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Alesa Lightbourne

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Alesa Lightbourne

Goodreads Author


Born
in Carmel, California, The United States
Website

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Member Since
February 2008


Alesa Lightbourne has been an English professor and teacher in six countries, lived on a sailboat, dined with Bedouins, and written for Fortune 50 companies. She lives close to Monterey Bay in California, where she loves to boogie board and ride a bicycle.

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Alesa Lightbourne Hi May,

Great question.

Actually, the school where I taught was on the outskirts of Arbil (also spelled Erbil or Irbil). However, I did not have a cha…more
Hi May,

Great question.

Actually, the school where I taught was on the outskirts of Arbil (also spelled Erbil or Irbil). However, I did not have a chance to get to know many educated or professional Kurds except for the ones at the school. I was there for only six months. So I just know about the people I taught with and lived amongst.

I was hoping that the book would not give a dark picture of the village. There were so many things that I appreciated and respected about the village culture. The way they handled grief together was something I envied, since my own family and community at home doesn't cry together. I was amazed at Ara's generosity, saying that she would feed and house me for the rest of my life after I was made penniless. The wisdom and spirituality of Old Houda was amazing. And the patriotism expressed by virtually all Kurds I met was inspirational. These and other things were of great beauty to me. And I missed Ara, Bezma, Houda and Seema incredibly after I left.

The lives of city Kurds are indeed very different. The women don't wear abayas most of the time. They drive. They are not as likely to be cut. Many of them have professional jobs. Let's hope that one of these educated city women writes a book soon, so that we all can have insights into that aspect of society.

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Alesa Lightbourne Writing helps a person align with their own soul. I can't explain how this happens. It just does. Perhaps it has something to do with EM Forster's quo…moreWriting helps a person align with their own soul. I can't explain how this happens. It just does. Perhaps it has something to do with EM Forster's quote, "How do I know what I think until I see what I write?" I love that quote.(less)
Average rating: 3.9 · 3,567 ratings · 290 reviews · 6 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Kurdish Bike

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The SALSA Solution

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Ideas Into Reality: The Ber...

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kurdish bicycle

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Journey To Success

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How We Disappeared by Jing-Jing Lee
How We Disappeared
by Jing-Jing Lee (Goodreads Author)
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Wow. What a powerful and unforgettable depiction of WWII in Singapore, told from the viewpoint of a Chinese Singaporean teenager who was forced into virtual slavery as a "comfort woman" in a brothel run by the Japanese army.

This heart-rending story f
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The Summers by Ronya Othmann
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Leyla is a girl in Germany, the daughter of a white German mother and a Yazidi Kurdish Syrian father. Every summer during childhood she travels to stay with her grandparents in a tiny village in Syria. She learns about the joys and hardships of villa ...more
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Catching up on Cl...: A-Z Title Challenge 2018 104 278 Dec 27, 2018 02:37AM  
Adrian Tchaikovsky
“He tested his fragile composure and found that it would take his weight.”
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“Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart.”
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Cornelius Elmore Addison
“You were given your gift for the joy you may give in return.”
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“See, the problem is that God gives men a brain and a penis, and only enough blood to run one at a time.”
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I don't expect my group to be an overnight success, but thing is, I doubt I'm only Saudi Non-National living in this country *cough*I see more filipin ...more
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message 1: by Kia

Kia Penso Thanks! I have a copy of it and read through it rather quickly. Daddy took a look at it too on his last visit here. I'm glad she got the story out. This brings to four the number of books in which I appear as a character. I'm not counting the handful of poems and unpublished short stories, or the paintings. All of which is another reminder that I need to get real about getting the next book out.


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