to our happiness, and how negative choices are typically based in a lack of forgiveness and self worth. We tend to create habits of accepting stress and resentment as a fact of life, rather than an opportunity to transform. The author infused this book with humor, insightfulness, and the sensibility she calls, "Spirituality For Real Life." Powerful meditations and practices are shared which will increase your ability to live life with more enthusiasm, success, and joy. The future depends on how well we heal the past. Healed adults raise wise children and this is the path to a more peaceful world. The book in your hands will assist you in gaining deeper clairty about your past, living more fully in the present, and peering into the future with fresh eyes. It is a book you will reach for again and again.
I asked Laura why she felt the need to share her story. Here's what she had to say:
"I felt very passionate about writing my latest book The Caterpillar's Flight. As a survivor of childhood sexual, emotional, and physical abuse, I came to realize that the only way to lead a happy life as an adult, was through the process of forgiving the past. Many of us had great difficulties in our childhood. The difference between those who go on to lead happy and prosperous lives and those who do not....is the degree to which we remain stuck in our resentment and anger. I attribute my successful twenty year marriage, our beautiful daughter, happy home, and success, to the power of forgiveness. One should never underestimate the energy we create when we resolve to forgive, this does not mean we forget; but it does mean that we clear the way for joy to take the place of continued sadness."

Laura Lester Fournier is the internationally known author of a series of spoken word CD's and books; she has just released her fifth book, The Caterpillar's Flight. Her books, CD's, and message are making their way around the world and spreading a transformational tone of peace, forgiveness, unconditional love, and grace. Laura is the founder of The Center Of Forgiveness in Rollinsford, NH, where she offers workshops, private intuitive/spiritual consultation, and children's meditation groups. Laura also offers Spiritual Retreats designed to your goals and aspirations in the White Mountains. She is the creator of "Top of the Day - Tip for Today" a popular daily feature on her web-site, these inspirational messages are available for auto-delivery to your e-mail inbox by signing up at her web-site. Laura has written articles for a number of publications as well as having been a guest on numerous talk radio shows. She is the host of her own internet blog talk radio show "Faith & Fiction", on Red River Radio. She serves as an expert for the National Association of Divorce for Women and Children. Having been married for almost two decades she brings her unique voice to the challenges of having a successful and lasting relationship. As an ordained minister, she has been performing spiritual ceremonies for more than fifteen years. Laura speaks publicly on a number of matters including human rights, sexual abuse, teen suicide, homelessness, depression, healing the past, and learning to "thrive rather than simply survive" our lives. Calling upon her personal experience and more than twenty-five years of study in metaphysics, world religion, and philosophy; she brings a fresh perspective to the practice of modern day Spirituality......which she refers to as "Spirituality For Real Life (R)." She and her daughter founded the "Soul to Soul" project which focuses on supplying those who are homeless and suffering with blankets and inspirational books. Laura lives in New Hampshire on a small farm with her husband, their beloved daughter, and many happy animals. She believes that every person comes into this lifetime with unique and wonderful gifts; "It is the sharing of those 'gifts' which make a profound and lasting difference for the future."
You can visit Laura online at www.lauralesterfournier.com
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Elizabeth Walker's and the Healing Abilities of Poetry and Journaling
Today's guest blogger is Elizabeth Walker, author of the memoir, The Tablet of My Heart.
The world turns upside down for a young girl when her father begins a fatal battle with the merciless affliction cancer. Before his illness finishes its devastating rampage through her adolescence, she is confronted by a new demon. She falls victim, by the hands of a trusted adult, to sexual abuse. The devastation of these events causes her to question God’s role in her life, and whether He ever loved her at all. The Tablet of My Heart is a collection of poetry from the journal of that young girl. It is narrated by the author of the journal herself, who paints a portrait of words illustrating her emotional journey from hopelessness to healing. It is dedicated to victims of abuse; to bring to them the realization of hope that there is a light at the end of the silence.
You can visit Elizabeth online at www.tabletofmyheart.net.
The Healing Abilities of Poetry and Journaling
So often healing comes through means we never expect. As a matter of fact, I think that generally people in the midst or even at the tail end of devastation think that healing just never comes. That is what I thought at the beginning of my journey. Healing could not possibly be strong enough to devour this pain.
I did not decide to keep a journal to heal. As a matter of fact, I didn’t decide to keep a journal at all, my journal kind of …happened to me. I feared trusting anyone with the filthy, dark, ugly secret that I was harboring. The secret of sexual abuse. The problem was that the weight of the sexual abuse was boiling up from the very pit of my eight-year-old soul and threatening to spill over if I didn’t let it out. That pain, in conjunction with the death of my father (my father was not my abuser), which came shortly after the abuse began, left me in a state of absolute loss, confusion and loneliness. Without the strength to overcome the fears associated with telling on my abuser, in a state of absolute desperation I turned to ink and paper. In doing so I accidentally found a counselor and friend.
Every time I wrote, every time the ink spilled out of my pen into that journal a little bit of pain spilled out of me. I didn’t exactly recognize that what I was doing (writing) was helping me until later – but what I did know was that when I wrote I was able, in that little instant, to sort through my feelings and fears without consequence. No fear of judgment, no fear of being called a liar, no fear of being viewed as bad or being accused of overreacting, just no fear. The secrets that I told my journal were raw, they were without restraint or stutter because I knew that I could trust those pages.
The process was similar to painting a picture. When a painting begins, it just looks like paint on a canvas without form or purpose. But the more you paint, the clearer the picture becomes. My journal illustrated my pain for me. Of course it couldn’t be seen by looking at only one or two entries, but as more and more words fell out of my heart onto the pages, often in the form of poetry, I found myself looking at a portrait that explained the reasons for my emotions and gave me clarity.
My journal entries and poetry walked me through the pain of the loss of my father step by step, from the anger and confusion that knocks you to the ground when you experience the death of a loved one, to the memories of him where I was eventually able to find comfort. My writings helped me determine that I needed to tell someone about the sexual abuse, because writing gave me the priceless opportunity to dissect the pain in order to learn what I had to do to get rid of it.
The same way that a shaken soda pop explodes when you remove the lid, or a steaming pot boils over onto the hot burner, a person’s emotions are real even if not tangible and they will eventually become uncontainable without a way to release pressure as it builds – and will most certainly become tangible in the havoc they can wreak when they explode. Writing was my "release valve". As I said in my book, The Tablet of My Heart, "There is no doubt in my mind that it was God who chose the gift (the tablet that became my journal) His timing is beautiful." The healing abilities that my journal and the poetry I wrote in it had in my life during my most difficult hours are immeasurable. I will cherish this friendship, as even to this day my pen and paper have never betrayed me.
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Kathleen Willey is a Target for the Clintons
What would you do if your spouse had stolen a large sum of money from his clients and the clients found out? How far would you go to protect your family?
In Kathleen Willey's new book TARGET: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill and Hillary Clinton, Willey talks all about how she went from being a politically active Democrat and soccer mom to asking President Clinton for a paying job, and how that led to her assault in the Oval Office. She also discusses how Hillary Clinton enables her husband's behavior.

Having maintained her silence for many years, Willey says she must come forward, "to remind America, especially American women, what Hillary and her husband will do...They have wielded an ugly power over me and over many other women and witnesses. They will do it again and, worst of all, they will do it in the name of feminism!"
Willey believes that America is ready to elect a woman president and that many women will vote for Hillary Rodham Clinton solely because she is a woman. And this, she says, is why she believes it is time to tell her story.
I asked Kathleen Willey if her life had been changed by what happened to her in the Oval Office. She said:
"After I was forced to tell my story in the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit, my life was forever changed. I had never intended to go public about what Bill Clinton did to me. It was a no win situation. Even though, I and my children were threatened, and I was subjected to a brutal smear campaign, I decided that telling my story under oath insured my safety. I could not have lied under oath, no matter what they tried to do to me."
My detailed interview with Kathleen Willey, author of TARGET: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill and Hillary Clinton, can be found at American Chronicle at the following link: http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewArticle.asp?articleID=48395
This virtual book tour has been brought to you by:
In Kathleen Willey's new book TARGET: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill and Hillary Clinton, Willey talks all about how she went from being a politically active Democrat and soccer mom to asking President Clinton for a paying job, and how that led to her assault in the Oval Office. She also discusses how Hillary Clinton enables her husband's behavior.

Having maintained her silence for many years, Willey says she must come forward, "to remind America, especially American women, what Hillary and her husband will do...They have wielded an ugly power over me and over many other women and witnesses. They will do it again and, worst of all, they will do it in the name of feminism!"
Willey believes that America is ready to elect a woman president and that many women will vote for Hillary Rodham Clinton solely because she is a woman. And this, she says, is why she believes it is time to tell her story.
I asked Kathleen Willey if her life had been changed by what happened to her in the Oval Office. She said:
"After I was forced to tell my story in the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit, my life was forever changed. I had never intended to go public about what Bill Clinton did to me. It was a no win situation. Even though, I and my children were threatened, and I was subjected to a brutal smear campaign, I decided that telling my story under oath insured my safety. I could not have lied under oath, no matter what they tried to do to me."
My detailed interview with Kathleen Willey, author of TARGET: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill and Hillary Clinton, can be found at American Chronicle at the following link: http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewArticle.asp?articleID=48395
This virtual book tour has been brought to you by:

Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)