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Facing the Wind: A True Story of Tragedy and Reconciliation

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Robert and Mary Rowes second child, Christopher, was born with severe neurological and visual impairments.

For many years, the Rowes courageous response to adversity set an example for a group of Brooklyn mothers who met to discuss the challenges of raising children with birth defects.

Then Bob Rowes pressures professional and personal took their toll, and he fell into depression and, ultimately delusion. And one day he took a baseball bat and killed his three children and his wife.

In Facing the Wind, Julie Salamon not only tells the Rowes tragic story but also explores the lives of others drawn into it: the mothers, a social worker with problems of her own, an ocularist that is, a man who makes prosthetic eyes a young woman who enters the novitiate out of shame over her childhood sexual activities, and a judge of unusual wisdom.

Facing the Wind is a work of redemptive compassion and understanding.

It addresses the questions of how human beings cope with the burdens that chance inflicts upon them and what constitutes moral and legal guilt and innocence.

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£55.00
Product Details
0375507019 / 9780375507014
eBook (EPUB)
12/06/2001
English
320 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%