I loved this book! The things the authors do really well are:
- remind us of Helen Keller's words: "I am only one, but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something; and because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do something that I can do." This book is about empowerment and how starting w/ just the tiniest of steps can lead to the most amazing journey of self-discover and purpose.
- encourage each of us to find our passion. Yes, the book is about human trafficking and modern-day slavery, but it's not *only* about that. It's about how two people found their calling and used their power to effect positive change in the world. I'm sure, if either were to meet someone who said, "Hey, after reading your book, I was moved to do my part to end poverty, improve the quality of drinking water or start a recycling program in my community," they would be absolutely thrilled b/c the point isn't "you must join our cause," but rather "you must join your own cause." In fact, it calls to mind another quote, this one attributed to an anonymous aboriginal woman: "If you have come to help me, you are wasting your time. But if you have come because your liberation is bound up w/ mine, then let us work together." We are all on this planet together & we owe it to ourselves and each other to make the best of it.
The only two areas where I think the book could be even better, in future printings—& I hope there are a lot of future printings—are:
- there's a pronounced Christian slant, which is great in that it demonstrates the catalyst and driving force behind the change that motivated these women to become abolitionists that they are. I worry, though, that when they talk about "God's original design" and quote scripture, those whose motivation is not faith-based, but rather just a natural desire to do what is right, will begin to think, "Oh, this book isn't talking to me...it's talking to Christians."
- as a man reading this book, I couldn't help but noticed almost all of the traffickers talked about were men and the majority of those fighting against it were woman. Now, far be it from me to say, to paraphrase "Julia Sugarbaker," that it is not the men who have done the majority of "the raping and the robbing and the killing and the war-mongering…the pillaging and the beheading and the subjecating of whole races into slavery…the law making and the money making and most of the mischief making…in the past two thousand years," but one cannot deny that women play their part in the problem—in fact, many have claimed that Alice Lakwena, whose Holy Spirit Mobile Forces eventually dissolved into Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army, was not above shanghaiing child soldiers, herself—and men theirs, in the solution—as the authors point out, when they mention Justin Dillon's groundbreaking film, _Call + Response_. I wouldn't want any man who reads this book to feel it's not speaking to him, as we all have the power to effect positive change.
I think this is a terrific book that is likely to have a very positive impact on anyone who reads it—&, subsequently, the lives touched by those who do. I look forward to paying my copy, a gift from the authors, forward in hopes that whomever reads it—be s/he Christian, Wiccan, Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist; black, white, brown, red, yellow or orange; man, woman, child; gay, straight, bisexual, transgender or questioning—will be as inspired and uplifted as I was.