What price would you pay to touch the skies of your dreams?
David Norton spent his entire life fascinated with flying. With the help of his wife and young daughter, David set out to build his own VP-1 plane from scratch. For six years, David and his family worked on the plane, bringing N256DN from a basement workshop to its first flight in April 2000.
Three months later David was performing a routine take off when the wind beneath him dissipated. N256DN went down, and David was killed instantly.
Told by David's co-pilot and daughter, Taking Flight is a memoir about love, surviving loss and the importance of following your dreams - no matter what the cost.
"Taking Flight" by Sarah Solmonson is tragic, beautiful and real. There are truly no words to really explain the magnitude of emotions this book can cause the reader to experience, but I will do my best. What do you do when the last words you say to someone you love end up being literally and honestly the last words you ever get to say to them? How many times do you go back in memory and visit the moments you shared and wish you could make them a physical reality again? The answer, all the time. Always.
You always wish it could be that one special day or that single moment, or that fate had not interfered in your dreams and hopes for the future. Some people are lucky enough to have a gift and Sarah Solmonson is one of those people. She is a gifted author who has written a touching and compelling memoir dedicated to the memory of a father she loved dearly and lost early.
Through "Taking Flight" Sarah has managed to show the reality of loss, the long and painful road to healing, and the willpower of the human heart to not only survive, but to repair itself and build new dreams and hopes. This is a courageous debut and one that will linger in your memory after you have read the final page.
I have read a lot of memoirs, and as you would expect, many of them deal with very personal facets of a person's life. This book is no exception, but the way it is written is never depressing. It is sad at times as one would expect based on the subject matter, but this book is much more about moving forward than it ever is living in the past. Sarah's voice throughout this memoir was amazingly accurate when describing the thoughts of a teenager, the worries of an adult and the way we all tend to become children again at some point in our life, when tragedy does strike.
This is intelligent, introspective in places and overall one of the most beautiful and heartfelt books I have ever had the pleasure to read. If you are healing from a loss, or if you are simply searching for a well written book with real emotion, you should consider picking up a copy. In a word, amazing.
Sarah Solmonson tells her story of growing up as the only human child in the Norton family. Her father, David Norton, was obsessed with airplanes and flying. He spent six years building an airplane from scratch. Unfortunately on July 1, 2000, David’s regular take off took a tragic turn as the wind disappeared, causing his beloved plane to crash. David Norton didn’t survive and this book is the story of how his wife and daughter fought to survive their horrific loss.
In her telling memoir, Sarah Solmonson demonstrates an incredible talent for writing. She rotates chapters between a current conversation with her father and the memories she had growing up. This rotation provides the perfect balance between the heart wrenching emotions and the wholesome funny memories of the past. Readers will feel as though Sarah did not use any ink to write this book, but instead used her own blood from her heart. Each sentence, each statement and each memory are written with such honesty and such affection that readers will feel like they are a member of this family. Incredibly powerful and mesmerizing.
Notes: The author provided me a copy of this book for me to review. To learn more about this book and the author, please visit her website: http://sarahsolmonson.com
It wasn't until the very end of the book that I realized this book is a memoir. That'll teach me to pay attention to book descriptions!
What I can say about this book is that it's real. Her feelings and memories of her father's passing are real. She does an excellent job of conveying what it's like to lose someone unexpectedly and the aftermath that follows. It brought back memories of my mother's passing. And my brother's. And friends parents.
This isn't the best written book. It's not the happiest. But you will get a glimpse into what it's like to unexpectedly lose someone at a young age. Perhaps you'll learn how you can help someone who's coping with grief. And you'll be reminded that we really don't know what's going on in people's minds when you're talking to them. There are so many things hidden behind their day to day life that you may never be able to breach.