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American Spirit

Profiles in Resilience, Courage, and Faith

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The New York Times–bestselling author shares "moving and passionate" true stories of people who found their purpose through perseverance and service (Publishers Weekly, starred review).
Taya Kyle entered a period of deep grief when she lost her husband, "American Sniper" Chris Kyle. Yet the experience served as a catalyst for profound growth. Taya found her own reserve of strength with the help of family and friends—and also many strangers across America, who shared their own stories of suffering and survival. Inspired by their courage, Taya discovered her calling: spreading a message of how we can triumph over personal pain and heal our communities.
Working with trusted collaborator Jim DeFelice (coauthor of American Sniper and American Wife), Taya tells her own story, as well as those of other Americans who have built extraordinary lives after grappling with loss, illness, all manner of setback: a 9/11 survivor, badly burned over 60% of his body, who asked himself What debt to do I owe to God?; a man with the hole in his heart who runs ultramarathons; a young cancer victim whose lemonade stand inspired a revolutionary new model for fighting cancer; a pastor who became an undercover investigator, and more.
The more than thirty individual profiled here embody the "American spirit" of resilience, faith, and togetherness that has built the nation. In the end, their stories teach us that "every action, big or small, has the potential to spark someone else's movement."
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 25, 2019
      Kyle follows up American Wife, about her Navy SEAL husband Chris Kyle (author of American Sniper), with this moving and passionate collection of essays in which she shares her experiences with people she has met as a public speaker. At events, she writes, strangers told her “stories about the good things their neighbors are doing, accounts of how they were helped or inspired by others.” Kyle focuses on 30 of those “tales of heroism” in an effort to show the power of the American spirit and “brighten a sometimes very dark world.” Writing with DeFelice, who coauthored both her and her husband’s previous books, Kyle includes stories from a young girl suffering from cancer whose idea of raising money for research by having a lemonade stand in her hospital led to a million-dollar foundation for childhood cancer; a blind veteran whose work with disabled bike riders inspired a volunteer organization that takes blind bikers on rides through New York City; and another vet whose individual efforts to help the homeless led to the formation of a California nonprofit. Once again, Kyle and DeFelice inspire with touching stories of compassion.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2019
      A cheerily aspirational celebration of Americans who are making a difference.At the beginning of their latest collaboration, Kyle, widow of "American sniper" Chris Kyle, and DeFelice (co-authors: American Wife: A Memoir of Love, War, Faith, and Renewal, 2015) proclaim that "the pioneer spirit built America," with apologies to the Native and African peoples who paid the bill ("there is much we regret in retrospect"). Just what that spirit constitutes is a little fuzzy, but the phrase seems to translate as community-building altruism, its proponents "doing their own part to bring order to chaos and to show up for other people." Allowing that clichés such as "our kids are our future" are just that, clichés, the authors argue that the pioneer spirit is built on the premise that we sacrifice now for a better future. You might not know it from the behavior of the boomers and Gen Xers, but as for the kids themselves, many are doing important things. One example is Alexandra Scott, a victim of neuroblastoma who used part of her short life to operate a lemonade stand that raised thousands of dollars to help children like her--and, now that she's passed, the Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation for Childhood Cancer raises millions. "All of this," write the authors, "because one little girl decided to open a lemonade stand in her front yard...and because thousands of other kids decided to copy her." The authors also discuss the work of veteran Micah Fink, a New Yorker who takes fellow veterans on horseback rides in the Montana wilderness to work through PTSD and "guilt at not being 'O.K., ' whatever that means." Other profiles concern an autistic Appalachian Trail hiker and a blind marathon runner, with many others centering on veterans of recent wars.Though a rather ordinary book, the narrative is relentlessly optimistic and a good source of ideas for merit badge projects.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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